O.K. Forget what I said yesterday about "Spider-Noir." I watched Episode 2 last night. Boring. Silly. I'm over it.
Probably.
This is Chris Craft. So he said. I went on a photo walk yesterday. Got a late start. It was hot and humid and sometimes a bit drizzly, and my knees were barking, but I thought if I was going to walk, I could walk anywhere, and I could walk with a camera, and so I went to a little village across town to walk its Main Street. It is another old part of town that is growing, as all things around my little hometown are, with a proliferation of bars and restaurants. But this Main Street still has some funky little shops, too, not the big chain stores but little mom and pop places that aren't as put together and shiny. And since I wasn't going to be on a street with big crowds, I took my larger medium format digital Fuji camera because it just makes the most beautiful digital files. I wasn't looking to be stealthy. I wasn't going to be shooting from the hip. I wasn't sure if I would take any pictures at all. I just took the camera with me.
I parked at one end of the street with the intention of walking a mile, mile and a half, in one direction and then back on the other side of the street. I parked a few blocks from the old high school and walked nearly to Jack Kerouac's house just up the street from my old, dead friend's house who lived on Shady Lane.
Right away, I was stopping to take pictures. Bold colors caught my eye, and later, big empty spaces. Shop windows were great on a cloudy day, the ratio of translucence and reflection seeming to be about right. I made a lot of photos of shop windows. I wanted to take photos of people eating, but I didn't have the confidence I would have needed for that. People can tell by your posture and demeanor whether you are just creeping around or if you think you are doing something of importance. This day, I just didn't have it. But there surely would be a lot of pictures of reflected me.
Halfway up the street, I saw a guy cleaning the big glass windows of the biggest, oldest, bike shop in town.
Oops. I kinda got caught. Well, nothing to do now. He was staring at me as I approached. O.K. I was deciding how I would handle this one.
"Hey--were you in a band?" he asked as I got close. O.K. Alright. I'd been recognized. He must be someone who used to come and see us play. As always, I was surprised that anyone could still recognize me.
"A few," I smiled.
"Which ones?"
I named the most popular.
"What did you play?"
Wait a minute--he didn't recognize me. He just saw some aging hipster walking down the sidewalk and thought to start a conversation.
"Lots of things, but in those bands I played guitar. The band was really popular, but in truth, we weren't very talented."
He began talking guitar talk. He'd played in bands. He named off a guy who was in one of the big bands of the seventies. He'd played with him in a band in high school.
"Alright," I said.
He launched into a schtick about great guitarists. He went on and on about Stevie Ray Vaughn.
"He had strong hands," he said playing air guitar behind his back. I really didn't have much to say about guitar players, so he went on naming musicians from the sixties and seventies. So, me being me, I thought I'd push him over the edge.
"Yea, those guys were good, but you know who put them all to shame?"
"Who?"
"Prince. He could outplay them all."
Oh, I knew the response I'd get, and I was right. Why I do such things is beyond me. It's just fun to turn the room sideways sometimes and watch the furniture fall.
"Alright, man," I said after awhile, "I got to keep moving. Here. Let me take your photo before I go."
Now the thing I missed, I just wasn't ready, was him hitting what is known in bodybuilding as "the most muscular pose" (link).
"Seventy-five, baby."
By the time I had my camera up, though. . . well, you see what I got.
"Chris Craft, just like the boat. My band was called Chris Craft and the Cruisers!"
I left him with his headphones and his window washing equipment and limped on down the street thinking you never know what will happen when you leave the house. Just another little domestic adventure.
By the time I got back to the car, I'd taken a pretty fair number of photographs. I was dripping sweat and was oh-so ready to sit down. I rarely take my phone with me when I'm walking. I'm not someone who likes to listen to music through earbuds, and I don't care to be available for calls or texts. When I picked up my phone, I had a message from my mother. I'd forgotten to leave her two o'clock meds. It was one-thirty. I was half an hour from her house. Shit piss fuck goddamn.
By the time I got back to my house, the day was slipping away. I needed to do laundry. I checked my mail and picked up the packages Amazon had left on my porch. I needed to shower. And of course, I wanted to dump the day's pics into the computer to see what I had.
Mail and packages opened, laundry going, I slid into a hot shower. My hair, now much shorter, is fun to wash. Easier. Quick. Cheap. I trimmed my beard, did my duties. It only takes a minute now with the hair dryer. I put on clean clothes and went to the computer. I dumped the card expecting nothing. I've learned. Everything seems like a good photo when you are taking it. Later, nothing does. Results are always disappointing. But. . . hey now. . . these weren't all terrible. I decided to work on Chris Craft first as I knew in the morning it would be the only story I had to tell. I'm out of practice. Don't do this enough anymore. Chris Craft did what people do when you raise a camera. They smile. Why did I not take his smiley pic and then tell him to just look at me without the smile. Why? Because I was nervous. Because I forgot.
I was just glad he wasn't yelling at me for taking his picture before. Relieved, you might say.
Of course, I did a quick take on one of my window pics. See those black corners? That's because I'm using a lens made for a smaller sensor on my bigger sensor camera. But the lens is lovely and I already had it and only needed to buy an adapter to use it. I could have cropped this a tad more, but whatever. I didn't have time to do much at all. It was time to get to the store and buy groceries for dinner. I never have time. Good god how much I wished I could just get takeout, pour a drink, and work on the rest of the images for the night before sitting on my big leather couch in a darkened room and watch some show before bed. That's not a lot to wish for, but it is wishing for the impossible. And yes. . . I'm complaining.
I may take my camera out again today. Tonight is the Blue Moon. Once, you had to rely on me to remind you, but now, the news outlets, as always, have followed my lead and they announce the full moons, too. They steal from me ceaselessly. I guess I should take it as a compliment, but. . . I should be getting paid.
Selavy. I won't see the moon tonight. The clouds are endless here in the once Sunny South. Before long, they say, people will be living on the moon. That will, for me, change everything.
Have you heard about the sonic booms rocking the east coast? The government acts like they don't know what's causing it, but we do, don't we? Aliens. No shit. What else could it be but some supersonic spaceship visiting us from beyond, here to see the last of a dying planet?
Unless it is some Chinese super spy plane that goes so fast it cannot be detected by our radar systems.
I'm not sure which of those two I pick. But it is definitely one of them. Definitely.
Wait. You'll see. The Times will be saying the same thing soon. They are always watching this site.
O.K. Let me give you a little coffee and champagne music for a sleepy, cloudy Sunday morning. A mellow take on Duke Ellington tune.
You're welcome.
























