The Storyteller: Tales of Life and Music
By Dave Grohl
4.5/5
()
About this ebook
So, I’ve written a book.
Having entertained the idea for years, and even offered a few questionable opportunities (‘It’s a piece of cake! Just do four hours of interviews, find someone else to write it, put your face on the cover, and voila!’), I have decided to write these stories just as I have always done, in my own hand. The joy that I have felt from chronicling these tales is not unlike listening back to a song that I’ve recorded and can’t wait to share with the world, or reading a primitive journal entry from a stained notebook, or even hearing my voice bounce between the Kiss posters on my wall as a child.
This certainly doesn’t mean that I’m quitting my day job, but it does give me a place to shed a little light on what it’s like to be a kid from Springfield, Virginia, walking through life while living out the crazy dreams I had as young musician. From hitting the road with Scream at 18 years old, to my time in Nirvana and the Foo Fighters, jamming with Iggy Pop or playing at the Academy Awards or dancing with AC/DC and the Preservation Hall Jazz Band, drumming for Tom Petty or meeting Sir Paul McCartney at Royal Albert Hall, bedtime stories with Joan Jett or a chance meeting with Little Richard, to flying halfway around the world for one epic night with my daughters…the list goes on. I look forward to focusing the lens through which I see these memories a little sharper for you with much excitement.
Dave Grohl
Dave Grohl is an award-winning musician and director. He has been one of the most beloved and respected figures on the international music since his recorded debut with Nirvana on 1991’s generation-defining Nevermind. Grohl took centre stage with Foo Fighters’ 1995 self-titled debut album, and the band have gone on to win twelve Grammys and five Brit Awards. Their most recent album, Medicine at Midnight, went to No 1 on the UK charts. In 2013, Grohl made his debut as a feature director/producer with the acclaimed documentary Sound City. Grohl also directed the eight-part HBO docuseries Foo Fighters: Sonic Highways, which premiered in October 2014 and went on to win two Emmys.
Related to The Storyteller
Related ebooks
Adventures of a Waterboy (Remastered) Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsTotal F*cking Godhead: The Biography of Chris Cornell Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Eyes I See Through: Pretty Lady Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Dirt: Confessions of the World's Most Notorious Rock Band Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Can I Say: Living Large, Cheating Death, and Drums, Drums, Drums Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Stories to Tell: A Memoir Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Dave Grohl Story Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsAlice in Chains: in the Studio Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Working Class Man: The No.1 Bestseller Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Kurt Cobain: Montage of Heck Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Bowie: The Biography Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5It's So Easy: and other lies Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Open Book Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5From This Moment On Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Nine Inch Nails Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Making Rumours: The Inside Story of the Classic Fleetwood Mac Album Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Big Little Lies by Liane Moriarty (Trivia-On-Books) Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsWhole Notes Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Entertainers and the Rich & Famous For You
I'm Glad My Mom Died Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Yes Please Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Taste: My Life Through Food Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Finding Me: An Oprah's Book Club Pick Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Think Like a Billionaire Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The 38 Letters from J.D. Rockefeller to his son: Perspectives, Ideology, and Wisdom Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The Boys: A Memoir of Hollywood and Family Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Vanderbilt: The Rise and Fall of an American Dynasty Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Woman in Me Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing: A Memoir Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Bowie: An Illustrated Life Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Durrells of Corfu Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5We Need To Talk: A Memoir About Wealth Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Rememberings Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A Curious Mind: The Secret to a Bigger Life Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Apropos of Nothing Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5These Precious Days: Essays Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Where I Was From Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Not That Kind of Girl: A Young Woman Tells You What She’s “Learned” Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Down the Drain Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Let Me Tell You What I Mean Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Is This Anything? Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Hans Zimmer’s Approach: The Impact of Chinese Music in the Film Score of Kung Fu Panda 3 Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsDavid Mitchell: Back Story Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Elvis and Me Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5And Away... Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The House of Gucci: A True Story of Murder, Madness, Glamour, and Greed Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Life and Rhymes of Benjamin Zephaniah: The Autobiography Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Cinema Speculation Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Reviews for The Storyteller
285 ratings10 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Really entertaining read, seems to be a really interesting likeable chap.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A very inspiring collection of life experiences from a true music lover and creator. I was a big fan when I picked up this book and now I love him even more. Dave wins all the prizes in my book.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5He's good at telling an engaging story. He sure loves his three daughters, and his mom. I wish he'd spoken more about his wife, though he did speak about her a little at the end of the book. He did not talk about writing The Umbrella Academy.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Honestly, I didn't have a clue who this guy was when I started listening to the book and I'm probably a generation too old to really know the music, but I enjoyed Grohl's stories about his early days with the punk bank Scream, his partnership with Curt Cobain and Nirvana, and his establishment of the Foo Fighters. Here's a guy that drops name like crazy. An entertaining swing through the popular culture of the 80's, 90's and today.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I'm a huge Foo Fighters fan and this was a treat to read for me. hearing the stories from the crazy, goofy leader and all his stories about his life was really enjoyable. I think I'm going to get the audible version of this as well so I hear the book as I heard it in my head (his voice and the music tracks).
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Very enjoyable! I really didn't know a lot about Dave Grohl but got a kick hearing about his musical career and the famous musicians he has spent time with.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I read this in two days. It was outstanding.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Grohl is a storyteller....some of his antidotes are amusing (some downright funny) and his prose is almost poetic. I throughly enjoyed, I now know who Dave Grohl is (I had heard of the Foo Fighters), unfortunately still not a fan of the music, but he seems like a very interesting guy. I did look up the video of Grohl breaking his leg, his description of what if felt like made me cringe, he brought the saying 'the show must go on' to a whole new level.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I loved Dave Grohl before I read this book and I love him even more after! I devoured this account of his life - he really is a storyteller. As a huge fan of his music hearing the stories that were happening behind the scenes while he was making the music I love was awesome. Even if you are not a fan, this is a story of love of music and family and well worth the read!!!!
1 person found this helpful
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I was sucked in from page one. He reads the audiobook himself and tells his stories with such passion. You’ll appreciate it more if you are a musician (I’m not), or a huge fan of his, (I only know half his work), but it’s fun regardless. His collection of memories are a strange and wonderful mix. There are rockstar concert mishaps and there are first crushes in a classic suburban neighborhood. It’s a bit flowery at times, but it’s easy to get lost in his childlike enthusiasm.
1 person found this helpful
Book preview
The Storyteller - Dave Grohl
Dave Grohl
The Storyteller
Tale of LIfe and Music
CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP
The Storyteller, by Dave Grohl, UK AdultFOR VIRGINIA GROHL.
Without her, my stories would be very different.
FOR JORDYN BLUM.
You made my story so much more exciting and beautiful.
FOR VIOLET, HARPER, AND OPHELIA.
May each of your stories be as unique and as amazing as you are.
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION: TURN IT UP
PART ONE: SETTING THE SCENE
DNA DOESN’T LIE
THE HEARTBREAK OF SANDI
THE SCARS ARE ON THE INSIDE
TRACEY IS A PUNK ROCKER
JOHN BONHAM SÉANCE
PART TWO: THE BUILDUP
YOU’D BETTER BE GOOD
SURE, I WANNA BE YOUR DOG!
EVERY DAY IS A BLANK PAGE
IT’S A FOREVER THING
WE WERE SURROUNDED AND THERE WAS NO WAY OUT
THE DIVIDE
PART THREE: THE MOMENT
HE’S GONE
THE HEARTBREAKER
SWEET VIRGINIA
THIS IS WHAT I WANTED
PART FOUR: CRUISING
CROSSING THE BRIDGE TO WASHINGTON
DOWN UNDER DUI
LIFE WAS PICKING UP SPEED
SWING DANCING WITH AC/DC
INSPIRED, YET AGAIN
PART FIVE: LIVING
BEDTIME STORIES WITH JOAN JETT
THE DADDY-DAUGHTER DANCE
THE WISDOM OF VIOLET
CONCLUSION: ANOTHER STEP IN THE CROSSWALK
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
INTRODUCTION
TURN IT UP
Sometimes I forget that I’ve aged.
My head and my heart seem to play this cruel trick on me, deceiving me with the false illusion of youth by greeting the world every day through the idealistic, mischievous eyes of a rebellious child finding happiness and appreciation in the most basic, simple things.
Though it only takes one quick look in the mirror to remind me that I am no longer that little boy with a cheap guitar and a stack of records, practicing alone for hours on end in hopes of someday breaking out of the confines and expectations of my suburban Virginia, Wonder Bread existence. No. Now my reflection bares the chipped teeth of a weathered smile, cracked and shortened from years of microphones grinding their delicate enamel away. I see the heavy bags beneath my hooded eyes from decades of jet lag, of sacrificing sleep for another precious hour of life. I see the patches of white within my beard. And I am thankful for all of it.
Years ago, I was asked to perform at the 12-12-12 Hurricane Sandy relief concert in New York City. Held at Madison Square Garden, it featured the Mount Rushmore of rock and roll lineups: McCartney, the Rolling Stones, the Who, Roger Waters, and countless other household names. At one point, I was approached by a promoter who asked if I would join some of these most iconic artists in the greenroom to take photos with some fans who had donated large sums of money to the cause. Honored to be involved, I happily obliged and made my way through the maze of backstage corridors, imagining a room full of rock and roll history, all standing in an elementary school photo formation, nothing but leather jackets and British accents. As I entered, I was surprised to find only two of the performers, standing at opposite ends of the space. One had the shiny appearance of a brand-new luxury car. Perfectly dyed hair, spray tan, and a recently refurbished smile that had the look of a fresh box of Chiclets (an obvious attempt at fending off the aging process, which ultimately had the adverse effect, giving the appearance of an old wall with too many layers of paint). The other had the appearance of a vintage, burned-out hot rod. Wiry gray hair, deep lines carved into a scowl, teeth that could have belonged to George Washington, and a black T-shirt that hugged a barrel-chested frame so tightly, you immediately knew that this was someone who did not give one flying fuck.
Epiphany may seem cliché, but in a flash I saw my future. I decided right then and there that I would become the latter. That I would celebrate the ensuing years by embracing the toll they’d take on me. That I would aspire to become the rusted-out hot rod, no matter how many jump-starts I might require along the way. Not everything needs a shine, after all. If you leave a Pelham Blue Gibson Trini Lopez guitar in the case for fifty years, it will look like it was just delivered from the factory. But if you take it in your hands, show it to the sun, let it breathe, sweat on it, and fucking PLAY it, over time the finish will turn a unique shade. And each instrument ages entirely differently. To me, that is beauty. Not the gleam of prefabricated perfection, but the road-worn beauty of individuality, time, and wisdom.
Miraculously, my memory has remained relatively intact. Since I was a child, I have always measured my life in musical increments rather than months or years. My mind faithfully relies on songs, albums, and bands to remember a particular time and place. From seventies AM radio to every microphone I’ve stood before, I could tell you who, what, where, and when from the first few notes of any song that has crept from a speaker to my soul. Or from my soul to your speakers. Some people’s reminiscence is triggered by taste, some people’s by sight or smell. Mine is triggered by sound, playing like an unfinished mixtape waiting to be sent.
Though I have never been one to collect stuff,
I do collect moments. So, in that respect, my life flashes before my eyes and through my ears every single day. In this book, I’ve captured some of them, as best I can. These memories, from all over my life, are full of music, of course. And they can be loud at times.
TURN IT UP. LISTEN WITH ME.
PART ONE
SETTING THE SCENE
DNA DOESN’T LIE
Dad, I want to learn how to play the drums.
I knew this was coming.
There stood my eight-year-old daughter, Harper, staring at me with her big brown eyes like Cindy Lou Who from How the Grinch Stole Christmas, nervously holding a pair of my splintered drumsticks in her tiny little hands. My middle child, my mini-me, my daughter who physically resembles me the most. I had always known that she would someday have an interest in music, but… drums? Talk about an end-of-the-trough, entry-level mailroom position!
Drums?
I replied with eyebrows aloft.
Yeah!
she squeaked through her toothy grin. I took a moment to think, and as the sentimental lump began to balloon in my throat I asked, Okay… and you want me to teach you?
Shifting in her checkered Vans sneakers, she shyly nodded and said, Uh-huh,
and a wave of fatherly pride instantly washed over me, along with an enormous smile. We hugged and headed hand in hand upstairs to the old drum set in my office. Like a weepy Hallmark moment, the kind those hyperemotional Super Bowl commercials are made of (the ones that would leave even the hardest monster truck enthusiast crying in their buffalo chicken dip), this is a memory that I will cherish forever.
The moment we entered my office, I remembered that I had never taken any formal lessons, and therefore I had no idea how to teach someone to play the drums. The closest I had ever come to any structured music instruction was a few hours with an extraordinary jazz drummer by the name of Lenny Robinson who I used to watch perform every Sunday afternoon at a local Washington, DC, jazz joint called One Step Down. A tiny old club on Pennsylvania Avenue just outside of Georgetown, One Step Down not only was a hotspot for established touring acts but also hosted a jazz workshop every weekend where the house band (led by DC jazz legend Lawrence Wheatley) would perform a few sets to the dark, crowded room and then invite up-and-coming musicians to jam with them onstage. When I was a teenager in the eighties, those workshops became a Sunday ritual for my mother and me. We would sit at a small table ordering drinks and appetizers while watching these musical masters play for hours, reeling in the gorgeous, improvisational freedom of traditional jazz. You never knew what to expect within those bare brick walls, smoke hanging in the air, songs from the small stage the only sound (talking was strictly forbidden). At the time, I was fifteen years old and deep in the throes of my punk rock obsession, listening to only the fastest, noisiest music I could find, but I somehow connected to the emotional elements of jazz. Unlike the convention of modern pop (which at the time I recoiled from, just like the kid from The Omen in church), there was a beauty and dynamic in the chaotic tapestry of jazz composition that I appreciated. Sometimes structured, sometimes not. But, most of all, I loved Lenny Robinson’s drumming. This was something I had never seen before at a punk rock show. Thunderous expression with graceful precision; he made it all look so easy (I now know it’s not). It was a sort of musical awakening for me. Having taught myself to play the drums by ear on dirty pillows in my bedroom, I’d never had anyone standing over me to tell me what was right
or wrong,
so my drumming was wild with inconsistency and feral habits. I WAS ANIMAL FROM THE MUPPETS, WITHOUT THE CHOPS. Lenny was obviously somewhat trained, and I was in awe of his feel and control. My teachers
back then were my punk rock records: fast, dissonant, screaming slabs of noisy vinyl, with drummers who most would not consider traditional, but their crude brilliance was undeniable, and I will always owe so much to these unsung heroes of the underground punk rock scene. Drummers like Ivor Hanson, Earl Hudson, Jeff Nelson, Bill Stevenson, Reed Mullin, D. H. Peligro, John Wright… (the list is painfully long). To this day you can hear echoes of their work in mine, with their indelible impression making its way into tunes like Song for the Dead
by Queens of the Stone Age, Monkey Wrench
by Foo Fighters, or even Nirvana’s Smells Like Teen Spirit
(just to name a few). All those musicians were seemingly worlds away from Lenny’s scene, but one thing that they all had in common was that same feeling of beautiful, structured chaos that I loved each Sunday at One Step Down. And that’s what I strove to achieve.
One humid summer afternoon, my mother and I decided to celebrate her birthday by taking in another weekly jazz workshop at the club. It had quickly become our thing,
one that I still look back on today with fond memories. None of my other friends actually hung out with their parents, especially not at a fucking jazz club in downtown DC, so it made me think she was intrinsically cool and this was another way of strengthening our bond. In the age of Generation X, of divorce and dysfunction, we were actually friends. Still are! That particular day, after a few baskets of fries and a few sets from Lawrence Wheatley’s quartet, my mother turned to me and asked, David, would you go up and sit in with the band as a birthday present to me?
Now, I don’t remember exactly what my initial response was, but I’m pretty sure it was something along the lines of ARE YOU OUT OF YOUR FUCKING MIND?
I mean, I had only been playing the drums (pillows) for a few years, and having learned from the old, scratched punk rock records in my collection, I wasn’t anywhere NEAR ready to step up and play JAZZ with these badasses. This was a fantastically unimaginable request. This was being thrown to the lions. This was a disaster waiting to happen. But… this was also my mom, and she had been cool enough to bring me here in the first place. So…
Reluctantly, I agreed to do it, and slowly got up from our little table, weaving through the packed room of jazz enthusiasts to the coffee-stained sign-up sheet next to the stage. It had two columns: Name
and Instrument.
I read through the list of other seemingly accomplished musicians’ names on the list and, with pen shaking in hand, quickly scribbled David Grohl—drums.
I felt like I was signing my own death warrant. I stumbled back to our table in a daze, feeling all eyes on me as I sat down and immediately started sweating through my ripped jeans and punk rock T-shirt. What had I just done? Nothing good could come from this! The minutes seemed like hours as musician after amazing musician was called up to entertain those hallowed walls and hardened ears. Every one of them could hang with those jazz cats just fine. I became less and less confident with each moment. My stomach was in knots, my palms sweating, my heart racing, as I sat and tried my best to follow the band’s mind-bending time signatures, wondering how on earth I could possibly keep up with the skill of the incredible instrumentalists who graced this stage every week. Please don’t let me be next, I thought. Please, god…
Before long, Lawrence Wheatley’s deep baritone drawl came booming over the PA speakers and announced the dreaded words that still haunt me to this day: Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome… on the drums… David Grohl.
I tentatively stood to a smattering of applause, which quickly dissipated once the people saw that I was clearly not a seasoned jazz legend, but rather a skinny suburban punk with funny hair, dirty Converse Chucks, and a T-shirt that read KILLING JOKE. The horror in the band’s faces as I walked to the stage made it look as if the Grim Reaper himself were approaching. I stepped onstage, the great Lenny Robinson handed me his sticks as I reluctantly sat on his throne, and for the first time I saw the room from his perspective. No longer sheltered behind the safety of my mother’s table full of snacks, I was now literally in the hot seat, frozen under the stage lights with the eyes of every audience member bearing down on me as if to say, Okay, kid… show us what you’ve got.
With a simple count, the band kicked into something I had never played before (i.e., any jazz song ever), and I did my best to just keep time without fainting in a pool of my own vomit. No solo, no flash, just hold down the tempo and don’t fuck it up. Thankfully, it went by in a flash (sans vomit) and without incident. Unlike most of the other musicians who had performed that day, I had a song that was surprisingly short (though certainly not unintentionally). Imagine that! Done and dusted, I walked away with the relief one feels at the end of root canal surgery. I stood and thanked the band, mouth dry, with a nervous smile, and took an awkward bow. If the band had only known my intention, they would have understood such a desperate act of foolishness. With every ounce of charity in these poor musicians’ hearts, they had unknowingly allowed me to give my mother a birthday gift that she would never forget (to the dismay of about seventy-five paying customers), which meant more to me than any standing ovation I could have wished for. Humbled, I walked back to our little table of hors d’oeuvres in shame, thinking that I had a long, long way to go before I could ever consider myself a real drummer.
That fateful afternoon lit a fire in me. Inspired by failure, I decided that I needed to learn how to play the drums from someone who actually knew what they were doing, rather than stubbornly trying to figure it out all by myself on my bedroom floor. And in my mind, there was only one person to show me how: the great Lenny Robinson.
A few Sundays later, my mother and I returned to One Step Down, and with my naive courage barely summoned, I cornered Lenny on his way to the bathroom. Umm… excuse me, sir. Do you give lessons?
I asked in my best Brady Bunch mumble. Sure, man. Thirty dollars an hour,
he said. I thought, Thirty dollars an hour? That’s six lawns I’d have to mow in the suffocating Virginia heat! That’s a weekend’s pay at Shakey’s pizza! That’s an eighth of an ounce of weed I’d have to not smoke this week. DEAL. We exchanged phone numbers and set a date. I was well on my way to becoming the next Gene Krupa! Or so I hoped…
Our thirteen-hundred-square-foot house in Springfield was nowhere near big enough for a full drum set (hence the ad hoc, makeshift pillow practice set in my tiny bedroom), but for this special occasion I brought in the bottom-of-the-line five-piece Tama kit from my band Dain Bramage’s practice space, nowhere near Lenny’s caliber of gear. I awkwardly placed the dirty drums in front of the living room stereo and shined them up with some Windex I found under the kitchen sink as I anxiously awaited his arrival, hoping that soon all the neighbors would hear him ripping it to shreds… and think that it was me!
He’s here! He’s here!
I exclaimed as if Santa Claus had just pulled into our driveway. Barely containing myself, I greeted him at the door and invited him into our little living room, where the drums sat shining, still reeking of barely dry glass cleaner. He sat down on the stool, surveyed the instrument, and proceeded to blaze those same impossible riffs that I had seen so many Sundays at the jazz club, a blur of hands and sticks delivering machine gun drumrolls in perfect time. Mouth agape, I couldn’t believe this was happening on the same stretch of carpet where I had spent my life dreaming of becoming a world-class drummer someday. It was finally real. This was my destiny. I was soon to become the next Lenny Robinson, as his riffs would soon become mine.
Okay,
he said when he finished. Let’s see what you can do.
With every ounce of courage I could muster, I launched into my greatest hits
montage of riffs and tricks that I had stolen from all of my punk rock heroes, crashing and smashing that cheap drum set like a hyperactive child having a full-blown tantrum in an explosion of raw, rhythmless glory. Lenny watched closely and with a stern look quickly realized the amount of work that was going to be required in this gig. After a few cacophonous minutes of disastrous soloing, he stopped me and said, Okay… first of all… you’re holding your sticks backward.
Lesson one. Embarrassed, I quickly flipped them around to their proper direction and apologized for such a rookie move. I had always held them backward because I thought the fat end of the stick would produce a much bigger sound when it hit the drums, which proved effective in my brand of Neanderthal pummeling. I didn’t realize it was practically the antithesis of proper jazz drumming. Silly me. He then showed me a traditional grip, taking the stick in my left hand and placing it through my thumb and middle finger, just like all the true drumming greats had done before him, and definitely before me. This simple adjustment completely erased everything I had thought I knew about drumming up until that point, rendering me debilitated behind the kit, as if I were learning to walk all over again after a decade-long coma. As I struggled to keep hold of the stick in this impossible new fashion, he started showing me simple, single-stroke rolls on a practice pad. Right-left-right-left. Slowly hitting the pad to find a consistent balance, over and over again. Right-left-right-left. Again. Right-left-right-left. Before I knew it, the lesson was over, and it was then that I realized at thirty dollars an hour, it was probably cheaper for me to go to Johns Hopkins and become a fucking brain surgeon than to learn how to play drums like Lenny Robinson. I handed him the money, thanked him for his time, and that was that. My only drum lesson.
Okay… ummm… so, this is the kick drum. Your foot goes there,
I said as Harper’s tiny sneaker rested on the bass pedal. This is your hi-hat; your other foot goes there.
She settled into her seat, sticks in hand, ready to whale. Not knowing what the hell I was doing, I fast-forwarded past all of the confusing right-left-right-left bullshit that Lenny Robinson had shown me (all respect, Lenny) and went straight to teaching her a beat. Ummm… okay… here’s a simple kick-snare pattern…
After a few frustrating attempts, I stopped her and said, Wait. I’ll be right back,
as I ran out of the room. I knew what she needed. It wasn’t me. It was AC/DC’s Back in Black.
I put on the title track and told her to listen. Hear that?
I asked. That’s the kick drum. And that’s the hi-hat. And that’s the snare drum.
She listened closely and started to play. Her timing was incredibly solid, which any drummer knows is more than half the battle. She had a natural, built-in meter, and once she settled into the coordination of her movements, she started playing with tremendous feel. I jumped and cheered as my heart swelled with pride, headbanging and singing along with the lyrics as Harper played. Then something curious struck me: her posture. Her broad back arched forward slightly, angular arms and skinny elbows positioned out a bit, chin raised above the snare… and I saw it. SHE WAS A MIRROR IMAGE OF ME PLAYING THE DRUMS AT HER AGE. I felt as if I were time-traveling and having an out-of-body experience all at once. Not only that, but here was my mini-me, my grinning twin, learning to play the drums exactly as I had thirty-five years before: by listening to music with her parent. I wasn’t necessarily surprised, though. Like I said, I always knew this was coming.
As I offered in the foreword to my mother’s book, From Cradle to Stage, I believe that these musical impulses aren’t so much a mystery as they are perhaps predetermined, residing somewhere deep within the DNA strand, just waiting to be unlocked.
I wrote, DNA is a miraculous thing. We all carry traits of people we have never met somewhere deep within our chemistry. I’m no scientist, but I believe that my musical abilities are proof of this. There is no divine intervention here. This is flesh and blood. This is something that comes from the inside out. The day that I picked up a guitar and played Deep Purple’s ‘Smoke on the Water’ by ear, I knew that all I needed was that DNA and a whole lot of patience (something that my mother clearly had an abundance of). These ears and this heart and mind were born of someone. Someone who shared that same love of music and song. I was blessed with a genetic symphony, waiting to perform. All it took was that spark.
In Harper’s case, that spark
had just come the day before as she sat in her seat at the Roxy nightclub on Sunset Boulevard, watching her older sister, Violet, play her first show at the ripe old age of eleven.
Yes, I knew that one was coming, too.
Violet was an intensely verbal child. By the age of three, she was already speaking with the clarity and vocabulary of a much older kid, often stunning unsuspecting waiters at restaurants from her booster seat with fully enunciated requests like Excuse me, sir? Could I please have some more butter for my bread?
(I practically pissed my pants laughing every time, watching people do a double take as if we were a twisted ventriloquist act.) Once, while she was having a tantrum over something at the dinner table at home, I tried to calm her by saying, Look, it’s okay, everyone gets angry sometimes. Even I get angry!
to which she responded, I’m not angry! I’m just FRUSTRATED!
(I still don’t know the difference, but Violet does.) I eventually realized that she had a strong aural memory and an advanced sense of pattern recognition, which made it easy for her to imitate or repeat things perfectly by ear. That soon led to doing accents by request, where she would run through spot-on imitations of an Irish person, a Scottish person, an English person, an Italian person, and so on, all before she was even out of her smoothie-stained car seat.
Before long, Violet’s love of music attuned her ear to pitch, key, and tone. As she sang from the back seat, I began to hear her zeroing in on the subtle movements of each of her favorite singers’ voices. The harmonies of the Beatles, the vibrato of Freddie Mercury, the soul of Amy Winehouse (perhaps the most memorable, as there’s nothing like hearing your five-year-old daughter sing Rehab
word for word while wearing Yo Gabba Gabba! pajamas). It was clear that she had the gift. Now it was only a matter of time before she found the spark.
That spark eventually became a wildfire, and music became her life’s divining rod, until in time she formed a rock band with her classmates. She became stronger and more confident with every performance, with a voracious and wonderfully diverse ear for music, singing along to everything from Aretha Franklin to the Ramones, widening her range as she set forth on a path of discovery and inspiration. Her genetic symphony was in concert, and all we could do was sit back and listen. After all, this is something that comes from the inside out.
That day of Violet’s performance at the Roxy on Sunset Boulevard, the first official
show with her band, I sat with my family in the audience as she sang her set. Don’t Stop Believin’
by Journey, Hit Me with Your Best Shot
by Pat Benatar, and Sweet Child O’ Mine
by Guns N’ Roses were my personal faves, but during the performance, I had to stop and take in the moment. To my left, Harper’s eyes were filled with dreams of becoming a musician someday; to my right, my mother was proudly witnessing another generation of her family baring their soul to a room full of strangers. It was a profound experience, best summed up in a text my mother sent the next day that read, Now YOU know what it’s like to nervously sit in an audience as YOUR child steps onstage for the first time to follow their life passion with a funny haircut, dressed in jeans and a t-shirt.
She was right. THIS WASN’T DIVINE INTERVENTION. THIS WAS FLESH AND BLOOD.
Since then, I have performed with both of my children in front of thousands of people around the world, and each time I am filled with a feeling much like my mother’s pride on that humid summer afternoon at One Step Down so many years ago. It is my life’s greatest gift to see the passion and courage of my own children as they take that leap, and I hope that someday their children will somehow feel the same joy and echo the final words that I wrote for my mother’s book years ago:
But, beyond any biological information, there is love. Something that defies all science and reason. And that I am most fortunate to have been given. It’s maybe the most defining factor in anyone’s life. Surely an artist’s greatest muse. And there is no love like a mother’s love. It is life’s greatest song. We are all indebted to the women who have given us life. For without them, there would be no music.
THE HEARTBREAK OF SANDI
Her name was Sandi.
And she was my first heartbreak.
It was 1982, and as a gangly thirteen-year-old entering seventh grade, I was overwhelmed with the nervous excitement of meeting all the new, unfamiliar faces at Holmes Intermediate School. Life up until that point had been confined to my quaint little North Springfield neighborhood, surrounded by the same kids I had grown up with since kindergarten in our suburban maze of rolling hills and crowded