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| PERSONAL ESSAYS |
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No one has ever filmed me in the shower. For a lot of reasons. Here's one: I am not the lead singer of The Killers. Never have I starred in a music video where I spit arcs of bathwater and strain my AutoTuned lungs. There's an epiphany most of us reach at a relatively young age, so here goes: Lord, I am not a rock star. Believe me, I've tried. That three-day beard, that cowboy shirt with roses on the shoulders. Those pipe cleaner jeans. Had them all. And one night — and one night only — I had a groupie.
Here's what I know about groupie sex: even John Mayer does it. It's faceless. Demeaning. Autographs scrawled under shirts and panty bouquets onstage. Lars Ulrich complementing his drum solos with handjobs. Groupie sex might be why the preacher Jimmy Lee Swaggart called rock music the "new pornography," and why Swaggart's first cousin Jerry Lee Lewis had to stand up when he banged out "Great Balls of Fire." At the very least, the rock star should have more tattoos than the groupie. There too, I flunked.
I was going to college in Oregon when my friend Jordaan emailed, wanting me to arrange a gig. Jordaan's a Canadian singer-songwriter who sings about horse glue and transsexual housewives. He's amazing. That spring, he was touring cross-country on a Greyhound bus, playing house shows and coffee shops. So I said sure, let's do an acoustic show together at my apartment. We'll invite all my folky friends. It'll be transcendental and shit. The night of the show, my landlord called. The neighbor had caught wind, felt concerned about these "guitars." Rock stars don't have to deal with eighty-year-old neighbors, but I did. My landlord, who had a soul patch and sympathy, told us we could have the show two doors down, at an unoccupied apartment, so long as we kept the peace and didn't spill anything.
So we spread the word and the kids came. We sat in a circle, twenty-odd and earnest all, on the carpet of an empty living room lit by a single lamp lugged over from my place. I played first, to warm up the crowd: finger-picked Townes Van Zandt rip-offs of my own composition, very delicate and emotional, oh boy. Between the first and second songs, a girl moved to sit next to me. She smiled. After the last song, she reached over and gave me a high five. She had dreadlocks and sculpted eyebrows. I didn't know her very well. All I knew was her name, Juniper, and that my friend James had been weakly pining after this name for a long time, like a week. When the show finished, our after-party consisted of drinking Bud Lights in the empty kitchen. Juniper walked up to me and put her can against her forehead. "I like your songs," she said. "You remind me of Van Morrison or something. I like the song that goes" — and she sang, a little shy but with a nice rasp — "my life, my life, I've danced on a knife." "Thanks," I said. It wasn't even my line. It was stolen. "Are you hot?" I asked, pointing at the can. She shrugged. We made a lot of significant eye contact. "You look hot," I said. She rolled her eyes and laughed. Here's a partial list of people who have handled that situation better than me: Tommy Lee, Rod Stewart, Ian Gillan, and those fat guys in Uriah Heep.
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Commentarium (20 Comments)
Ugh, gawd. This whole article boils down to: she wasn't hot enough or you weren't straight enough. Stop trying to romanticize/overanalyze this. Jeez.
haha Im actually a big fan of Mike Young's work. You should check out his other stories
The songs -- they do the work. Your job is to live up to them. I like the ending ... nicely done.
The self-deprecation seems slightly exaggerated, but I liked it ... rings true.
Lars Ulrich is a drummer. Not a bassist.
Loved the writing style and the strong imagery. Hip without being cynical. I look forward to reading more of your work.
Jordaan is such a nice guy!
missing some basics here. you've told me a story?
Excellent. You put a realistic spin on what it is am I am doing to some young, coquettish Girl when I learn that Fahey or Frusciante. I'll just have to prepare myself to make sure the truth is felt afterwards, be it cheesy. But a rock-star I ain't. Perfect Dylan reference in the title by the way.
You wrote this whole thing from the standpoint of what you did to her, but the story is actually about what she did to you.
You have some sort of Xtian guilt or something... or you're gay like that guy said. Maybe you wanted your friend to join in?
Everyone has an opinion...I really liked your piece. I thought it was entertaining, uncomfortable and funny. I totally could visualize the whole scene in the vacant apt. I look forward to reading additional pieces.
Nice fact-checking peckerheads: Lars Ulrich is a drummer. This author has again proven himself not to be a rock star: he don't know basic metal, yo. Still a stellar piece, this miniscule misprint aside.
I liked it, for no particular reason. Made me really smile in places. Sounded real and uncomforable, which was your aim, i'm assuming. good job
Lovely piece but I'm sure a million people by now have told you it ends perfectly at "Rock stars we ain't".
That was a great read. Thanks for the excellently executed honesty.
Now you say something