Chris,
 excellent post! especially the inside hard data 
on Joni! thanks

to all:
 pls forgive my late posting on this. my digests 
are piled up a bit again, but I just have to 
chime in on this one.
(so the old fart leans back in his rocking chair 
and begins...)
 of course, as always, my post refers to the very 
early, pre-recording artist Joni when you could 
get in the door to see her play for $1.25 and 
there was no expense account and, accordingly, 
few 'requests'... but for the sake of history:
 in my role as booking manager and defacto stage 
manager, *most* of the time I spent with Joni was 
literally 'backstage' in the small dressing room 
or the tiny cubby Brian and I shared as an 
office, and there were really only two concerns 
she had which she expected me to handle: it 
actually boils down to one request but primarily 
regarding two distinct groups, both of which I've 
described before to this list: first, the 'cactus 
tree' gang, as I have come to call them... a 
small but consistent/persistent bunch of guys, 
'groupies' if you will, who, apparently, followed 
Joni, venue to venue, as she toured the circuit 
and, believe me, were quite avid in their desire 
for an audience with her as well as creative in 
coming up with schemes to get past me. secondly, 
there were the recording company agents who would 
show up wanting to convince her to sign a 
recording contract, also quite persistent. so 
this was Joni's 'request'... that I act as a 
buffer/shield and under no circumstances was I to 
allow any of these guys access to her. pretty 
straightforward... not really all that strange... 
only the circumstances were strange... or, 
rather, unique to Joni Mitchell.
 the mention of 'strange requests' also made me 
think of another little adventure of mine... it 
was in the early '70's when I was heading up a 
folk club at the local community college... 
Michigan's own Ted Nugent was coming to play a 
concert and some of us were asked to volunteer 
for stage security. I happened to be chosen as 
Ted's personal security and just what that 
entailed is kind of interesting. see, Mr. Nugent, 
as you are probably aware, is a rather headstrong 
fellow and, as a rock musician, this manifested 
in two major ways: first, of course, was his 
total abstinence from any use of drugs; very 
unusual in that day and time, and I can witness 
that it is true... in fact, I would guess that if 
any of his band members were using, they had to 
hide it and Lord help 'em if they showed up 
stoned before a show. the second thing had more 
to do with the music itself. unlike most rock 
musicians, Ted never used effects (a trait shared 
by only one other rocker that I know of, Rory 
Gallagher) he depended on two things for his 
sound, outside of his playing ability: full tilt 
volume from and, for feedback, proximity to his 
Fender stacks, and his fine, early '50's Gibson 
acoustic-electric guitars which he treated like 
they were made of glass... which was where I (and 
his 'strange request') came in... after sound-
check and tuning, his trademark blond Gibson was 
kept in the case back in the dressing room. then, 
when it was time to mount the stage, I had to 
take it out of the case *with* him and walk *
with* him, both of us holding the guitar, one 
hand on the body, one hand on the neck, all the 
way on to the stage... then I had to stand behind 
the PA speakers, a few feet away to his left, 
through the entire concert and then return to the 
dressing room cradling his guitar together all 
the way back in the same manner.
 well, there ya go... time for my geritol... ;o)

 pat

NP: Journey To The Center Of The Mind - Amboy Dukes

http://homepages.go.com/~badwolff/albums/album1/


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