Gainesville was a ghost town when we got there. Well, not really. There were plenty of people moving about, college students in flip flops, riding scooters, throwing Frisbees. Before I go on any further, I feel like that deserves to be talked about more, the whole Frisbee in college phenomenon. What is it about going away to school that makes everyone suddenly decide that reggae rules and that there’s nothing better to do with one’s time than stand around in the quad or wherever and throw a Frisbee back and forth? Really? A Frisbee? There was a solid 1:1 ratio of grassy spaces and Frisbee throwers as we drove by the University of Florida in Gainesville. It’s so strange. Sure, Frisbees are a neat thing to have at the beach or a picnic—I’m not really here to trash the Frisbee—I’m just astounded as to why college students like them so much. It’s weird because most college stereotypes are either destructive or extreme, or both. It’s usually binge drinking, V.D., crazy leftist ideas that you’ll soon abandon, pretension in all forms, uninformed idealism, terrible spring break destinations, semesters in other countries (followed by more pretension and that whole speech you’re forced to sit through about how Italy, or Spain, or wherever the hell they went, “is, like, so much better than America. Like the people there, they, like, really know how to live, you know?”). There are all these big, extreme things, and then, right in there with them is a piece of molded plastic. And people go crazy for it. Does anyone else think this is weird? Not content with just throwing it back and forth, many college students start Frisbee golfing (or Frolfing, as the dateless like to call it). People buy tons of different specialized Frisbees just for this “sport,” so they can master the art of precisely throwing a disc at some motionless object, while spending thousands of dollars to neglect studying Kant. There is also, of course, Ultimate Frisbee, which is what you get when uncreative people try to make the Frisbee less benign. Don’t you think the name is just a bit hyperbolic? I mean, ultimate? Really? You can’t run while holding the Frisbee. You can’t make any serious physical contact with the opposing players. A normal, incredibly un-ultimate, Frisbee is still used. It’s just a sweatier version of catch, but with teams and college funding. Shouldn’t real “ultimate” Frisbee have something like hungry tigers and guns and take place on a very precarious rope bridge over a canyon of spikes? That seems way more ultimate. At least to me. But then again, I’m not in college anymore and maybe that makes me unable to grasp the very nuanced concepts that constitute the fleeting brilliance of the Frisbee. College was years ago. Now, well, now I’m just another poor graduate, dodging calls from student loan companies, too distant from college to understand the appeal of a flying disc, close enough to still be plagued by a surprisingly dogged idealism, increasingly comfortable sleeping on floors, decreasingly comfortable in the same town for more than a week, and looking sadly at the present day Gainesville, disappointed in the juxtaposition between it and the very recent Gainesville of last October; the Gainesville of The Fest.
Due to a broken computer, I never got the change to really write about the Fest last fall, and I guess it’s too late to revive it here in any sort of detail worthy of the greatness of that weekend. It would take too many words to give it justice, enough that even I would perhaps find it a bit too wordy. But I would like to say, in my usual wordiness, that the Fest was this sort of brilliant oasis in the middle of what had been one of our most difficult tours. There had been no really great shows on that tour. We were with great friends, sure. To see Broadway Calls and Death is Not Glamorous every night, and then spend two weeks with Barlights, well, that part was great. And we met a ton of really nice people as well. But at the end of the day, I don’t work 55 hours a week and live out of my car just so I can hang out with fun people. If that were the goal, there’d be much easier ways to accomplish it. No, the main reason for all this is the music. And on that tour it felt like, at almost every show, our songs fell dead at the feet of the few people in attendance each night. Something just wasn’t clicking. Like a hybrid engine, our energy is often recharged by the crowd’s, and on that tour we spent the month before the Fest on slow drain; always diminishing. It culminated at a house show in Mobile, the tour got the best of me. Worn out, frustrated, tired from a long drive, I watched as the local band walked outside after their set, took their friends with them (most of the sparse crowd), and completely ignored our entire set. We played, yet again, to a crowd not much larger than our band. My voice had been ruined for the two weeks past, I couldn’t talk during the day, and it hurt like hell to sing. I was in pain, depressed, I had given my life for these songs I so desperately believed in, and I was destroying my vocal chords to be the soundtrack to someone else’s cigarette. I snapped. In between songs I swore at the local, said some nasty comments about their band, vented a little more, played the last few songs with my eyes clenched, and walked out of the house. I sat in the van the rest of the night, angry, sweaty, tired, defeated, embarrassed by my lack of self-control, unable to press my shredded vocal chords into sound, wishing there was a way I could just quit (though that’s impossible now, we’ve long passed a kind of point of no return). I knew I was in the wrong. I shouldn’t have said anything. The people at the house had been very nice, even bought us beer, and I should have just been grateful for their generosity rather than focus on the negative. But that tour had drained me of my good sense, knocked me down to the point that I had no perspective. We drove to Tallahassee that night and got a hotel. The next day, we woke up feeling a little better and headed off to Gainesville, with no show to play for the first night in thirty. It was fantastic to just sit there and relax, regain a little composure and a lot of perspective. As the weekend approached the city streets begin to fill with bands and fans, I soon couldn’t walk a block without seeing an old friend. Richmond has a strong presence at the Fest and on top of seeing friends from bands, I saw a ton of familiar faces from home as well. It’s impossible to be homesick at the Fest. On top of that, we, for the first time in a long time, played a well-attended show. Whether or not they were there on purpose, it seemed like people really seemed interested. Our songs had a life and a lightness that they hadn’t seen in a long time. It was incredibly refreshing. I was cured.
Though we entered Gainesville under different circumstances this time — our tour has been going quite well and we’re all in pretty good spirits — it was tough to come to terms with the fact that this was just another show. The streets not crowded with punks seemed empty. The air wasn’t alive like it had been, and so it seemed extra lifeless. Gainesville, this place that had in one weekend brought me back, restored so much inside me, was now just another town, entirely unmagical. But it only remained this way for as long as I allowed it to stand in comparison to something that it couldn’t at that moment be. So I eventually stopped holding it to an impossible standard, and just gave it permission to exist outside of the Fest. Once I did that, I found that I could still have a great time. Our show was well-attended, some people even came on purpose. We were reunited with Dirty Money for the first show of three in a row. Collin stepped off the stage during their set and fell over without missing a note. It ruled. I remembered that I liked non-Fest Gainesville too. I’d go back, even if not at the end of October.
This entry has been mostly tangent. And a lot of tangent at that, too. But I’m not going to apologize for that. I remember hearing some quote in a British literature class in college, though I’m not sure who was quoted, that said something to the effect that life is like climbing a spiral staircase. You retrace the same ground again and again but always with a new perspective. It’s easiest to see the truth of this on tour, where we literally re-cover the same ground again and again, but always approach it at a different angle. It makes sense that every new show in the same town will only remind us of who we were the last time we stood on that stage. We will increasingly compare and contrast then and now. Hopefully, as we traverse the same highways, stop at the same gas stations, play the same venues, sleep on the same floors, we’ll get better with each pass through. Our remembrance of the past won’t cast a shadow over the present, but we will return from tangents better prepared to emphasize the uniqueness of the present. A bit wiser too. More capable to deal with it.
Is that cheesy? It might be cheesy.
Even so, I’ll take cheesy over boring.
Brett