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Monday, 2 May 2022

Quincy, Recording, A Wedding Anniversary & A Run In With The Law


I keep writing stuff and not posting any of it - the world lurches from crisis to crisis and what I write quickly becomes irrelevant, inappropriate at at the very least just plain glib. I won’t write stuff about what’s wrong with the human race, and tell everyone how to put the planet to rights because it’s really not my place to do so, and most of the people who read what I occasionally write would probably agree with me on everything I’d have to say, so there’s really very little point.


And there are the others, the ones who disagree. I get so jangled by internet confrontations. I used to be stronger than I am now, but since having Covid and a heart attack in quick succession, and dealing with this thing called Long Covid, I’m not tough enough to take up the fight. Though I handled it coolly, a Facebook dust up with the daughter of a friend who told me my post was a fucking disgrace and I shouldn’t be in a creative industry left me depleted for the better part of a week. 


It was a joke concerning Eric Clapton in the wake of his anti-vaccine proclamations. I said that after careful consideration I was banning him from attending any of the shows on my US tour last October. It gave rise to a lot of anti-Clapton vitriol. I didn’t join in but as far as this person was concerned I was to blame and had relinquished any right to be in a creative industry.

 

Whatever the word in means in this context, and whatever industry it is that I’m supposed to be in that might be at all creative. 


The tremors, the palpitations, the extreme anxiety and upset that this sort of thing incurs just aren’t worth it. So from that point of view I’ve decided to be a human cabbage. 


I’ve been recording , and I’ve been recording, and I’ve been recording. I just finished mixing a song I recorded together with Amy for a forthcoming compilation album, a tribute to Badfinger. I’m never sure about these kinds of projects but I can never resist an invitation to participate. I had to work hard at it because I wasn’t sure the song had much going for it.


We started out with a random bass synthesiser loop, Amy played the Wurlitzer electric piano while I played an electric guitar with a load of delay and reverb on it.  We strummed a couple of acoustic guitars together around one mic and then overdubbed a couple more. We recorded a track of brushed cymbals and started on the vocals.


We sang in harmony - I sang it, then Amy sang with my vocal, then I replaced my vocal. The lyrics meant nothing to either of us. The track sounded great but the vocals were prosaic and lacklustre. At various points I wanted to give up on it but we kept going. I sent my vocal out through a Boss vocoder pedal and into my wonderful Moog Opus which Amy played. The result was other worldly and decidedly creepy. We put some oscillator noises on it and a casual bass guitar here and there and it suddenly came together. 


I wish I could do that with some of my own tracks. I spent bits of yesterday wrangling a track into shape in between celebrating out fourteenth wedding anniversary. It was a great day. In the morning we somehow got onto the subject of Quincy, played by Jack Klugman. I can’t imagine how we got there but Amy asked me if I’d ever watched the show. 


I was a huge fan, possibly for a lot of the wrong reasons, but I’ll readily admit to it. I watched it for the outfits - you never knew what he was going to be wearing next: loud checkered sports jackets with huge lapels; chunky V necked pullovers; windcheaters with elaborate collars and complicated arrangements of buttons or press studs. Every scene was a fashion shocker. Re-runs of Quincy were required late night viewing through the nineteen eighties.


We watched most of an episode involving the illegal dumping of toxic waste, featuring Quincy in a succession of golfing jackets and a big suede affair with sheepskin collar and cuffs, and patch pockets. Amy said she can see where I get my fashion sense. I hadn’t realised how much Quincy had rubbed off on me. I’d like to think that if he really existed we could be friends, maybe go thrift store shopping together.


It felt very decadent to be watching Quincy at ten o’clock in the morning, but it was our wedding anniversary after all.


Later on we decided to go for dinner and chose a restaurant down in Rhinebeck that looked suitably upscale and disgustingly expensive. We set off in my old Mercury Cougar talking enthusiastically about the writing of books, the making of records, and, of course, our rediscovered hero, Quincy. Amy usually keeps a check on my speed but she was having a night off. It was a country road that I’ve driven on many times. The speed limit changes every couple of miles. The Cougar was running perfectly and we were bowling along when I saw red and blue lights in the rearview mirror. I slowed down and prepared to pull in so he could pass me. Only he didn’t, he pulled in behind.


‘Have you any idea why I stopped you sir?’


‘I think it might be because I was going a little too fast…’


‘You were doing seventy-seven miles an hour in a thirty-five mile an hour zone.’


‘Oh wow! The car really is running well tonight…’


He asked where we were going and we told him. Amy took the opportunity to mention that it was our wedding anniversary. He asked how long we’d been married. I stuttered a bit over the answer to that, as you do, but I think it gave me a bit of guys together credibility


All this time we’d been trying to find the registration but for some reason it wasn’t in the car. I was having visions of celebrating our anniversary alone in a jail cell. He took my licence and headed off for his patrol car. He came back a couple of minutes later, handed back the licence with a smile, wished us a happy wedding anniversary, and told me to watch my speed.


I thought how different this encounter might have been had we been young and black instead of old, white, and heading for the stodgy town of Rhinebeck.


I don't usually drive so fast in thirty-five mile an hour zones but this one wasn’t exactly populated and I didn't see the sign. I’m usually more mindful. I don’t drive through neighbourhoods at breakneck speed.


Dinner was no great shakes but we enjoyed it anyway. There were an inordinate amount of waiting staff including a young man who kept coming around with a bottle of tap water. He topped us up and said Enjoy. He did this three times. The main or most prevalent waitress put me in mind of a shark with a ponytail. Vicious in her determination to do the absolute minimum.


It made us happy to be up here in Catskill. We’re lucky.


We came home and watched the last episode of the Warhol Diaries. Amy promised she wouldn’t cry but I think she did anyway. It was a happy sad ending.


I lay exhausted on the sofa. Amy googled Jack Klugman and we listened to him talking about the beginnings of Quincy. No one thought it would last more than four episodes, least of all Jack Klugman. But his cynicism turned to belief and it endured for eight seasons between 1977 and 1983.


Amy wondered why Quincy was such a success. 


The answer came to me in a flash from somewhere in the mists between awake and sleeping: those moist and soulful eyes, almost unable to bear the latest injustice, this week’s wrong which must be put right. Quincy is a good guy, the kindest, most tenacious, and fair-minded man that never existed. He lives on a boat with a vast collection of sports jackets and windcheaters. He’s a latter day male version of a fairy godmother. The world needs someone like Quincy. How could he not prevail?





19 comments:

  1. This usually works for me.
    When stopped for speeding, I milk the English accent as if I've just got off the boat. I have the last 15 years of registration docs in the glove compartment. I hand them to the police officer rather like Oliver asking for another bowl of gruel.

    Now here's the important bit. I look up at the police officer with Labrador eyes that say "please help me". Said police officer usually then helps me locate the current registration doc from my outstretched hands in the shape of a gruel bowl. He will then sift through and find the registration (providing its in the car) and all parties will be happy, me because I have escaped a ticket, and him because he helped an Englishman abroad and in distress.

    I then forget about the infraction and take off, at my previous speed and usually without repercussions

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    1. How about, "Sorry Officer, but many years ago I was burdened with the nickname "Wreckless" and I can't stop myself trying to live up to the name!"

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  2. Eric, two pieces of good news for us "fans" - first, you and Amy are recording, recording and recording, so we have some new material to look forward to hearing, and second you're playing a show in London (great - I'll certainly be there). Over lockdown I've managed to get hold of almost all of your and Amy's back catalogue, and it's notable how you've both managed to retain the verve and humour of your earlier work, while your powers of observation - seeing and expressing things we less artistically gifted people cannot - have sharpened and matured. There are certainly a number of your songs where particular bits really strike a chord with me, and I'm sure others feel the same. So while "Whole Wide World" and "Someone Must Have Nailed Us Together" (and others) always bring a smile to my face, it's songs like "Several Shades Of Green", "40 Years" and "Father To The Man" that I keep finding myself coming back to. Anyway, looking forward to catching you in London (by the way I have a good excuse for not seeing you play live before - I've lived in Hong Kong the last 25 years and have only recently returned to the UK) and could you please bring over some copies of "The Old Guys" and "One Way Ticket To My Life" for the merch stall as these are impossible to get here!

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    1. Simon – check out these links for "The Old Guys" and "A One Way Ticket to My Life" – https://www.discogs.com/release/14256189-Amy-Rigby-A-One-Way-Ticket-To-My-Life
      https://www.discogs.com/release/14256189-Amy-Rigby-A-One-Way-Ticket-To-My-Life

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    2. Thanks very much for the info, it's appreciated, I already have the downloads (so have the tracks as such), but being of a certain age I like to have the actual physical product, and if possible I like to purchase direct from the artist, as I know that merch sales are a big part of their livelihood these days.

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    3. My pleasure, Simon... and understood... nicely done regarding merch sales / direct from artist... at least now you know there is a backup plan should you require one...

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    4. Really enjoyed my first WE concert at the MOTH Club tonight. Great selection of tracks, great performance, and even managed to get the AR CDs I wanted from the merch stall! Looking forward to seeing WE again soon - hopefully a longer set, fewer noisy people at the back, and Amy along too! Great evening!

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  3. Another gem. Regarding your sporadic postings, for me it’s a good thing. If they were too frequent I’d probably just give them a glance over, but as it is I relish these occasional glimpses into another’s life.
    Btw, I used to watch Quincey but don’t recall any thoughts on his wardrobe. However, I was living in the US at the time and likely was surrounded with similar get ups.

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  4. I muse on the bile and hatred heaped upon those misguided souls like Clapton who apparently want to kill us all... and sit dumbstruck at the fact that the damn pokes didn't really stop so many folks from getting sick, myself included. They did stop most of us from dying, though, and I suppose my take is that Clapton can kill himself if he likes, or contract long covid, or whatever. I lived and generally did most folks who got the shots. But I decided being angry at everyone else is a sad way to go through life. God bless Eric Clapton, who is so obviously not god.

    In any case: How do we reconcile this hatred--for those who sought less-draconian ways of dealing with the nasty virus--with our urges to unnecessarily drive at speeds that would break more than just necks?

    Faithfully vaccinated myself, yours in spirit recovering from a fucking bout of COVID any-fucking-way, best regards.

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  5. My world almanac informs me that the theme for a 14th anniversary is Graphite.

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  7. In the world of Venn diagrams - comprising fans of Badfinger, The Odd Couple (TV versh, with Krugman) and Wreckless Eric - I'd like to think I sit in the middle circle.

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  8. Ahoy, Eric -

    Just wanted you to know, I really enjoyed reading this.

    Also, Quincy rules.

    E

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    1. It’s great to hear from you Erica!

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  9. I admit that I'm not hip to your entire recorded catalogue. I'm hoping somewhere in all that "tape" there is a likeness of that performance you gave in Catskill back in April, with the electric guitar symphony, in high fidelity. xo

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  11. A good read; but having arrived at it incidentally/accidentally, it was interesting to have "Final Taxi" come on the podcast I was listening to while I read. Valid observation about a possible different police response if you were young gifted and black. As for your friend's daughter's vitriol, some youngsters do seem to have very powerful opinions considering their world view is often limited by what they can see from the inside of their arse.

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  12. Oi oi Mr Eric, don't do this Internet stuff often but saw your blog and gave it a whirl, good memories of you and stiff days. Saw ya at Lyceum in 77, my first ever gig . Was 15 at the time and went alone . Still got all your vinyl , glad your still hanging on bruv,

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