Al Robert’s Search For The High White Note Night-Take Two
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
A lot of guys, musical guys anyway, are always trying to
reach for that high white note, that elusive note that says they have made it, that
they have met god and his graces, in their chosen profession. A few guys, guys like the Duke, Benny,
Lionel, Charlie, Miles reached it, reached it at great expense but reached it, maybe
reached it in some approaching dawn hour long after the carrying trade has gone
home and the guys, guys mainly, smoke wafting through the fetid air get down to
the real music in their souls.
Other guys, guys like Al Roberts, though fall down, don’t
make it. Maybe it is lack of talent, although Al Julliard –trained on the piano
had plenty of talent and his teachers and fellow students stood in awe of his
possibilities expecting Carnegie Hall futures, perseverance, although Al from kid
time was driven by that beat in his head that would not let him alone, wit, or
just plain old circumstances, bad luck or a wrong move but they fall down, fall
down hard. Al Roberts, unfortunately was the guy who was the guy in the wrong
place at the wrong time almost like something out of an old time black and
white B-film noir from the 1940s. He had his dreams; he had his chance to take
the brass ring with room to spare but some stuff, some serious stuff, got in
the way so we will never know whether he had the stuff to hit that big note
floating out into the film noir-like night.
Yah, no question, Al Robert’s was born under an unlucky star
or something. Here was a guy with all kinds of talent, including that classical
piano training playing for dimes and donuts to make ends meet at some back
street supper clubs in New Jack City and staying after hours, after wee morning
hours ,trying to catch that damn note. On an lucky night he might caught a five
or ten from some drunken party hungry to hear his sentimental journey stuff,
stuff strictly meant for the tourist trade. The only bright spot was that his
honey, a white night torch singer, Susan Sanders, with musical dreams of her
own was strictly first-rate and they, if they could ever rub two dimes together,
were going to get married. Oh yah, and as if to mock him, after that song bird
made it big in Hollywood where Susan was headed to make herself a star before
they got around to tying the knot.
Well you know the old Hollywood fame song by now. Song- bird
Susan, who had enough talent to work the back street supper clubs with Al
providing superb piano to hide her rough spots, went crashing down like many young
women with Hollywood lust in their eyes before her, wound up serving them off
the arm in some hash house in Santa Monica. It came out later, later after the dust
had settled and it didn’t matter, that she had done a few blue movies for
select clientele and had been “moon-lighting “ a couple of nights a week at
Madame DeFarge’s bordello over on Wiltshire in order to make ends meet and to
be “discovered.” Don’t laugh, many a young starlet, and some of them famous now,
turned a trick or two at that locale in hopes of attracting some knighted movie
executive to her cause. Al, having come up from a place where rubbing two nickels
together was tough, would have understood Susan’s need, her desire, although he
probably would have drawn the line on such activity once they were married.
Al was lonely, lonely as hell, lonely enough without his
muse that he needed to have her at his side in New Jack City and so Al,
penniless Al, decided to hitchhike out to share his honey’s fate after he
phoned her and she pleaded with him to come out. That search for the high white
note be damned, he detoured. Detoured big time before he was through. The road
cross-country was nothing but a lot of short haul rides and lonely waits at
miserable back road cross roads in place like Neola, Iowa and Lawrence, Kansas until
he finally got a break, a guy, Charles Haskell, a guy who was a step up in
class with a big old convertible, maybe a Packard stopped and picked him up and
said he was heading for the coast. Yes sir, a big break finally. Except that
big break turned into an Al nightmare when the apparently sickly Haskell hauled
off and died out in the middle of nowhere leaving Al holding the bag. Who,
after all, was going to believe a fairly young guy like Haskell with dough didn’t
meet with anything but foul play from a penniless tramp.
And in a way Al was right in his thinking. But he got a
little cloudy in his thinking, a little confused, no, a lot confused. See Al
came up with the bright idea that he would change identities with the deceased Haskell
and abandon the car in L.A. on his way
to his honey. Not the best idea, really, but an idea. So he grabbed Haskell’s clothes,
wallet, and dough, tossed his body in a ravine set-up as penniless Al Roberts
who nobody would give a damn about. He cleaned himself up a bit, got some rest
at a road-side motel, and morphed himself in one Charles Haskell, ah, sportsman
for lack of a better term.
Except Al made one fatal move, not intentionally, but just as
fatal nevertheless to show how his luck was oozing away from him by the minute.
He picked her up. Her being a wayward and mouthy femme fatale named Vera who, down or her uppers, was hitching the
roads west. A kindred spirit he assumed. But here is where Al really was born
under an unlucky star. She, having hitched a ride earlier with the deceased Haskell
and having had to fend his advances off, knew that Al did not own the car. Vera,
nothing but a flat-out gold-digger and hustler, started squawking about her
cut, or else. Or she would yell, no, scream copper and be done with it.
So after some very one-sided negotiations on her part concerning
splits and the sale of the car she has them act as a married couple as they
traveled west. Then Al’s luck got worse when Vera noticed an article in some
local paper when they were passing through some town. Haskell’s estranged rich dying
father was looking for him. Vera plotted to use that information to get the old
man into believing Al was his long lost son. When the deal went down Al finally
balked at that and Vera threatened to call copper on him for Haskell’s death.
He tried to stop her when she was in a drunken rage by attempting to pull the
telephone cord through the closed bedroom door on her. All he did though was
strangle her accidently when she got caught up in the cord.
Yah, but who was going to believe a tramp, a two- bit guy,
didn’t have murder and mayhem in his heart not once but twice. So yah, he never
did get to see his song bird as a free man, get to breathe some fresh coast air,
get that little house in the valley. And worse, Al never got to reach for that
high white note after hours at some high-end beach-front supper club blowing out
with the wind hard into the Japan Current in the Pacific Coast night.
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