As I mentioned in the Introduction, memories are all
parents have after their children die. I’m trying to keep those precious
memories alive for as long as I can. The memories I’m including are not
necessarily the most important ones or ones that others will remember, but they
are ones that keep coming back to me. Even though my recollections are long,
they won’t be exhaustive. My intention is to give you a little flavor of Jay
and his mom.
I believe Jay and I had a special bond even before he
was born. On Thursday, February 8, 1968, at my weekly checkup, my obstetrician,
Dr. Girard, told me three things: (1) that Jay wouldn’t arrive for two weeks,
(2) that he would be out of town when the baby was due, and (3) that the other
doctor—the one with the big hands—would deliver our baby. I wasn’t pleased with
not having my regular doctor in the delivery room, so I told him the baby needed to arrive sometime
before he left town. “There is no way that this baby will be finished ‘cooking’
by the time that I leave,” he told me. And I said to myself, “We’ll see.” I
honestly believe that Jay was determined to arrive when I wanted him to,
evidence of the bond.
At 4:30 in the morning two days later, Jay made it known
that he’d arrive that day, a great day for me because it was my dad’s birthday.
Since our daughter, Wendy, was my daddy’s heart, my boy would need something
special to tie him to his Papa. Two things gave Jay that special tie: (1) he
was a boy (we have very few boys in our family), and (2) he was born on Papa’s
birthday. Don’t get me wrong . . . he didn’t edge Wendy out—he was just
welcomed with open arms.
Throughout his life, Jay was determined, and I think
that determination reared its head before he appeared on the scene. He knew
that he needed to enter the world on February 10, 1968, so that his mom didn’t
have to face the “other” doctor.
Jay loved me right from the start. You see, I was his
only source of nourishment. He came into this world fascinated with a certain
part of my anatomy. I wonder if that was a foreshadowing of his later interests.
Anyway, he just about wore me out. He’d nurse on and off all day long, with
short periods in between feedings, and then just when I’d be certain that I’d
get a long nap around midnight, he’d be yelling for me again. We developed
quite a relationship right then. We talked a lot during the night. He’d look at
me as though I were the only important person in the world. He always had a
special look for me. I remember that I worried a lot because he wouldn’t eat
“real” food, but the doctor assured me that if he continued to gain weight at the rate he was going, he would
weigh fifty pounds when he was a year old. I quit worrying. Eventually, he ate,
but he never “lived to eat,” as some of us do. I sometimes thought he was part
camel, storing up food so that he wouldn’t have to waste his time on such
mundane matters as eating. He had much more important things to do.
I suppose Jay’s life really began when we moved to
Pensacola because he had no memories before that time. The only house he could
ever remember living in was the one at 2720 Wilde Lake Blvd., in Pensacola,
Florida. This was truly home to Jay. I remember him running from room to room when he returned after
being gone for seven months to New York, ostensibly to make his fortune, shouting,
“My house! My house!” It was always his house.
Jay did not like for me to leave him when I went to work
each morning. Can you imagine how I felt each day when I left him squalling and
clinging to me either with a maid at home or at the baby-sitter’s house? We
mentioned to Frank’s mother that Jay was a miserable little boy. Her reply was
that she’d ask her sister, Aunt Bill to us, to help us. Aunt Bill headed to
Florida from Maine right after Christmas. He had no reason to cry with Aunt
Bill as his “sitter” because they spent days reading stories and playing games
and going to the beach. If he woke up during the night, they got up, read more
stories, ate cookies, and went back to bed eventually. What a life for both of
them!
After Aunt Bill left, we began to leave him at
Children’s World daycare center. He really liked it there although he didn’t
like taking a nap with the other children: the teacher would put him in a room
by himself. Independent little kid! Actually, some of the children misbehaved
during naptime, and it scared him to hear the teachers yelling at them.
When he was a little older, I almost enrolled him in one
of the Pensacola Christian day care centers so that he could get some teaching,
not just babysitting; however, when I investigated, I learned that if he talked
on the bus, he wouldn’t get any dessert at lunch. I changed my mind. That
probably wouldn’t have been too much punishment for him, though, since he never
did care much for sweets. If you knew Jay, can you imagine anyone’s trying to
squelch Jay’s talking? We used to tell him to play the quiet game during meals
at home. Otherwise, he’d still be sitting there talking when Wendy and Frank
and I had finished eating.
A man named Dale Godbold used to work in our store. His
brother died, and Jay heard us talking about someone named Godbold having
passed away. You can imagine Jay’s surprise when Dale walked into the store a
couple of days later when we were there. Jay turned to him in complete
consternation and said, “Why, Mr. Godbold! I thought you died!” Whatever came
into his head came out of his mouth.
One of my favorite memories of Jay took place in our car
one afternoon. He must have been about five years old, and evidently he and his
dad had had words about Jay’s climbing on Frank’s truck. We were riding toward Frank’s
store in Brownsville when he announced that he was going to be a fireman when
he grew up. He said he was going to be married and he and his wife would have
at least twelve children. He’d take his fire truck home at night, and he’d let
his children climb all over it. I said that that was nice and asked him if he
knew that those children would be my grandchildren. How did Jay answer? “Of
course, I know that.” Then came the important question. “And will you bring
your children to see me?” He looked at me, astonishment written all over his
little face. “Oh, Ma, you plolly be dead by then!” Out of the mouths of babes!
In the summer of 1973, we began preparing for Jay’s kindergarten
year at Beulah School. Days at the old Beulah School were wonderful years for
both Wendy and Jay. They loved the school, and they loved their teachers, who
gave them elementary teaching that carried them through all of their public
school years. I loved it out there. Everything was so much more peaceful than
it was at the big schools in the city. Both Wendy and Jay had Eugene Winters
for their principal at Beulah, Wendy the whole time and Jay until third or
fourth grade. I have some very specific memories of his years out in the
country.
Jay, like Wendy, loved going to school. Once, Mrs. Gunn,
his first grade teacher, had jury duty for a whole week. Jay cried every day
before he went to school because she wouldn’t be there and he didn’t like the
substitute. I went by one day to surreptitiously get a look at her myself, and
she was pretty scary, both in looks and in action. I could hear her screaming
at the kids, and you remember, I’m sure, that he didn’t like hollering
teachers. There really was nothing I could do except encourage my little boy to
be patient, that Mrs. Gunn would be back in a few days.
By the time he was in second grade, we had so many kids
at Beulah that Mr. Winters, the principal, had to form a second section of
second graders after school started. Jay really didn’t like the teacher whose
class he was originally in, and neither did we. She insisted on calling him “Frank”
because that was his real name. Jay cried about that, too, so one day I wrote a
note asking her to call him Jay. I also dressed him in his shirt that had Here Comes Trouble! written on the front
and Jay on the back. Shortly after,
he was moved to the newly formed class. I have always thought Mrs. Gunn had
something to do with that. Even if she didn’t, I’ve always thanked her in my
heart for it.
Third grade was Mrs. Vickery for both Wendy and Jay.
What a lady! All he ever mentioned in later years was boobs and breath when her
name came up. I’m forever grateful to her for making both of our children learn
their times tables before they could be promoted to fourth grade. She was a
rather old-fashioned teacher. I like old-fashioned!
Also, when he was in the third grade, Jay began two
activities that he continued throughout his life—kissing girls and playing the
piano. I didn’t actually see the kissing activity, but I heard about it. I
believe it started at the Beulah Fall Festival that year when he and his best
friend, Walter Glenn, talked girls into going behind the portable buildings
with them.
I was right there for the piano playing, though. From
the beginning, he was good. I can see him at the piano, sitting there with his
legs dangling from the bench, playing songs that really were too hard for such
a little boy. But he was gifted. Always gifted. Frank and I recognized his
gift, and later in life, he did, too. His piano teacher recognized talent and
entered him in many contests. One that I remember so well might have been a
catastrophe except for Jay’s positive attitude. Jim Hussong, his piano teacher,
realized about three days before a contest in Tallahassee that he had given Jay
the wrong piece to learn. Jay’s reaction? “No sweat, Mr. Hussong. I can learn
the new one.” And he did. Jim was more than pleased with both Jay’s attitude
and performance.
I made sure that he was placed in Mrs. Gainey’s room in
fourth grade because we had loved her for Wendy. Mrs. Gainey allowed him to be
creative, just as she had Wendy. Jay was happy in her class. Unfortunately, the
new principal, Lynwood Kent, was very much unhappy with me because I told all
the mothers in the neighborhood to call the school and request Mrs. Gainey for
their fourth graders. Lynwood stopped by our house one afternoon after school
to tell me that when he needed a curriculum director, he’d hire me.
Can a person inherit headaches? I think so. My dad
passed them on to me, and I shared them with Jay. Mrs. Gunn mentioned Jay's to
me. These were agonizing times in my little boy’s life. One of these memories
actually covers many instances. Every time he had a headache, he and I would
sit in the rocker in the living room and rock in the dark. That’s the only way
he got relief. Those were special times to me. Rocking my boy was one motherly
thing I could do.
When we took Jay to the doctor to find out what caused
the headaches, we were told that he had classic migraines. While we were
sitting in the examination room with him, the doctor noticed some little red
places on his arms and legs. When asked what they were, Jay looked innocently
up at the physician and said, “Child abuse.” You can imagine our chagrin. The
doctor, however, was smarter than Jay thought and said he didn’t believe that
(Whew!); he had had a sister, and the doctor recognized the signs of
sister/brother horseplay when he saw it. That kid!
Another headache memory comes with thoughts of Jay’s one
and only attempt at football. All the other kids, Walter Glenn and Joe Jacobi probably,
were playing, so Jay wanted to play, too. We outfitted him and began going to
practice. His football “career” lasted about two weeks. He had a couple of
headaches during that time, and the coach accused him of trying to get out of
practice and made him go out on the field even though his head was splitting.
Jay never liked to be accused of lying if he wasn’t, so he said that he’d had
enough. I admitted readily that I had, too, and we both threw in the towel . .
. excuse me . . . uniform. The closest he ever came to football again was
playing xylophone in the high school band.
Even though Jay had taken piano for several years during
his elementary school days, his real love of music probably began in middle
school, for it was at this time that he joined the Bellview Middle School band.
He “blew the sax.” I know that’s a strange way to put it, but it was such an
awful sound at first. However, the screech didn’t last long. Soon he was
playing really well, so we didn’t have to put him out in the barn to practice,
as I thought we might have to. I don’t remember any specific instances of Jay
in band in middle school, except for going to concerts at Christmas time and at
the end of the year.
He also was tremendously interested in running during
this time. Soccer was a love, too. Jay never wanted to be anything but a star,
and during these years, he aspired to be another Pele. I took him to countless
soccer practices and games. I remember one particular game when I was sitting
in the stands cross-stitching and watching. (Yes, I could do both at the same
time.) I looked up just in time to see Jay butt the ball for a goal. I yelled,
“That’s using your head, son,” and was immediately relieved to know that he
hadn’t heard me because he would have been really embarrassed.
He was so little in middle school. One of his teachers
called him “Too-Tall Young,” after some famous athlete; he even had “Too Tall”
written on the back of one of his jerseys. Jay didn’t mind being short; in
fact, I always felt that he took pride in being the smallest but often the
“tallest” in accomplishments. He never longed (pun intended) to be tall. I
recall once his telling me that he had no desire to be a big person. But he was
big in many ways.
I think it was probably during his middle school years
when he rushed into the house crying about something that had happened in the neighborhood.
After he was about eight or so, he never cried much, so I was really surprised.
It seems that one of his friends had thrown Jay’s new Nikes into Walter’s pool.
Jay was so angry. I can’t even describe it. Thank goodness I don’t think I ever
saw him that angry again. The only time after this one that I recall him crying
was when he was much older. He and Suzy, his girlfriend, had had a horrible
falling out on the phone on Christmas Eve. The only solution that I could offer
was for him to call her to apologize and then to come home to spend the night
with us. He did both. We all felt better.
I told you earlier that Jay loved school. Don’t get me
wrong: He was not a wonderful student. I’d never try to convince myself that he
was. However, he loved people and fun, and that’s where both were—at school. He
also loved his teachers, like Mrs. Gunn, Mrs. Gainey, Mrs. Jackson, Mr.
Whitten, Mr. Ewing, Mr. Buck, Mr. “Longwoit,” Mrs. Crumpton, Mrs. Thompson,
Mrs. Livingston, and lots of others. But there was one teacher in middle school
that he did not like at all because she embarrassed him. I think she taught
math and science. Once when he made an F on a test, she told the whole class.
He just couldn’t stand it. His grades plummeted in her class, so we went for a
conference. She was not a delightful person, and we understood why the kids
would misbehave. They wanted to be put into the “hole,” a solitary place behind
bookshelves, for punishment to get away from her. Jay spent a lot of time there.
After the conference, we never complained about his grade. We just continued to
demand the best that he could do, realizing that he was working under very much
adverse circumstances with that teacher.
Just before he left Bellview Middle School to go to Pine
Forest High School, Jay announced that he wouldn’t be in band in high school.
Instead, he’d run cross-country. He didn’t think it would be “cool” to march
and play his sax because he might damage his teeth. Don’t ask me where he got
that idea. But if he got an idea in his head, it was there to stay. Well, Wendy
would have none of that. I remember that she took him outside at home and
talked to him for a while. When they came in, she announced that Mr. Buck had
an opening for a xylophone player and that Jay was going to fill the spot. Had
Jay ever played mallets before? No. Did that discourage him? No. He brought the
xylophone home and taught himself to play. I don’t think he ever missed a
Friday night “gig” in the Pine Forest band during his four years there.
Most of my memorable moments with Jay in high school
involved band. The PFHS band was not new to us. We had been through four years
with Wendy, so we were very much familiar with meetings and duty at the
concession stand and contests and last-minute ironings of uniforms . . . and on
and on and on. We loved John Buck, the band director, and his band. I must
admit that it was difficult for me to be a teacher at Woodham and a parent at
Pine Forest. I had to work really hard not to mix the two. When he and Jimmy
Mills were in Suncoast Sound Drum and Bugle Corps the summer of 1984, Jay
learned to play drums. That completed his percussion education. He wrote the
cadence for drums his senior year, and my heart beat right along with the drums
as the band marched into the stadium. Pride!! The night that he played his trap
set on the field was almost too much for this mother’s heart. The time that my
heart thrilled the most, though, was at Honors Night when John Buck gave him
the Band Award, saying simply that he had never known a student with so much
talent. In 1992 Jay still held that place in John’s heart. He told me so when
Jay died. Again, John brought joy to a mother’s heart.
Of course, I remember the night in January of 1985, when
Joey Allred called Jay. I was doing dishes, and I heard Jay say something about
a band. That’s when Velvet Melon was born. The name of the band didn't come that
night, though. It was months later when Jay's girlfriend at the time, Gina
Forsberg, told him that she had seen something strange carved on a desk at Tate
High School: Velvet Melon. "That's it, Gina. Our band is Velvet
Melon!" And he announced it to the guys that evening . . . immediate
acceptance.
Jay and Joey had a dream, a dream to have the best rock ‘n’ roll band in Pensacola. The dream began to develop every Saturday morning around 10:00 and went on for about four hours, letting up only for the guys to consume dozens of hot dogs. That was all I could afford to buy that bunch of boys who all looked and sounded alike to me. Even though Joey and Jay together formed Velvet Melon, Jay was always in the lead. I could hear him giving orders as I set out the food. It’s so funny that a month before the band came into existence, Frank was preaching about the ills of rock music, and I was shouting “Amen” to what he said. According to Frank, that rock beat would mess up your heart. I wonder. Somehow, though, when our boy began to play and sing the “stuff,” it wasn’t quite so bad.
Jay and Joey had a dream, a dream to have the best rock ‘n’ roll band in Pensacola. The dream began to develop every Saturday morning around 10:00 and went on for about four hours, letting up only for the guys to consume dozens of hot dogs. That was all I could afford to buy that bunch of boys who all looked and sounded alike to me. Even though Joey and Jay together formed Velvet Melon, Jay was always in the lead. I could hear him giving orders as I set out the food. It’s so funny that a month before the band came into existence, Frank was preaching about the ills of rock music, and I was shouting “Amen” to what he said. According to Frank, that rock beat would mess up your heart. I wonder. Somehow, though, when our boy began to play and sing the “stuff,” it wasn’t quite so bad.
I was in
love with all that Jay did. Frank, Wendy, and I were Jay’s #1 fans, and Steve, Wendy’s
first husband, was right up there with us. Naturally, certain gigs stand out
more than others. We went to all of them, except for the private parties,
which, by the way, were usually broken up by the police, who were responding to
the complaints of neighbors. It’s probably a good thing that we weren’t invited
to those gala events anyway because we might have seen some things that our
tender eyes didn’t need to see yet. We did see some things that we shouldn’t
have; however, we thought it best to ignore them.
The gigs that I enjoyed most were those at Pine Forest
(sock hops, talent shows, even concerts). I can’t remember when Velvet Melon
started to play in clubs, but it was probably after Jay was out of high school.
But the clubs that I enjoyed most in the early days were Longnecker’s and
Fennegal’s. I never did care much for The Rex, an old theater where I went to
movies when I was a teenager. None of these are in existence now.
Homecoming at PFHS -- He had on the whole tux when he escorted a friend at halftime.
Before I begin to tell you about Jay’s years after high school and in Velvet Melon, the best years of our lives with our boy, I need to mention some disclaimers.
Homecoming at PFHS -- He had on the whole tux when he escorted a friend at halftime.
Before I begin to tell you about Jay’s years after high school and in Velvet Melon, the best years of our lives with our boy, I need to mention some disclaimers.
When a parent writes about his or her child after the
child has died, it’s very easy to make the child out to be an “angel.” I assure
you that Jay wasn’t an angel, that he did things that later he wasn’t
necessarily proud of and that I certainly wasn’t proud of. I didn’t know about much
of the trouble that he got into during his young adult years because he and
Wendy and his friends kept me in the dark. They protected the mother who
worries much too much.
Because I wasn’t involved in most of the trouble that
Jay got himself into, my memories don’t involve the scrapes with the law and
the underage drinking. I found out in later years that we didn’t escape some of
these “events”; we just didn’t know what was going on. Even though we
discovered later some of the things Jay did, things we didn’t approve of, we
were happy to know for sure that he was not involved in drugs. It really is a
miracle in the twentieth century and especially in the rock music scene for a
person not to be involved in this aspect of the lives of young people. I never
feared that Jay would have anything to do with drugs; in fact, I can remember
telling him that he might get in trouble because of his outspoken abhorrence of
them. I feared that someone might slip something into a drink just to prove to
him that he, too, would do drugs. That never happened. Thank you, Lord! One
line that he wrote in an original song has always comforted me: “I don’t mix drugs
with rock ‘n’ roll/I’ve got Jesus in my heart to save my soul.” Isn’t that a
wonderful line? Another precious memory for this mother.
In 1989, Jay moved his band to New York to make their
fortunes playing in clubs in the Village and on the Jersey Shore. They all
needed steady jobs to support themselves while playing music in clubs so that
they could be discovered. The job that Jay thought would earn him the most
money was that of a messenger. He had seen the movie Quicksilver, about a young man who made good money and had an
exciting, dangerous life delivering messages. Jay was sure that he could do the
same, especially in the area of money. Wrong! He got the job. Actually, anyone
who showed up for work could have a job. The problem was that when he reported
for work, most of the time there wasn’t anything for him to do; therefore, he
wasn’t a messenger for long.
Andy Waltrip, one of Jay’s best friends, was already in
New York City when the guys arrived and had a job at The Beanstalk Restaurant
in Rockefeller Center. Andy told the manager about these starving Southern musicians,
and the manager agreed to interview them. Each went individually to talk to the
manager. Each was hired. I don’t know how the other guys touted themselves, but
Jay laid it on thick about all the experience he had had. His little job during
high school, washing pots and pans at Adrian’s Barbecue just down the street
from our house, turned into a fantastic job in an upscale restaurant in his
hometown. Jay could always stretch a story!
All the guys liked working at The Beanstalk Restaurant
and for good reason: they had at least one meal a day. If they were blessed
enough to get a double shift, they ate twice. Obviously, part of their reward
for working a shift was being able to order what they wanted to eat, taking time
during a break to devour a real meal. In addition to getting their earned
meals, they watched carefully when a family with small children were eating.
They eyeballed the kids to see whether or not they touched their food much and
took dibs on their plates. Not being afraid of germs or disease, if Jay, for
instance, said, “Dibs on that kid’s plate,” it meant that he could eat whatever
he wanted of what the kid left. As far as I know, none of the Velvet Melon
waiters ever got sick from cleaning the plates of kids.
The only day they didn’t like being waiters was
Thursday, the day they dubbed “Blue Hair Day.” The Blue Hairs were little old
ladies who met for lunch on Thursday. You may not remember when older ladies
went to the beauty parlor to have their gray hair colored . . . blue. I
remember, but I never understood why my mother did this. And so did elderly
ladies in New York City. I’m sure that the guys were very polite to them, even
treated them the way they’d treat their grandmothers; however, they dreaded it
when these ladies sat at their tables. And why would they dread these sweet
little old ladies? Because they sat at the guys’ tables for hours (or so my
story-stretching son said) and were the stingiest tippers ever. Waiters have always depended on tips
because they seldom get paid much by their employers. I can remember answering
the phone at home from time to time and hearing a very excited Jay saying,
“Guess what, Mom! I tipped out today at a hundred!,” meaning that he made a
hundred dollars in tips. Never on Thursday, though.
Since the main reason for Jay and the guys moving to New
York was to play music in hopes that an agent would hear/see them. (Another
main reason for Jay’s going was to be with his girlfriend Suzy. She and Andy
kept the guys afloat lots of times not only with money lent—and probably never
repaid—but also with encouragement.)
Getting a gig in Greenwich Village in 1989 wasn’t easy. In order to play at The Bitter End, for instance, the guys had to walk the streets of the Village, giving out tickets advertising the band, and they had to make the tickets themselves. If—and that’s a big IF—the people showed up for the gig and presented the tickets along with the cover charge, the guys received a dollar for every ticket collected. Wendy, Frank, and I were at one of those gigs, a gig where there were about ten or fifteen people in attendance. Ten or fifteen dollars for five guys to divide hardly foreshadows fortunes. They also played at Kenny’s Castaways in the Village, but I don’t remember the process for playing there or at a club on the Jersey Shore. What I do know is that these young musicians gathered fans, but I also know that they couldn’t make enough money to pay bills; therefore, in August 1989, they headed home, where they knew they could stay booked as much as they wanted. I can assure you that Pensacola welcomed the hometown boys back with open arms. Frank, Wendy, and I were overjoyed to have Jay and Velvet Melon back where they belonged, at least for a while.
Jay and Suz
Getting a gig in Greenwich Village in 1989 wasn’t easy. In order to play at The Bitter End, for instance, the guys had to walk the streets of the Village, giving out tickets advertising the band, and they had to make the tickets themselves. If—and that’s a big IF—the people showed up for the gig and presented the tickets along with the cover charge, the guys received a dollar for every ticket collected. Wendy, Frank, and I were at one of those gigs, a gig where there were about ten or fifteen people in attendance. Ten or fifteen dollars for five guys to divide hardly foreshadows fortunes. They also played at Kenny’s Castaways in the Village, but I don’t remember the process for playing there or at a club on the Jersey Shore. What I do know is that these young musicians gathered fans, but I also know that they couldn’t make enough money to pay bills; therefore, in August 1989, they headed home, where they knew they could stay booked as much as they wanted. I can assure you that Pensacola welcomed the hometown boys back with open arms. Frank, Wendy, and I were overjoyed to have Jay and Velvet Melon back where they belonged, at least for a while.
Not too long before Jay moved to New York with Velvet
Melon, he told me that he wished I’d think of something besides roast beef and fixings
for lunch on Sunday. So when he moved home after eight months in the North, I
asked him what he wanted for lunch on Sunday, certainly not planning to prepare
roast beef. Roast beef, of course was
his answer! He was ready for Mama’s Southern cooking, and he got it. Here’s another
funny thing about his return to Pensacola. When he walked into our house as
soon as the long trip was over, he walked from room to room shouting, My house! My house! My boy was overjoyed
to be back in his Southland, and overjoyed
is an understatement for what his mom felt.
I believe it was the Christmas after the guys returned
from New York when we had a wonderful surprise. For many years on Christmas
night, the guys had gigs, and Jay usually left for the gig around 7:00. On this
particular Christmas, Jay got up from the lunch table and announced that he had
to leave. We assumed that he was going to a practice before that evening’s gig.
Not so, though. About two hours after he left, we heard Christmas carols
outside. Upon checking, we found the guys playing the carols for us. What a
sweet Christmas surprise for the families of all the guys. They were going from
home to home to give this special “giff” to families.
I have a few more memories that I must share with you
because they show so well the kind of young man Jay was. Gigs were so important
in Jay’s life, and they were in ours, too. We went to all the gigs in
Pensacola, especially the ones at Coconut Bay on Sunday evenings. If I hadn’t
finished getting ready for the week ahead in my classroom, I sat and made
lesson plans on cocktail napkins while Velvet Melon entertained the raucous
crowd. Jay didn’t mind that I worked while he played, but he told me not to
grade papers. I wouldn’t have dared since my students would have questioned
where I’d graded them because of the lingering smoke and alcohol smells that
would have permeated the pages. Specific gigs are indelible in my memory.
I dreaded one of the nights at Coconut Bay because I
knew what would happen that evening: He was going to let one of the band
members go. During the first break, I kept looking around for Jay, but he was
nowhere to be seen. Finally, I spotted him, do-rag on his head, huddled in
fetal position off in a corner, obviously praying for help with his task. How
my heart hurt for him. He knew what was best for his band, but that guy was his
friend, and he couldn’t stand to hurt him. So many times he said to me, “Please
pray, Mom. I’ve got to have help.” And I prayed. And he did, too. I wonder how
many people know that about my boy. A few do.
This gig is different. I call it a No-Gig Gig. One
Thursday, not too long before Jay died, a friend called him to ask a favor . .
. a favor with $100 attached to it. The friend had been asked to be in a video
on Saturday at Seaside with the Bellamy Brothers. The track had already been
laid down, and the Brothers were making the video to go with the music. All Jay
had to do was to pretend to be playing the saxophone. For $100? Of course, he
could do that! But to satisfy himself and the musician in him, he had to do
something first. He went out and bought the tape of “I Could Be Persuaded,” the
song that he would be “playing,” listened to it who knows how many times,
memorized it on the way to Seaside (about an hour away from Pensacola),
practiced it after he arrived, and fingered the song correctly on the video. He
couldn’t bear the thought of a sax player watching the video and seeing that
Jay wasn’t really playing the song. One of the production guys from the Bellamy
Brothers told Jay, after hearing him practice, that he’d like to talk to him
soon about doing some work with his musicians. That didn’t happen, maybe
because the guy forgot or didn’t really mean it or Jay died too soon.
One Monday morning in the spring before he died, Jay
called me at school to register a complaint. It seems that he had had it with
us! We would go to his gigs, sit through one set, and then leave without
telling him good-bye. What greater compliment could a twenty-four-year-old son
give his parents? None, as far as I’m concerned. Then there was another time
when he called me at school. Becky McPheron answered the phone in the teachers’
work area. He wanted to speak to me, but before she went to look for me, she
told him that we were all burning up because the air conditioning wasn’t
working properly. She said, “Your mom’s really hot today.” His reply: “My mom’s always hot!” Now, that’s a
compliment, too, and a good title for a book about my boy.
And then there was the
night of October 31, 1987, when Velvet Melon played “Rebel Yell” for Wendy and
“My Girl” for Corey. Corey had just entered the world about four hours before
the gig. The guys were dressed in their costumes: Jay was the Punk Monk that
year, wearing the outfit that one of my students wore when we were studying The Canterbury Tales, and he had to
recite the Monk’s Prologue. Everyone was so excited about their new little
mascot. When she was older, Corey was right up there with the #1 fans! So many
times Jay played songs for her while she was at gigs, dancing away on the dance
floor of a bar. She was a light in his life. He loved her even though he didn’t
always know exactly what to do with her.
The gig that will always be most memorable to me, though, is
the one on the night of June 27, 1992, Jay’s last gig. I wouldn’t take anything
for that evening. We were at Yesterdays in Chattanooga, TN, heard every lick,
saw every wink, loved every minute of it. He came and sat with us during one of
the breaks—as he always did—and said, “You’ll never know the feeling, the
feeling of having them right in the palm of your hand!” He loved performing—leading
the audience in whatever direction he wanted them to go. One of his best
friends, Andy Waltrip, was right. Jay had charisma . . . and he still has it. If
you’re my friend on Facebook, maybe you’re one of the couple of dozen folks who
write beautiful comments about my boy even after a quarter of a century. You’ll
never know the thrill that you give Frank and me.
Jay with the audience in the palm of his hand. Cinco de Mayo in Pensacola.
Jay with the audience in the palm of his hand. Cinco de Mayo in Pensacola.
For three days after that last gig, we were with Jay and
the guys in their new home near Nashville. The guys composed and recorded; I read; we (Jay, Frank, and I)
shopped for a washer and dryer. Jay and I acted silly while Frank had to be
serious with the saleslady, whom we invited to gigs in the Nashville area
(she’ll never know what she missed). My heart soared as I listened to Jay
negotiate with Bill Puryear, an agent ready to sign Velvet Melon. We ate out; Jay
cooked breakfast for us; he ate my leftovers from the Chinese restaurant that
he never had a chance to go to. I was “smitten” with vertigo (thank goodness). I
watched him leave for the last time, dressed in the outfit that we buried him
in. I thought as he left, “I can see why the girls love him. He is SO cute!”
And now, I hope you know my boy, Jay Young. As Jay
always said, as he left home, “I’m outta here!” And so I, too, am outta here,
ready to tell you about the last days in the life of a gifted musician, my boy.
Earliest family photo
Arab Jay -- dressed by Wendy
Jay and his gang -- PFHS cafeteria
1986 PFHS Graduation with Casey and David
Family Photos
Wendy and Jay -- camping trip Wendy and Jay -- He's trying to lick her!
Corey and Jay -- Can you see the love?
ZZZZZZ -- Pooped after Christmas
1986 PFHS Graduation with Casey and David
Family Photos
Wendy and Jay -- camping trip Wendy and Jay -- He's trying to lick her!
Corey and Jay -- Can you see the love?
ZZZZZZ -- Pooped after Christmas
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