A Saturday Morning in Shelton

January 5: Morning in Shelton
LLyn De Danaan

After stopping by Shelton’s Treasures Thrift Shop and ridding myself of a backseat-full of unwanted items that had inhabited an upstairs closet for many years, I stopped in Lynch Creek Floral for a latte. I love Lynch’s for its good Batdorf Bronson brew and its line of beautifully chosen gift items. This particular early January morning, a man ahead of me at the counter was whistling. I liked this because I had been whistling as I walked down Railroad Avenue toward Lynch’s. I do this now and then, though aware that some people a. loathe whistlers b. think it is unladylike c. think it bring bad luck, especially if done inside. I’d been whistling “How Can I Keep from Singing.” I didn’t recognize the other whistler’s tune, but felt an instant comaraderie. He offered his place in line to me and said, almost under his breath, “There will be music soon.” This announcement took on the gravity of a prophecy. I didn’t know what to think.
After a few minutes, one of Lynch’s proprietors, more forthcoming than the gentleman who had now headed to the rear of the store, told me that there was about to be a “bluegrass jam” in the back and why not take my coffee, pull up a chair, and stay awhile. I did.
The whistler, John Rodius, a quiet, self-effacing man, set up a few chairs and pulled his Tacoma guitar out of its case. Turns out, I’m told, he is one of the founding organizers of Shelton’s Blue Grass from the Forest, an annual music festival. (It’ll be May 17, 18, 19 this year.) He and others play at the Senior Center in Shelton as well. When the group isn’t practicing or jamming, the member play under the name “Down Home Fiddle and Bluegrass at venues like the Puyallup Fair.
John tells me he has lived in Shelton for thirty years. He grew up near Mt. Rainier in Graham. It was his brother-in-law, a musician with Buck Owens in Tacoma, who got him started on guitar, he tells me. That made me curious. Turns out, Buck Owens (1929-2006), who had 21 number one hits on the Billboard country music charts and is a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame, moved to Puyallup in 1958 and had a live TV show on KTNT in Tacoma. Don Rich (1941-1974), a young and talented Tumwater Hill fiddle player and guitarist, was recruited by Buck and helped develop, “The Bakersfield Sound.” Rich and the Buckeroos even produced a song and album called “Tumwater Breakdown” named for his hometown, still considered to be a suburb of Olympia in Rich’s day. So John listened to his brother-in-law and the pre-fame Buck and Rich and the others who made up Buck’s entourage.
When he got older, John says, he went to work and stayed on the job for 37 years. During that time, he says, he didn’t play at all. He talks slowly while he takes out some bandages and tape and begins to wrap his fretting hand. He was working on a house project recently when someone dropped a 2 x 4 for him to catch. It slid through his hands and deposited some nasty splinters. He is in pain and there is some nasty looking red swelling where he says he extracted a sharp fragment of that board. He says that spot is healing. It looks iffy to me.
While waiting for his colleagues, I asked John if he does indeed play bluegrass as in Bill Munroe. “No.” He says. “We don’t play any Bill Munroe.” He pauses. “We play old music and Civil War stuff.”
A man enters from Lynch’s backdoor, cold and slim as a reed. “There’s Herb,” someone calls out. Herb has fiddle in one hand and a small plastic bag of cookies in the other. Another man, Al, has come in a little earlier and sits across from me. He calls himself a wannabe. He says, as a boy, he always longed to play guitar but discovered he has “no music in me.” He’s wearing what look like stiff new blue jeans, a bit oversized. He says, “They play at my house sometimes.” Then he says, “My nephew plays the banjo.” Someone jokes later that Al thinks he is a music critic. If so, he is an awfully quiet one.
The nephew and his banjo get seated. This is Paul. Paul wears jeans that ride very low on his body. He has to give them an occasional tug to keep them up. He wears a billed cap with a construction company logo, a work shirt with ticking stripes, and heavy soled work boots.
We’re sitting in a circle. Behind John in the flower shop part of the store, women are making bouquets and taking orders for wedding arrangements. The air is fragrant and warm. I’ve stumbled upon a good thing.
I ask John if the group members have song books or just call out tunes. He says they just call them out but “might have to guess for a couple of licks” til they are together. He says someone’s always coming up with something new. Later, I notice he has a stack of cards with tune names and chords. Someone else says, “I forgot my session book” so there is, somewhere, a list of favorites.
Last to arrive while I’m there are two women, a grandmother and granddaughter named Janice and Danielle. The men have done a little warming up, but things get started for real when Janice and Danielle get their fiddles out. Danielle seems to be a real spark. She is young and well practiced.
As the group prepares to play in earnest now, someone suggests “Up Jumps the Devil.” Instead they strike up “Whistling Rufus,” a popular cakewalk from circa 1899. Paul says, “There’s one song I want to learn before the year ends.” It is “Pig Ankle Rag,” a tune that shows up in “traditional” collections and has been passed around in jams probably for at least a century. The fiddlers seem to know it, but Paul needs practice he says. Next tune is “Ice on the Road,” another traditional tune and one that shows off Danielle’s talents.

Before I leave, Herb asks the group to play a waltz and he bows his fiddle sweetly. He tells me that his wife died just before Thanksgiving. He was her caretaker for many years and he is just beginning to get out and play again. It’s been ten years, he says, since he’s picked up his fiddle. I’m hoping for Herb that this is the beginning of a new, joyful musical life.

Posted in Stories, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on A Saturday Morning in Shelton

Celtic Colours

I’m a guest blogger on Hearth Music’s web site. Thanks to Devon Leger for all the formatting and editing he did. The piece looks great! Go to http://www.hearthmusic.com/blog/index.html. Last fall’s Celtic Colours festival is the subject. Lots of music clips.

 

 

Posted in Kith Magazine and Roots Music Articles | Tagged , | Comments Off on Celtic Colours

Sam Patch’s Last Jump

During the night, I was besotted with thoughts and words and images as, outside, I could hear birds shrieking (a woman crying?)….and I thought about Sam Patch.

Sam Patch’s Last Jump*

I didn’t change the litter.

The garbage sits by the kitchen door.

They’ll find those love letters

I should have burned long ago.

So many things I should have done.

No time now to tidy up.

The loose ends

Will snake together

And make a final knot

No thanks to me.

*Sam Patch, the “Yankee Leaper” was an ex mill worker who made his living jumping off high spots. He died jumping 125 feet into the Genesee River in 1829.

 

Posted in Poetry | Comments Off on Sam Patch’s Last Jump

A Few End Year Notes

Herdeljezi Roma Festival in Sebastopol is something I’d love to attend every year. Lots of singing and dancing and some very fine presentations this year. I toyed with the idea of supporting a film based on David Martin’s lecture called The Lavender Palette, a history of gay visual artists in the Pacific Northwest. Our conversations caused me to do some preliminary research and review of the fabulous art produced in this region over the past decades. Got to know Richard Schneider of Klee Wyk a little better through this project and paid respects to his partner, Bud McBride in the spring. I finished another little project (with Carol McKinley): a short condensed gay history of Olympia. We published a broadside with “walking tour” in time for Pride celebrations.

Mary Randlett continues to educate and inspire. Just last week she dropped off a copy of The Genius of Place, the life of Frederick Law Olmsted.

I finished rewriting and then, finally, responding

Posted in Announcements | Comments Off on A Few End Year Notes

March 22, 2012: News of Publications

Several new titles are available on Amazon.com. I’ve created a Kindle edition of Blue Horse and Dog Star Winter. Koans for the Inner Dog, which still sells regularly, will be available in Kindle and Nook formats in a little over a month.

Meanwhile, I’m working on a new book of fiction. I’m grateful for all the support. I enjoy readers’ reviews and comments. Always welcome.

The only research I’m doing currently (aside from that for my new book) is for a Lesbian/Gay walking tour/history of Olympia, Washington. This is a fun project that will be ready for the community by Pride weekend during the first part of June, 2012.

 

Posted in Announcements | Comments Off on March 22, 2012: News of Publications

The Long View: Intimate Reflections and Unexpected Messengers

Cover of new collection available sometime this spring on Kindle

Collection of recent work forthcoming soon on Kindle. Watch here for more information.

Am busily revising a novel written almost ten years ago: Romance of the Village of Solucion. I don’t know how long it will take to finish editing and revising. Plan to shop this one for a while and see if I can get it “picked up.” It’s a good one.

 

Posted in Poetry | Comments Off on The Long View: Intimate Reflections and Unexpected Messengers

Mountain of Shell News

Enjoy my latest publication, Mountain of Shell, on line:http://columbia.washingtonhistory.org/magazine/articles/2011/0411/0411-a1.aspx
Posted in Mountain of Shell: The Senryu Poets of Oyster Bay | Comments Off on Mountain of Shell News

Big Adventure on Moa Nui on Amazon.Com

Posted in Big Adventure on Moa Nui: A Novel | Comments Off on Big Adventure on Moa Nui on Amazon.Com

Novel Finished!

Big Adventure on Moa Nui: The Very Mysterious Events on a South Pacific Island and Their Resolution is ready for sale. It looks good and I’m pleased. The follow up Fiona Elizabeth Kelly book is already in the works.

I slog on revising and fine tuning Katie Gale’s Tombstone. Want to finish and get it off by end of October. I continue to find more material I want to incorporate and am thinking of a trip to Juneau to study Wickersham materials.

This morning I heard someone on the radio say, “The only reason we publish is to stop rewriting.” Got the message.

 

 

Posted in Announcements | Comments Off on Novel Finished!

August 2011

Big Adventure on Moa Nui is almost complete. Watch here for details of its publication. Katie Gale still awaits some minor revisions. Goal is to complete by end of September and return to publisher. Mountain of Shell article still awaiting publication in Columbia. My time is focused, now, on completing the two books. Having a great time reading chapters with a friend who is writing a memoir. We seem to really help each other.

 

Posted in Announcements | Comments Off on August 2011