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"There are men who steal
silver, and men who steal gold
But the worst kind of thief is the man who steals your soul"
It started with my father, who made
the transition from chicken farmer to music teacher when I was around
three. Actually, it started with his membership in various socialist
organizations, since he needed a guitar to take to the meetings when he
led them in singing. No, I guess it started before that, when he bought
The Guitar.
He bought it in 1948 from the widow
of a farmer who'd had it laying around in her attic for years. When she
asked what he thought it was worth, he replied "I dunno - 25
bucks?" He brought it home three years before I was born, and began
learning to play. It was rural New Jersey; there weren't exactly a lot of
other guitarists around. He got a Pete Seeger book with chord diagrams,
subscribed to Sing Out!, and we were on our way.
I grew up with that guitar. It was
miles too big for me, a colorful, beat-up window into another world. My
small fingers could barely get around the neck. As I began learning
chords, I discovered new ways of fingering them to compensate for my size.
To this day I play a D chord "wrong", but it works for me. The
Guitar went everywhere - to summer camp, where my father obtained 8-week
stays for us by teaching music for nothing; to my grandparent's, where we
went every weekend to pick up groceries from my grandfather the bagger. It
went with him to work, it went with us to play.
The guitar you grow up with, the
guitar you learn to play on, is a special thing. It doesn't matter much
whether it's expensive, pretty, even playable - it trains you. I wrote my
first song on it in my twelfth year, playing it to a captive audience from
the back seat of our car. I remember my mother turning and staring at me,
wondering what had happened to the child she thought she was raising. I
learned to write a lead sheet with it, sent the song into Broadside
Magazine, was invited to play at the Village Gate. The Guitar and I got a
standing ovation; we were on our way.
One day another performer mentioned
that it was a Martin D-18; when I got home I said "Dad! Dad! This is
a Martin!" He shrugged. "Yep, honey, it's a guitar. I knew
that."
We did everything wrong. I
faithfully polished it with cheap Lemon Oil once a month - everywhere.
Fretboard, pickguard, if you were attached to my guitar you got polished.
When it buzzed I'd fold over a cardboard match-cover and stick it under
the string, right up at the nut; that always worked. I took apart the
tuning machines and cleaned them periodically, squirting them with WD-40
to keep them moving. When a waitress dropped a tray on it in 1967, we had
no idea where to get repairs - a violin-maker in Newark rebuilt the top,
re-glued the braces, and installed a larger, heavier bridgeplate. Having
no idea how to take care of a valuable instrument, I went on instinct and
Mechanic's Weekly. In return, The Guitar played, and played, and played.
It became My Guitar when Dad gave
it to me for my 16th birthday. By then we'd met Leonard Bernstein,
recorded 2 albums, been on The Tonight Show and done concerts from coast
to coast. We'd lived through Society's Child together, getting spit on and
booed off the stage by crowds chanting "Nigger lover!" We'd
survived being called a has-been shortly after, and written Jesse two
years later. One of us, at least, had remained universally admired.
Artists like Jimi Hendrix would greet me and say "How's The Guitar
doing, man? What a sweetheart!" Vinnie Bell, legendary NY studio
musician, offered me $5,000 for it - in 1966! It was an extraordinary
instrument, a 1937 D-18 that somehow, through a combination of wood,
break-in, temperature, humidity, and just plain love, wound up being the
best acoustic guitar any of them had ever seen. Reverend Gary Davis would
beg it at folk festivals; other artists kept offering me money. Why? It
has the best bass tone I've ever heard on a guitar, bar none. And unusual
in a guitar from that era, it sounds as good picked as strummed,
flat-picked as frailed.
I moved to Los Angeles in 1972 and
took her with me (somehow over the years she'd become "her" - my
closest confidante, dearest companion), in large part hoping the more
temperate climate would be good for my aging friend. One day I came back
from a morning at the beach to find my apartment burglarized - although
clothing had been flung from the drawers, credit cards and jewelry were
left where they'd been. The only things missing were a rented television
and my two guitars. Ironically, I'd bought a Gallagher just months
earlier, having decided the road was too dangerous for my Martin.
I called the police; they were
pessimistic, saying a large ring specializing in stolen guitars had been
operating in LA for months. I called Martin, registering it as stolen. I
canvassed the apartment complex. I telephoned every pawn shop in the Los
Angeles area, offering a reward for any scrap of information. Then I sat,
dulled by fatigue and pain, waiting and hoping. The phone rang two days
later; a young man had pawned my Gallagher, demanding exactly what it was
worth "like he knew what he was doing". He'd used a draft card
for ID. A few days later the police picked him up.
I went to court and testified that
I hadn't given him permission to borrow my guitar. The detectives (knowing
he already had a 13-page rap sheet) threatened him, trying to break the
ring. Although told it was illegal, I desperately offered him a $2000
reward if he'd just bring it back, no questions asked. In the end he chose
to do 3-5 years of hard time rather than reveal anything.
That was the end of that. I mourned
for years - 26 of them, to be exact. Nothing in my life - not breakups,
not the death of beloved friends and family, not the loss of every dime I
had in 1986 - nothing affected me more deeply. You may think that's crazy,
but then again, maybe you've never owned a guitar like this one.
I became afraid to be attached - to
anything. When a former accountant failed to pay taxes on my behalf, and
the IRS stripped me of everything down to my pride, it was relatively easy
to sell everything. My friends thought I was in shock, not caring about
the things I lost that year - the Vega Tubaphone banjo, the Lloyd Baggs
guitar, the house and studio and clothes and furniture. But nothing
mattered after my Martin. Things were just things; everything that wasn't
replaceable could be lived without. The only regret I had was parting with
my Bosendorfer piano, and my heart was salved knowing it provided enough
money to care for myself and my mother for six long months. (A word to the
wise - the IRS cannot take your instruments because you need them for
work. But all they have to give for living expenses is $75 a week. Try
living on that.)
Yet somewhere in the back of my
head, a small part of me clung to hope. "If she ever comes
back…" I would think, "everything will be all right".
When I began recording again, I put a sign on each album: Missing since
1972, Martin D-18 serial #67053. Reward for return; no questions asked. I
meant it. I hoped someone kind had bought her, someone who played her
frequently and treated her well. I hoped they bought her not knowing she
was stolen. I hoped she wasn't living overseas. I hoped.
Years passed. I regained my
financial footing, bought a home, began a relationship that's still going
strong after nine years. I started to feel like the hard times were over
at last. Oh, I'd never be able to afford a Bosendorfer again, but I had
guitars now, and heat in the winter again. And I'd held onto two baby
Martins through the worst of it, thinking that if anyone ever returned
mine (unaffordable to me at today's prices), maybe I'd be able to swap for
it.
My partner graduated from law
school this year, and to celebrate we took a vacation in Provincetown, MA.
Over her objections, I brought my laptop. One day I was scanning my new
mail and noticed something from a stranger. Now I get email from strangers
all the time, but most of it does not have "RE: YOUR D-18" in
the header. I read it with growing excitement. Eric Schoenberg, owner of a
guitar shop in Tiburon CA., was telling me he had a client who had my
guitar. Did I want the client's phone number?
I wrote back immediately, saying
"Yes", then gave full reign to paranoia. Could someone have
replaced the serial number on a Martin, hoping to claim a reward? For that
matter, how much of a reward would they want? What were my rights under
the law, and what were my ethical and moral obligations?
I contacted everyone I knew, from
Stanley Jay of Mandolin Brothers to Preston Reed. Do you know this guy
Schoenberg? I asked. Is he reputable? Would he lie to me, or participate
in a coverup? And Geoff Grace, the fellow who says he has my guitar, does
anyone know him? The answers flew back. Eric Schoenberg was highly, highly
respected by one and all, with an impeccable reputation. It was impossible
to replace an old Martin serial number. And legally, since I'd filed a
police report, the stolen property was mine. All I would owe Geoff was
whatever he'd spent on maintenance and repairs.
A day later, heart in mouth, I
called Geoff Grace. He's not home, this is his mother. Ah, he had a
mother. That was already good. She lived with him, or spent time there -
even better. She didn't sound like a con artist; she knew about the
guitar. I sat in an agony, waiting. Hours later I was still waiting,
having completely forgotten the time difference between East and West
Coasts. Pat sat with me in silence. Suddenly tears began pouring down my
face. I couldn't speak, couldn't explain myself. It was as though a
26-year-old dam had burst, throwing the debris of all those hopeless years
out of my heart and into the open air. When I finally became capable of
speech, I spoke through my hiccups. "If it is her… if it is my
Martin… then I've come full circle, finally… I'll get back the only
material thing that ever mattered to me…all those years paying off the
IRS, paying off the ex-husbands' debts, paying off other peoples' mistakes
and meanness… all those years of waiting will finally be over. I can be
myself again, if she comes back."
Make no mistake - I am not a
fetishist. I don't cling to objects for luck, or believe my life is over
without them. Yet when my Martin was stolen, it left a hole in me that
nothing could replace - a big, dead spot where no life grew.
The phone rang, and I met Geoff. He
told me he'd bought the guitar in 1972 from a shop in Berkeley. It was
pretty beat-up; someone had done a bad lacquer job on the back, so the
price was only $650. He'd had the neck reset and a couple of other things
fixed, but never touched the body or frets. Oddly enough, the same guitar
was stolen from his home in Sausalito in 1976, which is why he'd memorized
the serial number. The guitar had been with him all this time; although he
bought and sold instruments regularly, he'd hung onto her because
"It's the best D-18 I've ever heard".
He'd read an interview with me in
Vintage Guitar Magazine by Steve Stone, praising my playing and mentioning
at the end that I was still looking for my Martin. "It took me 15
seconds to realize that was my Martin you were looking for," he told
me. And amazingly enough, he immediately decided to give it back
("Then I called two friends in the Bay Area with big mouths and told
them, just to keep myself honest. I figured after that, there'd be no
turning back.") He called Eric Schoenberg, knowing Eric could contact
me through email. The rest was history.
Now, the moment of truth. What did
he want? What, in his estimation, was the guitar worth? I won't say we
fenced; he quoted a figure I couldn't afford, then thought about it and
said that was for insurance purposes - the real value was half that. Even
half was too much for me. Well, since I did file a police report, isn't it
mine anyway? I asked. He thought about that and said yes, he supposed so.
He thought some more, then said "Hell, I don't want to keep someone
else's guitar! Just tell me where to ship it - it's yours." I
couldn't do that - this man had loved my Martin as long as I had, even
longer. I suggested we try a trade - he could ship it to me at my expense,
and I would ship him my two small Martins, a turn-of-the-century 0-28 and
a 1924 0-42. He could have whichever he liked, and the Mark Leaf case.
Geoff agreed.
I arrived home and raced to the
package. I pulled it out and began to cry again. It was her, just as I
remembered. "See, Pat, here's where I learned to flat-pick!" Oh,
she wondered, I thought you flat-picked over the hole, not making gouges
near the fretboard. "Sure, when you know how…" I mumbled. It
looks awfully… old, Pat said, kind of worn. "Like we're not?!"
I fiercely answered, clutching the Martin to me. Then I burst into tears
yet again, stroking the fretboard, afraid to play her. What if she didn't
sound the same? The lost fish is always biggest in memory. What if she
wasn't special, wasn't extraordinary? What if I'd spent the last 26 years
mourning nothing more than an imaginary ideal?
I hit the first chord; she sounded
just like herself. I tuned the E down to a low D and hit a second chord.
It rang forever. I pressed my ear against her side to hear the aftertones,
the subtones, all the little nuances I remembered. Everything was there.
Everything was stunning. Everything was beautiful. We were finally home.
Geoff ended up taking the small
Martin I preferred, but as Pat said, "If he hadn't taken the one you
liked best, what kind of sacrifice would it have been on your part? You
can't get something for nothing you know." When I finally met Geoff
and Eric a few months ago, I found myself speechless. How do you thank
someone for giving back your dreams? How do you thank someone for filling
a hole in your heart?
The bottom line is, you can't. You
can only hope he understands a small part of the gift he's given you - how
it made up for every petty moment in your life; how it erased all the bad
memories and left only the good. How you know now, in every fiber of your
being, that in this world righteous men still walk, and you're fortunate
enough to have encountered one.
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