My Bro
A small history about a big person.
My brother, the boy, wanted to please our dad when he signed
up for Little League but found the fit of eighty-eight black-and-white ivory
keys suited him more than an oak bat and leather glove. Report cards were low
on the list of anticipated events but teachers loved my brother. My brother’s
favorite-come-in-the-back-door-at-the-end-of-the-day-shout was “what’s for dessert?” My brother was mom’s best guinea pig. Lemon
meringue pie, lady-fingers, wedding cake icing, petit fours, peanut sauce and
honey mustard dip.
My brother, the teenager, learned how to sweep floors with
sawdust at Nelson Lumber & Hardware; turned in his push-broom for a guitar.
The Ivy Three. Practice sessions late at night. The Drone.
My brother, the friend, was never at a lack of company. His
friends were keepers and band-mates, fans and brothers, cousins, hermits, old,
young, digital and analog.
My brother, the musician, played piano from the age of four
and took up brass at ten. The only parts of the orchestra my brother didn’t
master were woodwinds and reeds, but my brother would blow a tune on a
saxophone if challenged. Harmonicas, accordions, trumpets and cornets, set
sheets, songbooks, sheet music, late nights, dark roads, local followers, fans,
messages on bar napkins and coasters, heavy loads, love letters.
My brother, the actor, had the lead role as Tully Bascomb in
The Mouse That Roared, the All-School-Play in 1963. It was a quaint lesson in
war that stained his naivety. My brother joined the protest in his own way; Bob
Dylan, Pete Seeger, Joan Baez, Woody Guthrie, Phil Ochs, Buffalo Springfield,
Hoyt Axton.
My brother, the digger, was hip to Miles and Mercer, Willie
and Waylon, Elvis and Elvis, Mavis, Aretha, John, Paul, George, Ringo, Stones,
Animals, the Duke, Ray, Dizzy, Louis, Booker T. My brother was the clam-digger
winner. Copalis Beach, annual camping corner, musty tent, open fire bacon and
egg breakfast, mosquitoes, 6-12, and rain.
My brother, the Parks and Recreation Guy, knew everyone’s
name, never missed a wave or hello, drove a loader, could dig a hole and use
the right shovel, and didn’t take shit from no one.
My brother, the dad, was more proud of his progeny than
anything he ever did. My brother wasn’t called to fatherhood but he wore it
like the cloak of a knight. Overseas phone calls, road trips, Mariners,
Seahawks, Avery Grace, Marin Skye.
My brother, my bro, hanging tinsel on a real pine tree, one
that dad brought down from the hills; sitting on my chest and farting under my
chin; hanging in the U District at Coffeehaus Eigerwand, Hippie Hill; teaching
me how to use a capo; painting plastic cars with Testor’s enamel paint and
letting me paint the wheels silver; sitting in front of the mirror while I
trimmed his bangs; visits to Snow Camp; boxing in the basement, learning a left
hook; giving me perfume for Christmas when I was sixteen; dime movies at the
Roxy; skateboarding on Skateboard Hill; giggling in church, getting scolded; overnights
with Grandma and Grandpa, hiding liver and onions under the table; madras
shirts and cut off jeans; blue eyes, freckles; Beatle boots, Stetson hats,
Rainier Beer belt buckles; old/new Mom tattoo; walrus moustache; authentic, stubborn,
stoic; vests and bolo ties; books, penguins, CD’s, LP’s, penguins, coffee mugs,
photos, penguins, postcards, ashtrays, penguins.
The longest journey is the one that takes you home.
Me and My Bro On Vacation Two Cool Kids 1950's |
JC, the Dad, with Charlie |
JC and Jim |
My brother's son, my nephew, Charlie Lenier, made a great video that I'll post here later, once I get the link. I've got some outtakes from his compilation. 1965; South Dakota; School; and Lance Romance.
Great Kids at a Grand Dam |
Thanks for reading.
John Carl Rieck September 9, 1946 - April 29, 2019 |
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