PURE JAZZ AND
MY COLLEGE ROOMMATE
Pure jazz was my thing. Blues, too. My roommate, John, was an inner-city kid who didn’t know a clarinet from an oboe, or anything about music. I visited John at his Chicago house decades later (1995); he lived in his childhood neighborhood, Wrigleyville. His teenage kid was jamming to Jamey Aebersold jazz play-along records.
John had started U. of Michigan as a pre-med, like me and everybody else, but he came out a railroad brakeman. Sophomore year he chalked “Take Drugs” and “Only Fools Stay in School” on the sidewalk in front of our co-op house, and he dropped out.
In 1995 he said he was sweating his monthly urine test with the railroad. His house, which he had bought in 1975 for $30,000, was worth more than a half million. “I’m a capitalist now,” he said. “And I have two renters.” But he still subscribed to The Militant, the Socialist Workers newspaper. His son played “Watermelon Man” on tenor sax. This was familiar to me, except for The Militant part. My parents had subscribed to Newsweek.
2 comments
From pre med to the railroad! Sounds like he finally got onto the right track! Although, I think his motive for leaving school was loco! Okay, I’ll stop.
Any recent news from Ignoffo? We had a plan, never realized, to buy motorbikes and tour around Europe. I bought a Marlon Brando “The Wild Ones” leather jacket, though….
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