Milton
Sayers lived alone in a second floor apartment in
the East Village of Manhattan, before everything became high-rise. As
I climbed the stairs I could hear Billie Holiday emanating from the
other side of the wooden door. Autumn in New York. She sang over
a piano that was only there because you had to have something there
I mean she couldnt sing on her own, now could she? Whatever
it was there for, it wasnt to be noticed. The song finished, and
I heard Milton take the three steps from the chair to the turntable.
Not bothering to turn the record over, he simply started the song again.
Ahh, Lady Day, I said as I opened the door. Doesnt get much better,
does it?
Yeah, he said, fishing in the pockets of his orange plaid dressing gown
for cigarettes. This is the life. Invalid, cancer-ridden
shitty
apartment. Cant play, cant work, no money, asshole landlord
listening to the same goddamned song again and again at ten o-clock
in the morning this is the life alright.
He
often said cheery things like that.
Theyre on the counter, I said, as he bent down to examine the
stylus for signs of his cigarettes. You shouldnt smoke, I added.
Not when your lungs arent well.
Mind your own fucking business, he said to me. Theyre my lungs.
I
was going through my regular period of re-adjustment, having just come
from the College. It made me realise the extent to which our paths had
differed, mine and Miltons. Milton had spent his entire life drinking
with gangsters, arguing with club owners (read gangsters), flaunting
Jim Crowe laws, riling racists, making stupid bets with dangerous people
and generally having fun. I, on the other hand, had retreated into the
sheltered world of academia. At the time, it seemed the only sensible
option.
It
was the depression, twenty years ago now, give or take. The world had
been taken to the cleaners by one war, and was warming up for another.
There was little work for the best of musicians, and I was by no stretch
of the imagination the best. So, when I heard that the post was available,
I called in as many favours as I could, and flaunted the moderate wealth
and standing that my family possessed to the best of my ability. Milton,
being the colour he is, had no such option available to him. He probably
wouldnt have taken it anyway. Now, after two decades of numbing
immersion in the banalities of the music have robbed me of the cream
of my passion for playing it, I have trouble deciding who got the rawest
deal.
Have you been playing? I ventured. This was always a touchy topic, though
both of us treated it with a forced casualness.
He
shook his head and grunted in the negative, pretending to be absorbed
in the Times.
Macys are having a sale, he said, in a dead voice that was doing
more than make conversation. Twenty percent off mahogany drawers. Didnt
your girl used to wear them? He asked, by way of a joke to diffuse the
situation. I couldnt laugh.
We
sat in uncomfortable silence for a few seconds.
Been anywhere? I asked. Music, its players, its Gods, its clubs and
its memories are the only topics on which Milton can be induced into
an involved conversation these days.
Last time was Birdland with you. And you know what that was like, he
adds. Miltons opinions on music have darkened to match his general
demeanour recently, though I suspect that this has been happening internally
ever since he stopped playing. However, his bleak assessments are always
tempered by a nostalgic longing for the way things (and he) used to
be.
It wasnt so bad
It was just bop. It might not be what we
did, but its whats happening now. Weve had our time.
Milton
stared into space and smoked his cigarette. This was what he had been
consigned to some old nigger in an apartment, whos time
it no longer was, invisible to the city that had made so much of him.
I sensed this in him more often, and looking at him smoke and stare,
I wondered if he, like myself, had considered (before he started to
fade) the possibility of becoming one of the ghosts of jazz. Had he
glanced sideways into the shadows at Mintons, at the Apollo, The
Savoy, Birdland, at Café Society at just about any damn
club you could find and seen the broken patrons and players of
yesteryear? Had he noticed their number dwindle, and felt a half-reasonable
fear that soon or at least one day in the foreseeable future
he would be called on the take their places? To warm the eternal
seat? Of course not. Those half buried in the shadows were unlike Milton
is one vital way. At the majority of clubs, if Milton was not making
wonderful noises on the stage, or being inconspicuous between sets,
then he was being thrown out.
He
wasnt like Lady Day, he didnt have the immortal glamour
and conviction, nor the barrier of femaleness, to throw chairs at bigots,
to go wild at doormen. This was a fact only brought to his attention
by his recent illness, which deprived him of the opium of his existence,
and the badge of his usefulness to white people the ability to
make a nice noise.
Its not the fact that its bop that worries me, he continued, unable
to stop himself as always. Its the whole scene. He took a drag
of cigarette, and started coughing violently. This would have worried
me, but it was just a part of his daily routine by now.
Half the motherfuckers there were only looking to score. I mean, I remember
when the blowing came first man. Wed play for maybe five, six
hours.
Cmon, I said in a tone of forced joviality that I immediately
regret, half of us woulda been out of our goddamned minds too.
But it was still about the playing! He wasnt yelling, but there
was a conviction in his voice that silenced me. I felt the back of my
neck redden. Look at the shit we have now, he continued. A club opens
one week, closes the next. Sure, there are guys who are good, real good.
They can say things the way you or me never could. But imagine what
they would be like if they didnt twelve outa twenty-four useable
hours into their arms. You think this shit I gots cancer? That
out there, he pointed out the window toward fifty-second street, thats
a fucking cancer!
He
started to cough, more violently this time. I fetched him a glass of
water, and put it next to him without a word. I was a little pleased
that I had at least gotten him talking passionately about something.
This was a new development in Miltons personality. While I knew
that he didnt like junk, and the things that it had been doing
to black neighbourhoods, he rarely went on rants like this. His usual
method was one of escape. He hid in the half-lit clubs that had provided
the backdrop for a more happier, youthful time. He hid in the mythology
that had grown up around the Jazz world, all of the apocryphal anecdotes
and colourful turns of phrase that his mind had patchworked together
to create a thick, heady blanket of nostalgia for him to hide under.
Even
as he was coughing, Milton struggled to continue his condemnation of
all the world had done to him and his beloved music. The coughing became
so strong that he could not force any more words out, though he did
not stop trying. Small flecks of spit came of his mouth. These were
followed by larger pieces, yellow flecked with the red of Miltons
blood. If he were white, his face would have been bright red by now,
as the coughing fit and the frustration welling up inside him fed off
of one another, and conspired to bring him to his knees. He picked up
the glass I had placed next to him and threw it hard into the opposite
wall. Shards ricoched in all directions, and the jagged base of the
glass fell to the ground, looking like a broken crown.
Milt, calm down. Look, its not that bad.
Like hell it aint. He coughed a few more times, and then took some deep
breaths. Look, Ill be cool. Youve got places to be, I imagine,
he said, not without bitterness. Go about your business, while it still
wants you.
Ill bring you some groceries tomorrow.
My
embarrassing exit followed me down the stairs and out into the street.
Walking home from Miltons was normally an enjoyable activity.
I would leave his apartment somehow transformed, re-enlivened. Usually,
seeing Milton reminded some almost forgotten part of me that there was
passion to be had in the creation of music, in short, that the sum of
the parts was greater than the whole. I believed if only for six or
eight blocks, that if I didnt think about it too much, and just
let my hands do what years of hammering away at black and white keys
had taught them to, everything would sort itself out, and I would once
again be able to just play without care.
This
time, I knew it was a lie. I left the house embarrassed, feeling as
though I had condescended to Milton. It wasnt the condescension
of a well-off white professor to a semi-impoverished coloured ex-musician.
It had nothing to do with money or skin or anything else. Neither Milt
nor myself had really ever paid them much mind. What bothered me was
that I had refused to acknowledge one thing. Milton and I were the same.
We were both dead in the musical sense, and we both knew it. I was strangled
by my consciousness, my years of thinking too hard, and my decision
at the beginning of it all to sell my musical soul for the comfort of
myself and my family. Milton was strangled by a deadly disease, the
arbiter of mans existence.
The
world we came from was dead, and (I had to agree with Milton here) the
one that had superseded it looked very much like dying. Where as I may
have massaged the pain with the methadone of a loving wife, nice house
and respectable post among the academia, he had hid from it until it
was too hard to hide. You cant hide from something that is being
sold under your window, that floats out of every club that used to come
alive with your sound.
As
I walked the distance home I heard the song again, Autumn in New
York spilling from an upstairs window that might as well have been
Miltons. How many others were there, who like me and like Milton,
had spent their time in the summer sun, and were waiting for the winter?