Webmistress Beth on the road…
to Brookville, Indiana
It all happened so quickly, I wasn’t sure it was real. Hubby Jeff and I were
sitting in the living room on a Saturday night, being married and boring. I
had just spent the day reading a wonderful book by Chassie West (I LOVE her
books!) and had finished it. I wanted to have some good-book afterglow time
before starting a new book, so I was feeling kind of restless. Jeff had spent
the day alternating between updating fantasy sport-du-jour teams (baseball
preseason, hockey, XFL, Survivor, harnessed mouse racing, turtle derbys) and
watching the NCAA basketball tournament (yawn).
I innocently said, “Hey, wonder where Dallas Moore is playing tonight?” --
more out of idle curiosity than take-action curiosity. Check online -- they
are playing in Brookville, Indiana, a mere 30 miles from the
megalopolis-wanna-be Cincinnati. Before the dust had really cleared, we were
in the car driving out in to the country to watch a band play at a bar we’d
never heard of. The bar was called “Who Cares.”
Now, I am a recovering farm girl. I was born and raised in
Nowheresville-Farmtown Illinois -- population ratio 3 cows to one person. It
was the law. All Republicans. All white. No Catholics allowed. No sissies
tolerated. Wearing your “dress up boots” meant wearing the ones you couldn’t
smell coming. I KNEW what we were getting into going to this town of 2,500
(cow:person ratio unknown) in the middle of the wilds of southern Indiana.
Mind you, Jeff is a New Yorker, through and through. Born and raised upstate,
but with NYC attitude and enough time living in The City to really infuse it
into his psyche. I’ve taken him to my hometown, even wandered into a bar or
two there. Strangers don’t go over well in small-town bars, especially not
ones who bring big-city attitudes (you know, like, “I should be waited on
just because I have money and I’m here” –- this isn’t enough in small
towns. You’re a stranger, you must acknowledge being out of your league and
show some humility before some dying-to-go-to-the-big-city waitress will
gather up her courage to wait on you and strike up a “so what’s it like out
there” conversation).
While we’re driving to Brookville, Jeff is bringing me up to speed on this
band we’re going to see. He had heard them play a week ago at an awards show,
and knew it was the kind of music I would like. There was some brain chip
planted in me at birth that gave me a deep-seeded liking for outlaw
rock/rebel rock that sometimes even surprises me. Lynyrd Skynyrd, Charlie
Daniels, David Allan Coe are hardwired into my brain. A big change from the
showtunes, dance music or vocal jazz/R&B that I listen to most of the time.
Jeff is more likely to know the lyrics to Public Enemy, Outkast, Frank Zappa
or vintage rock songs than anything else.
Full name of the band: “Dallas Moore and the Snatch Wranglers.”
Uh-oh.
We pull off the highway at our exit, but have another 15 miles to go on
country roads. I forget how dark it is away from the city. “Inky black”
comes to mind. I see glowing eyes next to the side of the road, and know that
the possums are out tonight. I see lone houses sitting back from the road,
miles between neighbors. I tell Jeff “I’m having flashbacks!” and he just
laughs. I’m not sure I was kidding.
We get into Brookville, and I’m reassured that it’s a real town -– there are
gas stations with food markets attached, fast food restaurants (okay, only a
McDonalds, but it was enough to reassure me), and even a Knights of Columbus
Hall. We pass a convenience store which is closed at 10:15 on a Saturday
night. Um, everything’s closed. Now I’m really having flashbacks. Just past
the stoplight in town (the one in downtown, don’t know if there were more
anywhere else), we see the bar. Or, rather, we see the pickup trucks and
hatchbacks and SUVs that indicate something nearby is open. Has to be a bar.
(Small-town rules coming back fast and furious now.)

Park the car, walk into the bar, the place is PACKED. Everyone in town under
the age of 35 has shown up, and is mingling with the 60-year-old resident drunks
who open and close the bar every day. The bar had to have exceeded its fire
marshal limit by 50 percent. (Of course, in small towns, the fire marshal probably
owns the bar.) Jeff leads the way through the mass of bodies. I see bib
overalls, sheepskin vests, clothing branded from the Big K Farm Supply store
that was my mainstay growing up -- fake bake tans, frosted hair and press-on
nails to make the women look “big city” are everywhere. I say a prayer of
gratitude to St. Urban of Large Population for getting me out of my small
town.
At the end of the song that was playing when we first began to part the sea
of bodies, everyone in the bar starts giving the finger to the back of the
room. Long-necks in one hand, the one-finger salute up high with the other.
Have to put your cigarette in your mouth to do this, causing the familiar
(to-me) one-eye-squint. I was a little taken aback at the lack of applause
for the band, until I figured out that the finger salute was the band’s
preference. Or, at least they were doing it back to the crowd.
We couldn’t see the band at all. There was no stage, no special lighting -–
just a bunch of guys at the end of the room where the pool tables usually
were. Jamming out the tunes. Er, I mean, stomping their Jack-Daniels-loving,
Marlboro-smoking, my-baby-done-left-me-Fuck-Her outlaw hearts out. Flipping
off the crowd, and getting flipped off back.
Tables were reserved for the likes of “Misty” “Suzi” and “Killer” -– no
last names or credentials required. Pitchers of beer were served in
Rubbermaid pitchers with a lid. Oy.
Jeff waited nearly 20 minutes to try to place a drink order since he didn’t
know the “at least look embarrassed that you’re a stranger” strategy.
Meanwhile, I stood against the wall and listened to some good music. When the
5’5” country boy wearing the 90-gallon hat apologized for standing in front
of me and my 6’0” ample frame, “You probably can’t see, ma’am” -- I didn’t
even snort “No, I can see right over you, your high stacked boots *and* your
hat.” My country manners were coming back.
Jeff got bumped a couple of times by guys who had to assert their right to be
there. I got poked a few times on purpose by guys doing the same. “Ooooooh,
you’re a big one, now, aren’t ya?” one of them said. I resisted the urge to
“accidentally” step on his foot. I’m a visitor now, I know the rules.
Besides, I think he was wearing steel-toed cowboy boots.
Shortly after midnight, we gave up and headed out. The band hadn’t taken a
break, no use waiting for this set to be over. “Sets” and “breaks” are for
city bands. These guys were just stomping to their music, playing songs like
“Frog Giggin” “Rednecks, White Sox and Blue Ribbon Beer” and a campy
version of “Rocky Top.”
As we were leaving, I was shaken back to reality by a group of six people
wearing green hats and green clothes who were looking for a place to
celebrate St. Patrick’s Day. Inside the “Who Cares” bar, there was no
acknowledgement of the “holiday.” There certainly was no green beer to be
found. I saw a number of green teeth, but I recognized those under the black
lights because of previous experience and a long-ago-implanted translator for
small-town living (one dentist per county seems to be the rule -- sadism required for licensure).
I breathed a sigh of relief when we hit Cincinnati city limits. But it was
good to be reminded of where I came from and know that I can choose to be a
country girl again any time I want to. If I could just find a small town with
a couple of Indian restaurants and a good Thai place that delivers.
Beth adds, "Dallas Moore and the Snatch Wranglers is a real band, and very talented. I didn't change their name, because they're not innocent. They'd probably flip me off if they saw this page anyway. Oh, and besides, we're going to see them again this weekend."