Friday, June 21, 2013

Happy Summer solstice at the Greens!


Happy Summer Solstice...and what would you like to do today? It was a question me and my neighborhood friends David and Barry Hirrell asked many times. I don't know, what do you want to do? aahhh those long summer days with adventure stretched out before us..it was almost always determined by one of us -- either me, my brother or sister, one of the Solis boys up the street or David and Barry... "LET'S GO TO THE GREENS!" this is where we always ended up...at some point pretty much every day. it's where we'd meet, where we'd take our dogs...it was a small grassy area of Golden Gate Park that was magical to us... transported into a jungle one day and another planet the next...we used sticks as makeshift swords or walking sticks...the bushes turned into fortresses and treehouses...we played among the hippies at all the free concerts and ate free cotton candy and dinners brought in... we pretended the high school football players were the "enemy" and crept around and dodged them...

I climbed my favorite tree often where I could see The Greens stretched out before me...I could watch the guys setting up the stage for a free concert or dogs and kids running around....at night we brought my brother's telescope to the Greens and took turns looking at the moon -- you could actually see craters...and we'd play late into the night with just flashlights...sometimes they'd set up parades there for the 49er football games, the Shriner games and the 49ers themselves practiced football out in that field...one year the Rose Bowl happened right there at Kezar...and we got to weave in and out among all the floats covered with thousands of roses... you name it. IT HAPPENED there...

I go to San Francisco frequently and either drive by the Greens, always glancing over, always remembering... OR I ride by on a street car (or whatever it's called now) on my way to a ukulele jam in the park...but I don't stop there. I don't get off the N Judah or the 71 bus...well, tomorrow, partly in celebration of summer solstice and partly because I need to be there to represent... (and of course Barry says I should definitely start a rumor that a buried treasure is still hidden someplace there, and somehow that doesn't surprise me at all!)...I'm setting out on a journey and heading straight there... tomorrow is the day that I finally make it back.  To the Greens! Now where do you want to go? Let's go to the Greens! :) maybe if you look hard enough you'll see those kids...you'll hear the music playing... and you will know where you are.
where I grew up - 1217 Second Avenue (the yellow building...door on the right)

THE GREENS



Thursday, June 13, 2013

Life Adventures and Creativity...Follow the Music and Words...

Ukulele jam at the Free Folk Music Festival, San Francisco!

Baby Jeremiah makes sure I have my ukulele for the musical journey...
Baby Jeremiah just knows...


Today I’ve returned to my sadly neglected blog – rekindling it. Although I’ve written many words since my last post, they somehow have not made it here to this place. The words are sprinkled throughout saved Word documents and appear amid Facebook posts. And my “Free Stubs” screenplay, my first REAL attempt at writing a screenplay has sort of taken over as well.

But the adventures don’t stop, nor do the words, the stories or the thoughts. They live on. And I found myself wondering – what inspires us to write our stories or our screenplays or poems? What inspires us to run around with ukuleles or other musical instruments and play music until the late hours of the night? The journey, I believe, is different for each and every one of us. So all I can do is share what inspires me to kind of remind myself of where I’m at and where I’m going.

My friend John traveled with me. Unlike the rest of the bay area, we could hear fog horns and a cool wind and swirling fog greeted us as we walked down to Presidio Middle School.

Nancy, Mark and Becky helped me lead the ukulele jam! that's what it's all about!



What an amazing time I had! And the memories that kept popping up as we jammed in hallways and classrooms. On Saturday, there were ukulele workshops with my good friend Janet Lenore, Swing Ukulele and playing chords up the neck! Then over 65 uke players showed up at my ukulele jam! My SF Ukulele Rebellion people helped me lead – Mark, Nancy and Rebecca -- and we rocked through 16 songs! That was after a fabulous two hour jug band jam that was so much fun! Even a dude blowing into jugs! All instruments. The saw player stayed for our uke jam!  Ended up jamming in assorted hallways, staircases and classrooms until 10pm before heading home.  

Then came back the next day via BART and muni brandishing my 8-string ukulele, small Martin Guitar, and a backpack filled with stuff – oh yeah and a music stand.  I got to finally get Blackbird down on guitar at Jeanine's workshop and attend yet another ukulele workshop. And of course there was more jamming. Then the ultimate happened, what I look forward to every year -- famous Beatles jam for two hours. People crammed into a large classroom spilling into hallways to sing Beatles songs in harmony even! A few of us uke players were sprinkled in the midst! Nothing can top that. I sat next to Denise who played guitar and my good friend June from Silicon Valley who sings so well. It was cool to see so many familiar faces among the crowds of people.

The hallways of Presidio! (photo courtesy of Rebecca Woo)

Then I joined some of my friends and walked over to the gym I remembered so well (and I did not like that place much either – PE was scary in 7th and 8th grade). I actually participated in some Contra dancing when I got approached by a couple of guys looking for partners for dances. There I was wearing my Sgt. Pepper’s t-shirt contra dancing! For once, I was having fun in the gym at Presidio! I finally had to leave to attend a Poetry Jazz Fest Reading at the other end of San Francisco with my long-time writer friends Floyd Salas and Claire.
Jeanine and Joe and Gang run the FAMOUS TWO HOUR BEATLES JAM!

me and Denise getting into the music!! she played guitar and I played ukulele!






When I left, my friend Steve was playing ukulele with the Contra band! I can still see him sitting there among the other band players, strumming away…so into what he was doing at that moment in time.

As I dashed out of the gym and through the courtyards, all these memories filled my heart and mind – about how I hated my mother for sending me to this junior high school to begin with. I was supposed to go to Hoover Junior High because that’s where all my friends from elementary school were going – but nooo! My mother said it wasn’t a good school, so she used my Aunt and Uncle’s address and sent me to this prison-like place they called Presidio Jr. High – with 1,200 students and I didn’t know a soul. That’s sort of like social suicide for an already eccentric 12-year-old kid like me. And I had to take two buses and walk four blocks to get there.

I looked over at those benches in the courtyard. I sat on those benches many times…

And I remembered a spring day in either 1969 or 1970, maybe a week before school let out. Of course, it was cool and foggy as it often is...for some reason I got benched by my PE teacher which was my final class of the day...I don't even remember why. I was mad. sitting on this bench in the courtyard where I sat with my friends and jammed on ukulele the other day... I was always in trouble for something or other in PE and Social Studies in 7th grade. So I sat there feeling sorry for myself when I saw this raggedy paperback sitting close to me on the bench, obviously left by someone. I picked it up, rifled through it and started to read it...it was "The Outsiders" by S.E. Hinton. Well, I got hooked and engrossed with Ponyboy and Johnny and Soda Pop, Dally and the gang...I sat there on that bench and read the book until I finished it...the fog had come swirling in...it got really cold and I didn't notice or care. the sun started to go down...the school grounds deserted with maybe a few teachers left if even that...but still I sat on that bench and I read the book...cover-to-cover. and I loved it...and I was hooked. don't remember reading an entire book that quickly until then... I even got in trouble for being late coming home... for some reason it's hard to explain that you're late coming home cuz you're reading a book! that's what it's all about, becoming immersed...

And that is a big part of what it’s all about. When I play ukulele with my friends and lose track of time and space or write a story and forget about where I am and why and everything around me reminds me of that place, or that story. Or I cannot rest until something is written down – until somehow the moments are captured through words and pictures.
Claire, Floyd and me!!!!
So, I headed out on the 38 Geary bus making my way to the lovely center on Franklin and Fell Streets for Floyd and Claire's poetry readings, which were fabulous! It was a beautiful venue.  I got a free ticket because Catherine's sister couldn’t make it. Catherine is a wonderful violinist and writer and a close friend of Claire’s and Floyd’s – it was wonderful to reconnect and hang out with old friends. Beautiful poetry about music and protest, colors, acid, trips Djangel Reinhart and Catherine's amazing violin playing with Claire’s poems. Floyd still rocks even at 82, which he has no trouble sharing. Felt like beat poetry relived! I ended up in Berkeley at Floyd and Claire's hanging out with Geoff and Caroline telling stories.

Write these stories down! Floyd yelled at me. God I love him. Floyd has been my huge inspiration for so many years.

My good friends Geoff and Caroline drove me all the way back to Union City because it was too late for Bart. Geoff missed my exit and had to turn around as we were all singing Yellow Submarine together in the car!  Good times.
Then Yesterday I found out (via Facebook) that June 12 would have been Anne Frank’s 84th birthday. I watched the amazing footage of Anne Frank at the age of 12 – just a tiny snippet in the scheme of things, a 12-year-old girl looking down on the street at a happily just married couple…


Anne Frank (snippet from footage)...age 12.
I was 12 when I rode the N Judah Streetcar down to 19th Avenue in San Francisco and then hopped on a 28 bus which took me through Golden Gate Park, got off and walked four more blocks to Presidio Junior High – how dubbed Presidio Middle School – to face 1,200 students, back in 1969. I was 12 when I found that raggedy book, the Outsiders, on a bench – and then I sat on those same benches and read many books – avoiding being attacked by volleyballs and kick balls and kids who weren’t so nice, remembering the ones who were and how joining the Choir in Ninth grade would change my life for the better as I moved on to the high school further up the hill, following the music which lit the way to success.

Anne Frank count not have known at that moment that her words, her stories would live in the hearts of millions of people all over the world forever – that she would be an inspiration to many. She had the courage to write it all down, even while in hiding – to remind us with her words and stories. I read her diary many times when I was young and even as an adult, always captivated each time…remembering. Wishing that she had survived, but knowing that her spirit along with the thousands lost at that time lived on through this one courageous young girl’s words.

And, then last night I stopped by to visit Diane and her husband Fred who live in Warm Springs -- a part of Fremont. They write songs and Diane and I play ukuleles together and run the Fremont Ukulele Group. I was there for several hours listening to their stories of growing up in the area -- when it was all pastures, farmland and trees -- and just dirt roads. They showed me pictures of the houses they grew up in. Diane said she even rode a horse to school sometimes! 

As I drove home, past the grammar school and community center Diane told me about, I tried to imagine what it looked like then, when they were growing up...like whenever I go to Niles and feel the magic of the past mixed in with the present.

And that, my friends, is what it’s really all about.