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JOHN KEATING REMEMBERS .......
Where to start...
I moved to San Antonio in '74 or '75 and was thrust into the
racially
stratified Alamo Heights Junior School where I met a diminutive
guy named
Carlos Yaritu. Carlos and I became fast friends and used to perform
little
skits to entertain ourselves outside in the playground area at
lunch. We'd
refer to the "cool" looking guys who hung out, ridiculing
us no doubt, as
the "blue jean gang" - which consisted mostly of the
white kids from
established SA families of whom I was most envious (ironically,
my family
was a somewhat established SA name as well, but my parents had
moved away
for twenty years, thus letting the "membership" lapse).
I'd been playing the
drums since I was in elementary school, and was better than most
drummers my
age - I'd even talked my parents into buying me a translucent
Ludwig
five-piece drumset (which I sold for nothing many years later
before
discovering that it had become a collector's item!)
One day, Carlos was browsing through the Sears catalog, a
Texas tradition,
and came across a knockoff of a Stratocaster they had for an
unbelievably
low price. He finally scraped up enough money to buy it, dubbed
it the
"Shit-Caster" and, with the help of an old stereo reel-to-reel
tape machine,
we began recording our jam sessions. When we moved on to Alamo
Heights High
School in 1977, we played our first gig at the Mule Stall at
AH, along with
a mutual friend, Larry Estefan. The scheduled band had failed
to show up and
we grabbed the opportunity for an audience and rushed home to
get our meager
equipment. Another friend of ours named Trey Gunn who WAS from
an
established SA family but who'd only taken some piano lessons
as a kid
decided that he wanted to join the band we'd formed, and we called
it
"Regent". Problem was, he didn't play an electric instrument,
so he bought a
shiny red Fender Music Man bass and learned to play well enough
that we
began gigging at parties and local venues like St. Lukes Church.
We'd spend
endless rambunctious hours rehearsing at his mom's house in Olmos
Park;
spewing obscenities through the PA system and into the neighborhood
and
mutually torturing one another until his mother would return
and throw us
out.
Eventually, we teamed up with one of the old "blue jean
gang" members that
we used to mock, Chris Lieck, and Carlos & Larry left the
band to be
replaced by friend Ed Holmgreen. Chris was a drummer too, but
after hearing
me play he had decided to give it up and switch to electric guitar
(okay,
this is how I remember it - but I suppose I could be flattering
myself a bit
:-) ). Chris had a head for business and promotion, and wasn't
a bad guitar
player either, and as we left our high school years, we began
injecting
ourselves into the local professional music scene as The Kids,
playing clubs
like Johnny Be Good's on Austin Highway, Cooter Browns, and others
whos
names I've forgotten. We made friends with some of the bands
that most
resembled our style like the Max and the Mo-Dels. In fact, we
even had Bubba
Perrone build us one of his proprietary click-track/tape devices
that
allowed us to pre-record various parts of our songs for playback
during
performance. Given the prevailing 1980's studio production excesses,
this
proved useful for "fattening" up our live sound at
the expense of some
spontaneity. By this time, I'd downgraded myself to soundman
so I could
focus on my studies, replaced on drums by the late Billy Carey.
I'd stand
back at the sound board, mixing the band and playing simple keyboard
parts
to beef up our sound even more. I remember the time Bubba invited
many of
the local bands out to his impressive house to watch the just
released This
is Spinal Tap. Though everyone had a great time and laughed throughout,
I
remember feeling like it had hit a little too close to home and
I remarked
to him that I'd found it kindof depressing. After he thought
about it for a
minute, his smile turned reflective and he finally said "yeah,
I guess
you're right - it is kind of depressing!". The Kids once
rented out the
vacant Broadway Theater in Alamo Heights (now a bank) and threw
a much
publicized concert there. Big on dreams, but short on cash and
equipment, we
talked some local band into being our opening act - partly so
we could use
their PA system. Unfortunately, we fell victim to our technical
limitations
and proceeded to play a loud and mostly unintelligible set of
original
songs, as people began walking out partway through. We vowed
then to get our
act together and buy the right equipment.
It's now the early 1980's and The Kids have become the darlings
of Sam
Kinsey's Teen Canteen and Chris has fashioned the band's image
and sound
after his idols The Knack and Cheap Trick (even down to hair
color and
guitar type), with the ultimate intent of duplicating a Knack-like
blitzkrieg on the LA music establishment, and eventual stardom.
Chris's plan
was a highly calculated effort to hone our chops locally while
writing
original music and building a following before moving to LA to
make it big.
In the meantime, Trey has left for college in Oregon to study
music,
replaced on bass by Mike Orbello. I'm attending Trinity University
to get a
degree in computer science, hosting a music show on Trinity's
KRTU FM, and
am busy discovering the magic of Kant, Niche, and the Apple II.
I had never
taken the idea of a career in music as seriously as Chris did,
but I agreed
to sign on with The Kids as their drummer and move to LA upon
graduation.
I'll never forget the summer of 1985 after I'd finished school.
Armed with a
short showcase set of original pop songs written by Chris and
Ed, we packed
the big white band truck, caravaned out the I-10 freeway and,
a couple of
all-nighters later, rolled down Sunset blvd. past the multi-colored
plastic
mohawks and Asian tourists, Grumman's Chinese Theater, and into
our newly
rented apartment overlooking the lights of Hollywood. We'd arrived.
That first year in LA was a heady time, having escaped our
small town past
and steeped in boundless optimism about our famous future. Chris
had secured
the services of a prominent LA music attorney along with an experienced
producer, and within weeks we were in the Clover Studio (where
Bruce
Springstein had recorded one of his B-sides!) cutting a ten-inch
record
which eventually ended up getting some national distribution.
We also
self-produced a music video for one of our songs, "America",
which won an
MTV Basement Tapes award and went into rotation for a while.
After a year of
recording and playing our original set at clubs around LA, I
made the
difficult decision to pursue a career in high-tech and left the
band to work
full time on a computer game I was writing. That was my last
communication
with the band which later changed its name to Kid Curry and hired
a
replacement. I understand that they had some success touring,
including a
stint with Pat Travers, but eventually disbanded after Chris
moved back to
San Antonio where he now lives with his wife Julie and runs his
own music
publishing and recording studio.
Trey graduated from the U. of Oregon and answered an ad in
the back of
Rolling Stone for a guitar seminar by Robert Fripp. He eventually
took up
playing the touch guitar and joined Fripp's League of Crafty
Guitarists,
released albums of his own material, and became a member of the
reformed
King Crimson in the late 90's. They're touring Japan as I write
this.
I went on to sell my computer game to a publisher, had some
success writing
music professionally in the early 90's, and now write PC software
in Santa
Monica. Of course, plenty more adventures happened along the
way - but those
are best told over a few cold beers and a few spare hours.
Some mentions, just in case someone's interested: Although
a student of the
jazz/rock "fusion" movement of the late 70's and early
80's, I once joined a
country band who's singer was Beth Hooker (I had a big crush
on Beth but
lacked the goombas to tell her). And at some time in the early
eighties, we
recorded a number of songs with Glen Smith, who had a small studio
in his
rural home outside San Antonio. We were awed by his Otari 8-track
and I'll
never forget the giddy, day-long sessions where we learned the
art and
science of studio recording. A far cry from the experimentations
that Trey
and I had done with the early Teac Portastudio. I don't know
where Glen is
now, but I understand he still lives in SA.
Years after I'd left The Kids, I returned to San Antonio for
a visit and
drove out to the old Teen Canteen behind the airport. To my surprise,
it had
been completely gutted. But in the rubble I found the photographs
that used
to adorn the cork-board display case just inside the front door,
and I
managed to salvage a picture that someone had taken of one of
our
performances. I examined the freeze frame of my past, which seemed
so fresh
still, and thought about the entire cycle of events that had
followed.
Standing there on that clear afternoon inside the gloomy, abandoned
metal
remains of a place so profoundly a part of my adolescence was
one of the
most sentimental times I can remember.
- john Oct., 2000 |