Chapter 75: Echoes in the Alley
Friday, January 15, 2016 (Afternoon)
Friday afternoon in Los Angeles had that grayish, urban color characteristic of winter in the city, but at Michael's canyon house, the air was charged with static electricity.
It wasn't the chaotic energy of the Christmas party. It was a different energy. Colder. More professional. It was the energy of a military operation about to begin.
Michael stood by the open trunk of his gray Toyota Corolla. He was wearing his work uniform: black cargo pants, a technical t-shirt, and his "GRAY" hoodie.
Around him, his team moved with renewed purpose.
T-Roc had arrived half an hour earlier. The DJ didn't say much; he simply pulled his armored flight case from the back seat of his own car and deposited it in the driveway. He was wearing a new cap and a camouflage jacket. He looked ready for war.
"XLR cables. Backup interface. Power adapters," T-Roc listed, checking a mental list as he loaded a black plastic box into the Corolla's trunk. "If the venue's sound fails, we have to be able to fix it in thirty seconds."
Michael nodded, adjusting the strap of his guitar case. His Squier Stratocaster, the cheap guitar he had bought at a pawn shop and learned to play on with bleeding fingers, was slung over his back. It now had new strings and was perfectly intonated. It was going to be his main weapon for the first half of the set.
In his hands, Michael held a small but sturdy aluminum case. Inside, cushioned by high-density foam, rested the Neumann TLM 102.
"No one touches this," said Michael, placing it carefully in the back seat, securing it with the seatbelt. He wasn't going to trust the venue's microphones, full of others' spit and dents. His sound had to be pristine.
Leo, Sam, and Nate were finishing preparing the media equipment.
Sam was cleaning the lens of the Panasonic VHS camera with a microfiber cloth, treating the old plastic relic as if it were a Hollywood movie camera.
"I have three blank tapes," Sam announced, putting them in his backpack. "And two batteries charged to 100%. If this dies, I'll kill myself."
Leo was checking the memory card of the Canon DSLR. "I have space for three thousand photos and two hours of 1080p video. Nate, you carry the tripod and the portable lights."
Nate, the silent giant, nodded and threw the tripod over his shoulder as if it were a baseball bat.
At that moment, the sound of a more refined engine broke the calm of the dirt road. A black Honda Accord, clean and waxed, pulled up behind the Corolla.
The driver's door opened and Karl stepped out.
The manager was wearing a long beige coat over a black t-shirt, and sunglasses even though the day was overcast. He had his phone glued to his ear.
"Yes... yes, we are on our way. I want soundcheck at five o'clock sharp. Not a minute later. If the sound engineer isn't there, you get on the board. See you."
Karl hung up and looked at the group. He smiled, that shark smile Michael had learned to respect.
"Gentlemen," said Karl, clapping once. "It's showtime."
He approached Michael. "Do you have everything? The guitar? The autotune? Nerves under control?"
"I'm ready," said Michael. And it was true. The paralyzing anxiety he had felt before the Observatory had disappeared, replaced by a cold concentration. He had already been on stage. He knew he could do it. He knew the songs worked.
"Good. Travel plan," ordered Karl, taking logistical command. "We go in convoy. T-Roc, you come with me in the Honda, I need to go over the setlist entry times with you one last time. Michael, you take the boys and the delicate equipment in the Corolla. Nate, make sure no one is following us... just kidding, but keep your eyes open."
They loaded the last backpacks. The Corolla's trunk closed with a dry thud.
"Destination: Echo Park," said Michael, getting into the driver's seat.
The two cars left the dirt road and took the highway.
The trip to East Los Angeles was a transit between two worlds. They left the quiet and clean suburbs behind, entering urban density.
Echo Park wasn't Hollywood. There were no tourists taking photos of stars on the ground. There were no rented sports cars.
It was the neighborhood of artists, hipsters, aggressive gentrification, and faded murals. It was home to second-hand vinyl shops, coffee shops serving six-dollar drinks, and music venues that smelled of history and cigarettes.
It was different territory from the Observatory in Santa Ana. There, the audience had been a mix of suburban teenagers. Here, the audience would be more critical. It would be guys with ironic mustaches, girls in vintage clothes, and music bloggers judging everything with crossed arms.
Michael looked in the rearview mirror. Sam was filming the urban landscape with the VHS through the window, capturing the palm trees and power lines against the gray sky.
They reached Sunset Boulevard. Karl, in the car ahead, put on his blinker. They turned into a narrow alley behind a low, black-painted brick building.
An unlit neon sign hung over the rear entrance, a single cursive word that had seen bands like The Strokes or Interpol pass through before they were giants.
The Echo.
Michael stopped the car next to the loading door, covered in graffiti and stickers layered over decades.
He turned off the engine. The silence inside the car lasted a second.
"We're here," said Michael.
He looked at his friends. Leo had the camera ready. Nate looked stoic. Sam had that mix of excitement and terror in his eyes.
"This isn't a party show," Michael reminded them. "These guys are going to analyze us. They're going to look for the flaw. So let's give them something perfect."
He opened the door and the sound of the city, distant traffic, and music from a nearby bar, flooded the car.
He stepped out into the alley. Karl was already talking to a security guy at the door, showing passes. T-Roc was unloading his gear.
Michael took a deep breath. The air smelled of exhaust fumes and tacos from a street stand. It smelled like reality.
He opened the back door and took out his guitar. It was time to work.
Friday, January 15, 2016 (5:00 PM)
They entered through the back door of The Echo.
The place was empty, lit only by work lights, giving it a cavernous and desolate look. If the Observatory felt like a miniature stadium, The Echo felt like a glorified basement.
The floor was sticky, a geological layer of beer spilled over years of punk and indie rock concerts. The black walls were covered in torn posters and stickers of bands Michael admired: Arcade Fire, LCD Soundsystem, Kendrick Lamar (back when he was K-Dot).
The place had history. You could feel it in the stale air.
"Hello," said a voice from the darkness of the sound booth. A sound engineer with a long beard and a Black Flag t-shirt looked at them skeptically. "Are you the hip-hop act?"
"We are the headlining act," Karl corrected, advancing with authority. "And we need to start soundcheck now."
T-Roc didn't waste time. He unfolded his Pioneer controller on a folding table on stage. He connected his laptop to the venue's direct box (DI).
Michael opened his case and took out the Neumann. The sound engineer raised an eyebrow at the sight of the thousand-dollar microphone.
"Nice toy," said the engineer. "Do you know how to use it or is it just to look good?"
Michael ignored the comment. He plugged in the microphone. Then, he took out his Squier Stratocaster. He connected his effects pedalboard (now real, not digital) to the Fender Twin Reverb amplifier the venue provided as backline.
"Line check," said Michael into the microphone. "One, two. Turn up the monitors a bit."
The engineer adjusted the levels.
They started the soundcheck.
T-Roc dropped the 'Sodium' beat. The sound at The Echo was different from the Observatory. It wasn't as massive or enveloping. It was dry. Raw. Direct. The bass hit the chest with a dry thud, without as much resonance.
"Sounds tight," shouted T-Roc over the music. "I like it. Nowhere to hide here."
Michael nodded. He picked up the guitar.
He tested the sound for 'Beamer Boy'. Stepped on the Chorus pedal. The watery, bright sound of the guitar filled the empty room.
He played the Modest Mouse riff.
The sound engineer lifted his head from the mixing board, surprised. He recognized the song. His expression of "another generic rapper" changed to one of mild interest.
"Okay," said the engineer over the intercom system. "Guitar sounds good. You got good tone, kid."
They spent thirty minutes adjusting levels. Michael made sure his voice was perfect, neither too loud nor too quiet. In such a small place, intimacy was key.
"Ready," said Michael, lowering the guitar. "We're good."
The engineer nodded. "Doors open in two hours. Your dressing room is on the left."
Michael, Karl, and the team gathered their things and went to the dressing room.
If they expected luxury, they were in the wrong place.
The dressing room was essentially a broom closet with pretensions. The walls were covered in graffiti from previous bands ("The Strokes were here '01"). There was a red vinyl sofa with a slash in the middle and a mirror surrounded by light bulbs, three of which were burnt out.
"Wow," said Sam, leaving the VHS camera on a folding chair. "It's... cozy."
"It's shit," Karl corrected, looking at a plastic cooler in the corner. He opened it. It was empty.
Karl's face turned red.
"Hey!" he shouted, stepping out into the hallway. "Where is the promoter? Steve! Dave! Whoever!"
A young guy with a badge appeared running. "Yes?"
"The rider," said Karl, taking out his phone and showing a PDF. "We clearly specified: twelve bottles of Fiji water, room temperature. Six clean black towels. And a bottle of Hennessy. There is nothing here."
"Ah, yes... it's just that the truck hasn't arrived and..." the guy started.
"I don't care about your logistical problems," Karl cut him off, his voice lowering to a dangerously calm tone. "My artist goes on stage in two hours. If there isn't water and towels in ten minutes, he doesn't play. And you will explain to the five hundred people out there why the show was canceled."
The guy paled and ran off.
Michael, sitting on the broken sofa, tuned his Squier guitar with a clip-on tuner, ignoring the drama. He knew Karl had it under control. That was the reason he paid him the 15%.
Leo was taking pictures of the graffiti on the wall. Nate was eating a protein bar he had brought.
Michael looked at his guitar. His fingers ran over the frets. It felt different from the Christmas show. There, he was nervous, afraid of failing. Here, he felt focused.
He knew tonight's audience wasn't going to forgive mistakes. They were critics. They were cool. They were going to analyze every note.
'Good,' thought Michael, tightening the G string. 'Let them analyze this.'
He finished tuning. He left the guitar on its stand.
"Karl," he called.
The manager entered, triumphant, followed by the venue guy carrying a box of Fiji waters.
"Tell me, boss."
"How are door sales?"
"Sold out," said Karl, smiling. "Gone an hour ago. There's a line around the block."
Michael nodded. He leaned back on the sofa, closing his eyes.
"Wake me up in an hour," he said. "I have to get in the zone."
Friday, January 15, 2016 (9:30 PM)
The clock struck nine-thirty. The room at The Echo was packed to the rafters.
It wasn't the sea of screaming teenagers from the Observatory. This audience was different. There were vintage denim jackets, bucket hats, ironic mustaches, and girls with straight bangs and analog cameras hanging from their necks.
It was the toughest crowd in Los Angeles: the tastemakers, the ones who decided what was cool before it was. They stood there, arms crossed, holding cans of cheap beer, waiting to be impressed or disappointed.
The room lights dimmed.
T-Roc, from his table in the corner of the stage, dropped the ambient hum.
Michael stepped out of the shadows. He didn't run. He walked to the center, with his Squier Stratocaster slung over his shoulder. He looked calm, protected by his sunglasses and hoodie.
He approached the microphone. He didn't say "Hello, L.A.".
He simply plugged in his guitar.
He signaled T-Roc.
The 'Ghost Boy' beat started playing, soft and lo-fi.
Michael started playing the melody on his guitar. The sound was real, analog, imperfect. It wasn't a backing track.
The crowd, expecting a generic rapper jumping over an MP3, went still. They saw his fingers move up the fretboard. They heard the real reverb of the Fender amp.
A murmur of approval ran through the room. The crossed arms began to drop.
Michael sang. His voice, processed with a ghostly echo, filled the intimate space.
'I'm in love with a ghost girl...'
He moved on to 'Star Shopping'. The connection was instant. In such a small place, the intimacy of the song was magnified. There was no security barrier; people were a meter away from him. He could see their eyes.
He saw a guy in a Joy Division t-shirt singing the lyrics silently.
He had won the initial respect. Now, he had to win their hearts.
He finished 'Star Shopping'. The applause was strong, but controlled. Respectful.
Michael approached the microphone. He wiped the sweat from his forehead.
"This is new," he said. "It's about wanting things you can't have."
He stepped on his Chorus pedal. Played the first chord of 'Beamer Boy'.
The guitar riff of Modest Mouse's "Broke" rang out, liquid and nostalgic.
The reaction was electric.
It was instant recognition. He saw the hipsters' heads snap up. 'Is that Modest Mouse?' their faces seemed to say.
T-Roc dropped the trap beat. The bass hit, merging with the indie guitar.
Michael entered with the verse, his flow relaxed and melodic.
'Man, I don't know what the fuck goin' on lately, bro...'
'Everybody actin' real different and shit...'
The crowd started moving. It wasn't a mosh pit; it was a collective sway, a heavy vibe.
'Baby, I'm a Beamer boy, I need a Beamer, boy...'
'I want a Z3, that's a two-seater, boy...'
He sang the chorus with a mix of longing and defiance. The lyrics, which might have sounded materialistic in another context, here sounded like an honest aspiration. It was the dream of getting out of the hole.
Leo, from the pit, captured the scene: Michael with the guitar, bathed in red light, with a room full of cool kids nodding to the beat.
The bridge arrived. 'I love a girl that don't even fuckin' need a boy...'. The girls in the front row screamed that line.
Michael smiled as he played the guitar outro. It worked. The hybrid of grunge and trap wasn't just a studio experiment. It was a real bridge.
He had taken an audience that hated commercial trap and given them something they could respect. And he had taken an audience that loved trap and given them real guitar.
He finished the song with a sustained chord that he left ringing in the amp.
The applause was loud, genuine. Someone shouted from the back: "Play the Sting one!"
Michael laughed, adjusting his strap.
"That comes later," he said. "But first... let's get weird."
He looked at T-Roc. The echo of the 'Beamer Boy' guitar faded. Michael had captured the skeptics. Now, he had to mesmerize them.
The DJ lowered the lights until the stage was almost in complete darkness, save for a pale, sickly green spotlight.
The drowned, lo-fi beat of 'Sodium' began to crawl through the speakers.
The atmosphere at The Echo changed. It stopped being a rock concert and became an art installation.
Sam, following the plan, climbed onto the stage with the VHS camera. Michael approached him, ignoring the crowd, rapping the first verse directly into the lens, recreating the claustrophobic intimacy of the music video.
'This is not a wig, it's fucking real...'
The hipster crowd, who valued aesthetics above all else, was fascinated. They weren't screaming; they were watching. It was performance art.
When the song ended, dissolving into static, Michael didn't give them time to wake up.
T-Roc dropped the last track. The sound of reverse reverb filled the room. Whoosh.
'Drugs You Should Try It'.
This was the final blow. The lush production, the psychedelic synths, and Michael's voice bathed in ethereal Auto-Tune filled every corner of the small venue.
He didn't play 'Look At Me!'. He didn't play 'Paris'. He knew that aggression didn't fit here. He gave them beauty. He gave them atmosphere.
He sang the last chorus with his eyes closed, letting himself be carried away by the music.
'I try it if it feels right... This feels nice...'
When the song ended, there wasn't the animal roar of the Observatory. There was dense, sustained, genuine applause. Whistles of approval. Shouts of "One more!".
Michael stood in front of the microphone.
"Thank you, Echo Park," he said. "See you in hell."
He left the stage, going down the steps to the closet-dressing room, followed by his team.
He was soaked in sweat, but his breathing was controlled. He didn't feel destroyed like last time. He had controlled his energy. He had executed the plan.
They entered the dressing room. Leo put down the camera and high-fived Michael. "That looked incredible from below. The green light was a master touch."
The door opened again. Karl entered, with a smug smile. In his hand, he held a bulging white envelope.
"The promoter is delighted," said Karl, tossing the envelope onto the plastic table. "He said you sold more alcohol in an hour than the last three bands combined."
Michael opened the envelope. Counted the bills. $2,500 (the second half of the fee, plus a bonus for the sold out).
"The first half of the weekend is paid," said Michael, putting the money away.
"Pack everything up," he ordered. "I want to be out of here in twenty minutes."
They loaded the gear in the back alley. The Los Angeles night air was cool.
Michael sat in the driver's seat of his Corolla. He felt satisfied. He had conquered the purists. He had proven that his music worked without needing to incite a riot.
But as he started the engine, his mind was already on the next day.
He looked at Jake, who was in the passenger seat.
"Rest up," Michael told him.
"Why?" asked Jake.
"Because today was art," said Michael, putting the car in gear. "But tomorrow is Create. Tomorrow is Hollywood. Tomorrow is the war of bass and bottles."
They drove out of the alley, leaving the echoes behind. The real party, the real chaos, started tomorrow.
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