Posted on 05/10/2007 4:09:02 PM PDT by Clintonfatigued
You state it so eloquently! Well said!
You saw those guys? My gawd, how did you get any work done? You lucky guy!! Did you get to listen?
But really, how was the crowd? Who frequented the club? Were they rowdies?
Although there was one dude, a big guy, a one-eyed Black pimp who had two girls with him but who was gay himself. He came in once not knowing what the place really was. I had to ask him to leave because he kept hitting on this skinny white drummer whose name I forget. It was a dicey proposition because the dude was big, solid and a street pimp. I played to his 'dignity' in front of musicians and it worked, he left with nothing more than a brief stare-down. He did give me that 'you ain't worth the sweat' chuckle as he left but so what. I'll admit I was nervous, I remember I kept my right hand on a thick beer mug on the bar throughout the conversation just in case I had to swing it. It pays to remember that at the time I was a 23 year old red-headed Irish guy playing it out in front of a bunch of guys who lived hard and had seen everything. Getting that pimp out to the street without a tussle sent my stock up about ten points.
The joint was in the basement of a brownstone but without the garden (there was an art-deco clock set in the wall over the entrance and that's how it got its name). That is not at all unusual as there are dozens of bars, restaurants, music joints in brownstone basements in the Village, the West Side, Chelsea and the Theater District in midtown.
The place was small, about twenty feet wide by maybe forty feet deep with space taken out for the bar, the kitchen, the rest rooms and storage. Most of the tables were along the wall with the musicians in the back and I heard it all up close. It was a very cool six months.
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