Saturday, August 29, 2015

U2: IT'S A BEAUTIFUL DAY FOR A BIKE RIDE


It was a beautiful summer day and I was sort of working at a new to me Hell’s Kitchen bar, after the other bar closed. I was just running errands around the place and filling in as a bartender here and there. I would go in every Tuesday at 1 p.m. and help out doing whatever. There was always something that needed to be done: paint, run out and get a fax machine, water the plants, update the chalkboard, whatever tasks had to be done.

On this one Tuesday in particular, I was at home just hanging around waiting to go to work. I was passing the time just watching the local News at Noon on CBS. There was a reporter doing an on-the-scene story from outside a Barnes & Noble’s store. It was a story on U2. They were inside Barnes & Noble, signing the first 500 copies of their new book. People had been lined up for hours, if not days.

The reporter went on to say something to the effect, if you’re not already here waiting on line, don’t bother coming down because it’s a zoo, and you’ll never get close. Right away I thought to myself, I do love a challenge. But I had to get to work and I was only working one day a week. I had to be there on time. I get to work and see the manager. He was a little stiff, not cordial as usual, and there was no music playing.

Then I see a lady in business attire, who I’d never seen before. The manager tells me, he’s going to be busy with the accountant all afternoon, and if I could please come back the next day instead. I was like, “Sure.” I just sat there for a minute and had a soda to get my thoughts together. I had mentally prepared myself for a day of work.

Now, I was surprisingly off, and thinking about what to do with my time off this beautiful day. I couldn’t waste it. Then all of a sudden, the light bulb went off. I remembered the news story. (Thank you, CBS.) U2 was at Barnes & Noble. I knew where I was going. I started pedaling downtown. I had to pass my apartment along the way, so I stopped in to get one of my U2 CDs and some Sharpies. I grabbed my copy of Rattle and Hum. It was the first one I came across in my collection and I also smoked up.

I arrive on my bike, pull up, and it’s a scene. There’s a line of people wrapped around the block, news vans, and a lot of people milling about. U2 had been inside for approximately four hours. I decided to ride my bike around to the backdoor. There were about a dozen people waiting, totally convinced that U2 was going to exit that way. I then lock my bike up.


I was just doing my own thing when I noticed two really nice SUV limos parked out front. I walked past and glanced at the customized license plates. I recognized the limo company’s name from my years of working at hotels. Visiting bands usually travel with this particular company. I’m thinking, I’ve loaded a lot of rock star luggage into this company’s limos.

Those have got to be the vehicles they arrived in. Everyone was hoping they’d come out and play right there, in Union Square, but that was only wishful thinking. There was no stage anywhere to be seen. The book signing was on the second floor. The security guard made sure the line was very orderly and that absolutely nobody blocked the front door. The store was still open to the general public on the first floor.

I walked up to the door; completely playing it off like I had no idea there was a book signing by U2 going on inside. I just needed to buy a book, real quick. I get in and just start browsing and looking around at all the books on display while keeping one eye on the escalator to the second floor. If that security guard were to let his guard down for a brief second, I would have made my way over to I t. He didn’t. So I just browsed and moseyed over to an employee elevator. I pushed the button real slyly and walked away. My plan was to get on it, when it arrived. That plan backfired, too. The elevator was manned with a security guard inside.

As I’m pretending browsing, I see the actor Chris Parnell. I have always wanted to meet him. Chris Parnell is my favorite actor from Saturday Night Live. I was on SNL three times: twice as an extra and once in a featured scene with Natalie Portman. He was in all three scenes. Extras never get to talk to or mingle with the regular cast. He appeared to actually be shopping. He was buying a magazine on the theater scene, possibly Theater Scene. I couldn’t read the title.

I wanted to go up and say hi, but I didn’t know if that would make him feel uneasy. All these thoughts were running through my head and I finally ask myself, do I want to meet Chris Parnell on the first floor, or U2 on the second?’ He bought his magazine and left, and I continued on my quest.



There was no penetrating the second-floor fortress. Besides, I didn’t want to get on security’s radar. Too late, I’m sure. So I went back outside. U2 exits. Pandemonium ensues. People start cheering like it’s a concert. The crowd had been waiting all day for them to emerge.

They run up to the band, and U2 starts shaking fans’ hands and signing autographs while being ushered into the two SUV limos, just like I thought. They waved goodbye before they got in—the crowd cheered one last time—and they zoomed away, right past me.

I’m sitting there on my bike at 17th and Broadway. I check out the license plates just to be sure. Yep, it’s them. Limo numbers one and two. So I take off after them. I’m sure I can catch up. I watch them as they turn right, onto Sixth Avenue, and proceed north. I lost my visual on them at that point.

A line from the song “It’s a Beautiful Day” started repeating in my head. “The traffic is stuck, and you’re not moving anywhere.” I’m thinking to myself, ‘come on New York, come on. I need some help from the streets, here!’ ‘It’s up to you, New York, New York, with all of your beautiful traffic-clogging construction zones.’ I needed two of them, on Sixth Avenue, to slow them down just enough for me to catch up.

I was peddling like a madman. I was now on Sixth Avenue. I flew across 23rd Street just before the light turned red. The limos were nowhere to be seen, but I had faith. I got to 28th Street, and there’s the first construction zone. Phew! Next I’m near 34th Street and people start crossing on the red—my green!—and I start yelling at them, “Get out of my way I’m chasing down U2!” They look at me like I’m the crazy one, as they jump out of the way.

I’m sweating as I cross 42nd Street and see the second glorious construction zone. I look up, three blocks north to 45th Street, and see what could be them. I pedal closer, and it is! It’s limo number two. As I get near them, the light turns green and they take off, so I must time things perfectly. I ride alongside until they hit a red light and roll to a stop at 48th and Sixth.

I now have approximately sixty seconds. I ride up to the backseat window, right side, and knock on the window, hold my CD in one hand, and a Sharpie in the other. The adrenaline is flowing. I was so hyped after that sprint. The window rolls down and Adam Clayton, the bassist, reaches out. I hand the two items to him. He signs the CD, and then hands it to his left, to Larry Mullen, Jr.

I was thinking, wow, Larry Mullen, Jr. looks so young. He looks like he hasn’t aged a day since The Joshua Tree. I’ve always wanted to bang him too. They hand me back the CD, and I say, “Thanks, good luck with the book!” The other SUV limo passes by right then. I interrupt myself, “Gotta go! There goes the other two. Bye!”

Limo number one rolls to a stop at a red light, a few blocks away. This one was on the west side of the avenue. I had to cross all four lanes in two blocks. It was crazy. I get... http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00BCQ2R7K?*Version*=1&*entries*=0

AC/DC: ON THE SET OF PRIVATE PARTS


I am a big fan of AC/DC. The first time I heard them I was in high school. I went out and bought the album Highway To Hell. My favorite song was “Get It Hot.” I remember our school’s football team would always have the song “T.N.T.” playing over the loudspeakers as they took to the field. I bought the album High Voltage after hearing that. My favorite song on that one is “Live Wire,” because at times I am a live wire.

I was shocked when I heard the news that Bon Scott died. It was the biggest news in my world. Everyone in school was talking about it. All the D.J.’s were reliving AC/DC memories on the radio. AC/DC was just starting to get some great radio airplay on rock stations here in the United States when it happened. They had just completed a very successful U.S. tour in 1979. They were already huge in their home country of Australia.

The tragedy left everyone wondering ‘what would happen next for the band?’ Five months later, that question was answered when AC/DC released Back In Black. I went out and bought it. Favorite track: “Shoot to Thrill.” After a brief mourning period, AC/DC got right back to work. They found a new singer in Brian Johnson and recorded their next album immediately. AC/DC fans were salivating in anticipation, curious to hear what they would sound like now.

The album was an instant smash. It was perfectly timed. It released in the summer of 1980 and everyone was driving around, cranking it, with their windows down. It contained multiple hits. For the first time, not only were the rock stations playing AC/DC nonstop, but the popular music stations began playing AC/DC as well, especially the songs “You Shook Me All Night Long,” “Back in Black,” and “Hells Bells.” That album went on to become the second biggest-selling record ever, right after Thriller. AC/DC was back and even bigger and more popular than ever.

The first time I saw them perform live was on September 2, 1984, at a Monsters of Rock concert in Germany. It is one of the best I have ever experienced. Van Halen (the very last show with David Lee Roth, years before the reunion tour), Mötley Crüe, Ozzy Osbourne, and Dio were also on the bill. AC/DC absolutely rocked that sportzplatz.

Flash forward twelve years to the summer of 1996. Howard Stern was filming his movie, Private Parts, in various locations throughout New York. I was unemployed at the time, so I decided to start my own dog-walking business. How could I lose? There are countless dog lovers and owners. Some of them work crazy hours and just can’t be there to walk their dog during the day.

That’s where I would step in. I made up a few signs, and just had fun with it. I wrote “Dog Walker Available, 28 Years Dog-walking Experience.” I then proceeded to post them around town. I got a client almost instantly. That client referred me to another client, and before I knew it I was walking a few different dogs. One day I was walking two Dalmatians when I saw a newly printed sign taped to a lamppost. It read, “Paid extras wanted for Howard Stern’s movie ‘Private Parts’ tomorrow. Be at Bryant Park at 8 a.m.”

I was psyched. I really wanted to do this, so I checked my calendar immediately, and fortunately for me, I was not scheduled to pick up any dog shit off the streets of New York City that day. I was available. AC/DC turned out to be the surprise musical guest at the filming, but that was all top secret. The next day I got there bright and early. I went to the holding area and checked in.

There were thousands of extras. It was all catered; we had breakfast waiting for us. During check-in, we received our wristbands and completed some paperwork so that we could get paid. It took a while to process all of us, so everyone just relaxed and hung out, ate, read the paper, chatted, whatever. It was a great way to ease into the day. People were buzzing about the top news story of the day, the bombing at the Summer Olympics in Atlanta.

Lunch was served once check-in was completed. Then we all made our way over to Bryant Park. The scene was a political rally. There was a big stage with a banner that read, “Howard Stern for Governor.” We just filled in the park wherever we wanted. It was an absolutely picture-perfect summer day, not a cloud in the sky. I scoped out a place to smoke up. There were dozens of porta potties. I went in one before it had the chance to be used, even once. I smoked up and got myself ready for my close-up.

All the extras were in place. Robin Quivers and Baba Booey took the stage and spoke for a while. We all applauded them enthusiastically, then we started chanting, “Howard, Howard, Howard.” Howard Stern came out next and we all started cheering insanely. We were clapping for everything he was saying.

It was really fun. –A lot of people remembered when Howard Stern actually ran for governor, it was only ten years earlier.- We shot the scene a few times, and once finished, Howard Stern announced, “I want to thank you for all your support, and as a surprise I have the greatest rock-and-roll band in the world.”

A look of wonder spreads across thousands of faces. Everyone was looking around, thinking, ‘who?’ Stern continued, “Please welcome AC/DC!” Five guys began to walk on stage, and we’re all just staring at them. From a distance people were asking each other, ‘is that really them or just actors playing AC/DC?’

Then, as they walked toward the front, people’s comments changed to: “Yes, that’s them!” “That’s Angus Young.” “There’s Brian Johnson, right there!” It took a few seconds before the crowd realized that AC/DC was really there and about to play.

It was shock and excitement rolled into one. Passersby on the street could see that AC/DC was on-stage; they started trying to get into the park. By now though, it was a closed set. If you didn’t already have a wristband, you weren’t getting in. They played, “You Shook Me All Night Long.” They were superb. I see them walk off the stage, and I think to myself, right now we’re all just actors on a set. We’re practically colleagues.


I walk over to the backstage area and...
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THE ROLLING STONES: REHEARSAL FOR STEEL WHEELS, 1989


The Rolling Stones were going on tour for the first time since their Tattoo You album, eight years earlier. I was working at a Long Island hotel at the time, right next to the Nassau Coliseum. There was a reservation for approximately forty people for the month of August. Rumors and whisperings started right up. The biggest being that the Rolling Stones were going to rehearse at the coliseum for a few weeks, and the crew was going to be staying with us. Turns out it was true.

I was on duty when the bus arrived with them. I wanted so very badly to go to some of these rehearsals. I was the doorman that day. I unloaded the luggage off the bus and placed it on carts for the bellman to distribute. For almost all crew arrivals, there is numbered tag on each piece of luggage. This make is really easy to sort. I noticed that on one piece of luggage a crewmember had fastened his working credentials—a laminated pass—right next to his luggage tag.

I had never seen anyone do that before. Usually those things are safeguarded. I went over to take a look, very casually. I realized what I was looking at. It was so basic, printed in black and white. I couldn’t believe it. It appeared that someone just made it up on their computer, hurriedly.

I had to move fast. I removed this pass very carefully and handed it to my bud who was working the front desk. He immediately went to the copy machine and ran off three copies. He gave it back to me, so I could quickly re-attach it, in the same manner, so the owner was none the wiser.

I got the pass back just in time for the bellman to haul the luggage away to be delivered. Next, me and front desk clerk went down to the health club. We had to bring a third person into our fold. The health club sold memberships to the general public, so anyone could use the facilities. We knew our buddy downstairs in the health club issued membership cards all day and had a laminating machine right there in his office; that was our next stop. He did his thing, and we now had three passes in our possession.

The Rolling Stones showed up a few days later, after the stage was assembled, and started rehearsing. At first we all got along fine and...       http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00BCQ2R7K?*Version*=1&*entries*=0

SHEA STADIUM: OPENING DAY '91

             

          The Mets game was completely sold-out. Opening day is always sold-out. It’s the beginning of a new season, there is so much hope in the air, reality sets in soon enough. The tickets are usually gone months in advance. There was none available at the box office. Even the scalpers had run out. There were, what seemed like, a couple dozen guys scattered about just hovering between the box office and the actual gate, hoping for anything.
I was in this group. There was a growing sense of nervousness as we realized, if this many people were looking for tickets, our individual chances of scoring any were very slim. I was standing there drinking a beer out in the open, as were the others—it was a different time in New York—as I planned my next move. 
The old Shea Stadium, the way it used to be laid out, was that after you got your ticket torn and you entered through the turnstile, there were two ramps, one on the left side and one on the right. You had a choice of walking up either ramp or you could continue on to the escalators, stairs, or elevators. Most people walked the ramps. These weren’t corkscrew-style ramps. They were in a zigzag formation. They started on ground level and zigged up to the second floor, then zagged in the opposite direction to the third floor, and so on and so forth, a few more times until the final floor.  
Those of us still without tickets were still milling about outside, where desperation had turned to slight despair as game time neared. We needed a flat-out miracle if any of us stood a chance. Right then, our miracle arrived in the way of a big, old-style yellow school bus. We’re standing there when all of the sudden we hear a large horn honk behind us, so we all look over. 
The driver had just dropped off some kids and now intended to park where we were all at, right next to a wall. Apparently we weren’t moving fast enough for him so he honked again. We were already looking at him after the first honk, collectively thinking the same thing as we got out of the way and watched him park as close to the wall as possible. The second he finished parking and turned the engine off, we knew what we had to do to get in. Nothing had to be said. We all stormed that bus so fast, it was such a blur. I can’t tell... http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00BCQ2R7K?*Version*=1&*entries*=0

QUEEN LATIFAH: HER SHOW, CHELSEA STUDIOS '99



I liked Queen Latifah long before she got her own talk show. I lived in Jersey City for a year between '92 and '93. She's a Jersey girl. That's where I first heard her name mentioned. My roommate at the time was DJ Mad Adam (his name is a palindrome, which spells the same way backward or forward.) He spun her music around the house all the time. One night she walked into a club he was spinning. That earned him some street cred among the other D.J.'s.

The next day he was telling anyone who’d listen, “Queen Latifah came into the club I was spinning at last night!” I had noticed that her music had been included on a few mix tapes from the New Music Seminar. I also remember seeing her in the Naughty by Nature video “Hip Hop Hooray” and then in the movie Set It Off. I bought her CD Black Reign when it first came out in 1993. It has the hits “U.N.I.T.Y.” and “Just Another Day,” plus my personal favorite “Coochie Bang.”

When I heard she was getting her own talk show, I had to go see it and get my CD signed. The show was being taped only six blocks from my apartment. I sent in for tickets and received four in the mail. I called friends, made plans. We were all going to meet up there. Whoever got there first would just get in line and wait for the others. It was me, so I jumped in line. I was about the fiftieth person in the cue. I noticed some producers and assistant producers were standing by the employee entrance enjoying a smoke break, hovered in a semicircle.

I knew they were working because I could see their credentials hanging from their necks. They noticed me get in line. As they were conversating, they looked over at me again, then talked amongst themselves some more. I had a feeling that something was up. They finished their cigarettes and came over to me as a group, and then one of them said, “Hey, the topic of today’s show is hip-hop.

We are going to pick one person from the studio audience to do a hip-hop makeover on. Do you want to do it?” Right away, the girl standing in front of me turns around and tries to get in on my game and says, “I want a hip-hop makeover. I want a hip-hop makeover.” One of the producers told her real nicely, “No thank you. You already look hip-hop. We’re looking for a more dramatic effect.” I was the only white boy in line at that time.

I was like, “Yeah, let’s do this!” My friends soon arrive and join me in line. I tell them I’ve been waiting for only about seven minutes and that I’m going to be on the show. They say how they expected no less and we all laugh. The line starts to move. We all pass through the metal detector and wait in a holding area before entering the actual studio. The show was in its first week, so a few minor kinks had to be worked out. There were guest celebrities coming in that day.

With extra coordination needed for the stars and the newness of the show, taping took longer than anyone anticipated. One of my friends had to get back to work, so she left after about two hours. Then another friend was getting antsy, and he bailed right after that. I was totally fine with them leaving, because I was going to be on TV with Queen Latifah.




They let us all in and I get pulled aside and given the rundown: “We are going for a total transformation. What we need from you is to act real nerdy in the first segment.” They instructed me to take my shirt and button it all the way up, and to “sit up real straight, walk very stiffly, and make it appear that you have an overbite. Queen Latifah will then come out, stop at a certain spot on the stage, and open the show.”

I was positioned in a seat in the second row, right above Queen Latifah’s shoulder. While she was doing her opening monologue, you couldn’t help but notice the goofy white guy right behind her. It was perfect. Everyone was cheering when she came out on-stage. She greeted the audience, the show got underway, and she says, “I was backstage looking the audience over before I came out here, and I noticed something just ain’t right.”

While saying this, she walks over to me and motions for me to stand up, which I did. She asks me, “How you doing, sir? What’s your name?” I spoke with an overbite when I answered. She then says, “Okay, Zachariah, we are going to send you backstage with our stylist to hook you up. Are you ready for this?” I nodded and said, “Yes.” The audience all clapped and Queen Latifah sent me off.

I walked real stiff across the stage, right through the backstage door. I get there and a producer takes me by the hand to a dressing room and drops me off with the wardrobe girl. I get inside this dressing room and there are clothes, shoes, and accessories galore. I ask her, “How much of this stuff do I get to keep?” But wardrobe girl doesn’t even look up from her magazine. I’m thinking to myself ‘I’m not kidding, bitch. Get me a shopping bag!’

I did the makeover myself. I tried on a few different pairs of jeans. I went with the Tommy Hilfiger carpenter pants. They were so it, in 1999. Really baggy, and they had the loops with extra pockets on the side for all the carpenter tools. For shoes, I had to go with the classic white leather Adidas with the three black stripes, just like Run-DMC used to wear back in the day.

I went with a Tommy shirt and a black-and-silver Raiders colored Kangol hat. I was styling, and I knew it. It appeared that wardrobe girl would not be providing me with a shopping bag after all, so that idea was out. I asked her, “I get to keep these clothes, right?” She doesn’t even look up when she tells me, “No.” I’m like, “What? I don’t get to keep these clothes?” She just turns the page of her magazine.

The producer returns to the dressing room to fetch me, and she says, “You look great. I’m now going to take you to the greenroom, where you will meet Slick Rick and Fat Joe. They are going to work with you for when you are out on-stage. I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. It was all such a whirlwind. I had no idea they were even going to be there, and here I was on my way to meet them. She asked me, “Do you have any questions?” And I was like, “Yeah, do I get to keep these clothes?” She tells me, “No. After the segment you need to go back to the dressing room and return them.

Now, I’ve heard ‘no’ from two different people, but I’m not done. I meet Slick Rick and Fat Joe. We rehearse for a quick minute before they go out on-stage, where the cast from the movie Whiteboyz (about some white rappers) are hanging out on one side of the panel, and on the other side are concerned conservative parents. Mix it up and let the drama ensue!

I was still in the greenroom at this point. When it was time for my segment, Queen Latifah says, “Alright, you all remember what Zachariah used to look like?” The before picture was displayed. Everyone laughs. “Bring out Zachariah now!” I was scared shitless, thinking, ‘oh no, what did I get myself into now?’ Right then, the door flies open. I walk out,...

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ABOUT THE BOOK


           The select stories contained in this book are 100% true and well worth the ninety-nine cents. Absolutely unbelievable are the antics that the author concocted to gain entrance into any place that hosted live music, in the NYC area, over a span of 25 years. No venue was safe; from stadiums to rock clubs and everywhere in between: coliseums, arenas, concert halls, you name it. 

            Now attending said performances would be an adequate experience for your average person, not Zachariah. He had to meet the band. And in most cases he did. Some of the A-list celebrities he has met or come into contact with are: Mick Jagger, Robert Plant, Eric Clapton, Billy Joel, Tupac Shakur, Biggie Smalls, Barry White, B.B. King, etc…to name just a few. 

            These outrageous tales have been told and repeated at parties and social gatherings for years and now for the first time ever, they are put down in writing for your pleasure.

If you like light reading, you’ll enjoy this collection.
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If you like fun, enthralling stories of behind the music scene in New York, over the last few decades, you’ll love this collection.
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If you like to read about old New York, when it was gritty and crime-ridden, clubs like CBGB’s, Tramps, Academy, Roseland, Malibu, plus others, were the place to be, you’ll really love this collection. 
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Zachariah Bennett stepped off a bus at Port Authority bus terminal on September 25th, 1985, smack dab in the middle of Hurricane Gloria. He came in with the storm and stayed. He moved to NYC from Europe, where he had been living for the last few years while traveling to numerous countries. Raised out west between California and Nevada, he had spent time in both foster homes and juvenile halls.

Now twenty-two years old, he was ready for anything NYC had to offer. The city was dangerous then, yet electrifying. Nothing could stop him from his quest to explore new places, attend live shows, meet new people, partying the night away and in general making the scene.

Usually he was able to get comps and/or put on guestlist(s), but there were also those few times that he had no contact or hook-up what-so-ever so he had to be creative on how he was going to obtain entrance into places.

Bend the rules was his main rule. Some of the things he has carried out to get into concerts are: in through the out door, climbing over a fence, scalping tickets, entering through the employee entrance, scooting under another fence, cutting through a kitchen, using old backstage passes from prior tours, etc...whatever it took.

Thirty years later, Summer 2015, he is still running these NYC streets, going to shows for free, most recently, U2 at The Garden (He loves what they did with the place with the whole renovation thing.) and Bad Religion at The Bowery Ballroom, sold -out, guestlist AND drink tickets waiting at the door. Keep on rockin' in the free world.

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