Friday, December 20, 2013
unpacked and played till nine o’clock in the morning. Neal and I were
there with beers. At intermissions we rushed out in the Cadillac and
tried to pick up girls all up and down Chicago. They were frightened of
our big scarred prophetic car. We rushed back, we rushed out again. In
his mad frenzy Neal backed up smack on hydrants and tittered maniacally.
By nine o’clock the car was an utter wreck; the brakes weren’t working
any more; the fenders were stove in; the rods were rattling. It was a
muddy boot and no longer a shiny limousine. It had paid the price of the
night. “Whee!” The boys were still blowing at Neets’. And suddenly Neal
stared into the darkness of a corner beyond the bandstand and said
“Jack, God has arrived.” I looked. Who was sitting in the corner with
Denzel Best and John Levy and Chuck Wayne the onetime cowboy guitarist?
GEORGE SHEARING. And as ever he leaned his blind head on his pale hand
and all ears opened like the ears of an elephant listened to the
American sounds and mastered them for his own English summer’s-night use. Then they urged him to get up and play. He did. He blew
innumerable choruses replete with amazing chords that mounted higher and
higher till, the sweat splashed all over the piano and everybody
listened in awe and fright. They led him off the stand after an hour. He
went back to his dark corner, old God Shearing, and the boys said
“There ain’t nothing left after that.” But the slender leader frowned.
“Let’s blow anyway.” Something would come of it yet. There’s always
more, a little further---it never ends. They sought to find new phrases
after Shearing’s explorations; they tried hard. They writhed and twisted
and blew. Every now and then a clear harmonic cry gave new suggestions
of a tune that would sometime be the only tune in the world and which
would raise men’s souls to joy. They found it, they lost it, they
wrestled for it, they found it again, they laughed, they moaned----and
Neal sweated at the table and told them to go, go, go. At nine o’clock
in the morning everybody, musicians, girls in slacks, bartenders, and
the one little skinny unhappy trombonist staggered out of the club into
the great roar of Chicago day to sleep until the wild bop night again.
Neal and I shuddered in the raggedness. It was now time to return
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