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Walk On Your Lips Through Busted Glass

by: keirdubois

Fri Feb 05, 2010 at 10:39:38 PST        
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Envy is the religion of the mediocre. It comforts them, it soothes their worries, and finally it rots their souls, allowing them to justify their meanness and their greed until they believe these to be virtues. Such people are convinced that the doors of heaven will be opened only to poor wretches like themselves who go through life without leaving any trace but their threadbare attempts to belittle others and to exclude-and destroy if possible-those who, by the simple face of their existence, show up their own poorness of spirit, mind, and guts. Blessed be the one at whom the fools bark, because his soul will never belong to them.

My brother's voice slices through the fermented air with muted authority. He always did love deploying the righteous wisdom.

keirdubois :: Walk On Your Lips Through Busted Glass
"Hoo boy," I chuckle. "Be careful with that shit. It'll rip your soul in half."

"That's Zafón for you, bro," he smiles. "No idle ball-busting from that man. He'll separate the sheep from the goats every time."

He downs the rest of the Blue Moon in front of him and looks for the waitress. "Where'd she get to? I'm still unacceptably sober."

"Probably fluffing some, like, Affliction-wearing ape-man with multiple Jager shots."

My brother raises an eyebrow, undoubtedly realizing that I'm getting wasted. It's ten-thirty on a Saturday night in South Orange County, and we'd spent the day moving his stuff into a new apartment only a block away from this bar. Hey, one night playing Andy Capp wouldn't hurt, right? A trustafarian jam band is due to start playing any minute now, so we can hang out for a few hours before staggering home with impunity. Surely.

"Ey, so can I get you another one?"

An insidious, sultry voice yanks me back to myself. Our frighteningly attractive Colombian cocktail waitress has returned, continuing that crass yet perfectly acceptable liquid dance of superficial concern for her customers' welfare. She leans right into our faces with a devastating smile and flagrant cleavage, so we really have no choice but to play along.

"Luna azúl, por favor," says my brother in passable Spanish, and the waitress smiles. She'd humored my own stumblefuck attempts last round, when I'd compared her voice to Elizabeth Peña's, but my brother can actually speak the language, so they talk a little longer. I flit in and out of their conversation, eyeing the band's gear, before another accented hook snags me by the throat.

"Oye, pelón!" She rubs my fuzzy bald head with a laugh. "What about you, babyface?"

I blush and murmur something about another Bass. She slithers away and my brother laughs at me.

"You're hopeless, man. I mean, you know she's only fishing for fat tips, right?"

I shrug. "Dude, I would walk on my lips through busted glass just to get next to that."

He rolls his eyes as the band begins tuning up. "Jesus God, she's really put the claws in you if you're dragging out those old boomer yuppie lyrics."

"Hey, there are worse ways to defile oneself than the...like, mutual...um, flattery of cocktail waitresses."

"You fool," he sneers. "Tiger Woods will go to hell for what he did with a cocktail waitress."

"Shut up." My lame reply is drowned out by the band as they kick into an expert set of vintage hippie-rock, and South American sin soon takes a back seat to some of the sweetest surf-reverbed Strat tones we've ever heard. We sit back, drinking it in, and eventually a surprising revelation punches through my drunken psyche.

"This is, uh, really weird, bro."

"Huh? How so?"

"I don't...I'm not...I can totally get into their music without, like, being jealous."

"What?" He leans in to hear me as the band delivers a country-fried take on "Wish You Were Here."

"I..uh, well you know, back when we were gigging more, I would...like, get really jealous if I went to see other bands playing. Cause, um, we shoulda been doing it, you know? I mean, I felt like we didn't get any respect, like we should have had better gigs, or more of them, or..."

Thought processes are derailing slowly, and my brother just shakes his head. "That's bogus, bro. We had plenty of friends who came to see us. Hell, half the time we didn't know what we were doing anyway."

"I know, dude-I realized that later, after we'd stopped playing regularly. But now, I...well, I don't care about it like that. I can listen to these guys do their thing and just, just enjoy the moment, enjoy the tunes."

I can't explain myself properly, but I have to make him understand. I go through another three or four tangents while the band shuffles through a bad Marley cover and some good originals. I try to, like, talk about how I'd ditched the hard-core envy binges just in time to back into the marketing business, where hypersensitive souls get chewed up and spit out every ten minutes. I try to get across the no-longer depressing revelations about nobody ever giving two shits about the real things I'd wanted to do, but had been impressed by the garbage that I'd tossed off here and there without a second thought.

It becomes a long purge of vomit about tight-assed gatekeepers in every industry-music, publishing, journalism-consumed by their meaningless self-importance, inflated like bloated puffer fish in evaporating puddles. I go on and on, oblivious to Colombian curves that periodically wrap around our table with liquid confidence in tow. I'm about to start in on politics when the band rips into a disco-infernalicious take on the Stones' "Miss You" and my brother cuts me off.

"Dude, listen to that! The bass player's on fire!"

That he is. All my dumb hang-ups and pet theories get rolled beneath a thick, creamy low end that nearly re-arranges my heartbeat.

"Man, that's what I'm talking about!"

I forget about everything else and ride the groove for as long as it lasts, and get desperate to play my Fender J again. Not in the old envious way-I'm just itchy to make noise-and after that it gets way too easy to work up some drunken plotting for our own band's reunion. We rant and rave and trade lyric ideas and flatter the waitress again and generally keep approaching middle age at arms' length for another twenty-four hours, and it feels glorious.

It may be impermanent, it may be totally delusional, but it works right now and that's all I need. Yeah, someone else can curdle their heart with envy. Someone else can slum with the mean girls. I'm not interested in that revenge-and-guilt trip anymore. It's time to cook up another serious fireball and jolt everyone out of their twenty-first century stupor.

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My blood is too thick for Orange County (4.00 / 6)
I could never properly explain myself in that climate.

mbr + dv + woyg

John Boehner? (4.00 / 2)

Did you hear the one about the tap dancer who broke his ankle when he fell in the sink?

No! (4.00 / 2)
My god man, what happened?

mbr + dv + woyg

[ Parent ]
garbage that I'd tossed off here and there without a second thought. (4.00 / 2)
so seriously hope this does not qualify.  you have the word thing down, keirdubois.

aka conchita

Thanks (4.00 / 1)
I liked the last one better (the mirror one) overall, and this one was more fun to experience than to write.

Seriously, that waitress was hot.

mbr + dv + woyg


[ Parent ]
i loved the mirror one (4.00 / 1)
it was artfully constructed, but i like the sincere tone of this one.  it makes for a very real reading experience.  if i had written this it would have been little more than a he said, she said back and forth.  you weave the personal into it which gives it a unique credibility and your descriptives bring to mind the kind of smokey club (back then) i used to hang in.  you make the reader feel as if you are opening a window into the psyche of the main character/you.  i seriously think you should consider sending your work to harper's.  there's probably other places too, but i don't have much time for dead tree publications - these days only subscribe to harper's and adbusters.  come to think of it adbusters publishes fiction too.  seriously think you should consider this.  

aka conchita

[ Parent ]
Well ok then (0.00 / 0)
If I can pull off either of those places without an agent or other middle/representation then I'll try it. Thanks for the tip.

mbr + dv + woyg

[ Parent ]
"Garbage" (4.00 / 2)
That was actually about the band. I put a titanic effort into lots of my lyrics-it's hard when you set up so many stupid rules for yourself to follow, especially in your twenties-but only a few people cared about those. People "in the industry" either didn't know or care-or at worst, they dismissed it as hopeless amateurism. I'd expect pretty much the same results if I try to get myself published, so I'll just self-publish.

mbr + dv + woyg

[ Parent ]
people "in the industry" only care about what will sell albums/cds (4.00 / 1)
i used to produce music videos and came to know label execs.  it was all about packaging.  sometimes talent mattered, but if they could create a marketable look that would sell, they didn't much care how much talent there was behind it.  they weren't in it for the long haul, not surprising the lyrics didn't matter.

if you have a sec, check out my late bf's daughter's myspace page.  of course, i think she rocks, but wonder what another musican might think.  her lyrics are still minimal, but i have been watching her grow over the last two years and each time she puts up new material i am impressed with how much further she has taken it.  i think she's a pretty gutsy 19 year old.
http://www.myspace.com/teafort...

aka conchita


[ Parent ]
I like it (4.00 / 1)
The voice sounds familiar, but I can't place it. That's good, cause that means it's hers. She doesn't sound like the influences she lists there (to me), and I think that's also good. It takes guts to do that-even when it comes natural.

I'm listening to this late (you'll tell by the time stamp I assume) and right now it works really well. The thing I learned about lyrics is that no one pays attention to them as much as the lyricist. It's all about delivery; I had none, so I relied on the words. She's got plenty. She'll be fine. :)

I'll trade you a link to ours:

http://www.myspace.com/honeywhite

Looks like I haven't updated it in a while. Ah, MySpace-I saw someone describe it as "the abandoned amusement park of the internet."

mbr + dv + woyg


[ Parent ]
keir, i listened last night very very late - about this time (4.00 / 1)
and somehow your band sounds almost exactly like what i expected.  i want to write more but it is nearly 3 am and i need to be in class tomorrow at 9 and before i leave in the morning i need to take conchita out and feed her, so i will leave a more substantive comment for another less late night very soon.  just wanted you to know that i am out here, just swamped atm.

aka conchita

[ Parent ]
Thank you (0.00 / 0)
That's the great thing-you can listen whenever you want.

If anything strikes your fancy I'm sure I can arrange speedy and cheap digital delivery at the very least.

mbr + dv + woyg


[ Parent ]
Reform Immigration -
March for America
Sunday, March 21
 

March on Washington
Saturday, March 20
 

 

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