| "I'm a
poor, drunken orphan with nowhere to go but the grave," wailed
a waifish and non-plussed Mr. Chris Funk as he lay supine by the
railroad tracks. The crate of records he had been cradling in
his nubile appendages now lay in pieces on the ashen ground, his
complete collected recordings of sixties psychedelic luminary
Rick "Paisley Dave" Rigmore scattered hit her and yon
like so many dead leaves beneath a diseased elm. Noting his neglect
to accredit this phrase to its rightful owner, chief engineer
Jenny Conlee, her accordion neatly strapped to her back, stepped
lightly from the caboose and corrected his negligence with the
aplomb only an immigrant Hungarian could muster: "Dylan Thomas,
sir! Please move along!" But it was too late: an indelible
bond had been soldered in that moment of recognition. A few hours
later, in a Turkish bath, they revealed their stories to one another
between sips of a strange, tangerine liqueur. Not far from that
spot, however, two young military dignitaries (Rachel Blumberg,
Nate Query), appropriately lathered, overheard our two heroes'
stories. Was it chance, then, that lead the four unsuspecting
bathers to seek to return their soiled undergarments at the same
kiosk where worked the poor, bespectacled Colin Meloy? One can
surmise all one wants, but the truth should be known that, after
adopting the moniker The Decemberists, these five wan vagabonds
began playing their peculiarly styled pop music in various concert-halls
and brothels all across the globe.
|