i walked out of that concert completely fried due to minimal sleep,
overexposure to my ears (remember: i saw swans on tuesday, too),
alcohol, nicotine and the other one that's still a few months away from
open mention. so, i'm not done sleeping yet. but there was an experience
near the end of the show that i want to say something about. it was one
of those really surreal moments of racism that you just can't do much
about besides point out loudly and shake your head about. so, i'm going
to scream about it for a few paragraphs.
i mother earth
were a kind of iconic canadian band in the 90s, and they were uniting
here with a singer they hadn't played with in many years. the announcer
said 18 years. i'm not sure if that's literally true or not, but it's
been a while. the audience was consequently full of nostalgia: an older
and mostly white crowd rocking out to records released in 1993 and 1996.
much drinking, yes.
now, everybody knows you're not
supposed to smoke anything at all in these kinds of outdoor bank
concerts. you're just supposed to shut up and drink your over-priced
beer. that is, of course, the economic purpose of this event: to sell
over-priced beer. but, you can't actually enforce this rule once the sun
comes down a little, the least important reason being that most people
in the crowd at rock concerts like this actually don't agree with bans
on smoking at outdoor concerts. many of them actually even smoke. and,
not just cigarettes.
the smell of marijuana is pretty
normal at outdoor rock concerts. it's a part of the experience - whether
you're actually inhaling, or just taking in the aroma. it wouldn't be a
real festival, without it. whatever the eventual legality of the
substance in canada, that smell is not going to lift from the concerts
of the nation. there will simply be a trail of corrected signs "thank
you for pot smoking".
the spirit of this event,
combined with the nature of the audience, actually at one point near the
end of the set had joints passing around amongst strangers. somebody
decided everybody at the show ought to be high. or it seemed that way.
they were just circling around. my nose and eyes caught multiple burning
around me.
so, i will acknowledge that there were
people smoking pot in the audience. see, but that's just it -
*everybody* in the audience was smoking pot. no exaggeration. nine out
of ten, anyways.
so, you'll imagine how absurd it was
to watch security swoop in, walk past several burning joints and key in
on the only black guy in eyesight - who, yes, was caught green-handed.
like, they took it out of his hand. ok. drug abuse. but, they had to
blatantly walk by scores of stoned white folks to do this, and then
scores more as they were escorting him out. 90 out of 100 people in the
immediate audience were stoned. it was being openly passed around. but,
only one person in the audience was black.
i didn't
stay for the literal headliner, so i don't know if they came back later
for more minorities, or even for some white folk - or maybe if they just
backed off and let people have a good time. but i know what i saw and
how obvious it was.
i don't really have any point
besides the obvious one: it's really not ok. i don't know exactly who
the security personnel were (mall cops?), either, but....i guess the way
i should articulate this to organizers is that i don't want to see
anything like that ever again.
of course, this has
nothing to do with the band. the actual show was excellent, for what it
was. tight. no fuck-ups. the tracks were identifiable, but expanded upon
enough to play out. i'd need at least two hands to count the number of
times i saw this band in the 90s, and they were always a strong live set
like that. so, i will actually have some footage coming up in the next
few days of i mother earth with edwin in 2016. that's something that is
actually happening. there's some teaparty footage, too.
right now, back to sleep....