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=== Recordings: ===
=== Recordings: ===
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/1v7WQsqHtQjloCYAzk1hNt_s5WHYQpHzF/view?usp=sharing Margo St James]
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/1REilrpSZG6ZQWGAmjPEIRpIuoJnugI00/view?usp=drive_link Last Waltz /Ducks]
 
== Transcriptions ==
 
=== Last Waltz Ducks ===
It was '75. Moved to Malibu. The Band was just down the road from where we were.
 
they had bought Elvis Presley's old place, Rancho Shangri la. Actually Presley
 
owned it, Johnny Carson owned it after Presley. All these famous people owned
 
this Rancho Shangri la and it was a really big old house on top of a hill and it had a
 
little corral down on the bottom when you first went in the road there's a little horse corral there, where they filmed Mr Ed.
 
 
So I was talking about Rancho Shangrilla. And Neil and i were living down the road
 
at Broadbeach road on a street called Sea Leaval Drive. It was this old Cape Cod
 
cottage, right on the beach at the end of Sea Level Drive so there was no one on right
 
side of us except sand dunes. Except down on the right side of us, about a quarter
 
mile, was Carol King and then next to her was Cheech, from Cheech and Chong.
 
On the beach in Malibu. It was a really cool house. Neill saw it when he was
 
recording the Zuma album. It wasnt' called Zuma in those days but he dreams of
 
making this album and it was actually up on BirdView Drive right above Zuma Beach
 
and he'd go down and he saw this house, right? And it's just this Cape Cod, just
 
romantic little Cape Cod cottage right at the end of the road all covered in red
 
Bouganvilla. it was two lots. The first lot was just a brick patio area so we had this
 
big social area and then this cute little two-bedroom Cape Cod cottage that
 
Catherine Ross lived in. So he started asking around the neighbors, who is it?
 
whoose there? He goes, "Oh ah Catherine lives there." He goes, "I wonder if she
 
would ever sell it?" He said, "Oh, no,no. She'd never sell, no way."
 
Turned out she didn't own it. She was just leasing. So Neil told his lawyers about it
 
in LA, big powerful lawyers, they checked. they found the property owner and they
 
said, "They have a client who is interested in your house." And he just low-balled this
 
really ridiculous price, when you consider $285,000 for it. This was like 1974-75. The
 
guy must have lived in Kansas or something. He said, "Yeah, sure!" he could have
 
probably bought it for sixty grand, and he said, "Yeah, sure, no problem." So Neil
 
bought it.
 
So we moved down there and I'm down there and we did the Zuma album cover there
 
and we'd go shopping for furniture, old antique furniture, and they'd fix up the beach
 
house and then I heard that The Band was living just down the road.We became
 
friends out on '74 CSNY tour because The Band, and when The Band didn't open for
 
us the Beach Boys opened for us. That's how big the CSYN tour was. We were
 
literally the American Beatles and that tour made more money than any other tour
 
had ever made. We broke history. We made 4.4 million dollars on that world tour
 
which was an all-time record back in 1974.
 
I got to be friends with all the guys in the band so I went down and said, "Hey--Neil,
 
I've got this house. And he said, "Ah, it's cool." So I sort of hang out with these guys
 
and then one day I went over there and then one day Robbie Robertson was there
 
and Robbie said (in those days I was "Sandy Castle", that was my rock 'n roll name),
 
"Hey Sandy, we are putting together a tour and it's going to be our last tour together.
 
They were calling it "The Last Watz Tour" and we are going to go all over the place
 
and see all our fans everywhere and just do one last show for everybody. It's
 
probably going to take a year and we know we can't afford a guy like you. But we
 
really like the way you were out on the road and we really think you'd be the perfect
 
guy to represent us because we have lots of friends all over the world and they are
 
going to come see us and we are going to be busy rehearsing and doing band stuff
 
but our friends and family are going to be there and you are the perfect guys. To
 
meet them, take care of all our friends, get them to the shows, and do everything.
 
Make sure everyone has a great time, as well as being our tour manager--road
 
manager. That would be your function. And Robbie goes, "Look, " (Robbie talks out
 
the corner of his mouth like a gangster) "Look, we know we can't pay you as much as
 
CSNY paid you but we can give you a hundred dollars a day for every day that you're
 
not on the road and then we're out on tour we'll give you $200 a day, seven days a
 
week. So that's $1400 a week in 1975-76. That's a lot of money. CSNY, I think I was
 
getting $300 a week. I think I got off that tour with about $4,000 in the bank. That
 
was the world tour. Robbie goes, "I know I can't pay as much." They offered me like
 
four times as much without even knowing it. And then he said, "But what we can do,
 
because you are going to be representing us, we will give you the finest suite in every
 
hotel that we stay at, because that's where our friends and family, you can invite them
 
to this really fancy suite and they can all hang out with you while we're rehearsing and
 
doing stuff like that. So wherever we are, you get the finest suite in every single
 
town, for a year!" I went, "Oh. Well, that'd be good, yeah--that would make for a fun
 
time for everybody. So I went back and told Neil, I said, "Listen, I'm going to take
 
about a year off from you and from what I was doing with Neil. I'd just done the
 
album covers so he was happy and he had other stuff planning Crazy Horse and
 
stuff. So, I said, "I'm going to go work for a year with Robbie and The Band. It's
 
going to be the last tour and everything and that, I told him the whole deal. He goes,
 
"Fuck, they're paying you that much?" I said, "Don't tell anybody!" So he said ok, so I
 
got his blessings and everything and I literrally moved from Neil's place over to
 
Shangrilla because Sahgrilla was this big old--I was telling you--at the bottom of
 
Shangrilla when you first drove in off the road was this corral, right? This lower part
 
of Rancho Shangrilla was flat and then you went up the hill to where the house was.
 
It wasn't a big hill, it was only about a hundred feet high from the lower part. But he
 
drove up the driveway, up to the upper big old, spread-out California Ranch House.
 
But on the end, Elvis Presely had built a whole row of cottages, just like a wing of a
 
motel off of one end of it, and each one was a little cottage with it's own bathroom and
 
everything. I guess that's where his band and stuff would all stay. Each one had their
 
own room and everything. Robbie then gave me the end room out of all the whole
 
rows the end, which looked right down this beautiful canyon out at Zuma beach. So I
 
had this just beautiful ocean view and everything. It was really cool. Down at the
 
bottom where the corral was, before Elvis, then it was a TV program called "Mr. Ed,
 
The Talking Horse" did you see that? Mr. Ed lived in the barn, in the corral at the
 
bottom of the road! It was Mr. Ed's corral and they actually filmed him there with the
 
little house and he'd be coming through the door and talking to Wilber and stuff, and
 
that is where they actually shot Mr. Ed! We were teenagers, when that was
 
happening. And so when I'm living there we had about --I moved in there about the
 
end of <nowiki>''</nowiki>75 and the two of us were going to start to --oh like February of '76, so we
 
had like three or four months before we actually got on the road, just kind of putting
 
things together and everything and Robbie was arranging for the last show that was
 
The Last Waltz on Thanksgiving Day with Bill Graham and stuff and Scorseisie, the
 
film director, he did that film and it was incredible, it was the best rock film, I think,
 
that's ever been made. I designed the stage sets in The Last Waltz. Bill Graham and
 
I, Bill's an old buddy of mine, and he did a whole lot of this of The Band's Last Show.
 
He did a whole lot of CSNY shows the year before, so Bill and I had been out on the
 
road a bunch doing the shows and when we went to do The Last Waltz we got there a
 
week early and Bill goes, "Hey Sandy, come with me, we're going to go down to the
 
San Fransciso Opera Company's warehouse and we're going to pick the sets for the
 
stage for The Last Waltz. You see the chandeleers and the big curtains on the stage-
 
-that's all from La Proviado (Traviata} operas-- "Well, we'll take this, this, and this..."
 
we'd put it all together so but--we had so much before we went out on the road and
 
we grew some pot in Mr. Ed's corral where Mr. Ed had been shitting for twelve years
 
and the ground was really fertile and the plants just took off--they grew like fourteen
 
feeet high and they grew higher than the hedges and stuff. They were like sort of
 
blocking the filming for Mr. Ed and the road--they grew way up above that--all the way
 
down Malibu has like a hundred and fifty cops that just keep patroling. Malibu's a
 
mile wide and twenty miles long and they just have cops all the time--it's the '70s--
 
you-d go to jail for pot and stuff. Our pot plants they just grow so high that you could
 
literally see them from Highway 1! And there is a stop sign right at Morning View
 
Road and the cops had plenty of time just to stop and glance up the canyon and see
 
the pot plants, there were only like two football fields away and everybody's going,
 
"Oh my God, man--we were going to get busted but it was SO good pot--it was just
 
incredibly good pot and we could just smell how good it was and I went, "I'll handle it."
 
And I went down to a craft's store and I bought four hundred dollars worth of red and
 
orange artificial flowers [who?] on wider? stems and me and the sound engineer who
 
actually lived in Mr. Ed's that was converted into a little tiny cottage that our sound
 
engineer lived in and it was in his front yard is where we'd grown all the pot. So I got
 
four hundred dollar worth of big red and yellow flowers on wire. and we just wired
 
them to the plants so all the plants had red and yellow flowers just all growing all over
 
and son-of-a-gun! It no longer looked like pot plants anymore. I thought, "God, you
 
know, I ought to just buy artificial flowers and put them in a plastic sack--bang--two
 
hundred worth of artificial flowers and sell it for fourteen dollars to the pot guys so
 
they could disguise their plants all around the whole United States...
 
Anyways that was a fun little thing.
 
So that's how I ended up managing The Band for that whole year and we finished it at
 
Bill Graham's place at Winterland on Thanksgiving Day. We fed five thousand people
 
and we fed them and I had my mom and my sister come, I sent a limo over to
 
Freemont to pick them up and bring them there and everything. It was like one time--
 
it was like the only time they ever came to any of my shows. And we had a special
 
section for our friends and family and stuff and I became friends with Rodney Wood
 
and Keith Moon while I was The Band's manager and Tony Curtis and Larry Hagman
 
and just all these amazing people and so Woodie --Keith Moon moved in and Woody
 
and Keith and I became really good pals just jamming around. Neill and I went down
 
and for some reason I decided I wantted to get a little trailer because every now and
 
then we would have like Dr. John or these other guys come and use the studio to
 
make their little projects? Bob Dylan and Eric Clapton, and stuff. In fact when
 
Clapton was there--
 
Kirk: So Neil had a studio there?
 
No, no. The Band had a studio in Shangrilla and it was a whole studio in one section
 
of the house. Really a nice studio. They'd been there for a few years and so
 
everybody, all these other people would rent the studio and sometimes they'd have to
 
use the "Star" you know would want my place with the ocean view and so I'd have to
 
sacrifice--so we decided that I would just get a little cool little fourteen foot trailer and
 
keep it in the parking lot at Shangrilla up next to the house and I'll go hang out in
 
there. So I'm just doing that every now and then. And I was friends with Woody and
 
Keith and they are just crazy English guys, right? Usually if they're not drunk they're
 
high on something, just having as much fun or trouble as they could get into. and
 
sometimes I'd be sleeping in my little trailer and about three in the morning all of a
 
sudden I'd hear commotion around the trailer as I'm sleeping in there and I'd hear
 
Woody and Keith going, "Oh my God--Oh my God! It's an earthquake--it's an
 
earthquake!" And they'd start shaking my trailer, right? So they'd wake me up--"We'd
 
better wake up Sandy! --The trailer is going to go over the cliff! Oh no! It's going over
 
the cliff! Quick---Sandy! Get up!" And I'd go, "Wha...what...what? and I'd come out
 
and they'd all go nuts and I'd go over to Keith's house and we'd get high for the rest of
 
the night or something. They were really--that was really fun stuff. But then I invited
 
Neil because The Last Waltz was all these famous musicians that always loved The
 
Band, it was their chance, Van Morrison, all those guys, to do their stuff with The
 
Band backing them, right. That was the whole premise of The Last Waltz--the
 
concert film and everything. And Neil did the song "Helpless" in The Last Waltz film
 
and Joni Mitchell and Rodney Wood and then Rodney Wood brought Ringo and a
 
bunch of different people and so with Neil we are back stage for The Last Waltz and
 
I've been gone from Neil for a year, so this was our chance to do a gig together again
 
so I was mostly--I was taking care of everybody else, all The Band friends too, but I
 
was hanging out with Neil and Joni a whole lot, you know. We're back stage. We
 
had a whole room back stage called Le Couquteau the French artist Coucteau room
 
where everyone would go in and snort their cocaine. This was 1976, the whole world
 
was on cocaine in '76. So we are back there. They give me the bag of coke to hold
 
for everybody. Meanwhile Joni and I --everybody's out, the show's going because
 
they don't come out until about the middle and the show's all going on and everything
 
and Neil and Joni are going back there and Neil goes, "Oh! We're on next! Sandy--
 
some coke!" "So I'd go, "Okay, here." and there's a big rock and I'd go, "Okay, listen,
 
I've got to chop it up, you know?" so I've got a mirrers there were mirrors on tables
 
and [ can't hear--coke to a room?] everything all set up. And so I'm chopping it up,
 
right? and Neil's going, "Hurry--hurry" because they've got to get out there, you
 
knew. And I go, "I am, I'm going as fast as I can! Ladies first." I set up Joni a little
 
hit of stuff that was really nice and chopped up like I needed more for Neil, so I get
 
another one and start chopping it up. And he said, "Naw, that's okay. I think I'm going
 
to go." So he just took a big snort and the rocks were kind of still big you know, and
 
they stuck in the hairs of his nose but he left so fast I wasn't able to catch it or
 
anything--[did voogoo gone?] In the movie, Scorcese's doing super hot close ups of
 
Neill, right? which in film is little tiny pictures but in a giant movie theatre, Neil's face
 
is like twenty feet high and twelve feet wide and his nostrils are like four foot circles
 
with big white chunks of cocaine hanging out of them. So Rodney and Scorcese saw
 
the problem and they had to literally take that footage and take it into Hollywood and
 
hand paint each frame of the film--handpaint the coke out of his nose. it took them an
 
extra week and a half to do the whole song, you know. And Rodney came back to
 
me a couple weeks after that, we were off the road and I still have a place at Shanghi
 
still there. And Bobby comes and says, "Sandy--I just wants you to know that I just
 
paid $4,650 for a rock of cocaine that big! I've never paid so much money for cocaine
 
in my entire life! I told him, "No problem." We didn't talk about my first tour but we
 
had fun covering [can't hear---] then after that, the next day, we did The Last Waltz
 
and we're all sitting at the Japansese hotel The Miyake Hotel in Japan town in San
 
Fransciso. It's a really fancy Japanese hotel, I didn't know Japantown over there and
 
each room has it's own hot tubs and all kinds of cool stuff. So we stayed there and
 
whenever Neil and I had been out on the road on all our previous tours and stuff we
 
always had breakfast together the next morning and so we're having breakfast the
 
next morning, after The Last Waltz, and it was a late morning because we had got in
 
a long night the night before, and so we're having breakfast, coffee and eggs and
 
stuff and Neill goes, "So what are you going to do now?" And I'm really happy with
 
The Band, you know, I'd been with them for a year. I got my place at Shangrila and
 
everything. And I go, "What do you mean, what am I going to about..." He goes,
 
"Last night The Band just announced to the entire world that this is their last show!"
 
And I went, "Yeah?" He goes, "So that means they're not going to be playing
 
together anymore." And I went, "Yeah?" And he goes, "That means they're not going
 
to be going on the road anymore." And I went, "Yeah?" And he says, "You're their
 
road manager." I went, "...Oh." [ Laughs. ]
 
He said, "Look, I've got this big hundred foot boat in the Carribean that's moved up--I
 
had to move it up to Fourt Lauderdale. They've got it --I want it rebuilt because down
 
below, it's a 1911 Eighty-five on deck, a hundred and four feet over, all baltic rig,
 
[gaffrig catch?] from the Baltic Ocean, right? and he said they belong to some
 
millionaire down in the Carabean and Europeans, down below you've got modern
 
formica white formica so it could all be kept really clean all down below and
 
everything, very "boatmanlike"kind of but sparse. He goes, "That'a not me." he goes.
 
so we are going to design the whole inside of the boat. It's 24 feet wide and 86 feet
 
long made out of timber that's like the hull was like four inches thick by fourteen inch
 
plank oak and stuff. 180 ton boat. Big big boat. So he said, "It's in Fort Lauderdale.
 
They've got it all hollowed out. And they've sand blasted it. All of the inside. It was a
 
granite hauler orinially before the millionaire put his stuff in it originally it was to haul
 
granite from Norway, where they have lots of granite and they would motor up the
 
North Sea, load this giant hull in front of the whole front of the boat was this big empty
 
hull where they would fill with granite in the center of the boat and then they'd turn
 
around and put up the gaff sails and they'd sail back down because the prevailing
 
winds were blowing that way. And so it was a granite hull. And so the inside of the
 
main salon in the middle of the boat was an inner lining of big giant heavy planks
 
because they didn't want the stone to break through the hull, right? So they had a
 
second sort of loose hull but big enough for giant chunks of granite. And all the
 
granite had scarred the wood, really deeply, like an inch, you know, an inch deep, but
 
the wood was like, three inches. So it had all these scars and stuff. So when they
 
sand-blasted it all the scars were really beautiful so we just all kept that and then
 
designed the whole boat with other wood we got these big slabs from this rancher,
 
wood slabs that we'd made from the redfwood forest for countertops and tables. We
 
bought a big French butcher block that they would butcher meat on and stuff. That
 
was sort of like a coffee table in the main salon the thing weighed about six hundred
 
pounds, it was huge. Everything was big. We went to the Hemmingway museum in
 
Key West and they had --Hemmingway was a hunter, right? He liked to go hunting
 
and he had the world's biggest elephant's tusk. It was like 12 or 14 feet long and
 
about 12 inches in diameter tappering down. Big curved hunk of ivory. Solid tusk.
 
And we bought it. And we put it down in Neil's --Neil took the whole forward third of
 
the boat and then the middle section was like the salon and the galley area and then
 
there was -- it had a brand new Caterpiller engine in it and a captain's room way at
 
the back of the boat. it had like staterooms off of the main salon and stuff. The
 
elephant tusk, we took the hull, it's kind of curved, right? Inside --so we took the tusk,
 
just put it off the hull and made that like a guest bed in Neil's stateroom for his kid to
 
sleep in and something like that. Just this beautiful Ivory tusk. So we had like,
 
treasures, down below in his boat and a pump organ right at the front of Neil's
 
stateroom where it' [sudd--] to the bow--it got smaller right at the very end of it. Not at
 
the pointed end because there was a paint locker and stuff up there but like a four or
 
five foot wall section at the front is tappered to about four foot wall and we put this old
 
pump organ, an old antique one Neill could play, it was really cool. So we left The
 
Last Waltz and went to the Ranch, got everything together and decided to go up route
 
66 for a week or two working our way across the country to Fort Lauderdale with the
 
boat. So we lived on the bus. It took us about nine days to get to Fort Lauderdale.
 
And that was really a fun trip going on route 66 because it was really delapidated still
 
and everything in those days. They still had the old tee-pee section you could back in
 
wherever it was like, pretty cool in the '50's, you know.
 
I had this idea that route 66, they built a super highway next to 66, right? And that's
 
why 66 became sort of like a ghost town that nobody went to because the highway
 
just took everybody faster so it was really funky and it wasn't very prosperous so I
 
thought, "This is where the artist community from Santa Monica all across the
 
country, the middle of the country could just be Art! Sculpters could live in this
 
section-- painters here, galleries and museums living in the old cement TeePees and
 
you know, whatever. I just thought, that would just be an incredible thing, just to turn
 
route 66 because artists love cheap rent, right? I mean, that's SoHo and all those
 
great artist spots that are now very expensive. It used to be the cheapest places
 
around, right? I just thought this is perfect for artists, man. It would just be incredible
 
and the whole middle of the nation be nothing but creativity and stuff. Anyway, we
 
had some pretty good times. Then we went to Fort Lauderdale and this was after '76
 
in November we got to Fort Lauderdale in January. We did Christmas at the ranch,
 
Rodney Wood and people all came up to the ranch for Christmas and stuff. And then
 
right around February we decided to go live on Route 66 and across the country.
 
Kirk: Who went with you?
 
This is Neil and I and a guy who was my assistant out on the 74 tour used to be a
 
ranger up in Tuscadero, used to call Ranger Dave. The guy was really good detail
 
man. Every little detail of everything we had to do, Ranger Dave was on top of it.
 
He's the kind of guy, he worked at the San Matteo memorial park up above
 
Tuscadero (Pescadero?) there's a big park up there and he was a ranger up there.
 
He got famous for picking up cigarette butts off the side of the trail. He was so
 
efficient. So he went with us and the three of us, which is great because we could
 
share the driving. Your driving a forty foot silver Eagle, you know, it's pretty trippy,
 
pretty fun stuff. So yeah, he went with us.
 
We get to Fort Lauderdale and start working on redesigning the boat and Neil had
 
hired all the best wooden boat builders on the East coast. He had a whole team of
 
them. Just shortening the wheel house and just doing all the stuff. When we finished
 
the boat and got it running, Archeticural Digest Magazine did a fourteen page spread
 
of down-below. They didn't say who the boat belonged to, they just showed every
 
little thing.
 
Kirk: What did they name the boat?
 
Yeah, well we named the boat after---the whole boat was named after Neil's family,
 
the whole boat was named The WN Raglan that was his mother's father who was a
 
Canadian birdguide, hunting up in Norther Canada who could call down ducks and
 
call down the geese and stuff. And people would hire him to go bird-hunting and stuff.
 
He was like this world-famous Canadian bird guide and so we named it the WN
 
Raglan, which the nickname for this giant sailboat was "rags" which was the perfect
 
name for a big sailboat, ox-blood sails and everything.
 
But down below, all those little staterooms for the guests and stuff--each one the main
 
salon was name "Pearl". Pearl was Neil's maternal grandmother that was married to
 
WN Ragland, right. So the main salon was Pearl. And then there was "Rasees?"
 
which is his mother and his mother had two sisters, so each of the staterooms was
 
named after the daughters and then there were two heads. There was a head up in
 
Neil's place and then a head in the salon for everybody else to use. There were
 
showers in there and he goes, "What are we going to call them?" And I says, "The
 
head--the heads." And I said, "Well, we've got your grandfather and your
 
grandmother, we got their children, did you have any pets?" And he said, "Yeah, they
 
had two dogs." And I said, "What were the names of the dogs?" He said, "Bonnie
 
Pie and Stinky-poo!" There you go! Perfect. I'll take Bonny Pie and you can take
 
Stinkypoo out there!" (Laughs) So anyway, that was really fun.
 
So we're hanging out and -Oh- while we were there, Neil decides to go buy this 1936
 
Matherson-Trumpy riverboat, because there's inline canaals on the East coast and
 
they made these mahogany riverboats, kind of, houseboats, basically but they are
 
like, two-stories and everything, like a big kind of house, I mean these are about forty-
 
five feet long, it was a nice size, and antique, it had antique curtains and lace and
 
stuff in the windows. It was really cute. It kind of leaked a little but we got the got the
 
bilge pump going all the time. So he bought that and we moved on that while we
 
were working on the big boat, that's where Neil and I lived. And I think Ranger Dave
 
had to go back to California after awhile so it was just Neil and I.
 
So we are in Fort Lauderdale and then one day Stephen Stills has a big mansion on
 
an island off in Miami and he invites Neil and I to come down and in the Matherson-
 
Trumpy and he's got a big dock in his backyard and hang out. So Neil goes, "Let's
 
go!" I was in the Coast Guard so, you know, Neil felt safer than I did. So Neil made
 
me the temporary Captain. So we get her fired up. It's always fired up. The only
 
problem is, it has an electric bilge pump. It didn't have a battery-powered bilge pump
 
so once we unplugged from Fort Lauderdale we had about twenty-six miles of inland
 
canaal to go down to get to Stephen's place which is about three or four hours of
 
cruising at four and five knots and by the time we got to Stephen's we were low in the
 
water. Then it occurred to me, "Oh my God, I'd better check the bilge. I looked at the
 
bilge. Bilges were full. Just full. And I said, "Fuck man, we could fucking sink!" And
 
we still had like six more miles and another hour to get to Stephen's place and I just
 
go, "Come on, we got [can't hear-something?] we gotta go, we just--we may make it,
 
we may not make it." So we get to Stephen's place and we were so low in the water
 
it's almost coming up through the floor boards. The bilge was about three and a half,
 
four feet deep, so it was a lot of water, swimming pool basically. We get there and we
 
were so low in the water, Steve's going, "A-Hoy, there!" "Here take the ropes, get us
 
some tied up along side of the road, we need a power cord! Get a power cord ready!
 
Get us plugged in!"
 
We get plugged in. We hang out at Stephen's place for about two or three days with -
 
--you can only take so much of Stephen Stills so after about three or four days, Neil
 
goes, "Let's go down to Coconut Grove because that's where all the clubs were and
 
all the party time and some pretty girls and everything. He said, "Let's go down to
 
Coconut Grove and I can get us a slip down there." So we did. So we left and we
 
went over to Coconut Grove and we lived in Coconut Grove for about two weeks and
 
we are going up by car, we run up to Fort Lauderdale to check on the boat but who
 
lived in Coconut Grove was Freddy Neil, the singer-songwriter, Fred Neil. He wrote
 
"Everybody's Talking" the theme to the cowboy movie. [Urben Cowboy?] What's-his-
 
name sang it, made it famous, was the other guy [Glen Campbell?]. But Fred Neil
 
wrote it. Fred Neil was a real famous folksinger and it was the guy who actually took
 
young Bob Dylan off of the streets and started introducing him to the clubmembers in
 
Greenwich Village. When Bob first started it was Fred Neil that actually got Bob
 
going, you know, from Minnasota to you know...
 
And Fred Neil writes great songs. He wrote, "I've Been Searchin' For The Dolphins In
 
The Sea", the Linda Rondstat made famous. All kinds of people sang Freddie Neil
 
songs and they were all beautiful hits and stuff. And Freddie was a heroin addict and
 
had his own thing, but he was really a super nice guy. And his best friend in Coconut
 
Grove was Vinny Marty? [Martin?] and Vinny Martin had had a hit in the ' 50s, called
 
"Marianne: .....works down by the seashore, sifting sand...Even little children love
 
Marianne....down by the seashore sifting sand..." That was a huge hit in 1957 or
 
something. And so Vinny and Fred would come over to --we named the houseboat
 
the Evening Coconut, right? So they would come over to the Old Evening Coconut
 
and Vinny--I think Vinny went back to New York--so then mostly it was just Fred Neil
 
would come over with his guitar and Neil and him would sit on the back fantail in the
 
houseboat every evening around sunset, I'd make up a blender full of Margaritas and
 
we'd sit back there and they'd jam together. And Freddy Neil has a really low, deep
 
beautiful velvety voice, just incredible. And Neil has a really high voice and hearing
 
these two guys singing--it was like, Holy Shit, what a combination of voices. It was
 
amazing. And I was like the whole audience, it was an audience of one, me! It was
 
just so cool. Really nice, really cool. And I became friends with Fred and everything
 
and he was a good guy.
 
Send? Neil down at Coconut Grove at one of the clubs one night. I think I had a date
 
or something. He went off to some club. And he met some guy, you know, with a
 
gold chain around his neck, and has really got it--[fingers snapping] and Neil just
 
kinda got into this guy's trip, because it was just not kind of like us from the ranch or
 
anything, and the guy goes, "Let's go down and look at cars!" (because Neil is a car
 
guy). And the guy takes him to this Ferrari place, right? And he's trying to talk Neil
 
into buying a brand new Ferrari. Neil's a '48 Buick-guy. You know? Maybe a '57
 
Caddy if it's a convertable with fins. But he's not a Ferrari , in fact, he had an old
 
1932 Bentley and he got rid of it because it was just a little too sporty. And he
 
started---you know, they're into the blow and they're into the club scene, and I'm
 
staying at The Evening Coconut, and I'm kind of seeing what's happening, and Neil's
 
like really falling for this guy's rap and Neil's thinking, "Yeah Man, I can get a Ferrari."
 
And finally, I just went, "Man, Neil's just turning into this person that's not him, and
 
I've never seen him before, so one morning at breakfast I just went, "Look, I have to
 
tell you something. I've seen you hanging out with what's--his-name and it seems like
 
the more this guy kisses your ass, the more you bend over and smile." And I said, "I
 
can't take it. I don't want to be around it. I'm going back to California. You go buy
 
your Ferrari and have fun with your new friend and I'll just see ya. I'll be back in
 
California." And I split.
 
And I come back and I didn't want to go to the ranch because it's empty, Neil's back in
 
Florida. And so, I'm a Santa Cruz guy, so I phoned Jeff Blackbird? and Bob Moseley
 
from Moby Grape that used to play at the Ark where I had my very first light shows--
 
right? I told you about the Ark and Sauselito when I got out of the Coast Guard. And
 
those were my old buddies right there, Lee Michaels and stuff. But Blackbird lived in
 
Santa Cruz --and still does, and Bob Moseley lived down here and Johney Carviato
 
[spelling?] which is this drummer friend of ours, who makes really beautiful snare
 
drums, he wasn't back in those days, this was 1977, I moved back to Santa Cruz
 
from Florida, and Blackbird (Blackman?) had an old one-and-a-half acre--it used to be
 
a farm, it was that water tower on 38th Avenue, just a block from Pleasure Point. So I
 
still had my little tiny trailer from Malibu. So I went down, I picked up my trailer, it was
 
over at a friend's house, I'd stuck it over at a friend's place in Malibu and I went over
 
and I picked it up and I brought it back up to Santa Cruz and parked it on Buck's
 
property there, and was just getting ready--Buck and Johnny and Mosely--guitar,
 
bass, and drums, were going to put together a little trio and play over the Summer,
 
they were going to call themselves "Buck 'n The Odds" (Buckin' the Odds) and so
 
they said, "Cool man, you could be our manager!" Yeah, it's good, we're all pals. I
 
went, "Cool." So I move right in and it's kind of fun, I'm back in Santa Cruz and it's
 
really nice and I'm going for about two weeks and all of a sudden Neil shows up--and
 
he just drives in. I didn't even know how he found us but he did. And he drives in and
 
I go, "Oh". [Snide voice] "Where's your Ferrari?" and he goes, "Yeah, Mazz. Mazz,
 
I've got to tell you something." He goes, "I don't have many friends that can just
 
come and tell me the truth and how they see things. Most people just want to
 
accomadate me all the time and say yes to everything. You're a real friend. I just
 
have to let you know that I really value that." And I went, "Cool. Good." And he goes,
 
"So what are you guys doing?" And I said, "Well, we got a little three-piece band, we
 
started playing some clubs around town here, you know, Moseley and Blackburn [?]
 
and Johnny Gravianno. And he goes, "So you got, let's see, bass and--Blackburn's a
 
great rhythm guitar player and you got Moseley on bass and Johnny on the
 
drums....Sounds like they need another guitar player." And I went, "Sure!"
 
And so Neil literally moved into Buck's ranch with us, because it was a little apartment
 
off one side and all overgrown and we kind of cleaned it out and he moved in and we
 
drove around town and started figuring out what we were doing and we said, "Well,
 
we like doing these things called "Art Attacks" and so we are just going to just
 
consider this a Summer Surf band. Which is actually going to be an Art Attack in
 
disguise. And Neil goes, "Okay, but here's the deal. We are not going to play outside
 
the city limits of Santa Cruz. We're not going to play Cappatolla. All we did was city
 
limits of Santa Cruz. And they had about five or six live clubs going in 1977. There
 
was The Catalyst, which we never really wanted to play because it was too
 
[organized?] but they had these little tiny clubs. There was one called The Backroom,
 
which was [little off-of-London?] hotels off of SoCal Ave. There's one out on Harvey
 
West Park called The Steamboat, another one out there called The Crossroads,
 
which was a biker-beer bar--but they all had music. And there were bands, there was
 
The Snail Band, which was a local band, there was another band called The
 
Artichokes, and there was one that did nothing but 50's rock 'n roll stuff from San
 
Jose, played over here all the time at the beach and stuff. So there were five or six
 
little clubs that we could play, all just bouncing around. And one day we're driving,
 
one day Neil brought down this '48 Packard Woody station wagon which we made the
 
band car and we'd all drive around in the Woody from town over to Pleasure Point.
 
And we'd go by Twin Lakes, where the habor is, and the lagoon. And i was thinking,
 
"What are we going to call the band?" And we were throwing out all these names:
 
"Thunderhead!" All these different things...
 
And we go down into the Lagoon and there's a duck crossing from the beach over the
 
lagoon and they had a sign right in the road that said "Duck Crossing!" with this little
 
plywood cop and we'd been shouting out all these names and we come down the hill
 
we get to the lagoon and there's a little crosswalk and we kind of slow down and we
 
go "Oh, duck crossing...." and Neil goes, "That's it--Ducks! That's the perfect name!
 
Because in the grocery store and in the bakery shops, all over Santa Cruz at that
 
time in '77, they had big boxes of stale bread with signs saying, "Feed the ducks".
 
The whole town was into ducks! There was even a story about one of our surfer
 
buddies when I was in highschool named Dave Pussinger. Pussinger had this old
 
black Packard hearse. Really sinister old hearse. And Pussinger was about my age
 
and we were all juniors and seniors in high school and surfing at Pleasure Point and
 
Cals[?] Beach.
 
And Pussinger, one day, we didn't really didn't realize right at the time but we found
 
out later that when Pussinger's father was at Duck's Unlimited, right? He was a duck
 
hunter. And he had duck plates on the diningroom table, duck wallpaper, and
 
Pussinger's bedroom: Ducks--his whole--Pussinger grew up with ducks and his
 
parents didn't get along all that well, right? So one day, Pussinger is driving down by
 
the lagoon in his black hearse and this little family of ducks is waddling across from
 
the beach over to the lagoon and Pussinger steps on the gas and runs over and kills
 
six ducks and he's the only old black hearse in town, so it's pretty easy to figure out
 
who did it because there were witnesses. He gets arrested. This is years before we
 
got the band. Many years before. And he gets arrested and it's in the newspapers
 
and everything--"He's a duck killer!" and he gets up in front of the judge and the judge
 
sentences him to jail and says, "A day, a duck." So he had to go to jail for six days.
 
So when we had the ducks when I told them the story about Pussinger, and we
 
turned into "The Pussinger Curse", right? The only problem, in Santa Cruz, when
 
Pussinger killed the six ducks, there was Old Master Mallard [can't hear] he was like a
 
shaman duck. And he put a curse on the town that couldn't be broken unless
 
everybody in town quacked like a duck. And that would break the curse. So the
 
whole Summer thing was for the ducks to get everybody in town to at least once in
 
the Summer quack like a duck to break the curse. So we would have shows--the
 
ducks--and anybody that came with a duck call could get in for free. Anybody who
 
came up to the cash register--we decided to only charge $2.50 at the door because
 
when we all first met each other in ' 66 when I had my first light show at The Ark, that
 
was how much it cost to get in to see the shows, is $2.50. And by that time it was up
 
to four or five bucks, in '77 from '67. But we decided, let's have ten-year-old prices.
 
So these guys are getting Neil Young for $2.50 and so--crowds, just everybody--
 
beautiful girls--and just everything.
 
So we got everybody to quack like ducks at the concert. And we also got Mulligan,
 
from the ranch, who was a recording engineer. We got a truck set up with recording
 
equipment, a mobile truck. So we had Mulligan come down everynight from the
 
ranch up in by Half-Moon Bay, come down and wire up wherever we were going to
 
play in the afternoon and we recorded every single show we ever did for the entire
 
Summer. And I think that we're the only band that ever existed literally recorded
 
every single show that they ever did from beginning to end, we did like twenty-six
 
shows over the Summer. And we have all those records, all those recordings. We
 
kept them all. Neil's doing his archives now and he just had me do a take-off on the
 
Zuma album cover but there is also a duck album too, from the making of the duck
 
recordings. Then we started to pick, just the best take of this one, basically the duck
 
set, but the best of all the different shows, the best recordings to put together for the
 
record and I told Neil, I said, "No, man. What we should do is offer every single show
 
that we did from the time The Ducks started to the very last show. Then everybody
 
could go to every single show and listen to every single show, they'd have twenty-six
 
albums to listen to, you know? So, I don't know where they are at with that, because
 
it hasn't come out yet, but that's what I'm kind of hoping for, because that would be
 
like a truly historic thing, really historic.
 
So that was the -- we moved over by --you know where the museum over off Sea
 
Bright Beach is, with the Whale on the front lawn? Across from that museum are two
 
little cottages right on the cliff. Neil and I rented those. We rented them for $400 a
 
month. We moved out of my traier and out of funky Blackburn's--we called it Duck
 
Landing over on 38th Avenue. We moved off of Duck Landing and he and I got these
 
really cool places right on the cliff. The band would come over and there's a lawn at
 
one of the places right at the edge of a cliff and down off the cliff is Sea Bright Beach.
 
It used to be called Castle Beach in the old days. So we'd set up on the lawn and
 
every afternoon the band would play and practice for that night. First thing--I'm their
 
road manager--so first thing, they'd go, "Well, tonight we want to play The Crossroads
 
Club and I'd phone the Crossroads but they're all booked, right? They're booked.
 
They've got bands that are going to play that night. So I call The Backroom or The
 
Crossroads or whatever clubs they told me they wanted to play at, I'd call the club:
 
"Oh, The Artichokes are playing tonight." I'd say, "Well, give me their phone number."
 
So I would get their phone number and I'd go, "So you guys are playing The
 
Crossroads tonight, huh?" And they go, "Oh yeah." And I said, "Uh--how much
 
money do you think you're going to make tonight?" And they said, "Are you guys
 
playing in town?" I go, "Yeah". They'd go, "Not much!" Because everybody's going to
 
be to see us, right? And I'd say, "What do you think? A hundred bucks, a hundred
 
fifty bucks? How much?" And they'd say, "Yeah, if we're lucky we would make a
 
hundred bucks." I said, "I'll pay you $150 not to play. We'll take your spot tonight."
 
So I would pay them $150 and I'd say, "You're our guests, you know. Come and hang
 
out, have a good time." And so that's how I would do it, everyday I just phoned a
 
different band and they'd say Backroom tonight, or The Steamboat, a different place
 
everynight. And we just bounce it around. And I'd just phone whatever band that was
 
playing and we'd bump 'em, pay them not to show up, kind of farmers growing
 
soybeans or something.
 
Kirk: So the band would decide where to play the same day that they were going to
 
play.
 
Yeah, in the morning. They wouldn't even tell me until the morning, right? But
 
nobody's going to say no, because it's Neil Young and he's legendary in '77 he's got a
 
big rep. And the whole town's going nuts, everybody is quacking like ducks at the
 
concerts and stuff. Not everybody knew that if they just winked and said, "Cool
 
Duck." they could get in for free. Just people who we'd say, "Here, just tell the
 
cashier "cool duck" and wink and then [can't hear: Then they'd duck call?]. So on the
 
tape you hear people quacking like ducks all the time in between the songs. We'd
 
drive down the road and people would quack at us as we drove across town. India
 
Joe's was this restaurant in town that was a late-night restaurant so after the gig we
 
would go to India Joe's. But we never had much money. We'd be lucky at the end of
 
the night if we each made $2.50 each. They only held like a hundred fifty people,
 
seventy-five to a hundred fifty. Two hundred people was a big crowd. That's only like
 
$400 for Mulligan, and the soundtruck? and you know--we'd be lucky to end up with
 
$200 each at the end of the night. So we'd go to India Joe's and people would know
 
that we went there after the gig so that place was just rockin' like at one in the
 
morning [can't hear next word] because they were doing such good business, right?
 
Because we were there everynight, that the owner of the place, I'd tell 'em I'd say,
 
"Yeah, you know, we're a little short on money..." And they'd say, "Don't worry about
 
it!" I said, "Here's our check." He goes, "Just sign it 'Ducks'". And so I'd just write
 
"Ducks" on our bill and the guy started pinning them up by the cash register. He had
 
a whole wall. He said, "Yeah, it's deductable!" It was a business investment because
 
his business was making so much money from everybody else. So we ate for free. It
 
was really fun.
 
Then two motorcycle guys, near the end of the Summer, we were going pretty strong
 
and living at those places on the cliff. But we're off doing a gig one night and these
 
two motorcycle guys, a couple days before that last gig, went to the Crows' Nest with
 
guns and laid down everybody in The Crows' Nest, robbed The Crows' Nest--they
 
robbed The Sky-View drive-in movie theatre. They were on a binge, they were two
 
little outlaw motorcycle guys. They robbed the drive-in one night. They robbed the
 
Crows' Nest the next night. I think they did two or three robberies and then one night
 
they came over and broke into our house and stole a bunch of shit from us--BUT--
 
we'd had all Summer here, you know, and we'd go down to Union Grove to The
 
Guitar Shop and Neil would look at Guitars, and look at stuff. Just goofin' around
 
during the day. We bought bicycles. We'd ride bikes across town. it was really fun.
 
One time at Union Grove, right at the beginning, when we moved into the cliff house,
 
we went to Union Grove. When we'd crossed the country going to Miami, going on
 
route 66, we stopped in Nashville, Tennesee and hung out with Bobby Charles and
 
Ben Keith, Neil's steel guitar player. Bobby Charles is a friend of ours who wrote
 
"See Ya Later, Alligator". He was a song-writer's songwriter. Everybody Bobby
 
Charles, Bob Dylan--everybody sang Bobby Charles' s songs. He's legendary, and
 
he's a great guy, Cajun, from the swamp. We all hung out. We hung out there for
 
about a week-and-a-half in our bus because we were living in a bus across route 66
 
and there was an empty lot next to the Hall of Fame Museum in Nashville. There was
 
just this empty lot. We didn't even ask permission, we just parked in the empty lot
 
and Ranger Dave snuck an extention cord from the museum plug outside over the
 
fence and into our bus and we had electricity and just moved in there. It was a big
 
fancy bus and the museum just thought it was another rock or country-music star
 
[can't hear--something like "let us alone" ?]
 
So we're there, and we go shopping for guitars there in Nashville and we get turned
 
on to an opportunity to buy Hank William's guitar and his kid, Hank Williams Jr., who
 
does pretty good too. But as Hank Williams Jr., as a kid, he was a problem kid, and
 
his father was on the road and he died young himself, and Hank Williams Jr.
 
destroyed most of his father's guitars. So much so that one of the old-timer friends of
 
Hank's grabbed this Martin, that Hank had, and just got it out of the house, so he'd
 
already detroyed a couple of Hank's [stock?stuff?] . We got that guitar and we bought
 
a decoy guitar at Union Grove. It was an old Kay? that needed refinishing It was
 
beautiful. The guy did a beautiful job refinishing it. They only wanted fifty bucks for it
 
but it was so pretty. We bought it for $50 but they said, "This would be a good decoy-
 
(duck decoy--right!) and so we got it and when we set up the beach house in Neil's
 
livingroom I put the guitar stand and I put the decoy right there in the livingroom so
 
when the guys broke into the house they stole Neil's guitar, they stole the Kay but in
 
his back-bedroom closet, burried under some clothing, was Hank William's guitar, so
 
they missed that! So our decoy-thing worked! But it bummed out Neil that we got
 
broken into but that's what pretty much ended The Ducks, he went back to the ranch.
 
But the Ducks ended. I went to court and testified against the two guys and
 
identified my stuff.
 
So I became friends with the district attorney who later became a judge, which is
 
pretty cool. Anyway, that's pretty much the story of The Ducks, that's pretty good.

Latest revision as of 10:04, 9 December 2024

Recordings:

Last Waltz /Ducks

Transcriptions

Last Waltz Ducks

It was '75. Moved to Malibu. The Band was just down the road from where we were.

they had bought Elvis Presley's old place, Rancho Shangri la. Actually Presley

owned it, Johnny Carson owned it after Presley. All these famous people owned

this Rancho Shangri la and it was a really big old house on top of a hill and it had a

little corral down on the bottom when you first went in the road there's a little horse corral there, where they filmed Mr Ed.


So I was talking about Rancho Shangrilla. And Neil and i were living down the road

at Broadbeach road on a street called Sea Leaval Drive. It was this old Cape Cod

cottage, right on the beach at the end of Sea Level Drive so there was no one on right

side of us except sand dunes. Except down on the right side of us, about a quarter

mile, was Carol King and then next to her was Cheech, from Cheech and Chong.

On the beach in Malibu. It was a really cool house. Neill saw it when he was

recording the Zuma album. It wasnt' called Zuma in those days but he dreams of

making this album and it was actually up on BirdView Drive right above Zuma Beach

and he'd go down and he saw this house, right? And it's just this Cape Cod, just

romantic little Cape Cod cottage right at the end of the road all covered in red

Bouganvilla. it was two lots. The first lot was just a brick patio area so we had this

big social area and then this cute little two-bedroom Cape Cod cottage that

Catherine Ross lived in. So he started asking around the neighbors, who is it?

whoose there? He goes, "Oh ah Catherine lives there." He goes, "I wonder if she

would ever sell it?" He said, "Oh, no,no. She'd never sell, no way."

Turned out she didn't own it. She was just leasing. So Neil told his lawyers about it

in LA, big powerful lawyers, they checked. they found the property owner and they

said, "They have a client who is interested in your house." And he just low-balled this

really ridiculous price, when you consider $285,000 for it. This was like 1974-75. The

guy must have lived in Kansas or something. He said, "Yeah, sure!" he could have

probably bought it for sixty grand, and he said, "Yeah, sure, no problem." So Neil

bought it.

So we moved down there and I'm down there and we did the Zuma album cover there

and we'd go shopping for furniture, old antique furniture, and they'd fix up the beach

house and then I heard that The Band was living just down the road.We became

friends out on '74 CSNY tour because The Band, and when The Band didn't open for

us the Beach Boys opened for us. That's how big the CSYN tour was. We were

literally the American Beatles and that tour made more money than any other tour

had ever made. We broke history. We made 4.4 million dollars on that world tour

which was an all-time record back in 1974.

I got to be friends with all the guys in the band so I went down and said, "Hey--Neil,

I've got this house. And he said, "Ah, it's cool." So I sort of hang out with these guys

and then one day I went over there and then one day Robbie Robertson was there

and Robbie said (in those days I was "Sandy Castle", that was my rock 'n roll name),

"Hey Sandy, we are putting together a tour and it's going to be our last tour together.

They were calling it "The Last Watz Tour" and we are going to go all over the place

and see all our fans everywhere and just do one last show for everybody. It's

probably going to take a year and we know we can't afford a guy like you. But we

really like the way you were out on the road and we really think you'd be the perfect

guy to represent us because we have lots of friends all over the world and they are

going to come see us and we are going to be busy rehearsing and doing band stuff

but our friends and family are going to be there and you are the perfect guys. To

meet them, take care of all our friends, get them to the shows, and do everything.

Make sure everyone has a great time, as well as being our tour manager--road

manager. That would be your function. And Robbie goes, "Look, " (Robbie talks out

the corner of his mouth like a gangster) "Look, we know we can't pay you as much as

CSNY paid you but we can give you a hundred dollars a day for every day that you're

not on the road and then we're out on tour we'll give you $200 a day, seven days a

week. So that's $1400 a week in 1975-76. That's a lot of money. CSNY, I think I was

getting $300 a week. I think I got off that tour with about $4,000 in the bank. That

was the world tour. Robbie goes, "I know I can't pay as much." They offered me like

four times as much without even knowing it. And then he said, "But what we can do,

because you are going to be representing us, we will give you the finest suite in every

hotel that we stay at, because that's where our friends and family, you can invite them

to this really fancy suite and they can all hang out with you while we're rehearsing and

doing stuff like that. So wherever we are, you get the finest suite in every single

town, for a year!" I went, "Oh. Well, that'd be good, yeah--that would make for a fun

time for everybody. So I went back and told Neil, I said, "Listen, I'm going to take

about a year off from you and from what I was doing with Neil. I'd just done the

album covers so he was happy and he had other stuff planning Crazy Horse and

stuff. So, I said, "I'm going to go work for a year with Robbie and The Band. It's

going to be the last tour and everything and that, I told him the whole deal. He goes,

"Fuck, they're paying you that much?" I said, "Don't tell anybody!" So he said ok, so I

got his blessings and everything and I literrally moved from Neil's place over to

Shangrilla because Sahgrilla was this big old--I was telling you--at the bottom of

Shangrilla when you first drove in off the road was this corral, right? This lower part

of Rancho Shangrilla was flat and then you went up the hill to where the house was.

It wasn't a big hill, it was only about a hundred feet high from the lower part. But he

drove up the driveway, up to the upper big old, spread-out California Ranch House.

But on the end, Elvis Presely had built a whole row of cottages, just like a wing of a

motel off of one end of it, and each one was a little cottage with it's own bathroom and

everything. I guess that's where his band and stuff would all stay. Each one had their

own room and everything. Robbie then gave me the end room out of all the whole

rows the end, which looked right down this beautiful canyon out at Zuma beach. So I

had this just beautiful ocean view and everything. It was really cool. Down at the

bottom where the corral was, before Elvis, then it was a TV program called "Mr. Ed,

The Talking Horse" did you see that? Mr. Ed lived in the barn, in the corral at the

bottom of the road! It was Mr. Ed's corral and they actually filmed him there with the

little house and he'd be coming through the door and talking to Wilber and stuff, and

that is where they actually shot Mr. Ed! We were teenagers, when that was

happening. And so when I'm living there we had about --I moved in there about the

end of ''75 and the two of us were going to start to --oh like February of '76, so we

had like three or four months before we actually got on the road, just kind of putting

things together and everything and Robbie was arranging for the last show that was

The Last Waltz on Thanksgiving Day with Bill Graham and stuff and Scorseisie, the

film director, he did that film and it was incredible, it was the best rock film, I think,

that's ever been made. I designed the stage sets in The Last Waltz. Bill Graham and

I, Bill's an old buddy of mine, and he did a whole lot of this of The Band's Last Show.

He did a whole lot of CSNY shows the year before, so Bill and I had been out on the

road a bunch doing the shows and when we went to do The Last Waltz we got there a

week early and Bill goes, "Hey Sandy, come with me, we're going to go down to the

San Fransciso Opera Company's warehouse and we're going to pick the sets for the

stage for The Last Waltz. You see the chandeleers and the big curtains on the stage-

-that's all from La Proviado (Traviata} operas-- "Well, we'll take this, this, and this..."

we'd put it all together so but--we had so much before we went out on the road and

we grew some pot in Mr. Ed's corral where Mr. Ed had been shitting for twelve years

and the ground was really fertile and the plants just took off--they grew like fourteen

feeet high and they grew higher than the hedges and stuff. They were like sort of

blocking the filming for Mr. Ed and the road--they grew way up above that--all the way

down Malibu has like a hundred and fifty cops that just keep patroling. Malibu's a

mile wide and twenty miles long and they just have cops all the time--it's the '70s--

you-d go to jail for pot and stuff. Our pot plants they just grow so high that you could

literally see them from Highway 1! And there is a stop sign right at Morning View

Road and the cops had plenty of time just to stop and glance up the canyon and see

the pot plants, there were only like two football fields away and everybody's going,

"Oh my God, man--we were going to get busted but it was SO good pot--it was just

incredibly good pot and we could just smell how good it was and I went, "I'll handle it."

And I went down to a craft's store and I bought four hundred dollars worth of red and

orange artificial flowers [who?] on wider? stems and me and the sound engineer who

actually lived in Mr. Ed's that was converted into a little tiny cottage that our sound

engineer lived in and it was in his front yard is where we'd grown all the pot. So I got

four hundred dollar worth of big red and yellow flowers on wire. and we just wired

them to the plants so all the plants had red and yellow flowers just all growing all over

and son-of-a-gun! It no longer looked like pot plants anymore. I thought, "God, you

know, I ought to just buy artificial flowers and put them in a plastic sack--bang--two

hundred worth of artificial flowers and sell it for fourteen dollars to the pot guys so

they could disguise their plants all around the whole United States...

Anyways that was a fun little thing.

So that's how I ended up managing The Band for that whole year and we finished it at

Bill Graham's place at Winterland on Thanksgiving Day. We fed five thousand people

and we fed them and I had my mom and my sister come, I sent a limo over to

Freemont to pick them up and bring them there and everything. It was like one time--

it was like the only time they ever came to any of my shows. And we had a special

section for our friends and family and stuff and I became friends with Rodney Wood

and Keith Moon while I was The Band's manager and Tony Curtis and Larry Hagman

and just all these amazing people and so Woodie --Keith Moon moved in and Woody

and Keith and I became really good pals just jamming around. Neill and I went down

and for some reason I decided I wantted to get a little trailer because every now and

then we would have like Dr. John or these other guys come and use the studio to

make their little projects? Bob Dylan and Eric Clapton, and stuff. In fact when

Clapton was there--

Kirk: So Neil had a studio there?

No, no. The Band had a studio in Shangrilla and it was a whole studio in one section

of the house. Really a nice studio. They'd been there for a few years and so

everybody, all these other people would rent the studio and sometimes they'd have to

use the "Star" you know would want my place with the ocean view and so I'd have to

sacrifice--so we decided that I would just get a little cool little fourteen foot trailer and

keep it in the parking lot at Shangrilla up next to the house and I'll go hang out in

there. So I'm just doing that every now and then. And I was friends with Woody and

Keith and they are just crazy English guys, right? Usually if they're not drunk they're

high on something, just having as much fun or trouble as they could get into. and

sometimes I'd be sleeping in my little trailer and about three in the morning all of a

sudden I'd hear commotion around the trailer as I'm sleeping in there and I'd hear

Woody and Keith going, "Oh my God--Oh my God! It's an earthquake--it's an

earthquake!" And they'd start shaking my trailer, right? So they'd wake me up--"We'd

better wake up Sandy! --The trailer is going to go over the cliff! Oh no! It's going over

the cliff! Quick---Sandy! Get up!" And I'd go, "Wha...what...what? and I'd come out

and they'd all go nuts and I'd go over to Keith's house and we'd get high for the rest of

the night or something. They were really--that was really fun stuff. But then I invited

Neil because The Last Waltz was all these famous musicians that always loved The

Band, it was their chance, Van Morrison, all those guys, to do their stuff with The

Band backing them, right. That was the whole premise of The Last Waltz--the

concert film and everything. And Neil did the song "Helpless" in The Last Waltz film

and Joni Mitchell and Rodney Wood and then Rodney Wood brought Ringo and a

bunch of different people and so with Neil we are back stage for The Last Waltz and

I've been gone from Neil for a year, so this was our chance to do a gig together again

so I was mostly--I was taking care of everybody else, all The Band friends too, but I

was hanging out with Neil and Joni a whole lot, you know. We're back stage. We

had a whole room back stage called Le Couquteau the French artist Coucteau room

where everyone would go in and snort their cocaine. This was 1976, the whole world

was on cocaine in '76. So we are back there. They give me the bag of coke to hold

for everybody. Meanwhile Joni and I --everybody's out, the show's going because

they don't come out until about the middle and the show's all going on and everything

and Neil and Joni are going back there and Neil goes, "Oh! We're on next! Sandy--

some coke!" "So I'd go, "Okay, here." and there's a big rock and I'd go, "Okay, listen,

I've got to chop it up, you know?" so I've got a mirrers there were mirrors on tables

and [ can't hear--coke to a room?] everything all set up. And so I'm chopping it up,

right? and Neil's going, "Hurry--hurry" because they've got to get out there, you

knew. And I go, "I am, I'm going as fast as I can! Ladies first." I set up Joni a little

hit of stuff that was really nice and chopped up like I needed more for Neil, so I get

another one and start chopping it up. And he said, "Naw, that's okay. I think I'm going

to go." So he just took a big snort and the rocks were kind of still big you know, and

they stuck in the hairs of his nose but he left so fast I wasn't able to catch it or

anything--[did voogoo gone?] In the movie, Scorcese's doing super hot close ups of

Neill, right? which in film is little tiny pictures but in a giant movie theatre, Neil's face

is like twenty feet high and twelve feet wide and his nostrils are like four foot circles

with big white chunks of cocaine hanging out of them. So Rodney and Scorcese saw

the problem and they had to literally take that footage and take it into Hollywood and

hand paint each frame of the film--handpaint the coke out of his nose. it took them an

extra week and a half to do the whole song, you know. And Rodney came back to

me a couple weeks after that, we were off the road and I still have a place at Shanghi

still there. And Bobby comes and says, "Sandy--I just wants you to know that I just

paid $4,650 for a rock of cocaine that big! I've never paid so much money for cocaine

in my entire life! I told him, "No problem." We didn't talk about my first tour but we

had fun covering [can't hear---] then after that, the next day, we did The Last Waltz

and we're all sitting at the Japansese hotel The Miyake Hotel in Japan town in San

Fransciso. It's a really fancy Japanese hotel, I didn't know Japantown over there and

each room has it's own hot tubs and all kinds of cool stuff. So we stayed there and

whenever Neil and I had been out on the road on all our previous tours and stuff we

always had breakfast together the next morning and so we're having breakfast the

next morning, after The Last Waltz, and it was a late morning because we had got in

a long night the night before, and so we're having breakfast, coffee and eggs and

stuff and Neill goes, "So what are you going to do now?" And I'm really happy with

The Band, you know, I'd been with them for a year. I got my place at Shangrila and

everything. And I go, "What do you mean, what am I going to about..." He goes,

"Last night The Band just announced to the entire world that this is their last show!"

And I went, "Yeah?" He goes, "So that means they're not going to be playing

together anymore." And I went, "Yeah?" And he goes, "That means they're not going

to be going on the road anymore." And I went, "Yeah?" And he says, "You're their

road manager." I went, "...Oh." [ Laughs. ]

He said, "Look, I've got this big hundred foot boat in the Carribean that's moved up--I

had to move it up to Fourt Lauderdale. They've got it --I want it rebuilt because down

below, it's a 1911 Eighty-five on deck, a hundred and four feet over, all baltic rig,

[gaffrig catch?] from the Baltic Ocean, right? and he said they belong to some

millionaire down in the Carabean and Europeans, down below you've got modern

formica white formica so it could all be kept really clean all down below and

everything, very "boatmanlike"kind of but sparse. He goes, "That'a not me." he goes.

so we are going to design the whole inside of the boat. It's 24 feet wide and 86 feet

long made out of timber that's like the hull was like four inches thick by fourteen inch

plank oak and stuff. 180 ton boat. Big big boat. So he said, "It's in Fort Lauderdale.

They've got it all hollowed out. And they've sand blasted it. All of the inside. It was a

granite hauler orinially before the millionaire put his stuff in it originally it was to haul

granite from Norway, where they have lots of granite and they would motor up the

North Sea, load this giant hull in front of the whole front of the boat was this big empty

hull where they would fill with granite in the center of the boat and then they'd turn

around and put up the gaff sails and they'd sail back down because the prevailing

winds were blowing that way. And so it was a granite hull. And so the inside of the

main salon in the middle of the boat was an inner lining of big giant heavy planks

because they didn't want the stone to break through the hull, right? So they had a

second sort of loose hull but big enough for giant chunks of granite. And all the

granite had scarred the wood, really deeply, like an inch, you know, an inch deep, but

the wood was like, three inches. So it had all these scars and stuff. So when they

sand-blasted it all the scars were really beautiful so we just all kept that and then

designed the whole boat with other wood we got these big slabs from this rancher,

wood slabs that we'd made from the redfwood forest for countertops and tables. We

bought a big French butcher block that they would butcher meat on and stuff. That

was sort of like a coffee table in the main salon the thing weighed about six hundred

pounds, it was huge. Everything was big. We went to the Hemmingway museum in

Key West and they had --Hemmingway was a hunter, right? He liked to go hunting

and he had the world's biggest elephant's tusk. It was like 12 or 14 feet long and

about 12 inches in diameter tappering down. Big curved hunk of ivory. Solid tusk.

And we bought it. And we put it down in Neil's --Neil took the whole forward third of

the boat and then the middle section was like the salon and the galley area and then

there was -- it had a brand new Caterpiller engine in it and a captain's room way at

the back of the boat. it had like staterooms off of the main salon and stuff. The

elephant tusk, we took the hull, it's kind of curved, right? Inside --so we took the tusk,

just put it off the hull and made that like a guest bed in Neil's stateroom for his kid to

sleep in and something like that. Just this beautiful Ivory tusk. So we had like,

treasures, down below in his boat and a pump organ right at the front of Neil's

stateroom where it' [sudd--] to the bow--it got smaller right at the very end of it. Not at

the pointed end because there was a paint locker and stuff up there but like a four or

five foot wall section at the front is tappered to about four foot wall and we put this old

pump organ, an old antique one Neill could play, it was really cool. So we left The

Last Waltz and went to the Ranch, got everything together and decided to go up route

66 for a week or two working our way across the country to Fort Lauderdale with the

boat. So we lived on the bus. It took us about nine days to get to Fort Lauderdale.

And that was really a fun trip going on route 66 because it was really delapidated still

and everything in those days. They still had the old tee-pee section you could back in

wherever it was like, pretty cool in the '50's, you know.

I had this idea that route 66, they built a super highway next to 66, right? And that's

why 66 became sort of like a ghost town that nobody went to because the highway

just took everybody faster so it was really funky and it wasn't very prosperous so I

thought, "This is where the artist community from Santa Monica all across the

country, the middle of the country could just be Art! Sculpters could live in this

section-- painters here, galleries and museums living in the old cement TeePees and

you know, whatever. I just thought, that would just be an incredible thing, just to turn

route 66 because artists love cheap rent, right? I mean, that's SoHo and all those

great artist spots that are now very expensive. It used to be the cheapest places

around, right? I just thought this is perfect for artists, man. It would just be incredible

and the whole middle of the nation be nothing but creativity and stuff. Anyway, we

had some pretty good times. Then we went to Fort Lauderdale and this was after '76

in November we got to Fort Lauderdale in January. We did Christmas at the ranch,

Rodney Wood and people all came up to the ranch for Christmas and stuff. And then

right around February we decided to go live on Route 66 and across the country.

Kirk: Who went with you?

This is Neil and I and a guy who was my assistant out on the 74 tour used to be a

ranger up in Tuscadero, used to call Ranger Dave. The guy was really good detail

man. Every little detail of everything we had to do, Ranger Dave was on top of it.

He's the kind of guy, he worked at the San Matteo memorial park up above

Tuscadero (Pescadero?) there's a big park up there and he was a ranger up there.

He got famous for picking up cigarette butts off the side of the trail. He was so

efficient. So he went with us and the three of us, which is great because we could

share the driving. Your driving a forty foot silver Eagle, you know, it's pretty trippy,

pretty fun stuff. So yeah, he went with us.

We get to Fort Lauderdale and start working on redesigning the boat and Neil had

hired all the best wooden boat builders on the East coast. He had a whole team of

them. Just shortening the wheel house and just doing all the stuff. When we finished

the boat and got it running, Archeticural Digest Magazine did a fourteen page spread

of down-below. They didn't say who the boat belonged to, they just showed every

little thing.

Kirk: What did they name the boat?

Yeah, well we named the boat after---the whole boat was named after Neil's family,

the whole boat was named The WN Raglan that was his mother's father who was a

Canadian birdguide, hunting up in Norther Canada who could call down ducks and

call down the geese and stuff. And people would hire him to go bird-hunting and stuff.

He was like this world-famous Canadian bird guide and so we named it the WN

Raglan, which the nickname for this giant sailboat was "rags" which was the perfect

name for a big sailboat, ox-blood sails and everything.

But down below, all those little staterooms for the guests and stuff--each one the main

salon was name "Pearl". Pearl was Neil's maternal grandmother that was married to

WN Ragland, right. So the main salon was Pearl. And then there was "Rasees?"

which is his mother and his mother had two sisters, so each of the staterooms was

named after the daughters and then there were two heads. There was a head up in

Neil's place and then a head in the salon for everybody else to use. There were

showers in there and he goes, "What are we going to call them?" And I says, "The

head--the heads." And I said, "Well, we've got your grandfather and your

grandmother, we got their children, did you have any pets?" And he said, "Yeah, they

had two dogs." And I said, "What were the names of the dogs?" He said, "Bonnie

Pie and Stinky-poo!" There you go! Perfect. I'll take Bonny Pie and you can take

Stinkypoo out there!" (Laughs) So anyway, that was really fun.

So we're hanging out and -Oh- while we were there, Neil decides to go buy this 1936

Matherson-Trumpy riverboat, because there's inline canaals on the East coast and

they made these mahogany riverboats, kind of, houseboats, basically but they are

like, two-stories and everything, like a big kind of house, I mean these are about forty-

five feet long, it was a nice size, and antique, it had antique curtains and lace and

stuff in the windows. It was really cute. It kind of leaked a little but we got the got the

bilge pump going all the time. So he bought that and we moved on that while we

were working on the big boat, that's where Neil and I lived. And I think Ranger Dave

had to go back to California after awhile so it was just Neil and I.

So we are in Fort Lauderdale and then one day Stephen Stills has a big mansion on

an island off in Miami and he invites Neil and I to come down and in the Matherson-

Trumpy and he's got a big dock in his backyard and hang out. So Neil goes, "Let's

go!" I was in the Coast Guard so, you know, Neil felt safer than I did. So Neil made

me the temporary Captain. So we get her fired up. It's always fired up. The only

problem is, it has an electric bilge pump. It didn't have a battery-powered bilge pump

so once we unplugged from Fort Lauderdale we had about twenty-six miles of inland

canaal to go down to get to Stephen's place which is about three or four hours of

cruising at four and five knots and by the time we got to Stephen's we were low in the

water. Then it occurred to me, "Oh my God, I'd better check the bilge. I looked at the

bilge. Bilges were full. Just full. And I said, "Fuck man, we could fucking sink!" And

we still had like six more miles and another hour to get to Stephen's place and I just

go, "Come on, we got [can't hear-something?] we gotta go, we just--we may make it,

we may not make it." So we get to Stephen's place and we were so low in the water

it's almost coming up through the floor boards. The bilge was about three and a half,

four feet deep, so it was a lot of water, swimming pool basically. We get there and we

were so low in the water, Steve's going, "A-Hoy, there!" "Here take the ropes, get us

some tied up along side of the road, we need a power cord! Get a power cord ready!

Get us plugged in!"

We get plugged in. We hang out at Stephen's place for about two or three days with -

--you can only take so much of Stephen Stills so after about three or four days, Neil

goes, "Let's go down to Coconut Grove because that's where all the clubs were and

all the party time and some pretty girls and everything. He said, "Let's go down to

Coconut Grove and I can get us a slip down there." So we did. So we left and we

went over to Coconut Grove and we lived in Coconut Grove for about two weeks and

we are going up by car, we run up to Fort Lauderdale to check on the boat but who

lived in Coconut Grove was Freddy Neil, the singer-songwriter, Fred Neil. He wrote

"Everybody's Talking" the theme to the cowboy movie. [Urben Cowboy?] What's-his-

name sang it, made it famous, was the other guy [Glen Campbell?]. But Fred Neil

wrote it. Fred Neil was a real famous folksinger and it was the guy who actually took

young Bob Dylan off of the streets and started introducing him to the clubmembers in

Greenwich Village. When Bob first started it was Fred Neil that actually got Bob

going, you know, from Minnasota to you know...

And Fred Neil writes great songs. He wrote, "I've Been Searchin' For The Dolphins In

The Sea", the Linda Rondstat made famous. All kinds of people sang Freddie Neil

songs and they were all beautiful hits and stuff. And Freddie was a heroin addict and

had his own thing, but he was really a super nice guy. And his best friend in Coconut

Grove was Vinny Marty? [Martin?] and Vinny Martin had had a hit in the ' 50s, called

"Marianne: .....works down by the seashore, sifting sand...Even little children love

Marianne....down by the seashore sifting sand..." That was a huge hit in 1957 or

something. And so Vinny and Fred would come over to --we named the houseboat

the Evening Coconut, right? So they would come over to the Old Evening Coconut

and Vinny--I think Vinny went back to New York--so then mostly it was just Fred Neil

would come over with his guitar and Neil and him would sit on the back fantail in the

houseboat every evening around sunset, I'd make up a blender full of Margaritas and

we'd sit back there and they'd jam together. And Freddy Neil has a really low, deep

beautiful velvety voice, just incredible. And Neil has a really high voice and hearing

these two guys singing--it was like, Holy Shit, what a combination of voices. It was

amazing. And I was like the whole audience, it was an audience of one, me! It was

just so cool. Really nice, really cool. And I became friends with Fred and everything

and he was a good guy.

Send? Neil down at Coconut Grove at one of the clubs one night. I think I had a date

or something. He went off to some club. And he met some guy, you know, with a

gold chain around his neck, and has really got it--[fingers snapping] and Neil just

kinda got into this guy's trip, because it was just not kind of like us from the ranch or

anything, and the guy goes, "Let's go down and look at cars!" (because Neil is a car

guy). And the guy takes him to this Ferrari place, right? And he's trying to talk Neil

into buying a brand new Ferrari. Neil's a '48 Buick-guy. You know? Maybe a '57

Caddy if it's a convertable with fins. But he's not a Ferrari , in fact, he had an old

1932 Bentley and he got rid of it because it was just a little too sporty. And he

started---you know, they're into the blow and they're into the club scene, and I'm

staying at The Evening Coconut, and I'm kind of seeing what's happening, and Neil's

like really falling for this guy's rap and Neil's thinking, "Yeah Man, I can get a Ferrari."

And finally, I just went, "Man, Neil's just turning into this person that's not him, and

I've never seen him before, so one morning at breakfast I just went, "Look, I have to

tell you something. I've seen you hanging out with what's--his-name and it seems like

the more this guy kisses your ass, the more you bend over and smile." And I said, "I

can't take it. I don't want to be around it. I'm going back to California. You go buy

your Ferrari and have fun with your new friend and I'll just see ya. I'll be back in

California." And I split.

And I come back and I didn't want to go to the ranch because it's empty, Neil's back in

Florida. And so, I'm a Santa Cruz guy, so I phoned Jeff Blackbird? and Bob Moseley

from Moby Grape that used to play at the Ark where I had my very first light shows--

right? I told you about the Ark and Sauselito when I got out of the Coast Guard. And

those were my old buddies right there, Lee Michaels and stuff. But Blackbird lived in

Santa Cruz --and still does, and Bob Moseley lived down here and Johney Carviato

[spelling?] which is this drummer friend of ours, who makes really beautiful snare

drums, he wasn't back in those days, this was 1977, I moved back to Santa Cruz

from Florida, and Blackbird (Blackman?) had an old one-and-a-half acre--it used to be

a farm, it was that water tower on 38th Avenue, just a block from Pleasure Point. So I

still had my little tiny trailer from Malibu. So I went down, I picked up my trailer, it was

over at a friend's house, I'd stuck it over at a friend's place in Malibu and I went over

and I picked it up and I brought it back up to Santa Cruz and parked it on Buck's

property there, and was just getting ready--Buck and Johnny and Mosely--guitar,

bass, and drums, were going to put together a little trio and play over the Summer,

they were going to call themselves "Buck 'n The Odds" (Buckin' the Odds) and so

they said, "Cool man, you could be our manager!" Yeah, it's good, we're all pals. I

went, "Cool." So I move right in and it's kind of fun, I'm back in Santa Cruz and it's

really nice and I'm going for about two weeks and all of a sudden Neil shows up--and

he just drives in. I didn't even know how he found us but he did. And he drives in and

I go, "Oh". [Snide voice] "Where's your Ferrari?" and he goes, "Yeah, Mazz. Mazz,

I've got to tell you something." He goes, "I don't have many friends that can just

come and tell me the truth and how they see things. Most people just want to

accomadate me all the time and say yes to everything. You're a real friend. I just

have to let you know that I really value that." And I went, "Cool. Good." And he goes,

"So what are you guys doing?" And I said, "Well, we got a little three-piece band, we

started playing some clubs around town here, you know, Moseley and Blackburn [?]

and Johnny Gravianno. And he goes, "So you got, let's see, bass and--Blackburn's a

great rhythm guitar player and you got Moseley on bass and Johnny on the

drums....Sounds like they need another guitar player." And I went, "Sure!"

And so Neil literally moved into Buck's ranch with us, because it was a little apartment

off one side and all overgrown and we kind of cleaned it out and he moved in and we

drove around town and started figuring out what we were doing and we said, "Well,

we like doing these things called "Art Attacks" and so we are just going to just

consider this a Summer Surf band. Which is actually going to be an Art Attack in

disguise. And Neil goes, "Okay, but here's the deal. We are not going to play outside

the city limits of Santa Cruz. We're not going to play Cappatolla. All we did was city

limits of Santa Cruz. And they had about five or six live clubs going in 1977. There

was The Catalyst, which we never really wanted to play because it was too

[organized?] but they had these little tiny clubs. There was one called The Backroom,

which was [little off-of-London?] hotels off of SoCal Ave. There's one out on Harvey

West Park called The Steamboat, another one out there called The Crossroads,

which was a biker-beer bar--but they all had music. And there were bands, there was

The Snail Band, which was a local band, there was another band called The

Artichokes, and there was one that did nothing but 50's rock 'n roll stuff from San

Jose, played over here all the time at the beach and stuff. So there were five or six

little clubs that we could play, all just bouncing around. And one day we're driving,

one day Neil brought down this '48 Packard Woody station wagon which we made the

band car and we'd all drive around in the Woody from town over to Pleasure Point.

And we'd go by Twin Lakes, where the habor is, and the lagoon. And i was thinking,

"What are we going to call the band?" And we were throwing out all these names:

"Thunderhead!" All these different things...

And we go down into the Lagoon and there's a duck crossing from the beach over the

lagoon and they had a sign right in the road that said "Duck Crossing!" with this little

plywood cop and we'd been shouting out all these names and we come down the hill

we get to the lagoon and there's a little crosswalk and we kind of slow down and we

go "Oh, duck crossing...." and Neil goes, "That's it--Ducks! That's the perfect name!

Because in the grocery store and in the bakery shops, all over Santa Cruz at that

time in '77, they had big boxes of stale bread with signs saying, "Feed the ducks".

The whole town was into ducks! There was even a story about one of our surfer

buddies when I was in highschool named Dave Pussinger. Pussinger had this old

black Packard hearse. Really sinister old hearse. And Pussinger was about my age

and we were all juniors and seniors in high school and surfing at Pleasure Point and

Cals[?] Beach.

And Pussinger, one day, we didn't really didn't realize right at the time but we found

out later that when Pussinger's father was at Duck's Unlimited, right? He was a duck

hunter. And he had duck plates on the diningroom table, duck wallpaper, and

Pussinger's bedroom: Ducks--his whole--Pussinger grew up with ducks and his

parents didn't get along all that well, right? So one day, Pussinger is driving down by

the lagoon in his black hearse and this little family of ducks is waddling across from

the beach over to the lagoon and Pussinger steps on the gas and runs over and kills

six ducks and he's the only old black hearse in town, so it's pretty easy to figure out

who did it because there were witnesses. He gets arrested. This is years before we

got the band. Many years before. And he gets arrested and it's in the newspapers

and everything--"He's a duck killer!" and he gets up in front of the judge and the judge

sentences him to jail and says, "A day, a duck." So he had to go to jail for six days.

So when we had the ducks when I told them the story about Pussinger, and we

turned into "The Pussinger Curse", right? The only problem, in Santa Cruz, when

Pussinger killed the six ducks, there was Old Master Mallard [can't hear] he was like a

shaman duck. And he put a curse on the town that couldn't be broken unless

everybody in town quacked like a duck. And that would break the curse. So the

whole Summer thing was for the ducks to get everybody in town to at least once in

the Summer quack like a duck to break the curse. So we would have shows--the

ducks--and anybody that came with a duck call could get in for free. Anybody who

came up to the cash register--we decided to only charge $2.50 at the door because

when we all first met each other in ' 66 when I had my first light show at The Ark, that

was how much it cost to get in to see the shows, is $2.50. And by that time it was up

to four or five bucks, in '77 from '67. But we decided, let's have ten-year-old prices.

So these guys are getting Neil Young for $2.50 and so--crowds, just everybody--

beautiful girls--and just everything.

So we got everybody to quack like ducks at the concert. And we also got Mulligan,

from the ranch, who was a recording engineer. We got a truck set up with recording

equipment, a mobile truck. So we had Mulligan come down everynight from the

ranch up in by Half-Moon Bay, come down and wire up wherever we were going to

play in the afternoon and we recorded every single show we ever did for the entire

Summer. And I think that we're the only band that ever existed literally recorded

every single show that they ever did from beginning to end, we did like twenty-six

shows over the Summer. And we have all those records, all those recordings. We

kept them all. Neil's doing his archives now and he just had me do a take-off on the

Zuma album cover but there is also a duck album too, from the making of the duck

recordings. Then we started to pick, just the best take of this one, basically the duck

set, but the best of all the different shows, the best recordings to put together for the

record and I told Neil, I said, "No, man. What we should do is offer every single show

that we did from the time The Ducks started to the very last show. Then everybody

could go to every single show and listen to every single show, they'd have twenty-six

albums to listen to, you know? So, I don't know where they are at with that, because

it hasn't come out yet, but that's what I'm kind of hoping for, because that would be

like a truly historic thing, really historic.

So that was the -- we moved over by --you know where the museum over off Sea

Bright Beach is, with the Whale on the front lawn? Across from that museum are two

little cottages right on the cliff. Neil and I rented those. We rented them for $400 a

month. We moved out of my traier and out of funky Blackburn's--we called it Duck

Landing over on 38th Avenue. We moved off of Duck Landing and he and I got these

really cool places right on the cliff. The band would come over and there's a lawn at

one of the places right at the edge of a cliff and down off the cliff is Sea Bright Beach.

It used to be called Castle Beach in the old days. So we'd set up on the lawn and

every afternoon the band would play and practice for that night. First thing--I'm their

road manager--so first thing, they'd go, "Well, tonight we want to play The Crossroads

Club and I'd phone the Crossroads but they're all booked, right? They're booked.

They've got bands that are going to play that night. So I call The Backroom or The

Crossroads or whatever clubs they told me they wanted to play at, I'd call the club:

"Oh, The Artichokes are playing tonight." I'd say, "Well, give me their phone number."

So I would get their phone number and I'd go, "So you guys are playing The

Crossroads tonight, huh?" And they go, "Oh yeah." And I said, "Uh--how much

money do you think you're going to make tonight?" And they said, "Are you guys

playing in town?" I go, "Yeah". They'd go, "Not much!" Because everybody's going to

be to see us, right? And I'd say, "What do you think? A hundred bucks, a hundred

fifty bucks? How much?" And they'd say, "Yeah, if we're lucky we would make a

hundred bucks." I said, "I'll pay you $150 not to play. We'll take your spot tonight."

So I would pay them $150 and I'd say, "You're our guests, you know. Come and hang

out, have a good time." And so that's how I would do it, everyday I just phoned a

different band and they'd say Backroom tonight, or The Steamboat, a different place

everynight. And we just bounce it around. And I'd just phone whatever band that was

playing and we'd bump 'em, pay them not to show up, kind of farmers growing

soybeans or something.

Kirk: So the band would decide where to play the same day that they were going to

play.

Yeah, in the morning. They wouldn't even tell me until the morning, right? But

nobody's going to say no, because it's Neil Young and he's legendary in '77 he's got a

big rep. And the whole town's going nuts, everybody is quacking like ducks at the

concerts and stuff. Not everybody knew that if they just winked and said, "Cool

Duck." they could get in for free. Just people who we'd say, "Here, just tell the

cashier "cool duck" and wink and then [can't hear: Then they'd duck call?]. So on the

tape you hear people quacking like ducks all the time in between the songs. We'd

drive down the road and people would quack at us as we drove across town. India

Joe's was this restaurant in town that was a late-night restaurant so after the gig we

would go to India Joe's. But we never had much money. We'd be lucky at the end of

the night if we each made $2.50 each. They only held like a hundred fifty people,

seventy-five to a hundred fifty. Two hundred people was a big crowd. That's only like

$400 for Mulligan, and the soundtruck? and you know--we'd be lucky to end up with

$200 each at the end of the night. So we'd go to India Joe's and people would know

that we went there after the gig so that place was just rockin' like at one in the

morning [can't hear next word] because they were doing such good business, right?

Because we were there everynight, that the owner of the place, I'd tell 'em I'd say,

"Yeah, you know, we're a little short on money..." And they'd say, "Don't worry about

it!" I said, "Here's our check." He goes, "Just sign it 'Ducks'". And so I'd just write

"Ducks" on our bill and the guy started pinning them up by the cash register. He had

a whole wall. He said, "Yeah, it's deductable!" It was a business investment because

his business was making so much money from everybody else. So we ate for free. It

was really fun.

Then two motorcycle guys, near the end of the Summer, we were going pretty strong

and living at those places on the cliff. But we're off doing a gig one night and these

two motorcycle guys, a couple days before that last gig, went to the Crows' Nest with

guns and laid down everybody in The Crows' Nest, robbed The Crows' Nest--they

robbed The Sky-View drive-in movie theatre. They were on a binge, they were two

little outlaw motorcycle guys. They robbed the drive-in one night. They robbed the

Crows' Nest the next night. I think they did two or three robberies and then one night

they came over and broke into our house and stole a bunch of shit from us--BUT--

we'd had all Summer here, you know, and we'd go down to Union Grove to The

Guitar Shop and Neil would look at Guitars, and look at stuff. Just goofin' around

during the day. We bought bicycles. We'd ride bikes across town. it was really fun.

One time at Union Grove, right at the beginning, when we moved into the cliff house,

we went to Union Grove. When we'd crossed the country going to Miami, going on

route 66, we stopped in Nashville, Tennesee and hung out with Bobby Charles and

Ben Keith, Neil's steel guitar player. Bobby Charles is a friend of ours who wrote

"See Ya Later, Alligator". He was a song-writer's songwriter. Everybody Bobby

Charles, Bob Dylan--everybody sang Bobby Charles' s songs. He's legendary, and

he's a great guy, Cajun, from the swamp. We all hung out. We hung out there for

about a week-and-a-half in our bus because we were living in a bus across route 66

and there was an empty lot next to the Hall of Fame Museum in Nashville. There was

just this empty lot. We didn't even ask permission, we just parked in the empty lot

and Ranger Dave snuck an extention cord from the museum plug outside over the

fence and into our bus and we had electricity and just moved in there. It was a big

fancy bus and the museum just thought it was another rock or country-music star

[can't hear--something like "let us alone" ?]

So we're there, and we go shopping for guitars there in Nashville and we get turned

on to an opportunity to buy Hank William's guitar and his kid, Hank Williams Jr., who

does pretty good too. But as Hank Williams Jr., as a kid, he was a problem kid, and

his father was on the road and he died young himself, and Hank Williams Jr.

destroyed most of his father's guitars. So much so that one of the old-timer friends of

Hank's grabbed this Martin, that Hank had, and just got it out of the house, so he'd

already detroyed a couple of Hank's [stock?stuff?] . We got that guitar and we bought

a decoy guitar at Union Grove. It was an old Kay? that needed refinishing It was

beautiful. The guy did a beautiful job refinishing it. They only wanted fifty bucks for it

but it was so pretty. We bought it for $50 but they said, "This would be a good decoy-

(duck decoy--right!) and so we got it and when we set up the beach house in Neil's

livingroom I put the guitar stand and I put the decoy right there in the livingroom so

when the guys broke into the house they stole Neil's guitar, they stole the Kay but in

his back-bedroom closet, burried under some clothing, was Hank William's guitar, so

they missed that! So our decoy-thing worked! But it bummed out Neil that we got

broken into but that's what pretty much ended The Ducks, he went back to the ranch.

But the Ducks ended. I went to court and testified against the two guys and

identified my stuff.

So I became friends with the district attorney who later became a judge, which is

pretty cool. Anyway, that's pretty much the story of The Ducks, that's pretty good.