NIGHT LIFE
Alex Coolman
Even from the parking lot, I could hear a band playing inside Club Mesa.
Something was horribly wrong.
I was supposed to go check out the spoken word event the Costa Mesa club
holds on Wednesday evenings. I was supposed to bring back a heart-rending
story about the terrifying phenomenon known as the open mike.
Here I was, all dressed down in T-shirt and grubby slacks, the better to
fit in with the punker wordsmiths I expected to encounter. I had a surly
grimace creeping across my face and a pronounced slouch to my posture. If
crowds of grunge poets were holding up the bar, I would be totally
incognito.
But a band was playing. And not even a particularly great band. Three
guys were huddled up on the stage, their backs turned to the meager
audience. They were churning through a set that consisted mostly of
arrhythmic noodling, with occasional passages of moderately competent
strumming.
Not only was I not seeing any spoken word action, I hadn’t even brought
my earplugs. Tinnitus, here I came!
But all was not lost, necessarily. The crowd checking out the band looked
suspiciously arty. One guy was wearing a tie. Various nervous and
troubled-looking women were scattered around the room, clutching thick
books of what were almost certainly erotic sonnets or depressive
limericks. With any luck, the three rockers might eventually be persuaded
to relinquish the spotlight in favor of these West Side scribblers.
Which is what happened. The band mercifully called it a night and the
poetic floodgates were opened. Maybe it was just the can of beer I’d been
served, but the night was starting to seem entertaining.
Oscar Wilde once wrote that all bad poetry springs from genuine feeling,
and that basically sums up my feelings about the aesthetic merits of the
average open mike event. They’re fine as therapy for the people who
participate in them; they’re agony for anyone who isn’t also on the
literary 12-step program.
The catch with Club Mesa, though, is that the crowd at the bar is a lot
meaner and more entertaining than the excessively generous cafe-dwellers
who are typically the audience for a reading. At Club Mesa, if bad poetry
starts springing, the bruisers and skinheads start heckling. And that’s
when the fun begins.
Take the woman named Leotha, who steps up to Club Mesa’s mike on a
regular basis: she’s charismatic and funny, and she writes about sex
quite a bit -- a gambit that goes over big with the peanut gallery.
One of the guys sprawled on the floor occasionally decided it was
necessary to start applauding in the middle of poems or to slur “Let’s go
play pool” to a friend, who was himself slumped across several chairs.
All of which seemed like an appropriate response to what was being said:
when the person on the stage is mumbling things like “This cross I bear
has become burdensome ...” it’s time to talk a little trash.
Fortunately, a lot of what gets read at Club Mesa is of a respectable
quality. If it’s not life-changing material, it’s at least engaging and
occasionally funny. One of the women who had looked so promisingly
neurotic got up and read a story about buying a man at a discount store
-- a story that managed to draw chuckles even from the beefy dudes with
the chain wallets and the tattoos.
Best of all, the reading started off with a poem by a guy named “Phil
Dog,” who is apparently a poetic type trapped inside the body of a
rocker.
After giving a few of the requisite shout-outs from the stage to his
various homies -- “Don’t drink all my beer, dog!” -- Phil launched
laughingly into what was unquestionably the grimmest selection of the
evening.
“So I woke up this morning with anger,” he said, chuckling conspicuously.
Phil Dog then proceeded to rant about suicide, running through the
various methods one might choose to carry out that act -- all the while
working very hard to keep up the pretense that the poem was a sort of
wacky joke.
Phil Dog’s friends, who could barely contain their hilarity, obviously
weren’t particularly concerned that there might be some sort of emotional
turmoil behind all that talk of death and destruction.
In a way, it was a refreshingly callous response to an open mike reading,
the kind of response that the boozy crowd and the bar setting encourages.
Club Mesa isn’t the right venue for sensitive analysis of psychological
bruises anyway; it’s the kind of place you hang out if you already know
you’re bruised and you feel like consorting with the others among the
wounded.
It’s this general attitude -- an awareness that screwed-up people don’t
really heal themselves through poetry -- that makes Club Mesa’s open mike
fun to witness. At the end of the night, the neurotic women are still
neurotic, and the beefy drunks are still sucking down beer. It’s
thoroughly unhealthy, and it’s fine entertainment.
FYI
WHAT: Open mike night at Club Mesa
WHERE: 843 West 19th St., Costa Mesa
WHEN: 9 to 11 p.m. Wednesdays
HOW MUCH: Free
PHONE: (949) 642-8448
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