Sunday, January 23, 2011

Come Downstairs and Say Hello

The other night I went to my first concert in years.

Okay, that's not true- this summer I went to see The Swell Season at the zoo with some girlfriends, but forgive me if I do not count laying out on a fleece blanket while next to me hipsters are drinking red wine from goblets in the shape of ocelots as an actual concert experience. Subsequent sexual fantasies about being Glenn Hansard's guitar notwithstanding.

I went to see Guster, a band with whom I am celebrating the single longest relationship of my life.

Before moving on, I must bore with brief history. (Yes, I am wearing a satin smoking jacket and sitting in a library in a high-backed leather chair next to a roaring fire. Why do you ask?) I discovered Guster ten years ago while attending my first big arena concert- the Barenaked Ladies at the Rose Garden. Okay, yes, you can go ahead and laugh, but please keep in mind that this was before the song about monkeys when they were still writing songs like "The Wrong Man Was Convicted" and killed their harmonies. So there.

The appeal was immediate- this band had a drummer that played the drums with his hands. Instead of floor toms and bass drums, he rocked bongos and djembes (that's a hand drum, right?), and the rest was a drum kit complete with cymbals and hi-hats and everything. And he slammed them all without the safety of two sticks. I was at that concert with about ten friends, and we all kept turning to each other going, "Is that guy playing with his hands?" "Look, he's playing with his hands!" "I am pretty sure he is playing with his hands." Hey- it was loud and we were excited. You can make fun, but the minute that you see someone slap a symbol with their fingertips and follow it up with a military perfect drumroll played with the sides of his palms, you pretty much lose the capacity for any type of quasi-intellectual thought and become obsessed with your own wooden spoon and stovepot roots.

After that night, my friends and I were hooked. We bought the merch and music and wore and/or listened to it endlessly. We went online and discovered that the drummer was an online journaler- which only made those of us narcissistic enough to also write our thoughts down on LiveJournal love him even more. The fact that most of his posts were scatalogical in nature just further convinced me that he was, in fact, what my mother had been talking about when she told me that someday I would find true love.

Thus came a community-based tango with fanatacism. Guster toured constantly and we saw them every time that they came within 100 miles of our little college town. When they played at home, we dragged noobs and determined their future social interactions with us by whether or not they saw Adam Gardner and Ryan Miller's harmonies as revelatory. When they played far away we dressed in weird clothes and adopted personalities of people who don't care how they appear to strangers-praise be to the closest available deity that this behavior was not accompanied by alcohol consumption because who knows what would have happened. We became these loud people that screamed like teenagers suffering from the after-effects of Lautner-smolder, and who licked tour buses to prove their uniqueness as fans (Thank heavens that last bit does not include me- Tammy still has to get a yearly shot.) I very nearly converted to Judaism after discovering that all the of band members yearly took part in seder.

I owned every album. I had t-shirts for each day of the week. The "Guster is for Lovers" sticker on the bumpers of the two crap cars that I drove in college proclaimed my only love and earned me car honks from people appreciative of my then-alternative tastes. (Oh no, wait, that was my driving the wrong way on a one-way. Bygones.) The boy who broke the copy of "Lost and Gone Forever" that I bought at my first concert became dead to me, and even now, when I see pictures of him at a summer picnic that my sister attended, I think, "That asshole broke my Guster CD."

But then, you know . . . we grow up. The White Stripes happened. Jay-Z closed escrow on my soul. American Idol brought us closer to 2012 and I may or may not have gotten caught up in the hype over "Daughtry"- a musical low which still causes me to wake up in cold sweats. My musical tastes refined and then became unrefined. "Amsterdam" was good, but it took me a while to learn to love "Keep It Together". By the time "Ganging Up On the Sun" came out, I was struggling with a piss-poor job in a worse economy and did not want to hear richer-than-me white guys singing about someone being their satellite. In addition, they became more popular and started playing bigger venues and demanded more money for their tickets. It turns out that I am devoted up to about $25 including surcharge.

My once special-occasion Guster shirts with the felt covered llama and the Animal House lettering became workout clothes. I became less interested in music and more interested in reading dystopian literature and watching television about men that spend their days analyzing blood spatter and their nights feeding their inner Little Shop of Horrors while wearing the hell out of a form-fitting henley. Guster was relegated to Saturday cleaning music and what I sang with Kendall around campfires on church camping trips to impress cute boys.

Which brings me to this week.
I got a call from a sweet friend of mine that I had not seen in a while. She said that she had tickets to the Guster show and wanted me to go with her. I texted back an emphatic, "YES", but then changed my mind about twenty times over the next several days. My book club was meeting that night. There would be too many people. The last time I went to a concert I couldn't hear anything for three days, which just furthers the insecurities I am having about my late twenties that cause me to go fetal. Eventually, though, the day of the concert came, and although I knew that my altogether gorgeous friend would have no problem finding a last minute date, I decided to put on my figurative "I'm still young" panties and actually go out and do something fun.
We got to the concert venue and the place was loaded with hipsters and college students. Oy ye oy. The opening band was a collection of moderately attractive long-haired hippies finishing a cover of "Cecelia", which was promising as it is my favorite Simon & Garfunkel song about a girl that likes giving it away. I stared at the nymphs on the wall of the Crystal Ballroom and begged them to please not make me experience feeling someone's genitals pressed against any part of my person again. (I have horrible luck at concerts.)
And now we are joined by: my boys. They looked older and slightly thicker- just like me- but still good, in that unwashed, on-the-road, "What city am I in? All the Arby's look the same!" kind of way.
Then- they played.
Although the first song was not one of my favorites it was an immediate and semi-traumatic adrenaline shot to the heart of memory and joy in its purest sense. Feeling drumbeats so deep from my shoulders to heels. Singing at the top of my voice with no regard for the guy recording the performance on his cell phone in front of me. Watching two of my good friends' faces as their Guster virginity taken by the musical equivalent of Lloyd Dobler.
I was reminded of the small joys of concerts in general- the stoners that are dancing like they are dying tomorrow, those intensely focused post-college-age grecian columns that refuse to externally manifest that the band is rocking so hard but eye you like you are a Nazi for talking during slower songs. Shouting until your voice is gone. Not giving a damn about activating your long-dormant tonitis.
Amusingly, there are things that had changed. "The Airport Song", once the crowd-pleasing favorite that caused the audience to go into apopleptic fits most aptly described as "batshit", was recognized only by the few old-timers like myself. Unfortunately, nobody had sent us the memo that what we loved was no longer cool, so there were about four people that screamed like a mouse was running up their pant leg while the rest of the crowd backed away as though they were afraid of catching Beiber fever.
I left the evening lightened by the experience and weighted down only by the absolutely pointless but fabulous silver Guster belt buckle that my friend loaned me some green to purchase. Of audiological necessity, we shouted our reviews of the show back and forth to one another all the way home. Insert contented sigh here.
The following evening my sloth caught up with me (The attribute, not the animal. Being unable to outrun a sloth would either speak very poorly of me or very highly of the animal.) and I was forced to attack the giant monolith of dishes that had been forming over the previous week. As this was no small job, I decided that music was necessary for the moment. Still buzzing from the excursion of the previous evening, I popped on the boring-yet-self-explanitorily-named "Guster" mix and sang loud and true and further frustrated my upstairs neighbor and the action he was likely then pursuing from his long-suffering girlfriend.
The moral: You can't reverse your own personal evolution, but you can remember that the point from which you evolved was pretty great and give it its due. Even when you go all the way up to heaven, you gotta go all the way back home.
(For those who would like to enjoy the meanderings of my first true love, visit the link below.)
http://gusterjournal.tumblr.com/

1 comment:

Jenny P said...

Guster is for lovers. I love every word you just wrote.

And I love you.