FartinMowler
Jul 9th, 2003, 02:21 AM
Jack-Feels-Fine
My best friend Davey was much cooler than me in so many ways. Davey had long blonde hair and could play drums in a syncopated blinding fury that would dazzle every girl that would enter his basement lair that was covered in old carpets. Daveys parents where so hip that it hurt with his mother and her funny British accent and his father and his deep Canadian radio voice it was a weird event every time I went to his house and hung out.
Davey had a reliance of my age getting alcohol and having a car that I seem to meld into a lifestyle of parties and molding a persona of my own. Clicking the seat belts heading downtown one Saturday with out knowledge of where we where heading Davey gave me instructions to a house on Oak and 20th to see a band that he was going to try out for. Keith the bass player and Nick on guitar introducing themselves and with out a vibe of preconception I sat in a large lazy boy type chair in a garage soaked in incense I sat back and listened. I was a token mascot of musicians and I really didn;t mind and would gladly run to the 7/11 for Slurpies or grab a six pack and come back to find them laying on the house couches talking about changes in there music.
Two months went by and I had become friends with Keith and Nick but Davey was chasing a prospective new girl friend and as a drummer found the whole traveling downtown rather tedious and fruitless. I wouldn't give up and tried in vane to drag him back to sessions but after a while they dumped him but I found a job close by there house and still hung out.
Keith was the writer and bass player and had a style of clothing that he had picked up from living in a England with baggy East Indian pants and flowery shirts. Growing up In Saskatchewan Keith had a calm mystical character that exuded kindness but his song writing was dark and brooding and I just was hooked on the music. Nick was a totally different cat altogether with his grin of a million teeth and acoustic strumming that rang in your ears until the string would stress no more.
Part 1.
My best friend Davey was much cooler than me in so many ways. Davey had long blonde hair and could play drums in a syncopated blinding fury that would dazzle every girl that would enter his basement lair that was covered in old carpets. Daveys parents where so hip that it hurt with his mother and her funny British accent and his father and his deep Canadian radio voice it was a weird event every time I went to his house and hung out.
Davey had a reliance of my age getting alcohol and having a car that I seem to meld into a lifestyle of parties and molding a persona of my own. Clicking the seat belts heading downtown one Saturday with out knowledge of where we where heading Davey gave me instructions to a house on Oak and 20th to see a band that he was going to try out for. Keith the bass player and Nick on guitar introducing themselves and with out a vibe of preconception I sat in a large lazy boy type chair in a garage soaked in incense I sat back and listened. I was a token mascot of musicians and I really didn;t mind and would gladly run to the 7/11 for Slurpies or grab a six pack and come back to find them laying on the house couches talking about changes in there music.
Two months went by and I had become friends with Keith and Nick but Davey was chasing a prospective new girl friend and as a drummer found the whole traveling downtown rather tedious and fruitless. I wouldn't give up and tried in vane to drag him back to sessions but after a while they dumped him but I found a job close by there house and still hung out.
Keith was the writer and bass player and had a style of clothing that he had picked up from living in a England with baggy East Indian pants and flowery shirts. Growing up In Saskatchewan Keith had a calm mystical character that exuded kindness but his song writing was dark and brooding and I just was hooked on the music. Nick was a totally different cat altogether with his grin of a million teeth and acoustic strumming that rang in your ears until the string would stress no more.
Part 1.