***Out In The Be-Bop Doo Wop Night-
The Night Red Rock Doo Wopped
Road weary, yes, road weary all right that is what Fritz Taylor said to himself repeatedly as he waited, waited his third hour waited, by this god-forsaken exit just off Interstate 40 heading west out of Albuquerque on the seemingly endless hitchhike road. This trip had more than its fair share of mishaps. Road weary let’s just call it that, and let’s call it also a sudden realization by Fritz that something was not right in the world, the hitchhike world. For example, a couple of years back there was no way in hell, or god’s good green earth, have it your way, that poster hippie hitchhike boy, Fritz Taylor, would be standing for his third hour, christ, his third hour, on a major highway west looking for a ride.
Not Fritz, decked out in obligatory
olive drab army jacket (World War II version, bought at some ubiquitous
Army-Navy surplus store not earned by military duty, although he did serve it
was just that he couldn’t bear to wear anything that reminded him of ‘Nam),
slightly faded, faded from too much washing and wear blue jeans, sturdy,
reliable, purposeful work boots (although sometimes they felt like lead, heavy
atomic lead, when he had to walk to some more practical road in search of a
ride), bedroll nicely slung over one shoulder, a small green knapsack over the
other carrying, in toto, all his worldly goods. Something was definitely
off-kilter in his world in this year, this 1974 year that had started out with
so much promise. Now in hard August, hard hitchhike road August, no girl, no
home except the road, no real dough, and no prospects, add in no sense of order
in his universe and there you have it. A serious recipe for road weariness.
Deep in those bleak house thoughts
Fritz almost missed the Volkswagen mini-bus that was slowing down just ahead of
him. Or maybe, reflecting on the bleak road idea, he no longer believed, except
as apparitions, old time mini-buses, or converted yellow brick multi-colored
school buses that trolled the roads in great profusion just a couple of years
back still existed. This trip had been dealt out, been pushed forward, mainly,
by tired big-load cross-country truckers looking for white-line road company, a
son’s company really, and by an occasional curious tourist-type wondering,
probably wondering hard, why a good looking, although oddly dressed, young man
who looked like he knew what he was doing was out on some no job, no home, no
prospects road in Muncie, Indiana, Moline, Illinois, Omaha, Nebraska, Dallas,
Texas or a million other just names stops on the road west.
“Hey, brother where are you
heading?” came a question for the front passenger seat of the now fully stopped
van. And the question, once Fritz came to his road senses, was uttered by a
very sweet-looking woman all dressed in Native American regalia. “Los Angeles,
and then Big Sur” answered Fritz. “Oh, we are going to the Intertribal
gathering just up the road at Red Rock for a few days and then heading to
Joshua Tree, does that help you?,” came the sing-song response. Fritz, for just
a minute, thought that he would thank them for stopping but that he needed a
longer ride and needed to make faster time pass but that sing-song voice, that
van apparition, and just that flat-out road weariness made him say “Hell, yes,
it’s good to see fellow freaks on the road, it has been a while. What are you
guys the lost tribe that they are always talking about in the books?” That
brought a chuckle from the occupants of the van as the side door slid open and
Fritz threw his gear on to a mattress, maybe two mattresses, that filled the
floor of the whole back portion of the van.
And on that matting were two kindred
guys, and a youngish woman, a girl really. “Hi, I’m Fritz,” he said as he
closed the door and the van started up. “Hi, I’m Zeke,” Hi, I’m Benjy,” yelled
the two kindred over the roar of the engine. “I’m Moonbeam,” whispered the
girl, who actually, on closer inspection was older than a girl and also clearly
deep in some mystical drug experience, either coming down or going up Fritz
could not tell. From the front the sing-song voice called out her name, “I’m
Sally Running- Water and I am one-sixteenth Hopi,” and the driver yelled out,
“Hi, I’m Doc and I know how to cure you,” as he passed back a pipe filled with
some herb. “We are the Pink Fogs and we’ve just finished a rock concert in
Austin and Sally wanted to go to the Intertribal to see some of her people
before we head to Joshua Tree for the big alterno-rock jam that will put us on
the rock ‘n’ rock map.” Just them Doc, steady, rock-like Doc, who was the
obvious leader of this group, maybe more like a flock shepherd turned the tape
deck up and the Rolling Stones’ Gimme Shelter came blasting away at us
and they all, collectively, started blasting away at it in response-yes,
"it’s just a shot away, just a shot away." Fritz, now a little high
from that passed pipe, thought yes I finally made a right decision, these are
my people, lost tribe or not.
Between this and that it was dark,
very dark but also star-bright dark, where they got to Red Rock, found their
assigned site and started to set up kitchen stuff for a meal, and prepare the
van for sleeping, if sleeping time ever came. Doc, as Docs will do, started a
fire from some heavy brush gathered in the area, and Fritz noticed as he hadn’t
before in the dark that the campsite was adjacent to a high cavern wall and as
the flames of the fire grew stronger he could see shadows, almost human form
shadows bouncing off those walls. And in the distance, although he, to be
honest was too stoned to know how distant, he could hear the steady, slow,
rhythmic pounding of the war drums, or rain drums, or just plain entertaining
drums that provided an almost mesmerizing effect. Fritz also noticed that Sally
and Doc seemed to be sitting together just now, her head on his shoulder,
listening to that same incessant hypnotic sound. And Zeke and Moonbeam were
doing the same. Benjy was sitting by himself, off to the side just a little,
and maybe a little miffed that he had “lost” the girl wars. And of course
Fritz, new boy Fritz, was left to fend for himself. And just that moment he
wished, he wished to high heaven, that he had not been girl-less and wished
that Cindy was here with him.
Suddenly the air was filled not only
with the tattoo of drums but sounds of rattles and some almost bass guitar
sound. And that sudden change brought the little Pink Fog campsite to life.
Because, for whatever reason, Doc started singing out in a very strong bass the
words to that old time doo- wop rock song by the Five Satins, In The Still
Of The Night, and his fellow Pink Fogs joined in on the harmony, even
Benjy. Hell, even Fritz did a low-slung harmony just to help fill the air. And
Doc, or Doc and Sally, or just Sally, Fritz never did quite figure it out after
than song was over, started up on The Penguins Earth Angel and that
really got Fritz kind of weepy for Cindy, and for his not so long ago lost
youth.
But here is the real funny, funny
odd, part. Fritz noticed as the flames flickered from the campfire that on the
walls he could see human figures, women’s figures, a couple anyway, and when he
looked over in the dark he noticed that a couple of young women, twenty-ish
women from what he could tell, women who in any case knew, knew as well as he
did the words, and, more importantly, the spirit and growing up absurd meaning
behind the songs, and were moving closer to the circle. Then, like it was
contagious, Zeke started in on the Capris’ There’s A Moon Out Tonight
(and there was) and all joined in. Fritz waved the two shadowy women toward the
circle and noticed that in the meantime they had been joined by two other
youngish, twenty-ish women.
Benjy got into the act having also noticed the bevy of women
standing in some ill-defined outer circle and bellowed out Don & Juan’s What’s
Your Name and backed it up with Robert & Johnny’s We Belong Together.
The other members of the troupe backing him up, backing him up big time. Now
they were all in one circle, even Benjy was in tight, and with the drums and
other instruments still beating time for them Fritz started out low-voiced just
above a whisper Johnnie & Joe’s Over The Mountain; Across The Sea as
one of the women moved over to sit right next to him, almost on his lap. And
that night, that ancient flame, ancient sounds starry night, was the night Red
Rock did indeed doo-wop.
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