Chapter 6
So now I’m back in the pit and thoroughly disoriented. I reunite with my wife and we rejoin the herd to be led out. At this point, however, I have one last task in mind -- in this particular environment, I’ve learned to be on the lookout for Derek Power. As I mentioned in another thread, I bumped into him at the Halloween show and, despite being almost-perfect strangers (I knew who he was but not vice versa), he seemed perfectly happy to chat. That was pretty cool in its own right, but the best part was that he was wearing the same zombie-vampire makeup as Stewart. Seems to me that with a guy like that, once you approach his orbit you never know what might happen.
Lo and behold, there he is in the second row of floor seats, speaking with another gentleman. As gingerly as possible I butt in, mention that we’d met before in pretty much the exact same spot, and I get the same cheerful response as last time.
As expected, I observe that Derek Power is the Mr. T of credential lanyards [insert more Homer Simpson drool sounds]. I consider various gambits, but none seem either plausible or polite, and in any event I think I’ve had more than my fair share of fun already.
I thank him for the free ticket that I won through sc.net. (I gave that ticket to a friend who is a phenomenal solo drummer. Please check him out at
http://www.shakerleg.com and if you like him, let him know!)
I thank him for staging this show in NYC. He mentions that Central Park was actually the first choice venue, but that got canned because of legal limits on crowd size. That’s just as well because it is, or soon will be, raining.
I ask him if this is it. He thinks it is. At least that’s what he tells me.
The sand has pretty much run out on my meeting with management when Jeff Seitz comes over to talk to Derek. Derek introduces Jeff to his companion and his companion to Jeff. Then Jeff smiles at me and asks (with what I hope was amused mock-exasperation) “and WHO are YOU?” With the last remnants of my energy, I thank Jeff for not forcibly ejecting me from the drums.
My wife and I look around and realize that our herd is long gone. We’d better scram before trouble starts. So I leave the Copeland Crew with my standard farewell: “See you next time.” I hope so.
To be concluded . . . .