Life As An Elevator
A Novel
By D. Witt
Chapter Sixteen
By this time the halucinoginic effects of the mushrooms have set in and
we are definitely tripping. We make our way toward the stage. Bill Ham
and the Wizzard set up the light show. I climb the platform and sit
behind my kit to pick up my sticks and look around at the audience.
After an instant, I begin clicking my sticks to the rhythm. The
musicians are saddled with their instruments and I give a nod of
acknowledgement. With the downbeat, "She Lives in a Time of Her Own"
begins. Another rock and roll experience is etched into history and
into the memory of the audience and musicians. Maybe it is the first
night that someone falls in love or the first time someone gets high, I
don't know, but it will be a night to be remembered. The band finds the
groove and rides the seam in the time warp transcending the world as we
know it. It brings us closer to God. It brings us into the no-thing. We
are born and no one knows why.
Your form you can move
Your shape is composed of edges
Your form you can loose
Your edges are ridges
Of your own energy
Your own energy
Your own energy
It's just emotion you feel
Copr. Roky Ericson and Tommy Hall, 1967
I spot some friends in the audience, Billy, Frank, and Dusty. They just
put together a new band called Z Z Top. They got the name from the
brands of the cigarette papers that we buy to roll our own joints, Zig
Zag and Top. Billy used to be in a band from Dallas called The Moving
Sidewalks and Dusty was in a band with his brother here in Houston
called the American Blues Band. They dyed their hair blue. Along with
them is the President of the local branch of the Banditos. He is a nice
guy as long as he doesn't have a reason to kick your ass. Dusty plays
bass and Joe plays drums. It is a trio like the Johnny Winter Band.
They play mostly variations on 12 bar blues. Billy made his way through
the crowd past Diana, the quacamole queen, one of the hostesses
employed by the club, to sit with the motorcycle gang members at a
table near the stage. The Wizzard cranked up the light show from his
place in the rafters and the walls started dripping colors. The crowd
disappeared like melted wax right before my eyes. The bass guitar's
throbbing rythmic heart beats sycopate with my drumming. Roky blows
frantically on his harmonica and Stacy wails along with Tommy's chu-ca
chu-ca chu-ca jug. We explore the harmonic overtones and the music of
the spheres chiming out high volume feedback quitar choruses. The
synthesis emerges as a single entity with inspired Roky bursting in
free verse screaming in his inimitable way. His singing springs from
the more primative stage of human evolution. Yelping, crooning, and
shouting the melody and the message, he words speak of a better way.
The philosophy of the group as a whole is summed up in the linar note
of our first album so meticulously crafted by Tommy. The crowd hangs on
every word in a hushed and transfixed almost hypnotic state. Now, I
dive into my drumming with all I've got and lock into the steady
rhythm. "I've Got Levitation" is the song which aptly describes what I
am feeling. Should I dare to look up into the eyes of the audience? I
can see the backs of the musicians in front on the edge of the stage as
they challange the fans on the front row to reach foward. Each player
shines in the illumination of the spot lights. Their images glow like
pillars of fire anchored to their marks on the stage. The power of my
good musician friends seems almost supernaturally incarnate and in the
groove. Our performance becomes effortless, like floating in slow
motion. My subconscious takes over the task as I look through my third
eye. Paradiddles and ratamaques all fall into place. Innovation,
variation, and improvozation cross over into the audiences' ears as
they melt into one big flowing mass of passionate rhythmic dance as
intense as the music itself. A flow field of bobbing, gyrating, and
throwing hairheads moving with fluid motion, unfettered, rocking and
rolling into a massive oneness. A dance here, a tarantella there, and
whirling dirvishes reverberate through the sweet smoke. I play on
through the fog. It's what I do best. And anyway, it's too late to
change.