Streets of Gold (31 page)

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Authors: Evan Hunter

Tags: #Contemporary

BOOK: Streets of Gold
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“I don’t know.”
“They seem to utilize many notes outside the mode. Well, no matter. If you want to fool around with this for your own amusement, I have no...”

All
the time, Mr. Passaro.”
“Eh?”
“I want to play it
all
the time?”
“What do you mean,
all
the time?”
“That’s what I want to play.”
The room went silent.
“Let me understand you,” Passaro said.
“I want you to teach me to play the way he plays,” I said. “Art Tattum. That’s his name. That’s how I want to play.”
“Iggie, this is a bad joke,” Passaro said, and chuckled again. “I’m a very patient man, you know that by now, we’ve been together for more than seven years, very patient. But this is a bad joke. Are you finished with it? If so, I’d like to...”
“Mr. Passaro, can you teach me to play what he’s playing?”
“No,” Passaro said, his voice suddenly sharp. “Of
course
not! What are you saying?”
“I don’t want to play this way anymore.”
“What way?”
“This way,” I said, and my hands moved out to the keyboard, and I ran through the first four bars of a Chopin scherzo, and then abruptly pulled back my hands and quietly said, “That way, Mr. Passaro.”

That
way,” he said, “is the only way I teach.”
“Well,” I said.
His voice softened again. “What is it?” he asked gently, and sat beside me on the piano bench. “Ah, Iggie, I’ve been stupid. Forgive me. Your recent loss, your brother, I know the grief you must.... forgive me, please. Go home. Please. I’ll see you next Saturday, do the exercises I gave you, get your hands back in shape, have you practiced much, I’m sure you haven’t. Come back next week. Forgive me for being inconsiderate. I get so involved sometimes, I... forgive me.”
“Mr. Passaro,” I said, “I don’t want to come back next week unless you can teach me to play like Tattum.”
I felt Passaro stiffen beside me. He was silent for several moments, and then he rose, and moved away from the bench and the piano, and began pacing the floor.
“No,” he said. “I won’t allow this to happen. No. No, Iggie, I’m sorry. No. You can’t do this. I will not permit it. It’s been too long. No. I’ve given you... I’ve invested... I’ve... no. Enough! You’ll go home, you’ll do your exercises, and next week we’ll pick up again on the Moussorgsky. There’s a lot to be done. They are already holding auditions for many of the prizes. If we...”
“Mr. Passaro, I don’t...”
“Stop it!” he shouted. “Do you want to kill me? Stop it,
please
, stop saying this... these... please, Iggie.”
“I don’t care about prizes, Mr. Passaro. I don’t want any prizes, I want to play like Tattum.”
“Tattum, Tattum,
quello sfaccime, che c’importa
Tattum? He’s a piano player; you’re an
artist
! I’ve made you an
artist
! You came to me with talent, and I took it, and shaped it, and put in your hands what’s in my
own
hands. You’re destroying me. Do you want to destroy me, Iggie?”
“No, Mr. Passaro, but...”
“I thought you loved music. I thought my own love for music . ..”
“I
do
love music!”
“Then stop talking about trash!”
“I’m sorry, Mr. Passaro.”
He fell silent. When he spoke again, he had controlled his anger, and his voice was intimately low.
“Iggie,” he said, “how many pupils do you think... how many do I have like you? How many do you think?”
“Mr. Passaro...”
“One. In twenty years,
one
. I have no others like you. I’ve
never
had another like you. I may never have another as long as I live. I’ve never lied to you, Iggie. Never. I said you’d win prizes, and you will. I said you’d play in Carnegie Hall...”
“I don’t want to play in Carnegie Hall.”
And then he exploded.
He called me an ingrate, he called me a fool, he called me an immature child, he told me I was
truly
blind if I was ready to throw away a brilliant career as a concert pianist. He told me he was not mistaken about my future, he would not have lavished such attention on me if for a moment, for a
single
moment, he had thought he was mistaken. And for
what
? Were all those hours of patient instruction to be wasted? Did I think it was a simple matter to teach a blind person? He had given me more time and more energy than he’d given all his other pupils together, and now
this
. He reviled my decision, he spit upon my decision, he told me I would come to regret it, he promised I would be back on my knees begging him to teach me again, and he told me by then it would be too late, my repertoire would be gone, I would have squandered precious hours on the playing of trash, my opportunity will have vanished, my promise will have corroded, my future will have been flushed down the toilet like shit.
“So go!” he shouted, “Leave me! And good luck to you!”
It was a curse.

 

In the back room of my grandfather’s tailor shop, I told him of my decision. He listened carefully. He was sixty-three years old, and he had been in this country for forty-two years, and I think he still found many of its ways baffling and incomprehensible.
He was pensively silent for a long time.
Perhaps he was thinking if only he had sent Luke to college, perhaps he was thinking if only he had allowed Tony to join the Air Corps, perhaps he was thinking that here in this America you could not expect the young to follow in the footsteps of their elders, you had to let them go, you had to let them run, you had to set them free.
In his broken English, he said, “Go play you jazza. And
buona fortuna
, Ignazio.”
It was a blessing.
III
Oscar Peterson once said: “First you learn to play piano, then you learn to play jazz” — or words to that effect. I once heard him play eighteen straight choruses of “Sweet Georgia Brown,” and while he was on the sixth chorus, I thought He’ll never top that one, but he topped it in the seventh, and then again in the tenth, and he kept topping himself as he went along, utilizing a personal retrieval system to yank idiomatic ideas out of his mind and push them into his hands, shaping those ideas into an entirely fresh improvisational line, each chorus having no intrinsic relationship to the one preceding it or the one following it, except as part of an original, imaginative, and (to me) inspirational flow. But he had paid his dues, he had the technical knowledge stored in the computer bank of his memory, all of it was under his hands; those years of learning Bach and Chopin from one of the best classical teachers in Canada finally paid off when he came down to New York and promptly knocked off everybody’s hat.
In 1943, I knew how to play piano, but I didn’t know how to play jazz, and if there was anyone teaching it, I couldn’t find him. It’s a different tune today, when jazz has been elevated to the stature of an art form. (I
still
think it’s only folk music, and I’ve been playing it for thirty-one years now, but I suppose mine is a minority opinion.) Today you can find jazz departments at Indiana U. and the New England Conservatory and several other revered institutions across the length and breadth of this great creative nation. And even those schools without departments per se are offering courses in jazz. It wasn’t that way in 1943. In 1943, there was nobody. I had only my brother’s records.
His collection of piano stylists was fairly comprehensive, I now realize, including such early ragtime players as Scott Joplin and James P. Johnson, and some good representative barrelhouse piano playing by Jelly Roll Morton and Frank Melrose, and stuff by old jazzmen whose names alone seemed to promise strange and exotic keyboard happenings — Pine Top, and Cripple Clarence, and Speckled Red; Cow Cow, Papa Jimmy Yancey, Willie the Lion — and then moving up through men like Meade Lux Lewis, Albert Amnions, and Biff Anderson. Most of the records, though, were by Fats Waller, Earl Hines, Teddy Wilson, and Art Tatum. I liked these best, possibly because there were more of them than any of the others. I’ve since learned that there was a direct line of succession from Waller to Tatum and from Hines to Wilson, but I didn’t know it then. I only knew that I liked the way these men played jazz.
I once sat in with Dizzy Gillespie, and he jokingly (I think) said, “I sure wish you cats would give us back our rhythm,” and I jokingly (I think) replied, “Okay by me, Diz. Just give
us
back our harmony.” Well, harmony and rhythm were jogging along there simultaneously in the left hand of every piano player I listened to, and it was the left hand that delineated the various styles I learned to identify. But even though I was no stranger to counterpoint (who
could
be after all those years of Bach?), and even though I had no difficulty recognizing that the chords in any jazz chorus were held for either two beats or four beats, and the rhythm was a steady four/four, and the melody was built on eighth notes, I nonetheless had difficulty understanding how all of these units were put together to get that distinctive... I’m sorry, but “swing” is the only word that describes it. Jazz is by definition a duple musical system. Everything in it is based on equivalents and multiples of two; that’s part of its symmetry. But those three levels of duo-divisible rhythm moving in counterpoint were pressed into a
larger
rhythmic context that seemed like...
Well, magic.
I’m blind. To me, there’s no such thing as sleight of hand. I figured it was simply a matter of sitting down and learning a new system. There was no one to teach me, and so I had to teach myself. If Tatum had learned it, 
I
could learn it. I now know that Tatum was perhaps the greatest keyboard virtuoso since Franz Liszt. But ignorance is bliss, and I figured if I had once mastered the “Hungarian Rhapsody,” I could now master this thing called jazz.

 

Back in 1937, Susan Koenig had gently patted my hand and told me my “Moonlight” Sonata was the most beautiful thing she’d heard in her life. In December of 1943, we were both seventeen years old, and I was itching to get into her pants (or
anybody’s
, for that matter). I had no real idea what she looked like, but I had formed some tactile, olfactory, and auditory impressions — I had touched her a little, smelled her a lot, and hardly listened to her at all.
Every Friday afternoon, Santa Lucia’s held a social for its juniors and seniors, and I had been dogging Susan’s tracks for the better part of a year now, seeking her out in the school gymnasium while the record player oozed Harry James’s “I Had the Craziest Dream,” Dinah Shore’s “You’d Be So Nice to Come Home To,” or Freddy Martin’s “I Look at Heaven,” a popularization of the Grieg Concerto upon which I’d worked so long and hard. I was working equally long and hard on Susan, who — unless my senses were sending absolutely haywire messages to my brain — looked something like this:
1. She was approximately five feet four inches tall. I reckon this by deducting from my own height the distance between the top of my head and the tip of my nose, which, according to my Braille ruler, was six inches. The top of Susan’s head came to just under my nose. Subtracting six inches from my own height, which was five feet ten in 1943, I got a girl who measured five-four.
2. Her eyes were brown. She told me this. She wore shades all the time. So did I.
3. She wore her hair very long, almost to the middle of her back. It would brush the top of my hand as we danced. The style was unusual for 1943, when girls were wearing shoulder-length pageboys, with or without high pompadours. But Susan later told me it was simpler and neater for a blind girl to wear it long and straight.
4. Her brassiere size was 36B. I pressed against her chest a lot and based my estimate on empirical knowledge, having handled many such garments in my Aunt Bianca’s corset shop, and having been intimately involved with Michelle’s bras during the thirteen-month period of her extraordinary growth. Michelle’s bra size, when she moved away in 1941, was a 34C.
5. The top of Susan’s head smelled of Ivory soap. Her ear lobes smelled of Wortt’s
Je Reviens
. She later identified this brand name for me while my nose was nestled between her naked breasts, where she also dabbed a bit of that intoxicating scent.
6. Her voice, angelic back there in 1937 when she’d praised me for my performance, had lowered in pitch to a G above middle C, somewhat husky, always breathless, even when she wasn’t whispering in my ear as we endlessly circled that gymnasium floor and tried to avoid collisions.
Did you know that blind people can detect the presence of an object by the echoes or warmth it gives off, and even by changes it causes in the air pressure, which are felt on the face? A little-known fact, but scientifically authenticated. I once detected the presence of a short, fat lady standing on the corner of White Plains Avenue and 217th Street, and asked her if the approaching trolley went to Fordham Road. When she did not reply, I asked the question again and discovered I was talking to a mailbox. The mailbox did not answer me. But then again, neither did it answer the Martians when they insisted it take them to its leader. Which reminds me of what Django Reinhardt, the gypsy jazz guitarist said when he first came to America in 1946: “Take me to Dizzy.”
Susan Koenig made me dizzy.
We did not talk very much as we danced our way around the world, preferring to sniff each other and rub against each other, and derive whatever small erotic pleasures we could while the eagle-eyed nuns watched our every fumbling move. But in our brief, breathless conversations over the course of countless Fridays spent in that room lingeringly reeking of dirty socks and jockey shorts, I learned that Susan’s father had been born in Munich, and that he’d gone back there in the fall of 1934 because he wanted to be in on the big resurrection Mr. Hitler was promising. Mrs. Koenig, an Irish-American lady born and raised in Brooklyn, chose not to accompany her brown-shirted mate on his return to the fatherland, and so the two were separated when Susan was eight and her older brother was ten. Her parents were legally divorced in 1938, by which time Herr Koenig was probably smashing the plate-glass windows of Jewish merchants — “Good
riddance
to him!” Susan said. She had no idea where he was now, and no desire to find out. Her fear, before her brother was drafted, was that he might be sent to Europe, where he would meet his own father on a battlefield and put a bullet between his eyes. Not that she cared about her father. But suppose the reverse happened? The thought had been too dreadful to contemplate, and she’d been enormously relieved when her brother was sent to the Pacific, even though she was terribly afraid of all the awful things the Japs did, like burying prisoners up to their necks in ant hills, and then covering their faces with honey and letting the ants eat them to death —
urggh
, it was disgusting. She could not wait for her brother to get home from the war. They had had such good times together.

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