Lord French's tales
Tom DeLisle has been a close friend of John and Buffy Stewart for over
25 years. He has more funny stories about the Stewart's than anyone I know.
I'm going to put some of those stories here for others to enjoy.
- Ron Beffa
Tom's internet nickname is Lordfrench. I asked Tom to tell me a little about
himself and how he happend upon that name :
"The Lord French name evolves from pure perversity; I heard an Irish folk
song once at the Gaelic League in Detroit (and can't track the tune down
now) about some poor and starving Irish peasants who got caught poaching
game on the baronial estate of an English dude named Lord French. (The English
aristocracy owned all the great estates in Ireland.) When his minions asked
what they should do with the obviously needy and suffering poachers, who
were trying to feed their families---the good Lord decided to have them executed.
The story coincides with my general understanding of human empathy and justice.
And since I am part Irish and also part French (a de l'Isle wrote the French
national anthem) I went with Lordfrench for my computer because "Norb" was
already taken.
The choice is similar to the t-shirt I used to wear on the beach at Malibu
in the mid '70s, "Kill More Whales," which drove humorless people insane,
and which the lady at the We Print Anything t-shirt shop refused to print
so I had to go elsewhere. Asked to explain such an outrage, I claimed I was
the PR man for the Harpoonists Union. (Perhaps, in retrospect, I DID see
Andy Kaufman too often in those days.)
Beyond that, I am just a tragically flawed freelance writer and TV producer.
Originally a newspaper reporter (and a good one; the only thing I've ever
excelled at), I went into politics as an aide and speechwriter for the Mayor
of Detroit in the early '70s, and then fell into television because unemployment
seemed a worse disgrace. (Of course I was wrong.) I worked on a talk show
in New York, then a variety of awful comedy shows in LA for a while; wrote
"Tonight Show" guest-host monologues for my friend Richard Dawson; and left
LA a confused and hungover--but well tanned-- man. I've done even worse TV
in Detroit ever since, and wrote a sports book about hockey legend Gordie
Howe (nicknamed 'God' if you're from Canada) that was--coincidentally--tragically
flawed itself.
My good points are that I am very nice to my mother, who deserves it, and
I feed my cat way beyond what the vet recommended. The top highlight of my
life was the time I sat up all night with John Stewart and Nick Reynolds
and three guitars at Stewart's house in Malibu in 1976, and--fueled by a
bottle of brandy--we sang about every Kingston Trio we could think of, and
I was the only guy who remembered the words."
Here's a shot of the cover of the book Tom wrote with Gordie
Howe.
And now to the stories. I'll add many more as time goes by.
John's Hat - Tom DeLisle, February 2002
I have one of John's famous cowboy hats sitting here in Clinton Township,
in an honored and special spot. (The hat rack.) It's one of those cool white
straw cowboy hats, one that you can bend this way and that so it looks cool,
just right. John's a master at that, cowboy hat-bending, so this hat has
never been re-bent. John Wayne was good at hat-bending too. He had very cool
cowboy hats, like JS.
The hat I mention is the JS hat from the ill-fated taping of "The John Stewart
Show" (the REAL John Stewart, not that Johnny come lately) in Boulder Colorado
back in 1993. Or 1994, I can't remember which. It was a one-hour
music--and--interview pilot, intended for national cable viewing, shot onstage
at the lovely Boulder Theater, with JS, of course, as host. It was a real
high-quality Hollywood type deal, with five cameras and cables everywhere
and a big equipment truck and a big crew and a big house band and a big show
theme song and even an English director. You can't ask for more than an English
director.
The producer was a huge JS fan, and owner of the Boulder Theater, and I am
forever fond of him because he acted as the announcer of the pilot show and
introduced John thusly: "And now ladies and gentlemen...the three best
songwriters in America....John Stewart!" I liked that; still do.
The reason I'm not COMPLETELY fond of him is that, well, the two checks he
paid me for flying to Boulder, Colorado from Detroit, Michigan, and writing
the show, didn't do so hot at my bank. In fact, they bounced. I never did
get paid, and also was out the airfare bill, a tidy sum of about $400 or
$500 bucks. And the second rubber check for writing The John Stewart Show
was substantially larger than that.
(John's check originally bounced too; but they guy later made good on that
one. What the hell, JS was the host. I could see that. Sort of. But the guy
eventually went to jail or something, because he bounced a lot of other checks
in producing The John Stewart Show, and I think he eventually lost the Boulder
Theater too. But what the hey, Boulder was lovely in the spring, we laughed,
and I got a hat out of the deal.)
Which is the point of this --- John's hat. One of the cool things we did
for the show was shoot little comedy sketches with John and "Dave" in and
around Boulder. Example: We had John and "Dave" walking down the sidewalk
in Boulder, coming towards the camera, to "cold open" the show. John says
to "Dave":
"I don't know if this is a good idea. Me hosting a show. Do enough people
know me to justify ME having a national one-hour talk and music show?"
"Dave" assures John that it's a great idea, and it'll be a great show, and
that he's known all OVER America. "I dunno..." says the worried JS. They
walk past the camera and we turn to see them proceed to the Boulder Theater,
and enter. The camera pulls back and reveals the big marquee letters:
"Tonight! Live! The Jim Stewart Show!"
Stuff like that. One of the bits we did, of many, centered around John's
hat. (Now you see the connection. Actually, another bit centered around "Dave"
wearing fuzzy slippers onstage, big pinks ones as I recall, as he played
behind JS. John really liked that bit, but the owner of the Boulder Theater,
who with a great flourish wrote me not one but two big phony checks, never
got it.)
Anyway, we went up onto a mountain overlooking Boulder. A GORGEOUS panoramic
viewing site, the whole city below. We shot John from behind as he stands
at a railing and views the city down below him. He has his back to the camera,
and is bare-headed. JS says "God, what a great view. But I'm so bummed out...that
I come all the way to Boulder to do this show...and somebody STEALS my hat!
Why would anybody steal a HAT?" The camera slowly pans to the right, and
reveals "Dave" standing about 15 feet away, also looking down on the city.
He is wearing a straw cowboy hat that comes down to his ears. It's John's
hat. "I haven't seen it," he says.
(John has a big head, and wears like a size 11 hat. "Dave," love him as I
do, is kind of a pinhead---in the nice sense---and wears about a size 4.)
But that's not the hat story. The hat story is: The Friday night before the
taping of The John Stewart Show there was a show at the Boulder Theater,
with John sharing the bill with the Pleasure Barons, a wild all-star group
featuring old JS sideman Joey Harris and Dave Alvin and John Doe and Country
Dick Montana and Rosie Flores and Mojo Nixon or somebody, and more people
too. They turned out to be the best rock band I ever saw, but that's not
the story.
I was so impressed with Dave Alvin, his songs and guitar work, that the next
day I went to the Boulder Music Store and bought a best-of CD of The Blasters,
Alvin's old group. Reading the liner notes, I could see that Alvin was a
big fan of pioneering rock and roll, and I was intrigued to see that the
Blasters had used The Jordanaires, Elvis' fabled backup singing group, to
back the Blasters on a cut or two.
When we left Boulder on the following Monday, after two days of intensive
taping of The John Stewart Show, proud of our accomplishment, clutching checks
that would someday mock us ... wait, let me stop here. I should point out
before I wrap this up with the hat story that The John Stewart Show WAS very
good. John was terrific as host and interviewer. We did goofy stuff and we
did serious stuff; kind of like Letterman. He sang three songs, I think,
"Ghost Inside of Me" (you should hear that with a full band and chick backup
singers and a piano solo!); "Daydream Believer," and "Lost Her in the Sun"
I think. The show woulda, coulda, been a hit. But it 'vanished in the sky,'
like the babe and the airplane in "Lost Her."
Anyway, the day we left Boulder to head to the Denver airport "Dave" literally
packed 720 pounds of baggage and music equipment into the 500-pound-capacity
rear end of a rent-a-station wagon. Amazing. So we're heading down the Boulder
Freeway or something, with me in the backseat and "Dave" driving and JS shotgun.
So I bring up Dave Alvin, and rave about him. "Yeah, isn't he great?" says
John. And I mention that Alvin had used The Jordanaires on some Blasters
recordings. "God, what a buzz it must have been for a kid who grew up in
the '50s to work with the Jordanaires!" I gush.
Without turning around, John sarcastically says "Tom....big deal....I did
it before he ever did. I used the Jordanaires way back on Bloodlines." "Dave"
and I both jumped in. "Whatta ya mean?...the Jordanaires weren't on California
Bloodlines....on what song?"
More sarcastically, like he's talking to children, JS impatiently says "That
was the Jordanaires singing the backing on 'Pirates.' For cripe sake, I mentioned
all the musicans at the end of 'Never Goin' Back'....I gave them a live credit
on the damn album!"
In unison, "Dave" and I say: "No you didn't..."
There is a pause. John suddenly grabs his hat with both hands, his cool white
straw cowboy hat with the great grooves and brim ... and yells "Oh my God!!
I forgot to thank The Jordanaires!"
That's the hat story. It's one of my favorites.
I have another JS hat story, a kind of Laurel and Hardy hat story, this one
from an ill-conceived driving trip from Malibu California to Aspen Colorado
for a gig in 1976, probably another one I've already told, about me being
a pinhead too, and I was gonna tell it in conjuction with this one, but all
this has already tired me out. Maybe some other time. And, oh yeah, John
gave me the Boulder cowboy hat at the airport. Did I mention it's a cool
white straw one that's bent and grooved in all the right places?
This is really one of the funniest Stewart related tales I have ever read,
about Andy Fregus, now proproetor of the Turf Inn, Dalry Scotland.
-Ron
"Too Good for the Pooblic" - Tom DeLisle, April 1999
My feeling is that Andy Fergus holds the all-time How Far??? record, set
in 1978.
That summer he flew alone from Glasgow, Scotland to New York to Los Angeles.
He then took a BUS from LA to Salinas, California--a considerable hop--then
WALKED from the bus depot to the Ramada Inn out near the Salinas County
Fairgrounds, his suitcase in tow. This last leg of his journey left his ruddy
Scot complexion mightily sunburnt by the end of the day, not a pretty sight.
When John and Buffy and their entourage (me) arrived at the Ramada Inn the
next day, the woman at the desk told JS "Oh, there's a man who's been waiting
here since yesterday to meet you." There was Fergie, who'd been sitting in
the lobby of the motel night and day, awaiting John's arrival. With the sunburn
and wearing shorts, he looked like a red light on sticks. He walked up and
introduced himself, pointing out that he'd come all the way from Scotland
just for the Salinas gig, which made us laugh.
So he hung out with us, and he proved to be a lot of fun, mostly because
we couldn't understand a word he was saying and we gave him the benefit of
the doubt that he was making sense. (Years later, when we finally got used
to his accent, we discovered he wasn't.)
At the rodeo at the Salinas Fair, later that first day, John was introduced
to the crowd and I think he dropped the flag for a horse race or something.
Anyway, I remember the guy on the PA introducing him as "Famous singer John
Stewart, known far and wide for his Number One hit, Mother Country!" I remember
looking at Buffy in the stands and shrugging, and then looking over at the
nonstop grinning Fergus, and thinking "gosh, he has pasty legs."
The JS show that night was at some kind of hall near the Fairgrounds, and
it was a good one. Fergus recorded it on a small handheld tape recorder,
and kept walking up towards the stage and snapping flashbulb pictures, looking
and acting like the worst tourist that ever lived. He was a fanatic JS advocate,
who could only repeat one line over and over whenever he was asked about
John's music ... "Too good for the pooblic." That got to be kind of a
catch-phrase after while. Too good for the pooblic.
I've related this story before, and it looks like I'm gonna do it again.
When we checked out of the hotel the next day and bid Andy farewell, he said
he was going to bus back down to LA in a day or two, and look around southern
California. Well, we said, if you ever get out to Malibu, stop by and see
us, kind of a Tony Orlando goodbye--thanks a million, you've been a wonderful
audience, good night everybody. On the way back south ourselves, we kept
marveling about that little Scottish guy coming all that way by himself,
and could you understand a word he said?
Well, two days later I'm sitting on my porch in Malibu, probably--as Arnie
always says--shooting flies with a squirtgun when the phone rings, and it's
JS. Who says, kind of in shock, "Remember that guy from Scotland that we
said should stop by if he's ever in the neighborhood? He's HERE!" Andy had
taken a bus out to Malibu, and walked along Pacific Coast Highway to John's
and Buffy's home. John, being the genial host he is, did the decent thing--he
sent Fergy down to MY house. Where he deposited his suitcase on my couch,
and we stared at each other for about four hours. After a while, it was obvious
he wasn't going to go away. And I didn't have a translator. So I stepped
up to the plate and sent him back to John's house.
Anyway, Fergie ended up staying with the Stewarts. I recall sitting in John's
front room a day or two later, with the three of us listening to the demos
for "Bombs Away," and the stripped-down first versions of "Gold" and "Lost
Her in the Sun" and "Runaway Fool." I remember that when we listened to "Lost
Her in the Sun," Fergie teared-up and got weepy. I thought, oh great, not
only is he short and sunburned, this guy is nuts.
Well, he turned out to be a great guy, even when we could understand him,
and he's been a friend ever since, and been a great host when we've visited
him in Skelmorlie on the Sea over in Scotland--his hillside house overlooks
the Atlantic at the Firth of the Clyde (and Clyde's Firth is something to
see), and I won't go again into the story of how I went to great trouble
to get him an authentic Kingston Trio shirt--Nick Reynolds' XXXS, the size
of a cocktail napkin--to take back to Scotland only to find out years later
that he didn't even want it.
But I'm confident that Andy's first half-world trek MUST be the alltime champ
in the How Far??? Sweepstakes.
LF
PS--I have Cinemax on the tube as I sit at the computer, and I just turned
to the screen and there is a movie called "Masseuse 3"--how did I miss the
first two?--and a guy is standing on a bridge that looks exactly like the
bridge over the stream on the original cover of "Children of the Morning."
It HAS to be the same bridge. Is that bridge in northern or southern California,
anybody know? Wait a minute. Now he's sitting bareass in the stream with
some naked babe and they're going to town. No kidding. Synchronicity! And
it reminds me of Andy Fergus' other famous saying, besides "too good for
the pooblic"
... "what a country!"
Here's part of the story behind the song "Gold" with it's lines of "Driving
over Kanaan, singing to my soul" and "My buddy Jim Bass, he's a working pumping
gas" as well as a workingman's guide to Stewart's Malibu. -Ron
Drivin' Over Kanaan and my buddy Jim Bass - Tom DeLisle March
1998 - January 2000
Yes, indeed, drive over Kanan from PCH to the Hollywood Freeway, and back
on Malibu Canyon Road into the 'Bu, where you will round a curve and see
the silver blue Pacific on the horizon. Beautiful winding canyon roads from
the beach to the valley via the Santa Monica mountains. Look for coyotes
and tumbleweed, even an occasional bobcat. Hopefully the two roads haven't
been too built up since I was last out there. Kanan-Dume road was the
northern/western pass to the Valley out of Malibu, and when John and Buffy
moved from Malibu Road up to Point Dume (cool nude beach up there; and Dylan's
house with the eastern/oriental dome high above the fences) Kanan was used
more to go to the real world than Malibu Canyon, which is (was, ain't seen
it in a while) a beautiful, curving, tunnels-through-mountains drive. When
you're coming back from the real world, on Malibu Canyon OR Kanan, you're
rewarded with an always-stunning view of the silver blue Pacific as you wind
around a sloping corner.
Also on the JS tour itinerary...cruise the length of Malibu Road, knowing
that--about 100 yards short of the west end--the hillside collapsed during
the Great Storm of 1978 and ate a 1972 Buick that was later dug out and salvaged
by Michael and Jeremy Stewart.
Look for the Mobil Station on the land side of Pacific Coast Highway at the
light opposite the Malibu Colony, in front of the supermarket and the fashionable
shops and about a half mile this side of Pepperdine U. It is the original
home of "My Buddy" the gas pumper and mechanic (named "Jack" actually.) "My
buddy Jim Bass" was a real guy, the owner of the Mobil gas station . His
real name wasn't Jim "Bass," but he was from Petoskey, Michigan ... and when
I first moved out there, and my car had Michigan plates, he adopted me as
his "buddy." I got gas there about twice a week, and he would always bound
out when he saw me, and say "How ya doin, Buddy? Fill her up, Buddy?" I'd
see his name on his gas station shirt, and say "How ya doin'....JIM. Yeah,
fill her up please." We'd compare notes about back home, the winter and snow,
the Tigers, the Red Wings. Very nice guy, tall and lanky.
After about four years of regularly going to his station, my car broke down
one time and I had to take it in for repair. I drove it up to my "Buddy's"
gas station one Saturday morning for an engine knock or something. When I
drove up, he came out ..."How's it goin', Buddy?" "Say, buddy...pretty good...how
are you...(looking at his shirt)...JIM?" "Things are good, Buddy, what can
I do for you?" I told him I needed some work on the car, and he said to come
into the office and he'd fill out a work-order form for his mechanic.
He wrote everything down, age of the car, problem, etc. Then he got to the
part where he had to fill in my name .... and his face fell. After a long
and awkward pause, (I didn't know what the problem was) ... he stammered
"Uh...what was your name again, Buddy?"
Check out Larrabee Sound and The Village Recorder in west LA, sites of JS's
"Bombs Away" and "Go Hollywood" production.
Cruise The Troubadour and Roxy in west LA, and the Palomino in North Hollywood,
live venues for John and Buffy, John solo, and John and the loudest folk
bands in music history.
At the entrance to Malibu Road at PCH, where I once looked over at the light
to behold a brown Rolls Royce with Cary Grant behind the wheel, there used
to be the Malibu Coffee Shop, a classic piece of old Californiana, but I
think I read or heard that it was torn down or moved of something. A shame.
A great breakfast place, where you could sit and b.s. and watch then-little-known
actor James Woods allegedly reading the LA Times but actually furtively eyeing
Malibu babes and Rod Steiger drinking coffee and talking with Burgess Meredith
at the counter. The Coffee Shop was also famous for, among other things,
the time Buffy let out a piercing scream because she saw somebody eating
scrambled eggs in public.
Also, walk the Malibu Pier; check out Alice's Restaurant, where Jan Michael
Vincent would drink at the bar and look more menacing with each drink; and
stroll the beach that runs along the far end of Malibu Road, there is public
access where the road re-meets the highway. At the western edge of Malibu,
not too far from Pirates Cove and a nude beach, find Selfridge Road, John
and Buffy's address after moving from Malibu Road because their house was
threatening to throw itself into the ocean. A few blocks from Selfridge is
the walled-in, near-East type structured estate that is, or was, Bob Dylan's.
Watch out for falling boulders
- --Also, regarding Route 66, the Winter '97-'98 edition of Route 66 magazine
has a color picture of, and favorable commentary about, "Rough Sketches"
in a feature about 66 as celebrated in song.
The Man in the Moon: Andy Kaufman, Tony Clifton, Richard Pryor and
JS Tom DeLisle, December 1999
This will be of limited, or no, interest to those not interested in the late
comic Andy Kaufman, maybe only the funniest man who ever lived. But with
the new Jim Carrey biopic (a term I picked up from the hard-hitting Entertainment
Tonight TV show) "Man on the Moon" movie coming out, and the recent publication
of a fabulous new book about Andy titled "Lost In the Funhouse," I figured
it was worth recalling the time Andy--or at least his alter ego Tony
Clifton--almost opened for JS.
In 1976 and '77, we were big fans of Andy--whose fame was growing after his
debut on the original SNL shows--and often watched his off-the-wall appearances
on the Dick Van Dyke variety show up at John and Buffy's home overlooking
the Pacific above Malibu Road.
When Andy did a now-legendary set of appearances at the Comedy Castle in
LA--and opened for himself in the disguise of the insulting and off-key Vegas
lounge lizard Tony Clifton--we were in the first row the first night. Neither
of us had any idea what was going on when the show started--this fat weird
guy in huge sunglasses and a bad tuxedo, singing horribly and insulting the
audience to the point that people actually got furious, and some walked out.
At one point, "Clifton" was leaning forward at the front of the stage, flicking
his cigarette ashes on diners, and I turned to John and whispered "Jesus...look
at his eyes...it's Andy." And sure enough, there were these piercing, and
young, blue eyes behind the face of this aging and toupeed jerk. Kaufman,
using false cheeks, nose, and chin, had created this bizarre alter ego---forever
denying that he himself was actually Tony Clifton---and presented him in
an amazing opening act that eventually took on a life of its own.
John and I talked about it recently, and we agreed it was the most memorable
live performance either of us have ever seen, just terrifically inventive
and funny. I went back the next night with Garry Shandling, who was a writer
then (and would open for John at Chuck's Cellar about a year later in his
first performance as a standup comic himself.) Garry stared in confusion
and awe at Clifton like John and I had, until I told him the same thing --
"Look at his eyes, look who it is." "No." "Yeah." "It can't be." "It is."
A writer for the LA Times named Bill Knoedelseder (regular spelling, and
a big JS fan) was also with us at the Comedy Castle, and was impressed to
the point that he arranged to do a big feature on Kaufman. So he asked me
to join him as he spent a day with Andy, which included driving around town
with Andy in his Elvis outfit (Bill took pictures of him as Elvis in front
of the Beverly Hills Hotel sign), and going up to Andy's canyon home, which
was a shrine to his love of Transcendental Meditation.
That night we went to Bill's house for a long taped interview with Andy.
During a break, I asked him if he was familar with John and his music. He
said he knew of him, and particularly remembered that he had been the lead
on "Reverend Mr. Black." I told him that John was a huge fan of HIS, and
he was impressed at that. So...we called JS on Bill's phone, giving me the
coolest lead line ever--"Yeah, John...I got a guy here who wants to talk
to you..." and I handed the phone to Andy.
John began asking Kaufman about Tony Clifton, and Andy said Clifton's arrogance
and insults were hurting him by assocation, and that people were begging
him to drop Clifton as his opening act. JS then said he was playing the Palomino
in North Hollywood in a few weeks, and that he thought Tony Clifton would
be the perfect opening act for his own show.
I saw Andy's eyes get very wide at the invitation. Tony Clifton, insulting
lounge lizard, singing an off-key "I Believe In Music" and "You Light Up
My Life" at the rough and tumble Palomino, the legendary country/rock and
roll nightclub. The possibilities were mind-boggling. It could have been
the evening of a lifetime, for everybody involved, if nobody got killed.
Kaufman obviously wanted to do it--it was the opportunity for a classic
put-on--and John repeated several times he was serious about the offer. "The
people who come to see me would LOVE Tony Clifton," JS said.
"I can't speak for Mr. Clifton," Andy said, "but I can pass the word along
to his agent. Actually, I would recommend that he do it."
Unfortunately....Tony Clifton couldn't open for John. Andy's schedule had
him out of town for the Palomino weekend, and it never came off. I can't
remember if Andy called John to tell him Tony couldn't make it, or we got
the word through Bill Knoedelseder (regular spelling), but it never came
off. What a lost opportunity.
There have been some interesting opening acts for John through the years--Tom
Waits, Larry Gatlin (sweating near to death in leather pants at the stifling
Roxy in LA in the summer), Garry Shandling (narrowly escaping a howling mob
at Chuck's). Tony Clifton would have been the most memorable.
Somebody wanted to know if Andy was John's favorite standup, and I don't
know if he is or not, but surely the comic who got the most airplay around
John and Buffy's house in the '70s was Richard Pryor and his LP cut of "Mudbone
I and II," about the wino from Pee-oria who encounters the voodoo woman,
Miss Rudolph, "named after that deer." I've always regarded it the funniest
single piece of recorded comedy ever. Of course, being Pryor at his best,
it's very...ribald. But falling-down funny.
For example, an average day in Malibu in, say, 1977 would consist of:
Rise at the crack of noon. Rush up to John and Buffy's and wait two hours
for John to get up. Play "Mudbone." Go to lunch. Return from lunch, play
"Mudbone." Go home to nap. Return to Stewarts, play "Mudbone." Go to restaurant,
order dinner. Return to Stewarts, play "Mudbone." Rush back to restaurant,
eat dinner. Back to J&B's, listen to "Mudbone" until 2 a.m. Go home
exhausted.
--If that sounds a touch exaggerated, I do recall a time when Nick Reynolds
came to stay at the Stewarts and John played him "Mudbone" before we went
out to dinner. Nick liked it so much, and everybody was imitating Pryor so
much, that we played it again immediately upon returning.
- LF
P&S---I STILL won't believe that Jim Carrey "becomes" Andy Kaufman in
the new movie till I see it with my own eyes. I just can't buy it from what
little I've seen. And I'm still only 99 percent convinced Andy is dead. His
buddy and cohort, Bob Zmuda, in another new book that he himself wrote about
Andy, says that when he's asked what Andy would be doing if were around today,
he has to honestly reply "He'd be thinking of ways to fake his own death."
Springtime Listening - Tom DeLisle. April 1999
Spring is finally here in the midwest. And while the severity and gloom of
the winters affect you more as you get on in years, you more greatly value
the re-emergence of life in April each year.
Yesterday, driving crosstown to work, gorgeous sunshine pure blue sky 60
degrees, pulled out a compilation 90-minute cassette of JS music that I must
have made in a former springtime. What a ride! First hit--"Tall Blondes,"
with that great beat and whispered lyrics. Great freeway song. Had to be
careful though, found myself unconsciously whizzing past cars in front of
me. Slowed down for "Tears of the Sun," maybe the best life-crisis/coping
song of all time. What lyrics. Then, speeding up again, because "China Sky"
pops on, that beautiful guitar work and soaring sound. Always wonder if the
"smoking gold" lyric could be "smoke and go," since it could also apply as
an aviation reference.
More from the first Secret Tapes follows--"Seven Times the Wind," "Home From
the Stars." Wow. Forces to guide you, spirits beside you, rivers to ride
you home. Perfect day, perfect music. Then ... the perfect springtime moving
song ... "The River." If that doesn't make you feel like hitting the road
and starting all over again, then ... well, then maybe you live in a part
of the world where you don't get terrific season changes.
It reminded me once more why I am such a diehard fan. What would I do without
that vast and rich stockpile of music, those hundreds of great songs, where
would I go for something even remotely comparable? What a less involving
life I would lead.
The Sun Flies Shining - Tom DeLisle. April 2001
editors note: This "lost song" is being released on the Wrasse CD reissue
of "Fire In the Wind", one of 5 cuts previously unreleased and appearing
for the first time on the Fire in the Wind CD. -Ron
- --"Sun Flies Shining" is an earlier demo version of "Heart of the Dream"
from the Bombs Away Dream Babies album. The song was originally written about
a monster rain storm with resulting mudslides in Malibu (one of which ate
my car; I lost my 1972 Buick) and some of the lyrics are:
I picked up the phone, I got God on the line
He said "John don't worry, it's the fire next time"
...Take me to, take me to, Take me to the land Where the sun flies shining
There's a reference in the song to
"and the army came through,
'cause the governor's holed up out in Malibu."
Gov. Jerry Brown was dating Linda Ronstadt at the time, and he was at her
place in the Malibu Colony when the big storm hit. I believe this happened
in January of 1977, and the National Guard was called in to help with the
cleanup.
The storm occurred on a Friday night/Saturday morning while John played at
the Palomino in North Hollywood. The rain was so intense that we car-caravaned
back through the Santa Monica Mountains, coming back on Canan Road, where
boulders were bouncing down from the mountainside. We drove south on Highway
1 back into Malibu, over a stretch of beach two-lane that later that night
collapsed down into the ocean. Also, a large section of John and Buffy's
front yard, and attached hot tub, slid down their hill and onto Malibu Road.
It was a pretty hairy time.
As I recall another lyric was:
I got mud on my clothes,
I got mud in my mouth
Put me on a highway
And send me south...
'Cause the rain came down
Washing my land away
Take me to the land
Where the sun flies shining
Malibu was cut off from the valley and LA with road collapses north and a
huge mudslide that covered Pacific Coast Highway south near Pacific Palisades.
The storm took about six feet of top sand off the beach the first night.
People had to jump down from their stairways to reach the beach. This all
made people nervous. I recall at the time that we were petitioning federal
officials for a Valium Airlift.
I suppose that John later found "Sun Flies Shining" to be too topical, and
changed the song and the lyrics to apply to something more generic, such
as the general state of life in Southern California, thus "Heart of the Dream."
- --Okay, here's the Buick story. My quad-speaker big-ass '72 Buick that
made it from Detroit to California was parked out on Malibu Road the night
the storm hit, and a whole hillside came down in a huge mudslide, almost
completely enveloping the car in mud. I think only the driver's side door
handle was visible, which depressed me to the point that I told John's sons,
Mikael and Jeremy, that if they could get the car out of the mud, they could
have it. So they did, and they did.
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