Daron's Guitar Chronicles: Vo...

By ceciliatan

137K 9.7K 1.1K

Daron’s Guitar Chronicles tells the story of Daron Marks, a young gay guitar player, from about the time he i... More

1. I Love Rock and Roll
2. Invisible Touch
3. Another Lost Classic
4. Always Something There to Remind Me
5. Promises, Promises
6. Jet Airliner
7. I Love L.A.
8. Look At Little Sister
9. More Than A Feeling
10. I Ran
11. I Fought the Law (And the Law Won)
12. Message In a Bottle
13. Old Man Down the Road
14. Heart of Glass
15. One Thing Leads to Another
16. It's Only A Northern Song
17. Owner of a Lonely Heart
18. Moody Blues
19. The Logical Song
20. You Gotta Look Sharp
21. That's What Friends Are For
22. I Know What Boys Like
23. The Cure
24. All the Young Dudes
25. No Time Left For You
26. Suddenly, Last Summer
27. Life In a Northern Town
28. Don't Do Me Like That
29. Tell the Moon Dog, Tell the March Hare
30. You Got Another Thing Coming
31: Goody Two Shoes
32 Welcome to the Machine
33 Lets Dance
34. Electric Light Orchestra
35 Everybody Wants to Rule the World
36 Unguarded Minute
37 Sweet Hitch-hiker
38. You're All I've Got Tonight
39 Bring Me Some Water
40 Town Called Malice
41 Waiting for the Man
42 Listen Like Thieves
43 Maybe I'm Amazed
44 Love Is The Drug
45 People Are Strange When You're A Stranger
46 Never Mind The Bollocks
47 Blinded By The Light
48 Doo Wah Diddy
49 Rock And Roll High School
50 Talk Talk
51 Who Can It Be Now
52 Rock And Roll Part Two
53 Roll With It
54 Cruel Summer
55 Fall On Me
56 Madness: One Step Beyond
57 Sympathy For The Devil
58 Putting Out Fire With Gasoline
59 Because I Would Not Be So All Alone
60 Money For Nothing
61 Have We Got Contact
62 The Ever-Popular Tortured Artist Effect
63 Pour Some Sugar on Me
64 WORKING FOR THE WEEKEND
65 I'VE SEEN ALL GOOD PEOPLE
66 ALONE AGAIN OR
67 TAKE THE SKINHEADS BOWLING
68 MISSING YOU
69/70 JUKE BOX HERO
71 OUT OF THE BLUE
72 INTO THE BLACK
73 ANYWAY YOU WANT IT
74 THAT'S THE WAY YOU NEED IT
75 MEXICAN RADIO
76 DON'T STAND SO CLOSE TO ME
77 BAD COMPANY
78 VIDEO KILLED THE RADIO STAR
79 COMFORTABLY NUMB
80 BOYS DON'T CRY
81 LOSING MY RELIGION
82 3 STRANGE DAYS
83 YOU SPIN ME ROUND
84 BIG AUDIO DYNAMITE
85 IN SEARCH OF THE LOST CHORD
86 THE CUTTER
87 FINEST WORKSONG
88 UNDER THE MILKY WAY
89 TURN THE PAGE
90 MORE THAN WORDS
91 HARMONY IN MY HEAD
92 ZIGGY STARDUST
93 YOU GOTTA FIGHT FOR YOUR RIGHT TO PARTY
94 CARRY ON WAYWARD SON
95 TAINTED LOVE
96 VETERAN COSMIC ROCKER
97 NEW SENSATION
98 WHAT'S THE MATTER HERE?
99 ONE TRICK PONY
100 SHARP DRESSED MAN
101 LISTEN TO WHAT THE MAN SAYS
102 STILL CRAZY AFTER ALL THESE YEARS
104 FLY ME TO THE MOON (SPIN MAGAZINE ARTICLE)
105 ONCE BITTEN
106 TWICE SHY
107 THE CLASH
108 (I'M NOT YOUR) STEPPIN' STONE
109 SMOKE ON THE WATER
110 BRING ON THE DANCING HORSES
111 HAD A DAD
112 I CAN'T GO FOR THAT (NO CAN DO)
113 DARK SIDE OF THE MOON
114 SWINGTOWN
115 MY GUITAR WANTS TO KILL YOUR MAMA
116 NAKED EYES
117 BRING ON THE NIGHT
118 THE MORE THINGS CHANGE
119 FREEZE FRAME
120 ME & JULIO DOWN BY THE SCHOOLYARD
121 IT DON'T COME EASY
122 SNOWBLIND
123 IN BETWEEN DAYS
124 RUNNING DOWN A DREAM
125 WALK THIS WAY
126 I FEEL YOUNG TODAY
127 CUTS LIKE A KNIFE
128 MIRROR IN THE BATHROOM
129 POP WILL EAT ITSELF
130 BLUES FROM A GUN
131 LONG DISTANCE DEDICATION
132 LATE IN THE EVENING
133 COLD AS ICE
134 YOURS IS NO DISGRACE
135 SENTIMENTAL HYGIENE
136 NEVER STOP
138 TEARS FOR FEARS
137 UNDER PRESSURE
139 DISINTEGRATION
140 DESPERATE BUT NOT SERIOUS
141 BIRTH, SCHOOL, WORK, DEATH
142 WHO ARE YOU
143 LIFE IN THE FAST LANE
144 ONLY THE LONELY
145 DANCE HALL DAYS
146 VOICES CARRY
147 ZIGGY
148 ONE OF THESE NIGHTS
149 HOOKED ON CLASSICS
150 SONGS FROM THE WOOD
151 YOU'RE ALL I'VE GOT TONIGHT
152 THE LOW SPARK OF HIGH-HEELED BOYS
153 ELECTRIC AVENUE
154 WHITE ROOM
155 BREAKFAST IN AMERICA
156 BURNING DOWN THE HOUSE
157 HEY HEY, WHAT CAN I DO
158 SO FAR AWAY
159 TURN ME LOOSE
160 GAMES PEOPLE PLAY
161 TAKE ME TO THE RIVER
162 DON'T FEAR THE REAPER
163 INSTANT KARMA
164 WALK AWAY
165 I STILL HAVEN'T FOUND WHAT I'M LOOKING FOR
166 WE WILL ROCK YOU
167 SAME OLD SONG AND DANCE
168 ANOTHER ONE BITES THE DUST
169 PRETZEL LOGIC
170 YOU MAY BE RIGHT
171 NO MORE WORDS
172 BLISTER IN THE SUN
173 LONG DISTANCE RUNAROUND
174 GO WEST
175 ROCKY MOUNTAIN WAY
176 BREAK ON THROUGH
177 GET OFF MY CLOUD
178 OVER THE HILLS AND FAR AWAY
179 WON'T GET FOOLED AGAIN
180 GOING TO CALIFORNIA
181 Centerfold
182 LOVES ME LIKE A ROCK
183 THE WILD NIGHT IS CALLING
184 LEGEND OF A MIND
185 FOLLOW YOU, FOLLOW ME
186 YOUR MAMA DON'T DANCE
187 SUPERSTITION
188 LIFE'S WHAT YOU MAKE IT
189 PAPA WAS A ROLLING STONE
190 THE POLITICS OF DANCING
191 FAME
192 GOOD TIMES BAD TIMES
193 MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR
194 YOU AIN'T SEEN NOTHING YET
195 THE LOADOUT/STAY
196 DIRTY DEEDS
197 I GOT YOU
198 ONE WAY OR ANOTHER
199 WHILE YOU SEE A CHANCE
200 TAKE THE LONG WAY HOME
201 POINT OF KNOW RETURN
Liner Notes: Bonus material & info
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Daron's Story continues...
That time we had a Reader's Poll
LINER NOTE #26
LINER NOTE #26...
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Liner Note 27
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103 OUR HOUSE

531 40 8
By ceciliatan

OUR HOUSE

The doorbell woke me up a few hours later and I knew Digger was back. Everyone in the band had a key to the house and wouldn’t have rung it. I started changing my clothes, then remembered I’d put these on clean before I fell asleep. The hair on the back of my head was still damp, like I hadn’t moved since I lay down. The sky was dark outside the window.

When I came down the stairs I was suddenly hyper aware of the graffiti in the stairwell, the pile of Colin’s dirty laundry at the bottom of the steps, the fact that most of our furniture had come off the street or from Salvation Army. No one expects their parents to see them live like this, I think. Not that I really gave a flying fuck what Digger thought of the place. And yet.

Digger had traded his tie and overcoat for a plain gray sweatshirt. He looked a little more like I’d expect that way, even though he’d worn a tie every day to work when he worked in my grandfather’s shoe store. God, I thought, I wonder what happened to the store? After my grandfather had died, Digger had been managing the place. For all I knew, Claire was doing the job now, though I couldn’t picture it. I also couldn’t picture myself asking about it. He was sitting with Christian in the living room and they each had a beer in hand.

“How’s the hand?” Chris said as soon as he saw me. Bart’s head peeked out of the kitchen to hear the answer.

I sat down in the broken recliner (it was permanently reclined–the footrest had stopped retracting before we acquired it). “Hurts. I gotta eat before I can take another horse pill.”

“So, let’s eat.” Digger looked pretty relaxed and happy. “You kids pick a place yet?”

Ziggy and Michelle came out of the kitchen and Michelle said “I think we’re thinking the North End.”

Digger insisted on driving, so all six of us piled into his Taurus while Chris and Michelle gave directions. We didn’t have an accident and the intensity of navigation in Boston kept us from discussing anything else for the duration of the trip. The North End is to Boston what Little Italy is to Manhattan. After shows Bart and I often visited a bakery here that was open all night, but I’d yet to eat in a North End restaurant.

After much driving around the edges we parked the car in a pay lot and walked up a brick-lined street into a neighborhood of narrow alleyways and streets strung with tri-color tinsel in the shapes of Christmas bells, stars, and curlicues. We went up and down two streets of bistros, bakeries, and restaurants before Digger pronounced our quest over and led us into a place paneled in dark wood, with red leather banquettes. A waitress with tall frosted hair brought us to a round table in a corner and left us with two steaming baskets of fresh-from-the-oven bread.

Okay, so I’d always heard the expression “breaking bread” and knew it stood for “making peace.” What I hadn’t known was how literally true it was. As soon as we started in on the bread, everyone relaxed and started to chat. The bread had a crisp crust but was melt-in-your-mouth light inside. We’d eaten all of it before I’d read half the menu. Digger didn’t open his–he’d picked what he wanted from the menu in the window. He also picked a wine and asked the waitress to bring us more bread. The trip had become like some weird family outing, only if it had actually been our family he and Claire would have fought about where to park the car, wouldn’t have agreed on a restaurant, and I would have already tried to slip away from them to pretend I was with some other family.

The conversation ranged from MTV to MNB to Charlie Sheen, and I had to admit I was impressed. Digger talked like he knew the entertainment industry and his opinions didn’t sound dumb. He’d seen more movies than I had and seemed well informed about music biz dirt. The osso bucco and gnocchi left us groaning stuffed, but he ordered a round of tiramisu with six spoons and coffee, and after I was done dumping sugar into mine everyone sat back, full, talked out, and tired.

“So,” Digger began, and my eyes unglazed to focus on him. “Chris here tells me you’re having some trouble getting BNC to go along with your program.”

The hairs on the back of my neck and arms tingled. “Typical stuff,” I said. I still hadn’t told any of them about Mills’ phone call that day.

He sipped his coffee from its tiny china cup. “Spin article mentioned you’re trying to self-manage, too.”

“For some definition of self-manage, yeah.”

“What do you mean by that?” He sipped his coffee. He was speaking in a groomed professional voice I couldn’t remember having heard before.

“I mean, we hire managers when we need them. Road manager, stage manager, you know. But there’s no… manager manager.”

“How about agent?”

“You mean booking agent?”

“An agent does a lot more than booking, you know that,” he said, matter of factly. “A good agency hooks you up with all kinds of stuff, not just venues.”

“We’ve been shopping around.” That was true, actually. I knew there was no way we could tour the way I wanted to without a decent agent. Especially with BNC being dicey about supporting us.

Digger put his cup down on the white saucer. “There’s business stuff you need to consider now, too. There’s a lot of things you need to be thinking about: cash flow, incorporation, insurance…” His eyes flicked to the splint on my hand.

“Yeah, yeah,” I began. “Guys, I talked to Mills today.”

Chris leaned forward. “And?”

“And he’s busting my balls about not having a demo for the next record ready. It’s almost like he either wants to sign us right away to a multi-year deal, or he wants to get rid of us.”

“And…?” Bart said.

“He wants to send Jordan Travers up to record some stuff like next week. And he’s going to be at the Orpheum show.” I held up my hand. “But I didn’t tell him about this.”

“No shit, Jordan Travers?” That was Digger and we all looked at him. “He produced probably four out of the current top tens on the Billboard chart right now. They want you bad, kiddo.”

“Would they send a guy like that just to produce a demo?”

Digger fiddled with the tiny china cup in front of him. “Sounds like he wants more than just a demo.”

“We’re not ready for this.”

“So how are you going to handle this Mills character?” Digger looked at me.

“I don’t know.”

“You need somebody who can intervene on your behalf.”

“That’s what worries me,” I said.

“Listen to me, Daron. You need to be able to play good cop bad cop with these people. You, as the artist, always want to be good cop to them. Let them think you’re doing what they want all the time. Stay on the good side of the people who have to work for you so that they’ll be motivated. But when that isn’t enough, you need someone else to play hard ball.”

“But I…”

“And when you do hit the road, are you going to do it your way or theirs? If you don’t already have a road manager, merchandising, a publicist, you know you’ll end up with who they give you to, am I right?” He looked at the others, not at me.

Bart was nodding slowly. Ziggy’s face was unreadable.

“And how about finances? Your taxes this year are going to be a nightmare, and how are you going to handle things next year? Not that the kind of lump account you have now can’t work, but have you thought about paying salaries from a central body? Incorporate, have your health insurance paid out of that account, and give yourselves salaries, and you reduce your taxable income. Have you ever thought about that?”

“Yes,” I said automatically, although that wasn’t strictly true. I’d thought about all that, but never known what to think. I’d been too lame to find out exactly what it takes or who it would take to get it all done. “I’ll get around to it soon.”

He waved his hands over his coffee cup like he was about the pull a rabbit out of it. “Oh no, kiddo, why bother? You get yourself a good manager, he’ll think of those things, he’ll handle those things, and free you up to worry about stuff like, oh, music?”

“No kidding.” I took a sip of my own coffee which was so thick with sugar as to be syrupy. I liked it that way. “But we’ve seen plenty of managers who treat their artists like slaves.” Or who were just plain promise-breaking sleazebags. “Yeah, their job is money but it’s the artist’s money. And how many managers claim they were doing things that were in the artist’s best interest that really weren’t? Nobody likes being treated like a commodity.” I was on a roll.

“So get somebody who really cares.”

“Oh yeah, and find me a fairy godmother while you’re at it.”

He smiled and folded his hands into his lap. “You’re looking at him.”

“Looking at who?”

“Your fairy godfather, a manager who really cares.”

We all sat without saying anything for a few moments while two voices in my brain went back and forth, no way, you know he has a point, no fucking way, why don’t we hear some more? The others were looking at each other and at me.

“If you say yes,” Digger said, “I can write off the whole dinner, too.”

“I…” I had that strange electrified feeling all over my skin, like none of this was real and I was just a projection from some camera somewhere.

When in doubt, defer, defer, defer. “We’ll think about it,” I finally said.

“Cool,” said Christian under his breath.

“I’d love to do it,” Digger said. “Let’s walk some of this food off while I tell you about what I’ve been doing this year with WTA. I think it’d fit in good…”

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