Sunday, December 22, 2013
audience. Neal stands in the back saying “God! Yes!” and clasping his
hands in prayer and sweating. “Jack, Slim knows time, he knows time.”
Slim sits down at the piano and hits two notes, two C’s, then two more,
then one, then two and suddenly the big burly bass player wakes up from a
tea-reverie and realizes Slim is playing C-Jam Blues” and he slugs in
his big forefinger on the string and the big booming beat begins and
everybody starts rocking and Slim looks just as sad as ever, and they
blow jazz for half an hour, and then Slim goes mad and grabs the bongos
and plays tremendous rapid Cuban beats and yells crazy things in
Spanish, in Arabic, in Peruvian dialect, in Mayan, in every language he
knows and he knows innumerable languages. Finally the set is over; each
set takes two hours. Slim Gaillard goes and stands against a post
looking sadly over everybody’s head as people come and talk to him. A
bourbon is slipped into his hand. “Bourbon-orooni---thank you orooni…”
Nobody knows where Slim Gaillard is. Neal once had a dream that he was
having a baby and his belly was all bloated up blue as he lay on the
grass of a California hospital. Under a tree, with a group of colored
men, sat Slim Gaillard. Neal turned despairing eyes to him. Slim said
“There you go-orooni.” Now Neal approached him, he approached his God,
he thought Slim was God, he shuffled and bowed in front of him and asked
him to join us. “Right-orooni” says Slim; he’ll join anybody but he
won’t guarantee to be there with you in spirit. Neal got a table, bought
drinks, and sat stiffly in front of Slim. Slim dreamed over his head.
Not a word was spoken. Every time Slim said “orooni” Neal said “Yes!” I
sat there with these two madmen. Nothing happened. To Slim Gaillard the
whole world was just one big Orooni. That same night I dug Lampshade on
Fillmore and Geary. Lampshade is a big colored guy who comes staggering
into musical Frisco saloons with coat hat and scarf and jumps on the
bandstand and starts singing: the veins pop in his forehead: he heaves
back and blows a big foghorn blues out of every muscle in his soul. He
yells at people while he’s singing. He drinks like a fish. His voice
booms over everything. He grimaces, he writhes, he does everything. He
came over to our table and leaned
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