I think the guy who brought the PA that night said it best:
“They
keep trying to introduce culture to Nannup, and it keeps getting rejected.
Tonight’s just another example.”
We
drove for hours through a thick forest to get to the isolated town of Nannup,
in the Southeastern corner of Western Australia. There were none of the random,
isolated dwellings you usually see on the road from one country town to
another. No trailers with broken down cars in the yard, no trim, cute little
farmhouses. Nothing but forest. Aside from Perth, a thriving metropolis like
any other, Western Australia can be disconcertingly underpopulated.
Every
person we encountered in this part of the world laughed ominously when I told
them we had a gig coming up in Nannup, so I had a foreboding feeling that we
were headed for a fiasco. The band pooh-poohed this as negativity on my part.
They were all way too experienced in the ways of the road to be wearing these
particular rose-colored glasses, but I admired their positive spirit.
From
the moment we were accosted in the dirt parking lot by a local who wanted to
know “if we were going to do some Abba” and who, upon being denied that
particular request, elaborated threateningly that “we better play country,
then,” I knew we were the wrong band in the wrong bar.
Andy
the drummer had flown in from Sydney that day with his wife and arrived in a
separate car. Qantas had lost his cymbals. You can’t really have drums without
cymbals. The claim was that as soon as they located this lost luggage, a
courier would drive it down from Perth to Nannup – almost four hours. I held
little hope that this event would transpire, but as we were setting up, the
courier arrived, cymbals in hand. It was all downhill from there.
We
had borrowed a keyboard for these three dates from a friend of a friend. It was
a Roland digital piano of mid 90s vintage. I had owned the very same keyboard
myself in the mid 90s, and I knew it was trouble. However, I was getting it for
the price of a bottle of whisky, which was just about what I could afford. Like
many Roland products, the concept was great but the execution was terrible.
Keys break, strange, gig-ending electronic glitches occur. A piece of machinery
ill-suited for the rigors of the road, where your shit has to work. Every
night. No excuses.
About
twenty minutes into Karen’s opening set, the keyboard suddenly changed keys.
There I was, playing an A minor chord, and a B-minor chord was happening
instead. The band and my wife stared in horror. I was sure I had lost my few
remaining marbles. I know I’m playing the right fucking chord! I thought. As the band
played on, I turned the keyboard off and then on again. This reboot seemed to
solve the problem. Like the fucking thing was running on Windows 95. It held
for the rest of the evening. I spent that time preying none of the keys would
snap off.
Early
the next we headed out for Denmark, some four hours away on the far south
coast. The venue was in a striking
location on a hill overlooking the Southern Ocean, nothing but thousands of
miles of churning sea and Antarctica to the south.
The
place was booked by a musician, so he had our back. I did a quick radio
interview for the local station, the six of us had dinner and then we did the
show.
It
was one of those small towns populated mostly by people who had moved from
bigger towns to get away from it all. Well-educated types, musicians, artists,
young hippies, old hippies. We met a guy who had moved there from Philly with
the money he made from his self-started fitness empire. That sort of thing. My
kind of crowd. They were with us from the start. Some sat, some writhed
pleasantly around the perimeter, doing that Grateful Dead dance. I love that
shit. There was one point where that connection got made in which you feel the
room is about to levitate. Those are the moments we do this for. The keyboard
changed keys again at almost exactly the same time. I restarted and got on with
it. It was just part of the show now.
The
next day, another four hour drive back up to Margaret River and our last show
in W.A. – Cape Lodge. Cape Lodge is the
swankiest and most expensive retreat in the west of Australia, but still,
nothing prepared us for the treatment we got there. As soon as we arrived, the
misses and I were whisked off to a five-star suite the size of our apartment,
while the band were taken to equally well-appointed cabins on the lush and
peaceful grounds. The place was so impeccable I felt like I was soiling it by
just standing there. A sound company brought in staging, lights and sound for
the show and set up everything while we rested and washed off the road grime.
The wife was very pleased.
About
an hour before showtime, armies of waitstaff brought course after course of
high-end tucker. This was a gig? It was hard to believe. If we’d been patrons
here, this food plus the room probably would have set us back two large.
The
show was transcendent from beginning to end, the crowd had paid $120 a head for
a “Jazz Soirée With Bob Malone” and they were primed and ready to dig the show.
But during the first song, the keyboard changed keys three times. And it did it
again in every one of the next four songs. The reboot thing became way too
disruptive, so I just started playing in the new key as it would happen. Good
thing I went to music school! I remained calm, told jokes about it, and the
adversity got the crowd even more on our side. I turned it to my advantage.
About halfway through the show, the trouble stopped and we wrapped it up
unmolested by any further electronic mayhem. With two encores. It was a
memorable night. A very fine way to end this part of the tour…this would be my
last show with this band until next year. We toasted our good fortune, and
headed back to our plush rooms.