Summer Times Blues

Today was the official summer solstice for the northern hemisphere. The day lasted almost sixteen hours in New York and the sun never set in Murmansk, Russia. I woke well before the dawn and went to sleep far past sunset, as the Earth polar cap tipped toward the nearest star 93 million miles away from our home planet.

Five hundred year after the discovery of beer by the Celts the Druid priests gathered the tribes to erect this monolithic bluestone clock to record the rising and setting on the sun and the passage of the stars. To this day modern archaeologists will not attributed this great feat to the Celts, because the true tribe supposedly arrived in Britain in 600 before Caeser’s reign over Rome.

Fucking Brits haven’t even discovered its ancient name.

No one has come even close.

No one.

Not even us remaining Neanderthals.

The Avebury henges followed Stonehenge’s creation.

Back in 1994 I drank in a good pub at the northern entrance.

I also climbed to the top of the Sillbury Hill.

Scientist have calculated that its construction took five hundred men fifteen years.

And over two seas of beer.

The exact purpose of the hill remains unknown.

The view from the top is good, but nothing special.

Stonehenge has its rivals such as the Hopewell Project in Bangkok.

Or Manhattanhenge in New York.

And who can forget the eternal bliss of Foamhenge in Virginia.

It’s now 2:33PM

In Brooklyn.

I am ready for a nap.

Longest day of the year or not.

With my head to the west.

As it should be on the summer solstice.

SOMEONE TO LOVE The Great Society

In 1965 Grace Slick and her husband formed the Great Society in San Francisco. They released ‘SOMEONE TO LOVE’ as a live single on Autumn Records with Sly Stone as the producer. Sadly Grace left the band to join the Jefferson Airplane, which scored a huge hit with their version of SOMEONE TO LOVE.

To hear the Great Society SOMEONE TO LOVE, please go to the following URL

After Bathing At Baxter’s – The Jefferson Airplane

The Milton town library added another angle to my education. The head librarian recognized my thirst for knowledge and allowed my taking out adult books at the age of ten. I read Nicholas Kakanzakis’ THE LAST TEMPTATION OF CHIRST, Balzac’s A HARLOT HIGH AND LOW, Prescott’s CONQUEST OF MEXICO, OM BURKE’s TRAVEL AMONGST THE DERVISHES. If a book of interest had never previously been checked out, it perked my transgessional interest. My parents never questioned my choices. They had forced my attendance at a parochial hgih school. My grades were better than good, but not as good as my older brother, who always speedread my take-outs for pornography, although after never finding any titillation I went back to his comic books. Thankfully he never skimmed through HUbert Selby’s LAST EXIT TO BROOKLYN or LE HISTOIRE D’O.

Sadly the musical selection was devoted to Pat Boone and Perry Como, until the appearance of After Bathing At Baxter’s by The Jefferson Airplane in 1968. I had purchased their monster hit album SURREALISTIC PILLOW the previous summer, which was more folk than rock except for the epic SOMEONE TO LOVE. The elderly desk librarian was surprised by the rock album.

“I didn’t know this was here. I loved COMING BACK TO ME in their last album.”

“Me too.” I pushed the long hair over my ears. LIFE magazine had featured the Flower Revolution in the Spring and I was in. Ready to go up country or hitchhike across the country to San Francisco and drop ACID.

“Let me know how it is.”

The old in my town were cooler than our parents and upon my return to our teaberry split-level ranch house in a suburban development lost in the Blue Hills, I went downstairs and cued up the “The Ballad of You & Me & Pooneil” on side one. Jorma’s searing opening touched my soul and I turned up the volume to 10. I wished the top was 100. Marty and Grace. Her voice launched a million trips. Marty says “Armadillo.” and I was cool with it meaning nothing. Skip’s drums. Jack Cassady’s thunder bass. I listened to the LP three times in a row, until my father came down into the basement and shouted, “Turn down that noise.”

Nothing said how great this LP was better than his rejection. I was no longer trapped in the suburbs.

ps I reached the Haight in 1971.

Long past the Summer of Love.

I dropped Orange Sunshine and traveled to the where forever there.

I’m still a hippie. Where’s the LSD?


To listen to After Bathing at Baxter’s please go to the following URL

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=INUHhW_w-ws

Old Men Love to Rock Pattaya



Five years ago I had been on Pattaya’s notorious Soi 6 in the Woo Woo Bar listening to Jefferson’s Airplane’s SOMEBODY TO LOVE. The trio of sub-20 Thai girls had invited me to visit an upstairs short-time room.

“You sexy man. How old you. 40?”

Even through beer goggles my mirror doesn’t lie more than 49.

My wife Mam thought that I’m ancient, however Pattaya was a refuge for men not wanting to face their age and to misquote TS Eliot. “As I get old I shall wear my trousers rolled where the women don’t speak about Michelangelo.”

A lot of us wore shorts, morning, noon, and, night, no one in Pattaya had ever mentioned Michelangelo, unless they were a Ninja Turtle fan.

I’ve been old for a long time, but the old age truck never blows its horn backing up over you.

In 1986 I returned to New York from Paris. I had sublet my East Village apartment to a Swede. Sven moonlighted as a bouncer at Danceteria. He liked black chicks. I had no trouble with the male nurse. He had paid the rent on time and helped the super with the plumbing.

When I informed him that I was coming back, Sven moved out three days before my return. Nothing was missing in my flat. Not one of my books or records or clothing. Even the old lady next door, Mrs. Adorno, said good for Sven.

“He good man. He like chocolate ladies.” The old witch was in love with the young Swede. She was only 4-10 with chronic pains from a spinal injury. “He help me with my back. I miss him already.”

“What about me?” I had been gone six years.

“Not miss you long time.” The bruja waved a hex sign. “You old man.”

“Old man.” I was 34.

“I old. I know old. You old.” Senora Adorno slammed shut the door.

I had never thought of myself as old and I asked my friends about this. They were slightly younger and suffered from the Peter Pan syndrome of never wanting to grow up.

“We’ll never get old.” Richie Boy told me at the Milk Bar, which was my new place of employ.

He was right. In my heart I was 25. In my head I was 15. I planned to be young forever, despite the old bruja’s curse.

My college friends were employed as lawyers, realtors, bankers, and doctors.

Real jobs weren’t me.

Arthur Weinstein got me a spot at the door of the Milk Bar. The club on lower 7th Avenue was decorated like the Malchek Bar in CLOCKWORK ORANGE. Scottie Taylor the owner hid in an egg chair. His manager ran the bar and hired the help. Malinda had good taste in funny people and in late-September she hired a new bargirl. Cheyne came from the UK. Her ambition was to be a pop singer. She wore dreads and had a cute body. I never hit on her and she asked if I had anything against black girls.

“You’re more high yellah than black.” More Chinese than African too.

“So why don’t you take me home?” Cheyne was forward and I couldn’t think of a single reason for not taking up her offer. I was single. She was over 18. We rode on my Yamaha 650 to East 10th Street. As I parked my motorcycle on the sidewalk Cheyne looked up at the building.

“What?”

“I’ve been here before.” The declaration wasn’t based on deja vu.

“Let me guess.” There was only one explanation. “With Sven.”

“Yes.” She followed me upstairs without any danger of her disappearing like Orpheus’ dead wife. I had a joint and she liked smoking weed. All Rasta girls from Nottinghill do. Once inside the apartment Cheyne picked up an LP. The Jefferson Airplane’s SURREALISTIC PILLOW. I put it on the stereo.

Hearing COMING BACK TO ME Shane laughed.

“I was here more than once. I looked at the records and wondered who lived here.”

“Who did you think it was?” My apartment a hippie homage to the 1960s. Wood covered the walls like a rural shack. Bathtub was in the kitchen and the water closet was in the back.

“Seeing these LPs I thought it was some old hippie.”

“Hippie?” I had hitchhiked to San Francisco in 1971 three years too late for the Summer of Love.

Mrs. Adorno was right. I was old. It was the first time anyone had said that about me. Maybe it had been long overdue. I didn’t make love with Shane. No newly old man could even to resurrect his youth in a young woman’s flesh. I didn’t have such a problem later in life, because old can get very old without the young.

But that afternoon on Soi 6 the fountain of youth flowed with the unabashed compliments of working girls. “You very sexy.”

No one in America has called me sexy since high society interior designer Tony Ingrao bought a 20-carat Burmese blue sapphire from me. At our celebratory dinner he cooed, “You’re very sexy.”

Tony only wanted sex.

Not much different from the Soi 6 girls, who were strictly after money.

As opposed to my wife who wants my heart and soul, despite my age, but during my money-making sojourns to New York I have learned the hard way that “As you get old you forget. As you get older you are forgotten.”

The other day a woman sent a query to my Facebook page.

“Are you who I think you are?”

It was Cheyne. I remembered her well. I wrote back that I had worked at the Milk Bar as the doorman. Her reply came as a surprise.

“I’m sorry. I worked at the Milk Bar too, but I don’t think you’re the person I was thinking…It was all such a long time ago…Take care.”

Not who I thought you were?

Cheyne must have wiped her memory.

‘Old hippie’.

Those two words castrated my pride, then again we never had sex, still her epistle on Facebook revealed she has forgotten about me 100% and the words ‘old hippie’ too.

She was wrong, for while I might not have long hair, I still listen to Jefferson Airplane and I will never forget SOMEONE TO LOVE even with my life halfway around the world.

The Bowery 1962

In April 1962 my father attended a business meeting in Manhattan for Ma Bell. While my father was at his appointment, my older brother and I accompanied my mother to Battery Park to see the Statue of Liberty and rode a taxi north through the Bowery heading to the Enpire State Building. As we passed along the Bowery, I asked my mother, if the men sprawled on the sidewalks were dead.

“No, they’re drunk like Red Tate.”

Red was our town drunk. He has served with the Marines in Korea.
He drank wine at the gas station and slept in a concrete bunker in the abandoned army base in the Blue Hills.

“You don’t want to end up here ”

My mother took us the Empire State Building. From the top the metropolis stretched to the horizons and into the Atlantic.

My father met us at Tad’s Steak House. We asked about the men on the Bowery.

My father told us that some soldiers came back from the war damaged and drink helped quiet demons.

“Like the devil?” Asked my brother.

“No, something much worse.”

During WWII my father had tested radar-directed 20mm cannons on B-26s In Kentucky. Thousands of miles away from the front line the fatality rates were 15%. My father never said what was worse adn I have no idea either.

foto by Meryl Meisler

FLOP HOUSE Charles Bukowski

you haven’t lived until you’ve been in a flophouse,
with nothing but one light bulb and 56 men
squeezed together on cots
with everybody snoring at once
and some of those snores so deep and gross and unbelievable—
dark
snotty gross subhuman wheezings from hell itself.
your mind almost breaks under those death-like sounds
and the intermingling odors:
hard unwashed socks pissed and shitted underwear
and over it all slowly circulating air
much like that emanating from uncovered garbage cans.
and those bodies in the dark
fat and thin and bent
some legless armless
some mindless
and worst of all:
the total absence of hope
it shrouds them
covers them totally.
it’s not bearable.
you get up
go out
walk the streets
up and down sidewalks
past buildings
around the corner
and back up the same street
thinking:
those men were all children
once
what has happened to them?
and what has happened to me?
it’s dark and cold
out here.

~ Charles Bukowski