Goinâ Down Slow
By Andrew Vachss
Saturday night, thereâs always a woman in a red dress. Looking over at me when my hands are downâharp in one hand, mike in the other.
I drop my hands when Big G takes a keyboard solo. Most people, their eyes go to the man with the front music. Junior does vocals, Melvin plays slideâthey get most of the looks. They both play the crowd too, working them.
But when I solo, I get lost. My eyes are always closed. Itâs not a stage thingâthatâs the way it happens. So, if a womanâs looking at me when I donât have my harp up and running, I know why.
But if the womanâs there with a man, I know better than to look back. Woman like that, the red dress is a signal. Sheâs a fire-starter.
In the joints we play, itâd most likely be a knife, but a pistolâs always a possibility.
And even if her man walks off, you canât be sure he wonât be back. Slick and quiet. And maybe your next drink will be the same kind that sent Robert Johnson off to pay that debt he ran up at the Crossroads.
But if that red dress is full of juice and thereâs no man next to it, thatâs another signal. And it ainât âStop!â
You have to play hard in these joints. I donât mean loudânoise wonât get it. Hard enough, maybe thatâs closer to it. Sometimes we get to play big places. Even a stadium once, behind a band with a label deal and all that. In big places, you donât have to play hard. The people in the crowd make most of the sound themselves anyway.
But in the clubs, you better bring it. Or theyâll take you right off the stage.
Thatâs the way I started. Tuesday nights at the Ice Pick. The house band opens up, one slot at a time, the way a flower opens, petal by petal. Thatâs to see if anyone wants to sit in. Like, the slide man, heâll make a gesture, then take a seat off to the side. And anyone who thinks he can make steel sing, well, he can just step up and try and take the manâs place for that piece of time.
It was a long time before I was ready. Longer than I thought, actually. âCause, the first two times, I didnât make it. It wasnât like the people booed me or nothing. They donât do that. What they do is ... they talk. To themselves, I mean. Just go back to their conversations like theyâre in an elevator.
They do that, youâre done.
The third time was the charm, like the people say. I just filled in behind at first. Then I put in a few figures. And when the leader stepped off and pointed at me, I made the crowd quiet right down. Most harp men, they can juke you to death, but they canât go slow. The great onesâJimmy Cotton, Butterfield, Musselwhiteâthey can go either way, of course. Sonny Boy, Little Walterâthey could go wherever they wanted.
I always modeled myself after Blind Owl Wilson. I must have listened to him on âGoinâ Down Slowâ a million times. I wanted to make people feel what I felt when I heard him. And that night, I got it right, bending the notes over slow and soft ... clean, not cheating off the feedback from the mike.
After that, I sat in a lot with different bands until Junior picked me for permanent. Iâve been traveling with them ever since.
I canât read music, but I can hear it perfect. I told Honeyboy, and he said it was okayâhe said he wouldnât trust no preacher that had to read his sermon from a script.
Iâll never be the king of anything. My ambition is to be one of the thousand great harp men. Not to be in no arguments, just to be. Like the blues. Thatâs one of the first things Honeyboy told me.
âThe blues is always going to be here. Like a convict run off from a chain gang who the Man never find. Oh, he have to lay low sometimeâdisco made the blues lay real low for a while backâbut he always going be around. Always be running, though. Never be on top for long, but never be gone neither. Remember that part, sonânever be on top to stay. Lotsa white boys, they made that mistake. The ones who come up in the late sixtiesâit was good then. College kids loved it. Record deals for everyone. Stadiums, TV, everything. Then the sheriff called to the hounds, and the blues had to get back in the woods. Those white boys, the ones who expected it to last forever, they stayed out in the openâand they got cut down. So what you got to remember is this one rule:
âThey canât hang you while you running.â
I never forgot that. But I donât know what to do now. It was a Saturday night. It was a woman in a red dress. It was a man I didnât know she had.
A young man. A white man. A rich manâs son who crossed the tracks one too many times.
Now heâs in the ground and Iâm on the run.
Iâll be all right if I donât go back to the clubs. Iâm nobody ... as long as I donât pick up my harp again.
I wonder how long I can go without.
I wonder how long I can go.
.
Originally published in Everybody Pays
© 1999 Andrew Vachss. All rights reserved.













