That
High White Note-Take Two
From
The Pen Of Frank Jackman-with kudos to Raymond Chandler
Every
guy, maybe every gal too, who has ever picked up some raw-boned trumpet, some
hammered sax, or some runaway trombone, some brass thing, dreams in his deepest
dreams, the ones that count, about blowing that high white note. The one that
says that guy is one with the instrument. That note that blows out some café door
works its way down the barren black back streets and curls on out into some
ocean slashed by the waves. Duke had it, Charley and Miles had it, Lionel on a
good night had it, the Count off and on, it was (is) a touchy thing to talk
about except when you heard it rip out in the night you knew, knew what being
just south of heaven must have been like when this earth first sounded out.
Some
guys, some guys like hard-nosed private eye Philip Marlowe, a guy who covered the
sun-ridden streets of Los Angeles back in the day, back when the town was livable
for the natives, before the war, World War II if you are asking, came and blew the
high notes, hell, the low notes to perdition maybe picked up the blow, took
some brass in hand, as a kid but could never quite get the hang of it, could
never dream about that high white note. Could only know that it was out there
for Duke or Charley to snap up. And so Marlowe wound up picking up brass of a
different sort, empty slug shells from a wayward gun out in the sullen steamy
Los Angeles night after some maddened episode that he had no control over
either. Still Philip Marlowe, tone deaf to the music grift, always loved to
listen to The Bill Baxter Be-Bop Hour
featuring artists live, guys who would come in on an off-night or after a gig out
of WJDA in the high desert night around Riverside midnight until dawn. Loved to
listen to see if some guy just for a minute could hit that damn high white
note.
John
“King” Leonard hit that high white note, hit it a number of times like maybe he
owned it or something. Marlowe heard the King, nobody ever called him anything bit
the King all the way back to his high school days in Chi town, one night and
knew exactly what it meant then when heaven beckoned. Marlowe also heard from the
Baxter show that the King was to be
playing at Jack Reed’s Club Lola over near the Santa Monica Pier for the next
several weeks and knew he would make time to catch the King live and in person.
Strangely Marlowe got to meet the King in person well before that club date
opening although it had nothing to do with high white notes, heaven, or even
curling sounds beating off the ocean’s edge, but rather too much noise, too
much racket.
Times,
like for everybody else, were hard in the 1937 private eye market and so
Marlowe the never work nine- to- five- for- another- guy king had to lower his
standards and work the graveyard shift as the house peeper for John Reed’s low
rent hotel (a no tell hotel), the Taft (which hadn’t been fixed up since about
that fat man’s presidential administration). Since everybody was trying to save
dough in 1937 Reed had the King stay in his hotel rather than some five-star
digs like he expected providing him with plenty of female company. That kind of
trade-off appealed to the King because if he craved anything besides seeking
that high white note it was diving under those silky sheets with women, lots of
women.
The
King with his angel- blown horn as a lure had no want for female companionship,
lots of it, and no want either of one- night stands and then off to some other
twist in some other town. You know the routine. Love them and leave them that
has been going on since Adam and Eve time. In any case one night, or rather one
morning about three o’clock, some of the hotel guests were squawking that the
King and his entourage were raising holy hell, loud holy hell, booze holy hell,
reefer madness holy hell, and please somebody stop the madman. And newly-minted graveyard shift house peeper
Marlowe was the stopper no questions asked and no quarter given. When the King
pulled rank he unceremoniously booted him out the door.
Of
course a big ego guy like the King squawked to Jake Reed and Marlowe in turn was
out on his ear. But that was not the end of Marlowe’s relationship with one
King Leonard. See the King had an opening act, a honey his for the asking or so
he thought opening act, a torch singer, good too, named Delia Day, who it
turned out would not give him the time of day. Nada, nothing. But the King was
a hard guy to say no to or to take no for an answer and so he headed to Delia’s
digs one night to wait for her to come home after a gig over at the hot spot
Café Florian where she was working
smoothing out her act for the Club Lola front gig.
When
Delia got home and went into her bedroom to change there was the King laid out
in his splendor on her bed. Laid out and very dead with a couple of slugs
through the heart, if he had a heart. Through the heart with her gun that she
kept in her night stand for protection, agun given to her by Jack Reed when she
asked for one. And the King was positioned in such a way that it looked, well, looked
like some lovers’ quarrel, a domestic dispute. Naturally nobody believed that
Delia just walked in and found the King in his very dead condition, not after the
King had bragged to one and all that “he had had some of that” and so they
threw her in the jailhouse to sweat out a confession from her. The L. A. cops figuring
they had an easy score gave her the third degree but she would not tumble and
so they kept her in the slammer as a “material witness.”
Marlowe
who had also followed Delia’s career, once he found out the King was dead and
Delia was set to take the big step-of for the crime, sensed that things did not
add up, that somebody or somebodies had the frame fit right around her. So
windmill-chasing Marlowe came to the rescue. It didn’t take long for him to figure
the whole scheme out though since it had to be the work of amateurs once he gave
the bedroom a once over and talked to a couple of the King’s female companions,
amateurs with some special grievance up their sleeves. And they did in the
persons of two guys who worked at Jack Reed’s hotel. The King liked his women,
no question, liked to love them and leave them after he had used them up. The
two guys at the hotel happened to be the brothers of one of the King’s used
ups, a young woman from the sticks, Joan Brown, who they said took what the
King said as pure gold and when he dumped her committed suicide.
These
brothers, whose bedroom set-up antics only the cops could miss were something
out of the gang that couldn’t shoot straight, got everything wrong. They
assumed that Delia was the one who took the King away from their sister when
she in fact hated the King. So they set the frame for her by killing the King
in her bedroom. They moreover assumed that the King had abandoned their sister on
her word when it was she who walked out on King and was looking to fix him for her own reasons
having to with a couple of off-hand beating she had taken from him when he was
doped up . Her suicide was related to
the fact that she was pregnant be another man later who actually had abandoned
her. The only thing they got right was their getaway. Marlowe was able to
follow them as far as Portland and then lost their trail out in the woods beyond
that town. They were never found. The King though, the King lived on in his
records played over that radio on WJDA .
Every once in a while they would play the King on his signature song, Banana Blues, and Marlowe would ponder
over the fact that even a rat like the King should be allowed to go to heaven
to blow that high white note one more time.
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