At first, I found this journey frightening and dull. It
bothered me that there were so many slow-downs, and I felt alienated by all the
exits I knew nothing about. In California, there is hardly an exit anywhere in
the Bay Area I haven’t been down at least once, to go to a diving meet, or to see a
friend, or to buy some obscure tool, or whatever. But here, it’s all a
mystery, and everything seems a little sinister. My neighbor Kelly once told me
that Lakewood is where they film all the worst episodes of Cops. My friend
Jason told me that Pulluyup is full of Trump supporters and people with guns.
Caitlin is keeping track of all the near-school shootings that have happened in
Lacey and Dupont and other nearby communities, since there seems to be some
kind of High School tribal hot line abut that. So driving down Highway Five
through all these places – slowly – was initially a bit of a chore.
Now I like it though. I look forward to it, even. I like it
because I charge up my ipod and listen to my favorite songs or to the latest
episode of Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me or S Town. I like it
because for a long stretch just past Lacey toward Tacoma you keep seeing Mount
Rainier peeking in and out of the horizon, and some nights it’s just beautiful.
And I like it most because I am on my way to diving practice.
Diving practice ends at 7 and I always do the same thing: I
call Vic’s pizza for a pickup at 8 and then I get in my car for the long drive
home. Often traffic on the Five is still really bad towards Tacoma so I take route 99 – the Pacific Coast Highway – through
Fife. This leads me past the Emerald
Queen Casino, the Indian Bingo Parlor of the Puyallup tribe, and whenever I
drive past an Indian Bingo Parlor, I fall into a kind of fugue state, thinking
about those places and how they intersect with my past.
There are actually several other casinos on 5 towards
Olympia, but the Emerald Queen Casino is the biggest. You can see it coming up
for ages as you round the corner for Tacoma, because it has a giant flashing
billboard sign advertising its upcoming shows as well as other important things
– job openings, food specials, giveaways, boxing matches, all kinds of bingo
parlor fun. I wait eagerly for those signs, because I have a weird fondness for
Indian Bingo Parlors, born when I lived in San Diego and used to cover rock
shows at the Viejas and the other casinos in El Cajon and San Diego counties.
There was a period of time when I went to them fairly frequently, though the
only show I can remember in detail was one by Jerry Lee Lewis. He played one of
those shows like all those old guys do, where the band vamps for five songs and
the artist comes on and plays, like, his three most famous numbers, and then
goes off and the band vamps another five songs and that’s it.
As expected, Jerry
Lee was an asshole, plus he could barely stand up and kick his stool out behind
him during “Great Balls of Fire”, though he did manage to do it on about the
third or fourth kick and being young a cruel and knowing his past as a
wife-beater and not yet having been trolled into psychic oblivion, I probably had a rock critic field day with
that in the subsequent review I wrote. What I remember best about the
experience, though, was that the ticket came with a free meal of BBQ and several
side dishes, and as I was eating an elderly man came up to me and asked if he
could have my baked potato. I am pretty sure that was the last show I covered
at the Viejas Casino, but when, out of academic interest, I tried to look up
the review the other day on the San Diego Reader archive, the only thing that
came up was a letter the editor from that era saying: “Gina Arnold: Rape Victim
or Bad Lay” that then proceeded to hope I was both. Those were the days,
alright.
Like Viejas, the Emerald Queen Casino has rock shows too. On Valentine's day, they had a special concert with Air Supply that especially intrigued me, as did a subsequent one with Blue Oyster Cult, a band which
I actually like. I went to see BOC last year with a friend from diving,
and we put our index fingers in the air and yelled “more cow bell” and "go go Godzilla!" had a
rollicking good time at it. It was at this terrible hard rock club in San Jose
and we went to Applebys beforehand to get in the spirit, and my friend told me all
about how he can play “The Red and the Black”. Later on, a Facebook
friend who has made many records that I actually like mentioned that his high
school band played that song too and I thought how perfectly odd it is that
Blue Oyster Cult sits right there in that intersection between people with no discernable
taste in music and people with MY taste in music. My Facebook friend is super leftwing, while my diving friend is one of those right wing, Harvard-educated Silicon Valley tech-millionaires who sold his
shares out young and is in retirement. He plays in bands in a Paul Allen kind of way - in fact, playing alongside Paul Allen at a tech show hosted by Esther Dyson is one of his favorite band memories (they played "Brown Eyed Girl"). In other words, he and
I had different agendas at that BOC show but we had a really good time anyway and therefore put paid to any idea that you can judge people by their record collection. And therein
lies the mystery and magic of music. Or at least of Blue Oyster Cult.
But back to the Casinos. Every time I see that sign on Highway Five, I think, “Oh I should
go,” but I just can’t face it – not Air Supply, or BOC, or next month's tempting act Randy Bachman either. Can you imagine having gone to the Emerald Queen Casino alone, on Valentine’s Day, to see Air Supply?
I mean, it’s such an awful thought that it practically tempted me: I could have written the living
shit out of that sucker, plus, I am actually dying to see the carpet there. (I
collect pictures of casino and hotel carpets.) The problem would
be, when I walk into places like that alone now I always get hit on. I didn't get hit on a lot when I was rock critic - unless you count writing letters to me hoping I’d get raped as a form of being
hit on -- but nowadays, old men in their 70s have absolutely no problem asking if
they can buy me a drink, even when I am not at Casinos. The last time it
happened the guy was a former Marine who now runs fitness classes at an old
people’s home. It was very disconcerting.
The other day when I drove by the Emerald Queen Casino I
considered going there one last time, but I rejected it. I thought, ‘let’s not and
say we did.’ After all, back when I was a rock critic, we did not have the
internet. Driving around weird empty counties in California, infiltrating
arenas where audiences congregated to see acts of yesteryear, and then opining
cruelly on the whole phenomenon was, I see retrospectively, perhaps not the
highest of callings. Today I can probably find out what the carpet looks like
online, remind myself what hits Air Supply had via Wikipedia -- did you know they are Australian, and that one of them went on to form the Divinyls? -- or watch a BOC show on YouTube.
Compared to actually going, this method of writing about it would probably lack aura, and insight, and authenticity, but then so too would Air Supply’s performance. So tonight when I drive home from diving, I'm going to put on some music I actually like.
Compared to actually going, this method of writing about it would probably lack aura, and insight, and authenticity, but then so too would Air Supply’s performance. So tonight when I drive home from diving, I'm going to put on some music I actually like.
Does the Emerald Bay Casino have a stage that rotates? 'Cause if it doesn't, how could Randy Bachmann be as awesome as seeing Bachmann-Turner Overdrive at the Circle Star Theater in San Carlos? For those who don't know (or can't imagine it), the Circle Star was this suburban 60s theater, just off Highway 101, capacity about 3,000, but it had the stage in the center and it rotated. The pitch was "no bad seats!" but in fact the effect was completely alienating, so it was really "all bad seats."
ReplyDeleteAnyway, we saw BTO there--at the time they hadn't had a hit in like 5 years, and they seemed absolutely ancient, ha ha--and at the Merch table you could buy a t-shirt that said "BTO-Half A Ton Of Fun," since none of them were particularly thin. This was about 1985--ok, let's not pretend, I have a list, it was January 28, 1985. The week before we saw Los Lobos at The Stone (of all places), the opening act was EIEIO. The next month (Mar 21) was the infamous Iron Maiden/Twisted Sister show at the Cow Palace, which surely deserves a post of its own. If you haven't blotted it out.
Was driving along 101 in Redwood City the other day just wondering where the Circle Star theater was. Its a mall along Veterans/Industrial right? Between Marsh and Whipple?
ReplyDeleteAnd last saturday: A pal at art studio suddenly starting singing some unknown lyrics at me - "who did this song??" - on a wild stab I blurted Blue Oyster Cult! and I was RIGHT! Suggesting that BOCs lyrics/tempo do have some kind of memorability meme that transcends actual memory. Like muscle memory, but of the mind.
Ooky ooh.
The circle star was actually in San Carlos - it's now an industrial park over near that Best Buy by Holly street. It's gone, but the park itself is on "Circle Star Avenue" - Corry we can go there for a photo field trip when I see you next week.
ReplyDeleteThe original address was 1717 Industrial Way. The theater was open from 1964-1993. Per one of Joel Selvin's books (which was probably written for me, personally), Judy Garland played a one-night engagement at The Circle Star in 1965 on the same night that the Beatles played The Cow Palace. That pretty much sums up the Circle Star.
ReplyDeleteI saw Frank Zappa twice at the Circle Star, both times great. Frank was the only one who could take the inherent alienation of the Circle Star and turn it into an asset. "We're rocking and rotating" he would say, in his greasy voice. Saw him in 1974 (Viv, me, Jennifer), One Size Fits All band, one for the ages, caused my brain to explode. Then again in 1984 (Gina, me), still pretty awesome, he played "Whipping Post."
Jeff (RIP) saw Van Morrison at CIrcle Star in 73, he assured me it was the worst Van Morrison concert ever. Tad and I also saw Wayne Newton there in the early 1980s, but that too is another story.
I saw Blue Oyster Cult at Concord Pavilion in the mid-90s (not with Gina), they were pretty good. Of course, I think the other bands on the bill were Foghat, J Geils Blues Band (no Peter Wolf) and someone even I can't remember, so the competition wasn't high. But still, my memories are pretty fond.
You went to the Concord Pavilion without me? For real?
ReplyDeleteYes, not your thing
ReplyDelete6 / 2 5 / 9 7 C o n c o r d P a v i l i o n S T E P P E N W O L F / B L U E O Y S T E R C U L T / F O G H A T / P A T T R A V E R S B A N D S u m m e r D a z e T o u r
A friend had "season tickets" to Concord (sort of), and invited me. So I was a Plus One, except that Carl didn't have to write a column. But really, the column would have written itself--"Magic Carpet Ride," "Don't Fear The Reaper," "Slow Ride" and "Snortin Whisky (and Drinking Cocaine)" all in one power packed summer daze.
What I recall about BOC was that when I was in high school they had a sort of "hard rock" vibe, but in concert decades later it turned out that they were actually sort of psychedelic folkies (which of course they actually were).