We were lost – gloriously lost in the enveloping darkness –
at a crossroads in the middle of nowhere with no signpost. We had crossed into
Czechoslovakia from East Germany some hours earlier and were trying to reach
Prague before the following afternoon when we were scheduled to play at a boys
club.
We
were a band of fractious New York improvisational musicians that raised hell
behind a poet named Copernicus whose philosophy was: We do not exist.
For
once he appeared to be on the mark as our driver pored over his maps unable to
nail down our location.
“I
could use a drink,” muttered Thomas Hamlin, later to become drummer of Black
47.
It
was then I spotted a flicker of light in the distance. It could have been Dracula
luring us to a necking session but the thirst was upon us.
To
our amazement we stumbled into a candlelit tavern occupied by a group of surly
peasants not one of whom turned a head to look at us in our black leather New
York splendor.
Not
until I flashed a $20 bill and was almost knocked down such was the stampede to
fulfill our every desire. When it was established that our only wish was for a
couple of cases of beer, these were carried out to the van and we were
dispatched without delay on the correct road to Prague.
It
was past midnight when we reached Wenceslas Square and met the very anxious
looking dissidents who were promoting our show. In broken, but very familiarly
accented, English they informed us that the gig had been transferred to the National
Ice Hockey Stadium and we would be headlining.
It
was June 1989 and the dissidents had decided to challenge the government by
running an unauthorized rock concert. In order to hire the stadium, however,
they needed “an international act of considerable cultural and popular appeal.” Though we emphasized that we had never
played to more than 50 people and had yet to receive a kind review we were
shushed into silence.
The
next day we could barely get near the stadium such was the crowd outside
jostling for tickets. We had apparently attained star status overnight. It
didn’t hurt that the best bands in Czechoslovakia, including members of the banned,
but internationally renowned, Plastic People of the Universe, were on the same
bill.
The
scene backstage was chaotic but it was then I identified the familiar
Czech-English accent. It was Lou Reed’s “take ze walk on ze wild side,” since hey
had all learned their English from Velvet Underground records.
After
a couple of slugs of Armenian brandy I was beginning to enjoy my elevation to
superstardom until a phalanx of the Czech State Militia marched to the top rows
of the stadium and aimed their weapons at the stage.
When
I notified the chief dissident, he smiled conspiratorially and replied in his
best Lou Reed, “Zey will not kill all of us.”
“Yeah,
right,” I replied in some dudgeon, “but you won’t be a sitting duck on stage.”
He
appeared to find the idea of a duck on stage the height of hilarious
originality; apparently Lou had never mentioned such a sighting in a Velvet
Underground song. He did however give me another bottle of Armenia’s best and
on stage we trooped to a rapturous welcome.
It
was one of those nights a musician dreams about. Everything went perfectly from
the moment Copernicus screamed to the 12,000 people, “I have always been in
trouble with the authorities” and flung a bible down on the stage. Every note,
tone and movement gelled; the audience cheered us from start to finish.
We
were the kings of Prague that night, feted wherever we went. Our dissident
friends told us we’d helped light a spark. Five months later the Velvet
(Underground) Revolution swept away the communist regime and dissident hero Vaclav
Havel became president.
I
came home a changed man. I had regained faith that music could make a
difference. A couple of months later I met Chris Byrne and we formed Black 47.
Sometimes
you have to be really lost before you learn to find your way.
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