When Sixto Rodriguez came out on stage at the Pascua Yaqui tribe's Casino del Sol Amphitheater in Tucson last week, the ironies rang all around. His long straight black hair, dark face, pronounced musculature and small build could pass for a Southwestern indigene. He looked apache. My own roots to the Yaquis added to that irony.
Then the 70-year-old physically assisted by a young Chicana
made his way to the mic area some which he would hardly wander during the
performance. Glaucoma is the official explanation for this. So I asked, can he
see well enough to pluck the string and hold the chords?
A floppy gray fedora, lots of dark leather, boots. He stands
there. And all of us realize we are in a Presence. I know that because without
moving very far during his entire play, his stance looked tougher than any
chuco on a street corner. His stoop sent a message that I interpreted as the
dark, withheld emotions of a life so unfair, as was done to him.
I'm not saying he looked, acted, moved like an oppressed,
deprived minority. In one sense, he reminded me of a slave who'd been beaten, simmered within, yet possessed a superior fortitude and soul no whip could break. It
lingered under the fedora that hid eyes and face, rippled in the muscles
covered by the dark clothes.
Even maybe shrouded anger, but along with personal belief in
himself. Something that could explode at any minute. And if you were the slave owner,
the music aficionado even partly responsible for harming him, you prayed that what
lay underneath never exploded. Forget about sleeping giants. This was Power. Of creative spirit. And more than a mere man.
My wife and I didn't know what to expect, as few concerts as
we go to. First, we were disappointed. Most of the audience appeared older
than our over-60 friends, like going to the concert of any has-been rock band.
Why were there not more young people? Like under 59?
I'm not one of the few Americans of any nationality who
followed and loved Sixto Rodriguez from back in the 60s. Like most of us, I
learned of him from the documentary Searching for Sugarman. That story of
course is about him, but it's about all of us, back then.
Racism, prejudice, Anglo-corporate musicdom deprived the
majority of us from ever knowing or enjoying Sixto's music until now. And it
took a European filmmaker and fans from Australia and South Africa to bring him
to us. If Sixto had performed at Woodstock or the Monterey Bay Pop Festival, maybe
we would have known about him. Woodstock got Santana pass the racism. And
Richie Havens, who at 72 died this past week. More irony.
Here's what Sixto looked like when he should have been
discovered. Other photos here show how much time passed for our country to make
it up to him. But really, it's something that can never be made up for.
In that sense, the injustice done to Sixto was the same
injustice done to all young Chicanos who were never encouraged to go to
college, never got in, were bypassed for promotion, never received a
scholarship or were asked to audition or show their art or dance or
creativity. His country and their country lost out.
When he started playing on stage, everything was forgotten, if not
forgiven. The tunes, the singing, the sounds were live, alive, and rhythm and
blues and folk. And strong. The hombre musician who performed in Tucson
didn't miss a beat
moved his fingers through chords, across strings
like a twenty-year-old
had a voice with none of the raspiness of a smoker or old
man
had the style that any young performer would die to
possess.
Sixto played many of the best
songs from his albums. The audience wasn't disappointed there. He also
performed three other classics like Lucille and I Only Have Eyes for You. He
did each in his style and connected to the audience with appropriate
emotion. What you could only get from someone who lived back when those
classics were first performed.
When Sixto pulled off his light coat, down to a sleeveless
black leather vest, his biceps shown like one of the baddest vatos on the
block. It's crazy that an old guy could be so fit. Individual muscles on his
forearms throbbed as he plucked and strummed, nothing like an old man should be
able to do, much less look so fine doing it.
Even after so many worldwide performances, Sixto didn't seem
totally comfortable being there. His words were sparse and sometimes
reflected this.
Acoustic backup - incredible. |
People like to comment how great it is that Sixto finally
got rediscovered. How good he must feel that his patience was rewarded. That
good things eventually come to those who wait. I think that's total bullshit.
Even if Sixto says any of that is true, there's much more lying under the dark
fedora than that. And I commiserate with him that some of it is not . . . forgiveness.
In Tucson, Sixto came across as incredibly charming, or
charmingly funny:
"Don't rush me; I want to be treated like an ordinary
legend."
Some pure wisdom: "About your love: don't be a silent partner."
Appropriately, he ended the show with a song from Dylan, who
he's been compared to so often. He wasn't Dylan when he sang this; he was
Sixto and worth hearing.
Then at the end he sent us home with:
"Go gentle with your anger." - which seemed more
about him than us.
I call him Sixto because I can't think of him as Rodriguez,
something attached to the whitewashing he was branded with when producers
wanted him to be Rod Riguez. Similar to Ritchie Valens who couldn't be
Valenzuela that sounded too ethnic. That's why to me he's Sixto.
Yes, you should see and hear Sixto perform. But before that,
I recommend doing more than that. Read his lyrics to learn the passion there.
To realize the level of his self-education. To remember the radical thinking of
the 60s. To feel the melody of his poetry.
And when you do attend a concert, forget everything written here.
Just try to absorb the Presence, feel Sixto's history, ours, and try to understand
what it's like to be Sixto. I think it's something unique, maybe never
fathomable.
I've tried to get the only Chicano interview of Sixto. Not surprisingly, his
staff hasn't responded. Maybe never will. But, that doesn't disappoint me
because I can't imagine that in one hour I'd be able to learn enough about this
legend. And maybe all that I learned wouldn't want to share. What's above is what I know and think.
Es todo, hoy,
RudyG
Rudy, I had never heard of Sixto, and I can believe the reasons you cite for the people of our country not having heard of him either. You express your interpretations in such a poetic, heartfelt way here. The human touch is always powerful.
ReplyDeleteWe women always talk about the proverbial "glass ceiling," which is still so strong or impenetrable in the 21st century, sad to say. But we forget that there have been, and continue to be, so many "glass ceilings" for so many worthy groups of people who have been held down or ignored because of their group/class membership. All this still happening in the great democracy of the world called the United States. Too much hypocrisy, irony, and dissonance to absorb!
We saw Rodriguez in concert last night here in Broomfield, outside Denver, Colorado. They had to accomodate him in a larger space than where he was originally booked. I was glad to have read your bloga beforehand, and appreciate everything you express. As far as the crowd, there were both young and old, but it was overwhelming white which surprised us slightly. We compared the demographics to that of some indie film fest or other liberal culture magnet. As such, I felt there was a little awkwardness in the dynamic between the crowd and the legendary artist. His low-key, super-cool persona inspired some of us to just soak in his presence quietly while others felt inspired to hoot and holler albeit hesitatingly. Toward the end, many in the crowd simply shouted "Thank you!" I couldn't agree more.
ReplyDeleteLove your comments, Thelma and BB. Tucson was heavily white, but some good number of Spanish speakers. There was that "little awkwardness in the dynamic between the crowd and the legendary artist" too. The "hoots and hollers" and young Anglo girls up front displaying their enticing dance were totally ill-fitting. Un-house-trained ccoyotes baying at a brilliant moon.
ReplyDeleteRudyG
Was at the Tucson concert, and saw the movie " Searching for Sugarman " twice. In my opinion he is a modern day prophet and a enlighten being🙏
ReplyDelete