Leo Kottke eventually singing Julie’s House. I could listen to a whole show of Leo’s noodling and stories. But when his stories and noodling end up being some sort of existential introduction to the next song and illustrative of human life you just can hardly figure out what to do other than smile.

“Usually these things go by four times and then the vocalist sings but I’m the vocalist and I’m not ready. I was doing a show with Al Franken and he brought up this tune to me and he said it was the best I’d done and was one of his favorites. I said thanks for listening. And he said would you do it tonight. And I said I can’t. I injured myself on it on a job one night. It’s a dangerous tune for me now and it’s a dangerous tune for me now i can return to it without threat you know to my career and well-being. But i could tell he didn’t care about that. So you know I thought about it there in the interim before the show started and I realized that the danger was in the fancy stuff I was trying to pull off and I had jammed my pinky and then tried to recover and missed. Just really bad application. And you know this thing just fell apart for a couple weeks. It was a finger now it’s a thing. So I simplified it back in the dressing room and I went out and played it and I was really happy to have it back. I felt safe. And I like the tune. And on the last verse Al Franken came out and started to sing along with me and it was one of the worst moments of my life.”

Tagged: #but don't be surprised when things go wrong again #how to get by #leo kottke #simplify #my life as a guitar

Notes. Permalink.  Tue, Feb 2nd 2010, 4:21 PM (∞).

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