“Dear
Christien,
You don’t know me. Our connection is that
we were both friends of Zak Jourek. I was his girlfriend in
the winter of 2002. We were only together a short while. One day, he walked out
on me – just a note on the kitchen table that said “Going out to the desert to
clear my head.” This wasn’t unusual, he spent quite a bit of our brief time
together disappearing, reappearing, and disappearing again. Staring at that cryptic
note I gave up on him, prepared to end it when he deigned to show up again. He
never did.
To be honest, in the months that followed, my
reaction was relief. Our relationship had been a bit bipolar – up and down and
up and down. Crazy. Zak was angry much of the time. The drinking didn’t help.
When he wasn’t drinking there was a sadness about him, deep, some place he
couldn’t reach. From what, I never knew. In retrospect, I think that he was in
the middle of some sort of mental breakdown. I probably suspected that at the
time, but kept the realization locked away from my own consciousness for years
– what would that say about me, my attraction to him? How was I haunted?
Right after he disappeared, I dumped his
stuff into a box and that box has traveled around with me, apartment to
apartment, house to house, stuffed in some back closet or in an attic, for the
last thirteen years. I don’t know why I didn’t get rid of it. Maybe I was waiting
for the right time to find it and open it. While packing for another move
(divorce) I found the box in the basement.
I read the manuscript, listened to the
tapes (after going out to a local thrift store and buying a tape deck). I
remember some of those songs recorded on the tapes, but not all. I vaguely
remember that he said that you were around when he recorded these songs. You
were "the poet" he had worked with in Des Moines, and then met again
later in Boulder.
After reading the manuscript, I went online
to find Zak, hoping to send all this stuff back to him, but there was nothing. So
I'm sending this package to you, through your publisher.
Maybe you’ll be able to do a better job at finding out what happened to Zak
than me.”
There
was no signature.
My Connection to Zak
I met Zak Jourek while working in the
dining hall of a small private university in Des Moines, Iowa. He worked in the
dish room and I worked in the kitchen. I heard someone singing "Graveyard Shift" by Uncle Tupelo in the dish room and went to see who it was. The connection was sealed when we
found out that we had both spent our teen years in the Philadelphia area. If
you know anything about Iowa, you’ll know that very few strangers – people who
were not born and raised in Iowa – come to live there. Iowa is filled almost
exclusively with Iowans. If you are from somewhere else, and you happen to end
up there, you will constantly get the question: “Why are you here?” Why,
indeed. So, we bonded as professional strangers.
About four months into my first year at
Naropa University in Boulder, Colorado, there as a knock at my door, and I
opened it to find Zak standing there grinning, guitar and backpack at his feet. He
stayed with me for about a month before finding a job and his own place. It was
during that time that he made the tapes that were in the package.
I sent the tapes to my nephew, Rick Thomas (aka. Rikki Lixx, former lead guitarist for Operator and Rev Theory, and poster boy for Epiphone guitars – you can find an interview with him from Epiphone here) and he kindly re-mastered them for me. After thinking about it for too many months, I decided to post sections of the manuscript and the songs here. Whether Zak would have wanted that – I don’t know. Where he’s gone – I also don’t know. Dead in the desert? Wandering in the mountains? Assumed an alias, living as someone else? Skipped the country? Playing on some street corner in Portland? Short of hiring a private detective, I’ve exhausted all avenues. If he’s out there still, he definitely doesn’t want to be found.
I sent the tapes to my nephew, Rick Thomas (aka. Rikki Lixx, former lead guitarist for Operator and Rev Theory, and poster boy for Epiphone guitars – you can find an interview with him from Epiphone here) and he kindly re-mastered them for me. After thinking about it for too many months, I decided to post sections of the manuscript and the songs here. Whether Zak would have wanted that – I don’t know. Where he’s gone – I also don’t know. Dead in the desert? Wandering in the mountains? Assumed an alias, living as someone else? Skipped the country? Playing on some street corner in Portland? Short of hiring a private detective, I’ve exhausted all avenues. If he’s out there still, he definitely doesn’t want to be found.
The manuscript has seven coherent sections
and then some unfinished bits and pieces. I believe it’s mostly autobiography
masquerading as fiction (as so much fiction is). The part below about being
signed and dropped by EMI was true enough (well, to be honest, it suddenly occurs to me
that I only know it was true because he said it was true – hmmnnn...). I’ll be
posting the sections, along with Zak’s songs and lyrics, over the next six
weeks.
I leave you now with the first section of
the manuscript (untitled) – and two songs. One of the songs is my all-time favorite
of Zak’s work, called Kids on the Stoop.
The other song, In the Motel Cave, shows
up in the manuscript below. Keep in
mind these tapes were personal demos, never meant to be heard by anyone other
than friends. How he would have finally produced them is anybody’s guess. The guitar
sounds a bit sour, but we can forgive it because it’s been re-mastered from ancient
audio-tape.
Beneath
the manuscript section, I’ve posted the lyrics to the songs.
To hear the songs, click on the title of the song below.
1. In the Naked Bed, In
the Motel Cave
I opened the motel
window curtains. We were somewhere south of Jackson, Missouri. Across the
highway, messages scrolled across the TRUCKSTOP 76 digital board: “ATTEND OUR
CHAPEL SERVICE IN OUR NEW AIR-CONDITIONED TV LOUNGE…BREAKFAST ALL YOU CAN EAT
ONLY 12.99...”
Me and Liv were in the middle of a
low budget singer/songwriter tour: empty coffee houses, bars that served up
open mics before we played. Denver, Kansas City, St. Louis. Fifteen years ago I signed with EMI. Right after I signed, there was a shuffle
in higher management and the executives that signed me were fired. Needless to
say, the new fuckwits didn’t want to have anything to do with the artists the
old fuckwits had signed, so I was dumped. They dumped a lot of people. In my
desperation to be signed, I’d handed over all the rights to my music. They
locked it all up in a vault and threw away the key, thus ending my brilliant
career in the music industry. I went on a drinking binge that lasted many, many
years.
I
picked up my guitar, played the same three chords over and over, humming
nonsense words. Liv stirred on the bed. “I need coffee.” There was still some
wine in the bottle on the bed stand from the night before. “Have some wine,” I
said.
There was a guy sitting poolside in
blue shorts, white socks, dress shoes, no shirt, scanning a Sunday paper. Two
children, wearing face masks, stood in the shallows. Trucks thundered down the
highway on the other side of the chain link fence that surrounded the pool. It
was strange how that fence, that flimsy see-through fence, stood in for a
legitimate divide between the vacation and the workaday world.
A tall, thin man wearing floods dragged a black plastic bag behind him through the ditch grass in front of The TRUCKSTOP 76, looking for cans. He suddenly dropped on all fours and scoured the ground, but came up empty. The reflection of the sun off a passing truck sent a sliver of light across the ceiling.
A tall, thin man wearing floods dragged a black plastic bag behind him through the ditch grass in front of The TRUCKSTOP 76, looking for cans. He suddenly dropped on all fours and scoured the ground, but came up empty. The reflection of the sun off a passing truck sent a sliver of light across the ceiling.
I could feel the words out there. I
opened my mouth and sang: There’s a long
white glare on the ceiling/Streetlight through the trees/There’s a man on the
corner crying “Jesus!”/He drops down to his knees…
“I’m sick of this,” Liv said.
I nodded, kept playing, humming,
waiting on more words.
“There was only one guy in the
audience last night,” she said.
When she first hooked up with me she
was under the impression that she was the secret ingredient that was missing
from my former brush with fame. Now that I was with her, singing with her, I
would surely get back what had previously been denied me, wouldn’t I?
The lone guy in that cafe looked
about my age. He sat through both sets, smiling, tapping his fingers on the
table. During the break he found me in the bathroom, stood at the urinal next
to me, pestering me with questions. How long did it take me to learn guitar?
Could I recommend a kind of guitar? It was hard to pee. I think he was slightly
retarded.
“I liked him,” I said to Liv.
“I think he was retarded,” Liv said
back.
It’s funny, thinking about it now, but
I’m surprised she didn’t last longer. We were only halfway through the tour
when she threw in the towel. But then, she was ambitious, and it was clear we
were heading nowhere.
Liv pointed at an old woman behind
another window, holding a plastic cup, staring down at the kids in the pool.
When the old woman saw us watching her, she slipped further into the darkness.
I instantly thought of my mother, the drunk war widow, and sang: There’s a woman in the sea of forgetting/drinking
wine from a plastic cup/Cutting the lines to her memory/the sea swallows them
up…
“Let’s go to Florida, lie on a
beach,” Liv said.
“With what?” We were barely making
gas money. The motel was a ridiculous splurge on my card. Most nights we slept
in the car. Of course, the tour would have been terribly exciting if I had been
nineteen. I wasn’t even close.
“Just use the card,” Liv said.
(end of part one)
(click on title to hear song)
Little
tense Anne in her neoprene suit
dives
beneath the closet floor
looking
for the treasure of lost hours
Her
husband sleeps by the closet door
still
drunk from the night before
Anne
prays for rain
but
she really means "flowers"
Dr.
Lazer adjusts his tie
gets
up from his DJ couch
thanks
the singing waitress for her cupcakes
Looks
out the window at half past noon
thinks
about the gypsies in his youth
Gone
with the orchards
that
they camped in
And
the kids on the stoops, beating things with sticks
And
the kids on the stoops, beating things with sticks
Shockbox
Fred reads to his girl
about
the troubles in the Third World
She
really likes the way he says the word "disaster"
They
replay the video of their honeymoon
The
part where he drops the ball too soon
And talk
about money made from such
disasters
Shirley
Temple Cannonball
staples
celebrities to her wall
Tells
her children they’re her lovers
Michael
Jackson, Elvis too,
the
first man who walked on the moon
The
children stare and dream
of
their potential
And
the kids on the stoops, beating things with sticks
And
the kids on the stoops, beating things with sticks
Crazy
Jackson collects the cans
he
separates the wheat from the chaff
Reads
the magazines left in the dumpster
Articles
of how to curl your hair
and
articles of what to wear
to
make your lover think that you're
a
model
Fat
Cat Mac in his sleaze balloon
born
with a silver spoon
trades
gold for love in the alley
Keeps
a watch inside his head
keeping
tabs on money spent
Marks
the wage of love by the hour
And
the kids on the stoops, beating things with sticks
And
the kids on the stoops, beating things with sticks
(click on title to hear song)
There’s
a long white glare on the ceiling
streetlight
through the trees
There’s
a man on the corner crying Jesus
he
drops down to his knees
There’s
a woman in the sea of forgetting
drinking
wine from a plastic cup
Cutting
the lines to her memory
the
sea swallows them up
The
butterflies of heat fly skyward
turn
to bats on the wing
Flapping
in the caves of the lonely
making
song where no one sings
The
train-engine talk whispers secrets
into
the widow’s ear
Telling
her of the sea of forgetting
...it's
here
A
boy flies towards the moon
just
because he wants to
An
old man with a farmer’s tan
sinks
into the frog-dark of his shoes
Remembering
the wife he lost
smelling
of buttermilk
Picking
roses in the dawn
eating
petals with the dew
What
I really want to know
is
why some rise and why some fall
Why
some thrash in the waterfall
and
why some do nothing at all
And
why some do nothing at all
And why
some do nothing at all
(All images of paintings are by Georges Braque,
except the one directly above -
known as "The Old Guitarist"
by Picasso)
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