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MEETIN, GREETIN, LATE NIGHT EAST BAY EATIN

Wednesday brought us to our now familiar haunt, in what most would describe as Berkeley but is in fact Emeryville: Strings, a secret concert house that forbids bands to advertise or tell where it is. An oasis on decaying San Pablo (oops, almost gave it away!) with a Japanese-style garden designed with secret nooks, secret hot tubs, and delicate shrines, big Persian carpets on walls and floors, and lots of wood weathered by years of Bay fog, rain, and sun. Our kind host Joey opened the show with his unique guitar instrumentalizing. Richie Lawrence, in from Sacramento, added his tunes and tunefulness, a fourth unofficial Hawk in the middle of our tourette, and a mellow night of music was had by all. It’s a real trip to play at Strings — a trip back in time (or is it sideways?) to a reality that could’ve come to be on a much larger scale if the hippies had won. A bearded man wearing a big smile comes up to the merch table to tell us he got all our records for free, only paying the 40 cent cost of the blank CDR. Wow. File sharing has hit the flower children.

We bid farewell to our fine friends at Strings and head back out into the harsh, impersonal world of triumphant 21st century capitalism. But it’s not all harsh. We use Richie’s iPhone to locate the nearest Nation’s hamburgers — an East Bay chain of 24 hour burger and pie stands that delivers on every level. The shakes are thick and malty, the burgers are piled high with cheese and onions and mayo. They fall apart before you can finish them. They even offers a delicious salmon burger to which PL grants an enthusiastic seal of approval. We are happy, full, and sleepy. Next stop, bed in Tiburon.

PSALMS FOR THE PALMS, HEMLOCK, AND THE FRINGES OF THE BAY

Our apologies, dear reader, it’s been a while since we’ve taken the time to chronicle our journey here on the pages of our humble web log. When last we wrote, we were headed north on the 99 towards our show at the wise and benevolent Palms, the cultural Center of Yolo County. If memory serves, and sometimes it does, the show was grand. Two acoustic sets with brother Hawk Richie Lawrence as special guest, singing some wonderful songs from his soon to be released solo CD. A generous crowd filled our hearts with pride and resolve. We played “Yolo County Airport” and the crowd, now familiar with the song, cheered heartily between verses. We have penned a regional anthem, and are setting our sights on a new national anthem, although the opening of “Freebird” is a already a strong contender for the post-empire era. We said our farewells to Palms resident poet Dave Fleming and drove into the night. What a wonderful place this is.

We stayed at our central California home away from home, the Tyson mini-estate in the fields and marshes near Winters, chief subject of aforementioned “Yolo County.” Kathryn and Carlos are very generous people, and even more interesting. Kathryn has lived a cat’s nine lives and then some, including teen queen hoodlum in reservation country in North Dakota, and flight attendant on a sketchy and perhaps CIA owned airline servicing Vietnam at the height of the war. Now she and Carlos do land preservation work, and their marshy surroundings are indeed a hotbed of wildlife activity. We saw a Swenson’s hawk divebomb a huge wild turkey that was encroaching on nesting territory. Better than Animal Kingdom, and commercial free.We got a late start for the Bayarea, after a many tales told Tyson breakfast, but we were late for nothing. A sweet day off in the hills of Marin.

San Francisco is wrong. Who first said this? Was it Marc Doten? Was it Anthony Lacques? Dear reader, you are perhaps concerned: where is this going? Surely the Hawks aren’t going to bash an entire city. Surely their anonymous but acerbic scribes are not going to unleash their full verbal vitriolosity in broad stroke broadside against what some, the more shallow among us, consider one of the shining gems of urbs Americanus?

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OUT OF THE MOUNTAINS AND INTO THE VALLEY

So we’re ready to vacate the Yosemite Bug and its towering trees, to leave our cool mountains for the hot and dry San Joaquin environs. We’re not eager to enter the rural smog zone. In the last moments in our cabin on the ridge, Rob’s doing a Lyndon Johnson in the bathroom (there’s not much choice–only a curtain separates it from the bunks), as the two Paul’s chart out Richie Lawrence’s fiendishly complex simple songs for our show at The Palms tonight. Then we roll.

We drop down through the hills, the evergreens melt away, then the oaks, now we’re in agro fields, now we’re on the 99 north. Rob’s feeling an espresso in his immediate future. If we can find a Starbucks Rob will pull his scam: order an iced doppio espresso. When the drink is presented, casually ask for a bit of soy milk. This used to go smoothly but of late the reluctantly proffered soy milk carton comes with a warning: “We’re not supposed to give away soy milk for free.” Feign innocent surprise, pour the soy milk. Voila! The $1.85 iced au lait. Rob is doing his part to bring this over-entitled union busting behemoth to its knees. Are you?Whoa! Speak of the corporate devil! Starbucks sign to the right, beacon in desolation! We make exit 195, over the 99, we pull in to the Atwater Arco/Carls/ISC Tractor Supply/Starbucks empire, black asphalt sulking in hot sun. We’re in. Rob earns his soy doppio without incident. We blog. It’s air conditioned. Why leave? Why not stay till closing time, abandon responsibilities of gigs, career, musical friendships, challenges? Why not sit here and blog, surf the web, read our friends’ Facebook musings, post musings, musings upon musings, read friends musing comments, respond with further comments, engage in comment banter, check Yahoo, check CNN, read of the latest explosion, abduction, bankruptcy, back to Facebook, wow, more comments. Why can’t we all just hang out? Let’s give it a try. Here in Atwater on the 99 amidst hardworking farmers and their overworked fields we are taking a stand for Facebook. This is how we will survive. We will camp along the monolithic parking lot wall, enter at 6 a.m. when Starbucks opens its doors, bathe in the bathroom. We will earn money on the Starbucks internet. Are you with us, brothers and sisters?

CARTER RANCH FESTIVAL – BUSTIN’ OUT

Day two in the Sierra foothills above Mariposa begins with the various low frequency rumblings of men waking in bunk beds, said frequencies bouncing off the wood walls of our cabin nestled among dry grass, wildflowers, and oaks and firs in their centuries long competition for this 3,000 foot altitude transitional zone. Our cabin is perched on a dry grass ledge overlooking a steep drop to the little creek valley below. On the opposite valley slope are the Bug hostel cabins poking through the dense tree cover. It’s a beautiful and silent spot. Just gazing out at the trees in morning light is a healing for the addled Angeleno.

We get good eggs and okay coffee at the Bug dining hall, pick up a mic stand we’d forgotten, and head back to our little wood aerie. Rob and Paul L scramble down rocks and red dirt, scratching themselves and picking up several ounces of foxtails, and find the creek and its enchanted waterfall and swimming hole. It’s far from the Bug cabins and tricky to find, plus the hip global tourists are safely on their sleek buses for Yosemite park. We are primeval man. The rocks sloping down to and into the pool are sedimentary, shiny green sculpted slabs with brown veins running through them. The water is cold. RW scales the rocks in bare feet to a rocky perch 20 or so feet above the pool. In a vain attempt to recapture his lost youth he steps into the air, aiming for the narrow deep center of the pool. Adrenaline floods his synaptic region and for a brief moment he is 20 years old again. The icy waters and the weightless fall act a natural defibulator. This time it works and he doesn’t even break his leg. Youth is still in reach. DSCN9058.JPG

We scale the steep and crumbling rocky cliff back to our lovely Gypsy Cabin. Indeed we ourselves are gypsies and fit well in this tiny architecturally improvised cabin, section tacked on to section as needed. We dress and head over to the Carter Ranch festival, 7 miles down Highway 140, left at Triangle Road, 2 dusty dirt road miles to the banners and the meadow and the hippies young and old in tents and campers and pickup truck beds, kicked back on the grass listening to a local folkie. There’s the teepee we Hawks spent a sleepless night in back in ’07, awaiting fresh innocent victims. Jembe and leather goods vendors and great smelling barbeque pits ring the upward sloping meadow. This is good vibes. The weather is perfect. A dry humidity.Carter Ranch Fest’s musical lineup is an unwitting (or is it witting?–fest booker Adam is a mysterious and complex cat) sampling of the rootsier elements of the experimental LA music scene, with its roots in the alternative to punk pioneers of the late 1970’s. Double Naught Spycar is here and Carlos Guitarlos, the Atomic Sherpas, and the Hawks. It’s odd to see Carlos and Joe Berardi, strangers to unpaved dirt and portajohns, out here among the trees and hippies. But it’s oh so grand.

PL slips away into the woods with Joe and a camera. An artist and his muse alone in the woods, anything could happen. Time to get the “Joe in Nature” photo shoot underway. The two return with sheepish grins on their faces, proud of their work and then it’s time for the musicians to go to work.** Spycar takes the stage and rocks the meadow with their avantarded musical madness, the idiot-savant of all instrumental bands. Who else would be fearless and twisted enough to give their songs titles like these: janmichaelvincentrehab.com, Marina Del Hayride, Journey to the Center of Guitar Center (Sherman Oaks), or Arrangement with a Dung Beetle? The crowd is delighted and surprised. A new musical paradigm has landed in Carter Ranch.

The Hawks are up next. It’s 4:30 and a nice lazy afternoon vibe is in effect. Shaded by the 300 year old oak above the stage, the Hawks stretch out the solos, jam a bit, and step through the rockers, the two steps, and the waltzes. It’s a friendly crowd, we’ve played up here several times now and there’s lots of old friends in the audience. After the show the Hawks linger beneath the oak and listen to Carlos howl his blues to the appreciative crowd. Somehow Carlos is always louder than anyone anywhere, and will not rest until all eyes and ears are upon him, onstage or off. And he’s great, we reluctantly admit. From there night begins to fall. The Atomic Sherpas, a fierce uberurban band with tight arrangements, funky bass, and powerful horns get the dance party underway. Doten is sitting in with the Sherpas on psychedelic synth and he’s mad, mad mad. Twenty year old Herculean twins on bass and trombone are pushing the Sherpas to a new level. The crowd flips. These hippies came to dance. Then the Tresspassers and their new fiddler bring it home with their haunting modern gothic songs and presentation. This is a new form of hoedown, a new generation sleeping in the dirt. Strangely familiar, and not familiar. There’s more people here than ever before, the Carter Ranch Fest is growing. Back to our Gypsy Cabin and quiet mountain sleep beneath the half moon.

**you can view Joe Berardi In Nature on Paul L’s Facebook page, in all its alienated glory. Here’s a tempting sampling:DSCN9071_2.JPG

FOUR CARS TO SAN FRANCISCO

Why should we change? Gas is $2.87 a gallon. It hurts but a little. So we eco talking Hawks are not going to walk this walk. Shawn driving to our shows in the Sierra foothills in his Exploder with his family. PM is driving a load of gear in his Astro van up to his daughter PJ who works the summers in the Park. Which leaves PL and RW to pilot the Yukon to The Bug hostel outside Yosemite, first stop on our summer northern tourette. It’s luxuriously empty in the Yukon. One of us can sprawl out in the back seat and sleep while the other drives. Ah, cheap gas.

It’s summer, time of the hippie festival circuit. We’re Carter Ranch Festival bound, 5 to 99 to 41 to 140 to Triangle Road, currently coming down out of the Grapevine with lack of coffee on our minds. And freedom. Paul L’s longstanding job has come to an end, as Actuality Productions, maker of such shows as Modern Marvels and documentaries of both higher and lower brow, crumbles into the corporate earth. Rob’s unshackled from USC till September. Freedom. No responsibilities. No need for sobriety, decency, shared values. We’re on the road. With much time to muse. Muse we do. Let’s muse upon, for example, two grand mind altering plants of earth, and their dual nature. Coffee is Arabica and robusta — mellow and flavorful vs. caffeinated and astringent. Cannabis is, if you believe the new generation of licensed connoisseurs, of two main types — sativa, the head high, and indica, the body high. Are there other dualisms in the pharmacological kingdom? Medical Marijuana has changed California for good. Our state proposition system has nearly brought the state to ruin but the super silver purple kush lining is the de facto legalization of weed. It comes in all flavors now and it’s high tech and strong. And reasonably priced. If you’re a musician you can bet you are one degree of separation away from a buddy with a card if you don’t have one yourself. What will be the result of this tectonic shift? What happenes when most Californians are stoned? We will soon find out.

Speaking of propositions, California’s method of slow suicide, consider the possible closing of state parks. Yes, there will be permanent campers with perhaps less than savory health practices and perhaps lacking social skills and even a rudimentary moral code. But the militarized rangers in the gleaming white pickups and SUVs lumbering up the access roads will also be gone. Trails will deteriorate, and the wilderness will be for the wild. Bring it on, say the wilder elements in this vehicle. We’re our of the Grapevine, engulfed in the wide flatness. The hills are already brown, with much less of the yellow mustard that painted the slopes last year. We turn pensive.Have the Hawks been coasting on their tried and true point of view? Is it time to shake our psyches, muddle our minds, focus on distant horizons, the future for to see? Is the sky blue? Does the new Pope sleep in the genetically modified woods? On the 5 north, of courthe, in the flat San Joaquin Valley, for the hundredth time, we truly feel home. Puffy clouds spare us the sun’s almost summer wrath. The air is mysteriously hard to describe. It’s a dry kind of humid. We hit the 99, and the terrain gets much more interesting. Funkier farms, old businesses that can’t possibly still have customers–yet off to the right is a giant Flicks candy display tube, still spinning on its mount, in a dry abandoned factory field. Mysterious.

We pass the Tulare city sign, and 50 feet behind it is an old primered fighter jet displayed in a brown field. If you are bedraggled, you display your fist first. At Fresno we hit the 41 north, six lanes at first to accommodate high volume summer Yosemite traffic. Riding through the foothills of the Sierras. Green oaks over yellows grasses. Windows down and stoney early summer breezes fill the Yukon with the scent of freedom. Bare granite peaks in the distance. Memories of trips past. Carter Ranch ’07, Mariposa County Fair ’08. RRW forgot his stage shirts and discovered Big Red in a thrift store off highway 41. U-turning the Yukon he nearly killed a biker who appeared on his Harley right out of the blind spot. Killing a biker is never a good idea but it’s particularly bad on Labor Day weekend on a scenic highway. They’ll come for you quick. It’s one of the things they’re waiting for. Luckily we only near grazed him. Tonight it’s back to our old friendly Yosemite hostel, the Bug. We’ll play to mostly Europeans then sleep the high altitude sleep of the traveler. Waking to long lines in the Wi-Fi breakfast room. Coffee, internet, conversation. Let the trip begin!

Later that evening. Bug. We came in we ate trout we set up we sat down we stood up we said hi we tuned up we sang songs we played drums we strummed chords we plucked bass we sat down we stood up we said hi we played songs we said bye we packed up we drove out we found house we unpacked we hung out we did blog.It was a very mellow, yea subdued evening, not in the wild barn at the top of the hill but in the Yosemite Bug dining cabin, a great wood walled hangout with herbal tea, damn good food served at the far end counter, and mellow Europeans and Japanese strumming acoustic guitars on couches. We did did a mellow, mellow set. In a mellow, mellow room, with mellow, mellow trees and breezes. And the Lakers won and beat Melo. All is well.

Summer

Hit the bong
Hit the bottle
Shaquille O’Neal
Is Aristotle
Sto-ney
Stoney Summer

Thus begins a never- but someday-to-be-finished Hawks song on the particularities of the L.A. summer. It’s always summer in the Southland, with brief interruptions of autumn-like weeks in December, a bit of rain in February, a chilly day in April. Time is marked by your friends’ daughter suddenly turning four, or finding an old newspaper with a sour old story. The blue skies with mysterious white traces tell you nothing about the passing of your life.

Memory disintegrates. When did what happen? Milestones are obscured in the heat waves. Is it May? What have we been doing?What have we been doing? We played an Earth Day fest at the Armory Arts Center in Pasadena, got shocked bigtime on the bad wired outdoor stage, then our amps got fried, and we retreated indoors, to the small stage amongst hundreds of toddler Angelenos furiously creating art at long tables, where the electricity again toyed with us and we wound up singing acapella to a good vibes Earth Day crowd. Yes, we can do with out coal fired Fenders and microphones. It’s going to be just fine.

What else? We’re working on a children’s record, spearheaded by our drummer Shawn, with all the Hawks, wives Sherri and Victoria, Mike Stinson, David Jackson, the Chapin Sisters. It’s a family affair. We’re playing on Susan James’s new psychedelic folk CD. We were supposed to return to Ireland and UK, but the global economy says nay.

We’re goofing around. Rob and Paul L have a bunch of new songs, kinda gentle and melancholy, and an epic 6/8 tune written with Paul M, “I Fell In Love With The Grateful Dead.” Rob and Paul L took the Dead tune and the other infant songs out for a spin at a duo show at the Redwood Bar. Mark Follman, bassist from the late great The Magic Of Television came down and jammed with Rob, Paul L, and Victoria slamming on drums, and it sounded like something, so we’re calling it “That And Wood.” Paul L is practicing his dobro and getting his guitars refretted. Someday he’s going to sell a bunch of junk on ebay. Shawn is obsessing over recording gear. He just bought a summing box and a Masterlink that only Tape Op readers can understand. Paul L can’t get ProTools to work on his new computer. Rob and Paul are using GarageBand to make demos in his garage.

We’ve been tweaking our website, got our videos up at iseehawks.com/videos, launched a No Depression web page with lots of songs.We played Ronnie Mack’s Barndance. Six years ago at our first Barndance out in the Valley we were timid oddballs amongst true country band veterans, but we did get the attention of L.A. country kingpin Paul Marshall, who’s been a Hawk ever since. In ’09 our oddballness is part of the scene, and the Barndance feels like home. Bless you, Ronnie Mack. We had a fine little set and King Cotton followed and was mighty mighty, in peak form with a kickass band. On, King, you mighty huskie!

After afternoon rehearsal Paul L was enticed Tom Sawyer style into digging up a raised bed in the Waller yard. We made “X” furrows in the newly turned soil, dumped in seeds randomly, and covered them up. Two weeks later, the miracle of life appeared in the shape of green “X’s” in the soil. That’s a lot of spinach and lettuce.A night of summer magic came early in May at the South Pasadena Eclectic Music Festival. Don Preston and Joe Berardi, Double Naught Spy Car, eclecticism personified, and as the sun sank, the Hawks played a love fest to a big crowd spilling in from Mission Street east of the train stop. Sweet summer. Stan Ridgway and his magical band followed, breaking into “Don’t Box Me In” as a full moon breached the South Pas irregular horizon. So good, so good.

Two earthquakes in three days. Enter stoney summer. We hit the road at the end of May, what some would call early summer, for the Sierras, Winters, and the Bay Area. Come with us.

Homecoming — Grand Old Echo with Old Californio

Hard times may be here again, as the song says, but some things assert themselves when you can no longer buy your way to happiness–friends and music, for example. Us Hawks are rich indeed.

april5hawkscalifornio2.jpgSunday afternoon kicked off the Grand Old Echo ’09 in style, with the outdoor patio and the indoor Echo more packed than we’ve ever seen it. Good vibes and rich musical textures filled the room from the getgo, as Whispering Pines played elegant and ethereal Allman Brothers influenced country rock, with our favorite outmoded device: sweet twin guitar lines. Nice.

The room got even more packed as Old Californio, launching their great new CD Westering Again, hit the stage. With new guitar virtuoso Woody Aplanalp blazing, Old Californio hit a new level–more muscular and focused, with their 60’s psychedelic layer intact. And great songs. The crowd freaked. Paul L of the Hawks was pleased to sit in on steel for the OC encores, at the same time wondering how the Hawks were going to follow this assault.It was our first full on electric show in a while, but we locked in pretty quickly, and our brand new Burritos 1973 style song “Dear Flash” felt great, like a new old friend. Likewise “Laissez Les Bon Temps Roulet,” which was first written as a cajun rocker, but we’ve been playing it slow and spacious, for the bittersweet verses that reflect on a battered life fully lived. The memory of Duane Jarvis was informing this evening, and although we didn’t know him well, we hope he was digging it all.

So many friends out there on the floor! Hot, steamy, dense, an embracing energy we love. Our friend Randall’s mom Evelyn fainted, the paramedics were called, and she was walked out to an ambulance, where the paramedics tried to convince her to come to the hospital. “No way!” she said. “I’ve got to see the Hawks!” And onstage friends too–Christina Ortega, Queen of the Bluegrass Murder Ballad and emcee for the night, got up with us and totally rocked on “Moundsville Pen.” Message to Christina: first of all, it’s not fair that you can take six months off, get up and own the stage like you’ve been on tour for six months. And second of all, the public wants more. Rich and Levi from Old Californio, on guitar and sweet organ, jumped up and added their good taste to “Motorcycle Mama,” with a satisfying guitar wankoff, er, tradeoff to bring the song home. We did a pretty ferocious “Humboldt” for an encore, and that was it. A long hang with family and friends, with the young Waller redheads and cousin Francis commanding a great deal of attention, big thanks to Kim and Pam, fare well to our Californio brethren, then the Echo security began their customary clearing out for the mysterious young pop bands that mysteriously take over the Echo after the country rock fest. It always seems strange that a packed out and beer and whiskey loving crowd gets festus interruptus every Sunday, but then Los Angeles is a strange, strange place. But good. On this warm April nice it was very good.

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photo by Crystal

I SEE HAWKS IN L.A. TURNS 10!

I See Hawks in L.A. was founded ten years ago today in the East Mojave desert west of Las Vegas. The day started bright and clear with a stiff breeze blowing from the east. Paul Lacques, brother Anthony, and Rob Waller were en route to Las Vegas to celebrate Anthony’s 30th birthday. The three comrades pulled off the road near Cima Dome to take a desert hike.

Cap2.gifThe hike quickly devolved, the hikers transforming into prehistoric, pre-homo sapiens versions of themselves. Screeching like monkeys, throwing rocks, tackling each other, zigging and zagging through the Joshua trees, the proto-hawks found themselves suddenly lost. Which way is the highway? All ways looked the same. Instead of getting freaked, the three men came to their senses just a bit and awaited their vision. ” I see hawks in L.A.” one of them said, though it is unclear which one. “We should have a country band called I See Hawks in L.A.” said another. They all agreed.

And so it came to be. A powerful vision was visited upon these souls that day. Somehow they made it back to the road and on to Las Vegas but not after losing and finding PL’s girlfriend Kathy with the help of the California Highway Patrol. But we’ll leave that part of the story out for now. It would be more than a year before the band played their first show but they’d already have a record under their belts by then. Ten years on and the journey has been a long and winding ride full of music and mystery. Paul Marshall joined the band. Then Shawn Nourse. Brantley Kearns floated in and out. David Jackson helped launch the musical boat. An incomplete list of the wonderful musicians who have played in/with the Hawks includes: Rick Shea, John McDuffie, Dave Zirbel, Marc Doten, Marcus Watkins, Joe Berardi, Danny McGough, Richie Lawrence, Bubba Hernandez, Amy Farris, Carter Stowell, Chris Hillman, Gabe Witcher, Dave Markowitz, Dave Raven, Dave Rubin, Tommy Funderburk, The Chapin Sisters, Jeanna Steele, Mark Follman, Jimi Hawes, M.B. Gordy, Old Californio, Steven Woodruff, Ethan Allen, Paul Olguin, Peter Lacques, Matthew Lacques, John Lacques, Keith Miles, Ed Barguiarena, Carlos Guitarlos, Tony Gilkyson, Mike Stinson, Kip Boardman and on and on and on.

Thanks to all for their musical contribution, thanks to our fans for coming to shows, taking us into their homes, keeping us going. Thanks to all the bookers, lawyers, record folks, auto mechanics, press people, and others who have understood our vision and connected to our music and played a crucial role. Thanks to our friends and families for supporting the us all along. Onward!

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Original Hawks 2000: Brantley Kearns, Rob Waller, David Jackson,
Anthony Lacques, Paul Lacques, backyard Echo Park.

WATCHING THE MUDDY WATER — FOLK ALLIANCE CONFERENCE, MEMPHIS

Greetings from Memphis, TN. It’s February 21st and the sun has just set. The sky is clearing after a day of light rain and an orange glow is settling over the Mississippi River to the west, far below this 19th floor Marriot Hotel balcony. It’s 37 degrees and day two for the Hawks here at the massive Folk Alliance national conference. We are I See Hawks In L.A., LLC. We are executives of Western Seeds Records. We are here to play music and make contacts. The first we can do. The second is a tall order for Rob Waller and Paul L. Rob is a moody semi-recluse and Paul L is a semi-kempt hippie who loathes any self promoting tendencies in his elitist soul. Paul M is a balanced and well adjusted human, but there’s only so much one man can do. And yet we breathe deep the Marriot beige recycled air. Paul L is wolfing down a hardened slice of buffet pizza that is screaming a warning. We are building a career here.

Yesterday: we woke well before dawn in L.A., argued our baggage and guitars onto the dismal Delta flight and made our way across the country by uneventful jet plane. Mild turbulence, no food, free water. Safe landing. Then it was down to the Marriott, and five showcases between 3 PM and 2 AM. Quite a day.

Good friend and director of 120 volunteers at the Folk Alliance extravaganza, Laura Barnaby has greased the wheels here for the Hawks. On arrival, she guides us through registration, provides us with a comfy hang in an obscure corporate meeting room, beer, coffee and exotic varieties of Red Bull, and attends each of our shows. She shows us the ropes and we get our bearings. There are hundreds of guitar cases and guitarists, side men and women, stand up bassists, and thoughtful song writers, eager young folk singers belting out American Idolized vocals, dazzling soloes on fiddles and guitars at every escalator and echoing high ceilinged foyer. Posters and flyers and free CDs cover every table and wall. We wander packed hallways, rubbing shoulders with legends of folk and country, past cases of the ubiquitous Red Bull and the kids to drink them. There’s a new wave of young folkers entering the scene and that’s exciting. There’s Japanese folk singers, Canadian accordionists, Texas swing bands, veteran bluesmen, zydeco queens. It’s quite a scene. We are bedazzled.

But with each showcase set we’re a little more connected to the rhythms of the house. We play a small showcase room to a small but responsive crowd. In the front row watching us stolidly is Guy Carawan, a legend of 60’s folk. Damn. We’re acoustic, no mics, so our vocals are at their best blend. Everything is all right. We exit the small room and resume our wander, lugging our cases through the sea of aspirants. It’s an erratic and jumpy rhythm but we’re catching the groove. The 17th, 18th, and 19th Marriot floors are literally hundreds of rooms filled with folk music, some too loud with amplification, some delicate flowers on the verge of being crushed by the sonic onslaught. We return often to the balconies to breathe outside air. The river far below is swollen with winter rains, snows, and ices. It has a powerful gravitational pull, we’re never out of its reach. Rob W spent his childhood near the river and feels at home back in its watershed.

But back to the folk scene. James Burton, Albert Lee, Ray Wylie Hubbard, Rodney Crowell, Charlie Louvin, Roger McGuinn. There’s some real baddasses hanging around the lobby. We check our guitars and start to mingle. How is this done? Well, not very well. We approach no famous or powerful people with our CDs. We meet our peers, and lots of people come up to us, so our group agoraphobia is blissfully buried. We swim the sea of folk humanity. We hear very bad songs, well played and sung. A few good songs. Rodney Crowell plays in a conference room, singing Emmy Lou Harris vintage tunes, backed up by James Burton and Albert Lee. Our good buddy Dan Montgomery’s new band, with Robert Mache (ex Continental Drifters) on guitar and Andrew Simons on upright bass, is soulful, subtle, and the perfect vehicle for his great new batch of tunes. This is very, very good.

Everyone is gently but relentlessly on the make. Singers and players wander in and out of rooms, check out their peers/competition, ever roving. Interwoven with wide eyed ambition is a wild enthusiasm for playing. People are jamming everywhere, in intensely focused small circles in every corner of the Marriot. Paul L sat in with Julie Christensen and Kenny Edwards, a big treat for him. Our five showcases went well. Lisa Haley sat in with us on mesmerizing fiddle, bless her heart. Our last showcase was at 2 a.m. We were fried. We staggered out of the Marriot, drove east through Memphis to Rob’s parents. We slept.

We began today, Day 2, in the afternoon at WEVL radio, in funky old downtown Memphis, down the street from a former whorehouse that serviced the railroad trade. Program director Brian Craig greets us, DJ Ron is elegant and genteel, and we do a live acoustic performance that sounds good. There are five or ten truly great radio stations left in America, and this is inarguably one of them. Check out their show schedule and be amazed. We get coffee at a very hip café across the street and Brian regales with his encyclopedic knowledge of early radio and the arcane ways of the FCC. Then it’s back to the Marriot, that bracing stale convention air, and more showcases. Our sleep deprivation has made us mellow, and we do some very good relaxed showcases, no tune repeats. We hung with the gracious Amilia K Spicer in her showcase room, with whiskey and coolness abounding. We saw Randy Weeks and Tony Gilkyson’s high altitude set, hands down the best music we witnessed. Be proud, L.A. Americana. You are second to none. L.A. pals Stephanie Bettman and Luke Halpin sat in with us on our last showcase. What a treat. They sounded so good, and kicked us into high gear. Dan Navarro caught and dug our new Cajun style love song, another big lift, as we have terminal anxiety and need for affirmation when we debut a song. We wandered the halls, got separated, got delirious, many things happened. We did our final stagger out of the Marriot at 3:30 in the morning. Down the dark and somewhat shabby highway to chez Waller.

The collapse of the air travel infrastructure worked in our favor the next day, as we bade farewell to Memphis. Understaffed, Delta Airlines had no one at the gate to keep Tony G, us Hawks, and several other bleary eyed folkies from walking on the plane with our guitars. We took up much of the overhead space, and civilians with their rolling baggage trying to avoid the $15 baggage fee had nowhere to stash. It was a fleeting grim payback for years of airline abuse of guitars and guitarists. We watched stonefaced as the civilians and flight attendants huffed and puffed, and finally retreated, the greedy luggage stuffed below where our guitars normally suffer. Home, you massive gravity defying beast. We have bested you this time.