essaysbysean.blogspot.com
I’m pleased to see,
on Sunday morning, how the Saturday part of the weekend Country Thunder Calgary
music festival got a two-page spread in the Calgary
Sun. The photographs were by Mike Drew, the guy who does the excellent ‘drive
Alberta farm roads-and-photograph-nature’ columns.
Our festival was
like the festival in Arizona. Again the big stage with extended runway flanked
by huge TV screens and a giant blow up drink can. Again that pair, the
self-described “Indian and White Man,” who did the interstitial talking. This
time the two did not ask us to sing the anthem, or share words of appreciation
for our servicemen and first responders. I wonder if they just knew, or if
someone warned them, that Canadians do not express their patriotism the same
way. I saw no one wearing the sort of T-shirts I described in my essay American Country Patriots, archived
April 2016, after the festival in Arizona. There are only a few Country
Thunders in North America, and the pair spoke of being to them all.
What was the same at
both festivals I attended was the love flowing among we rednecks, we trailer-trash,
we excited lovers of music. In the V.I.P. section were brown folding chairs. Again
we sat right at the stage fence, so my buddy Mathew in his wheelchair could
see. I counted three different smiling people saying they would set aside a
space next day for Mathew and I. (and two of his relatives) I also counted one
person help me put my sweater on, one person help with the zipper to my buddy’s
pack as I was reaching to it on the back of his chair, and, as I was digging
into the Matt’s pack from standing behind him, two friendly pats on my bum.
The sister-in-law
that drove our handi-van home observed with some heat how so many ladies
dressed “scandalously,” as in “…cleavage, and you could see their bum.” I
assured her, “It was the same in Arizona.” I don’t exactly know the psychology of
those ladies, which means I guess I’ll never be a great writer. I remember a
U.S. entertainment writer being mystified at how the (nearly) women-only crowd
for the opening night of the movie (from the TV series) Sex and the City dressed so revealing, with no men to impress. I
guess he won’t write the Great
American Novel either.
Our Cowtown daily attendance was sold out at 17,500. The Sun
said the bugs for lineups and things were noticeably fixed between Friday and
Saturday.
Someday I’ll learn
to shout “Whoo-hoo!” just like everybody else. For now, I will say that even a
repressed Star Trek fan like me had a good time. As an even more repressed fellow
from Austria said, “I’ll be back.”
Sean Crawford
Calgary
August
2016
Footnote:
~As I said back
in April to a commenter, I was surprised that so few “Americans” (U.S.
citizens) clicked on my American Country
Patriots. But slowly the hits have added up: Going forward to now, late August,
none have had as many cumulative hits,
and going back in time, the first piece with more readers was in March, The Madness of Michael Moore, and then
nothing greater until January.
~Come to think of it, all I saw were "persons of whiteness," as in "caucasians," just like you would see in a trailer court. The only "foreigners" I met were a nice young couple from Blackburn Lancashire who used my camera to photograph Mathew and I.
This could be partly because the Minister for immigration is no longer looking for the classic "farmers in sheepskin coats" but is encouraging new Canadians and refugees to come to the cities, not to the western countryside.
It sounds like you had a great time. Although I am a rock and roll lover, I have fond memories of growing up in the country where my father's friends would come over for a night with their "geetars" and "banjos" and we'd have ourselves a hootenanny. It's a shame that most immigrants find themselves settled in the cities. Our country folk have a lot of heart and a lot to offer our new citizens.
ReplyDeletePart of what makes home-made music so nice is that folks don't worry about whether they are good enough for national prime time—they just enjoy themselves.
ReplyDelete