The Green Mill Didn’t Ask You What Time It Is

The Green Mill

The Green Mill didn’t ask you what time it is. “Oh geez,” you say, as you emerge from it’s ancient timbers and shield your eyes from the sun. Is it 2015 already?

The bass player mouths his parts and savors his solo. He sings a song that only exists right now in front of us. By the way; who am I to quantify jazz anyways? Let’s let it happen.

The bass player mouths his moment and sings a song that’s never been written. The chorus almost feels like a cop-out, but there has to be a gravitational center to even this universe. The Green Mill didn’t ask you what time it is, and 5 AM comes quickly when you lose gravity.

Take the sign out front and the one behind the stage. Did you know they don’t teach cursive to kids anymore? Sidebar; it’s called ‘script’ in the Western-World-proper now. But at The-Green-Mill-proper it is flow. It’s the writing of love letters never delivered. Locked up inside your mind and summoned now by the saxophone. It’s the discourse of the dead, and you’re surprised it’s passed. But in green neon cursive has lived until 5 AM every morning since… since cursive was the language of love letters never delivered. And who asked you anyways? The Green Mill didn’t ask you what time it is.

If it has a reed, he can play it. Versatility is no luxury at the Mill. It’s what you have to do. There aren’t really words that can describe the suffrage locked up in jazz. And who am I to define jazz anyways?

Chicago is 77 official planets/countries/cities/neighborhoods, and one is ever really from where they are at this moment. The Mill is the new American melting pot as far as you or I are concerned. It is bread basket and mother and secret lover of all creativity. It is music written right in front of us and never played again. It’s a love letter never delivered. And it’s time immemorial. The Green Mill didn’t ask you what time it is.

Click to view on Instagram and follow us. Yu-yu Ren photo.

Click to view on Instagram and follow us. Yu-yu Ren photo.

(Wiffle Ball was) The Great Equalizer

great equalizer your own backyard panorama upstate new york

Does the backyard where you grew up still seem big?

These are the bases that were made of frisbees or squares of plywood. Bases that were filled with ‘ghost runners’ in 2-on-2 games of wiffleball. Ghosts that we could certainly see from the left-handed batters box with two outs and the game- nay, two outs and The Wiffle Ball World Series on the line.

This is the pitchers mound where you stared in at your best friend or little brother at the plate. With a yellow or orange plastic bat in their hand, you wanted nothing more than to make them feel terrible about themselves; a swinging strikeout or stupid pop-up back to the mound. For a brief moment at 16 they’re the greatest enemy you’ve ever known.

This is left field. A short distance away and a jumble of maple trees. They’re like weeds, you know. Somehow no matter how hard you tried, you could never catch a fly ball falling out of these trees.

This is the neighbors’ yard and driveway past left field. The driveway that forced a bunch of right-handed hitters to learn how to hit left-handed after some complaints about wiffleballs and parked cars coming together. I’ll never be convinced that a wiffleball could damage a car, but rules are rules.

This is the garden in straight-away centerfield. A full 78-feet from home plate, this was the deepest part of the park. Does that still seem far away, now that you’ve seen the world? Everyone will tell you how they once hit one into the garden, but no one believes them.

This is the home run tree in right field. A perfect distance for not-too-many homers, it was the perfect distance for a bunch of righties learning how to bat left-handed. And they were a perfect distance for a natural lefty to swing a plastic bat too hard and gain limited success. Wiffleball was the great equalizer.

This is home plate and this is home. Where there was no umpire and you learned to trust your opponent to make the right call. To compromise when needed. Out there by the ‘home run tree’ in right field, on the border with the neighbors- where you almost won the world series in the rain, only to see it settle safely into your little brother’s glove. Does that still seem like the ‘deep part of the park’?

Out there where your comrades, too, wished they were doing what the popular kids were doing; drinking and drugs and finding out about girls. Out there where everyone was on the same level. Wiffleball was the great equalizer. Out there where you wouldn’t change a thing.