by luddite lady on 28 Sep 2008 04:33
Part 10
As we arrived back at the motel in Schenectady The Boy asked my sister a question that I had never thought to ask her. He wanted to know if she had ever been to a Police concert before. Her answer astounded me.
With her typical nonchalance about such things she said, "Yeah, I saw them once about thirty years ago. They were playing at a place in Toronto called The Edge. I believe it was in 1978. I saw them for the cost of a pitcher of beer split three ways."
My jaw dropped open, but it made perfect sense. My sister would have been about 20 years old then and I remember she went to see a lot of new bands with her friends who worked for an independent record label. In fact, that is how she met her husband.
She continued, "I recall that they were cute and fun. They all wore striped shirts back then. It was good stuff, a little raw, but good."
At this I was thinking, "I know of one who is STILL cute and fun and looking pretty good in the striped shirts." I didn't get to articulate my thought, however, because my sister was still talking. She smiled, "I like seeing them once ever thirty years. Maybe they'll get back together thirty years from now and do this reunion thing for me again." Ha! There's a challenge for you, Stewart. I'm sure my sister will still be going strong. And I think Andy could still be rocking at 97. Sting will have probably perserved himself in one of those hyperbolic chambers. Keep eating those Wheeties, Mr. Copeland! Come 2038, you don't want to disappoint one of your earliest and most intermittent fans.
I didn't want to argue the point with my sister but I thought that I had read that The Police had played The Horseshoe for their first Toronto gig, and not The Edge. This was bugging me so much that I recently asked Dietmar about it. After all, who should I believe? My own sister who had lived the experience or some guy in Germany that I met for about five seconds in a parking lot on Long Island? Well, when the guy in question is Dietmar and we are talking about The Police, the answer is obvious. Just today I was able to tell my sister that she had seen The Police at The Edge in March 1979 and that I had on my computer the scans of two different original posters advertising the gig should she require further proof. What's more, the ticket price was $5. (But knowing my sister and her insider friends, she may have got into the club for nothing. She probably smuggled some of her red licorice in too) She graciously stood corrected about the dates.
We were all pretty tired, so the kids settled into bed without too much fuss. I had to be up at 7:30 a.m to meet my intrepid travellers, Sporterella and Daddy-o, at the local bus terminal. My sister and I cut short our trip down memory lane for the time being so that I could get some sleep too.
In Dallas, the only game that really mattered was in the word gamelan.