I must admit that I changed
out of my jammies and drove
to Leopold Bros. at 11:30
p.m. on a Saturday because
I was broke. Not because
I knew anything about the
cult groove band Deep Space
Six. Not because I wanted
to have a beer and dance
at one of the coolest bars
in town. I just needed
to hustle a story.
On my way in, I pass a
group of stoners heading
out. There's a predictable
number of tie-dye-wearing
longhairs spinning out
on the dance floor, but
there's also a fair turnout
of white-collar, beeper-on-the-belt
types nodding their heads
at the tables. I get a
drink and sit down.
Up onstage
are three guitarists
(one of them barefoot),
a keyboard player,
and
two drummers, one behind
a kit, the other playing
congas. They groove
from a Bob Marley song
to Lou
Reed's
"
Sweet Jane
"
and then play three Grateful Dead tunes. No pause,
no
"
between songs
"
patter
—
just a layered stream of improvisational groove.
An old
friend appears, and we
chat for a bit.
She gets up to dance;
I look around and sip
a yummy
Leopold raspberry thingy.
When she returns, I
ask how long she's been
coming.
She thinks for a minute
and says,
"
Since Steve had parties at his house and they'd play
in the basement.
"
How long ago was that?
"
Oh, shit.
"
She leans both palms against the table and puts her
head down to think.
"
Ten years.
"
Wow. These
guys have been together
for ten years?
No, she says. Different
members come and go
—
and then she's off to the dance floor, catching a
hug on the way. As I drink more of my raspberry thingy,
another friend comes by, surprised to see me. I'm
surprised, too, by the number of people I know here
—
folks I don't run into nearly enough. And they
ain't all hippies, either.
Before very long I'm on
the floor, too. There still
are no spaces between the
songs, just a seamless
flow, like the long chiffon
sleeves of the smiling
little hippie girl on my
right. We're all dancing
in rank now, lined up carefully
to give each other space.
The band members have stopped
interacting on stage and
now look extremely focused.
They must be focused, after
an hour and a half of improv.
I'm not
a Deadhead, so forgive
me if these observations
seem obvious, but I
have
performed improvisational
modern dance, so I
understand what it's
like to
"
tune in
"
to others while performing. It's a high, like the
one you get after running for forty-five minutes.
And those guys are plugged in. So is the audience.
It's easy to remember in a genetic way why music
was first created: to sing for a spirit, celebrate
community, and help the plants grow.
Deep Space Six is at TC's
Speakeasy in Ypsilanti
on Saturday, July 12, and
at the Club Above on Saturday,
July 19.
—
Charmie Gholson
Photo by J. Adrian Wylie