From time to time it is a fun thought experiment to consider
how small decisions we make end up shaping our fate and future; for me and my
trip in India, it was mustering up the courage to jump on stage and wail out
‘Red House’ as performed by Jimi Hendrix
with a local band that would shape the next 6 months of my life.
My friends had left, and I had just gotten a new editing
assignment, so I figured I would stay in my cheap and clean guest room for
another few days, paying my landlord on a day to day basis as to avoid
paperwork (he told me that booking for 3 days or more would warrant paper work,
with a dreadful tone of voice. Between my desire to feel off the grid and
his lack of desire to fill out forms, we settled on me giving him cash roughly
every morning). I also met some lovely Australian girls with a fondness for
partying, so my days consisted of posting up at a beach shack and editing a
journal on the provincial economies of China and then drinking heavily with a
posse of ladies from the land down under.
They told me of an all you can eat seafood buffet with live
music that was the cat’s pajamas at one of the original beach
shacks at Anjuna beach (a party destination known throughout the subcontinent). I personally feel a bit guilty gorging on food when
surrounded by poverty—or any time for that matter—but the live music caught my
attention.
Anjuna beach is a long stretch of beach lined with shacks that fulfill most all beach going needs: shade, music, alcohol, people, hash, food, drinking water etc. There are hippy markets on both the North and South side of the town where you can score any last minute beach needs or tapestries.
In the stead of dinner, I drank Kingfisher© strong beer—the thicker, more filling, sibling of the
ubiquitous Indian beer. Despite the more than ample energy the band was giving
off, no one was dancing, so I took it upon myself to be the crowd I always
wish I had; I let my hair down and rocked the F out. Before too long, a dance
party had commenced.
The guitar player/vocalist was wailing, shredding, jumping
up and down, screaming, yelling, and all the other –ing verbs you would want a
guitar hero to be doing. I felt a certain connection with him; his licks were not
unlike mine, albeit better executed. His choice of songs was eclectic and at
times ironic and humorous, at least by my standards (you know, like Bob Marley at Starbucks or something). His in between song banter
was dry and funny. I liked this guy; he was good people.
The always necessary blues number began—‘Red House’ as
performed by Jimi Hendrix. The music was tight, but the vocals were seriously
lacking; I figured I could do better. I gestured to the microphone, and the
guitar hero gestured back yes.
After performing a number of songs with them that night, and
having a plethora of drinks bought for me by people who appreciated what I had
added to the evening, the clock struck midnight, meaning the music had to stop (this was my first experience with Goa's election time noise ordinance; I
will address Goan elections at some point in the near future).
I joined the band for a post-performance
smoke. I introduced myself to the guitar hero and told him I loved his style,
he responded back with something similar and invited me to his apartment the
next day to jam and crash for a day or two. This was the start of me and
Anirban’s fruitful friendship.
I packed up and the next day hopped on a bus to Panjim, the
capital and port city of Goa, as well as Anirban’s place of residence. He
picked me up from the bus station on his sports bike and took me through Panjim,
along the water. We crossed over a river that emptied into the bay on the right
and was lined with old Portuguese style buildings to the left. Then we
passed by downtown, a bustling urban area with some taller buildings to the
left and casino boats in the bay on the right, all lit up with neon signs
connoting royalty or luck or the likes (despite the 30 cent minimum bets and my love for casinos, I never made it out). Then we passed down a recently revamped
road lined with new, old-looking, LED street lights. This long straight road was the site of
Anirban’s most recent bike wreck—a comforting piece of information to hear as
we are swerving through buses and cars going 60 mph.
The apartment was big and covered in posters of late and
great rockstars. The guy who lived above Anirban heard us jamming and came and
knocked on the door and offered beers and hash; we welcomed him and his gifts. This
was Antonio, a super cool and passionate Spaniard from the Basque country who
was really into sustainable farming. We spent the night playing songs and watching youtube
videos of musicians we admired.
I felt quite comfortable in the apartment from day one—it
was definitely a quintessential bachelor pad; full ash trays, dirty dishes, burn
marks on the glass table, a toilet with a thin film covering, signifying the
avoidance of scrubbing, and many other tell-tale signs that very few women
enter the premises. Little did I know at that point that this would become my
place of residence for the next two and a half months as I continued goin Goan.
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