Tuesday, September 21, 2010

BOB BAUER, COUNTRY ART PUNK: THE NIGHT OF THE LITTLE SANDWICHES (1982) -by Kerrie Sullivan Stepnick

Bob would have roared with laughter, uttering one of his mirthful growls - surely he would have put the kibosh on the notion that the “E” in “Sleazy E Ranch” stood for “evil.” He had arrived by night, so until he stumbled out of the house into noisy din of a Boston summer morning to enjoy his first cup of coffee in our tiny, pathetically barren back yard, he did not understand the significance of that “E”.  It’s not like he was in a hurry to leave town, but had he stuck around long enough to hear how some people talked, one can imagine him guiding our critics on the brief walk over a highly trafficked bridge (which all but crossed over the top of the “E Ranch”) for a bird’s eye view of what brought one of those famous involuntary shrieks to his lips:  an army of  two-story tall stout robot aliens standing rigidly at attention, connected head to toe by a complex grid of wires in perfect formation across some ten-odd acres, encompassed by an equally tall chain link fence topped with razor wire.  Boston Edison’s second largest electrical transformer station perpetually buzzed and crackled and hummed not sixty feet from the kitchen window of “the E” as our home was also known. 

No one who saw the place by daylight took exception to ”ranch” status either, despite the fact that probably no livestock other than police horses dwelled within a one hundred mile radius.  The Walsh family – our landlords who lived next door - had sliced lengthwise with a brick wall clean through the center of a classic Boston triple-decker, creating two rental units architecturally suggestive of three story tall mobile homes.  Their yard bristled with animals, albeit formed of molded plaster or concrete.  Their tacky fantasia of rabbits, giant toads, mushrooms, butterflies, ducks, lambs, cows, various birds and leprechauns (really, who can remember?) initiated a theme which streamed on inside to litter their house, whose interior was dominated by a huge, perennially squawking television set crowned by a genuine chunk of the Roman Coliseum.   Mrs. Walsh’s prudent business strategy was to collect rent individually from each of the inhabitants of the south unit.  While she always received rent from at least some of us, none of us could form a quorum to evict anyone else.  It also took her a few years to resolve problems with the “dark side of the ‘E’.”  The northern unit, which received next to no sunlight, served as a group home for young autistic people who occasionally strayed into the south E for surprise visits, sometimes locking themselves in the bathrooms or the attic for hours before they were coaxed back home.

Bob and Greg Garvin did not find the door to the E ranch locked.  Even in Boston it was unnecessary.  The neighborhood feared the household and its frequent noisy activities.  The renters sublet their basement to local punk bands for rehearsals, resulting in a steady stream of bizarre characters meandering in and out of the place at all hours, many of whom sported the black leather, chains, studded bracelets, bizarre hair and make-up which then were considered reasonable political responses to the initiation of the Reagan era.  Some came and went on skateboards, and no one, renters included, knew for certain how many people inhabited the E.  Quieter activities included “outdoor television,” starry nights when various occupants perched a black and white TV set atop a short ladder in the center of the small front yard, facing the blue blaze toward the front porch, whereby the whole world could witness the bizarre, pulsing light of television in a fresh artistic context as the notorious house appeared to tremble from irradiation to distant passersby.  Such were “postmodern” times, when the art world had degenerated into an apparent psy-ops boondoggle gone amok. 

Our new art heroes’ visit was a complete surprise.  Earlier that year, Bob had given me a lift back to my university from Livingston cross country as far as Ironton, Ohio in his sassy red convertible.  A delirious romp through the verdant Midwest, my Bob-guided tour included a jaunt through the Kentucky hillbilly regions on the other side of the Ironton River from where Bob was raised, and a shopping spree at the Ironton local Salvation Army thrift shop - Ben Franklin stores’ answer to the Twilight Zone - which yielded a fine art heirloom of one plastic half-bust JFK mold.  I had the pleasure of meeting his Mom and spending a couple of nights before heading on to Boston aboard a Greyhound bus. 

One night a few weeks after my return to the E Ranch, the doorbell rang.  This was odd as it never had rung before. The door was seldom shut, and anyone who had the moxie to enter – ghoulishly-attired antique mannequins attended the doorway – usually just drifted in like they owned the place.  I opened the door to see what looked like a couple of cowboy-style ruffians, hat brims pulled low over their faces, and Bob inquired with a well-disguised growl:  is Kerrie here, ma’am?  It took me a minute to catch on.

Inside, Bob convulsed with squeals of laughter, beholding all the industry he’d helped bring about since I’d left Ohio. The E Ranch was inhabited by what might loosely be termed artist/musicians, many of whom were then caught up in the thrall of Kennedy bust manufacture.  What rascality!  Kennedy busts numbered in the dozens. Every day flowers were purchased from the Moonies on the corner and crammed into the face of the half bust mold while still fresh, and then plaster was drenched over them to immortalize their impressions in place.  Paint, food coloring and whatever else was found at hand supplied diverse finishing touches.   The effects on the facial features of the progressively wilting flowers entombed in plaster rendered dramatic, eerily lifelike insinuations of the manner of death of the model. 

It was perhaps the strangest JFK honorarium ever seen:  the book case in the living room was a grid of some fifty squares, each one now containing a Kennedy.  One of the scalawags had painted a specific hairstyle and mustache onto a “Hitler Kennedy,” another featured imbedded doll lip implants which held smoking cigarettes.  Someone ran across a bust of Elvis in the trash and dropped it by, for the house served as the local Americana repository and such gifts constantly manifested via anonymous donations.  While taking a reverse impression of Elvis when initiating the mutant Elvis-Kennedy series, it was discovered that by lightly dusting a reverse mold with spray paint from beneath the chin, a holographic shadow effect was created; the eyes appeared to follow the viewer everywhere.  The Kennedy business had burgeoned into a “process piece” filling two rooms around the time Bob and Greg showed up, accented by dozens of plastic flowers which one artist had taken from a cemetery, stabbing their wiry stems upside-down into the rotting acoustic ceiling tiles as a decorative appointment which concealed the history of plumbing leaks upstairs.  Montana souvenirs included a genuine jackalope mounted over the kitchen table, augmented with a second, much larger set of elk antlers, the whole mess duly strung with blinking colored Christmas lights, the stuffed rabbit snout adorned with the obligatory rubber nose/glasses prop.  The colorful, perpetually twinkling snarl of lights illuminated the front of a refrigerator onto which had been affixed – among other accents - the former parking place placard of F. Lee Bailey.

One “E” alumnus, although unfortunately not on hand for the occasion of Bob’s and Greg’s visit, would be destined to carry the Ironton-inspired Kennedy tradition to its ultimate extreme.  Private Kitsch (a pseudonym will suffice) vehemently denied being an artist, although she was culpable of masterminding initiatives such as anonymously propping large wooden cutouts of entire herds of cattle in a dismal vacant lot by night, also outfitting the bathrooms at the E with custom Howard Johnson’s and Holiday Inn roach motels.  Only by day was her addition to the Kennedy series visible: five Kennedy busts painted with white skin, blue eyes and red hair, ears pierced by hoops joined in chains, one to the other, circled a rose bush planted in the front yard of the Sleazy E Ranch.  

Mutual friends might well imagine the mischief waxing within Bob and Greg, inspired by their exotic new environment.  Country punk was born that night in a collective fit of glee which instantaneously melted away superficial differences of fashion. 

Bob carried a small pocket recorder around and encouraged everyone to speak.  The next morning, Andrew directed them to his day job, where he was hired to take molded impressions from the rock cliffs along the coastline to incorporate them into new Boston Aquarium exhibits.  Bob and Greg held lucid conversation with the wildlife there, where Bob captured a number of lengthy interviews at various seal exhibits on tape. 

Meanwhile back at the ranch that first night, Lisa was going out to hear the night’s act, dressed in her usual friendly vampire attire of red basketball sneakers and a black dress, with a bottle of vodka stashed in her Barbie Doll case which doubled as a purse.  However she found the visitors so intriguing that we decided we all had to go together.  This led to the problem of funding, for the cover charge at her favorite haunt was significant so she usually sneaked in.  Bob and Greg and the rest of us hit upon the concept of catering the evening’s entertainment as a means of gaining entry.  Greg dug through the record collection to recover John Denver records to serve as platters, and then walked to the store to scrounge up Velveeta and Wonder Bread and Spam to make little sandwiches cut on the diagonal, artfully lanced through with safety pins.  Lisa, a professional waitress, coached us on the demure with which we ought to approach people:  “care for a little sandwich?”  Things worked simply enough with gaining entrance.  Lisa simply told them the truth, that we were there to cater little sandwiches, and filed in for free admission on the strength of the sight of us all balancing our platters.

The interior – we were all but deaf for the music – was fairly jammed with black leather.  This was before the days when it became popular to adorn one’s face as if one had suffered a nosedive into a tackle box, but at least lots of studded collars and chains were visible.  However there were only two men wearing what approximated cowboy apparel.  Bob of course had demonstrated superb timing, for the next night was Andrew’s opening for a group art exhibit, and the night of the little sandwiches was groundbreaking work for our art heroes.  They quickly discerned the vapid soul of the fashion movement of the day, to dress to inspire terror.  Most particulars have faded from memory, but nor the sight of Greg arguing with what might have been a future Republican who was adorned with pounds of metal studs, the latter shrinking back in genuine horror at the sight of safety pins speared through the little sandwiches.  “You’re no real punk,” Greg offered, reciprocally leaning further forward to the degree the man arched backwards.  Greg’s big blue eyes became hypnotically intense, as if to peer behind the man’s pupils, a characteristic outsized grin stretching across Greg’s teeth.  “You’re a wimp, you’re afraid of a little safety pin” he laughed with impunity.  The “punk” and his girlfriend slouched away, shooting Greg an unbroken sidelong stare backwards as they retreated.  One replay after another of such scene took place, until it could be said that Bob and Greg had fairly humiliated the place for its pretensions.

Admittedly we did end up eating a lot of the little sandwiches ourselves, later employing the John Denver albums as Frisbees.

Now adroit in punk sociology, Bob and Greg were prepared to hold court at Andrew’s opening the following night and take on the modern art world.  Beneath outsized orbs of large cast shadows from their hats under the intense spotlights illuminating a certain group of works suggestive of a child smearing mud onto expensive paper, from across the room I could not quite make out the thrall with which Bob attracted a growing crowd.  A line developed, Bob stood stalk still with a stern, philosophical expression as one person after another spoke animatedly before him, gesticulating wildly in inverse proportion to his quiet poise.

I wove through the jabbering crowd towards Bob and Greg, who stood abreast, solemn and rigid before the mud prints, legs apart, arms quietly to their sides or folded in solemn philosophical attention.  Transistor radio-recorder in his hand, Bob gruffly inquired of one inspired observer after another:  how did this sound relate to the prints behind him?  Bending over, straining to hear the low-fidelity guttural grunts and bellows of sea otters (“bwaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhaaabbbbaaaa…”), in all seriousness, a steady stream of ersatz art critics coined theories in response and sputtered them into his recorder as he switched it into record mode…

An outcry eventually came from the landlords once they identified the likenesses of the busts circling the rose bush out front: “it’s a desecration!” Mrs. Walsh objected.  But an unwitting prophetic gesture appeased her sense of impropriety, as it surely treated of things impossible in the US: Private Kitsch painted the front yard Kennedy's black.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

"We've Lost One of Our People" (the "Bob-isms")

(From Al and Emily Cantrell. All these expressions of Bob's we stole shamelessly from Bob and we use one or another almost daily.)


Bob-isms:

"Beyond beyond" - (always pronounced "B-E-Y-A W-N-D  B-E-Y-A-A-A-W-N-D!!")

"Jeezel Peets" -we thought this might be a common expression in Ohio, but Bob remains the only person we've ever heard say it.

"Order out" -as buying something mail order, but it was never "order it",  always "order it out." 

"Good news for modern man" -about anything he heard that he liked.

"Lay it on me" and "Turn me on deadman" -these last two being interchangeable, when you start to tell him something and he wants to hear more. We believe "deadman" is a reference to Paul McCartney from the "Paul is Dead" period.

"We've lost one of our people" -this in response to some bluegrass musician like Jimmy Martin, or '50s tv star, or country legend like Conway Twitty. When anyone like that passed away, really anyone from our mutual childhood who had entertained us in one way or another, that inspired a phone call either from Bob or to Bob starting without any opener, just the phrase "We've lost one of our people".

"Bob Bauer at the wheel" -a pencil drawing by Ron Dilg, 1980

 Bob's friend Ron Dilg drew this while riding with Bob to a music festival. 
Ron Dilg playing Pennywhistle 

"Saucecrotch" and Charlotte

Bob as "Saucecrotch" (see Parker's story) and his sister-in-law Charlotte Bauer

Singles Night at the IGA -by Mark Taylor

I haven't seen Bob Bauer in about 20 years. The last time I'm sure I saw him was at Dick Dillof's place in Paradise Valley. I may have seen him at Al and Emily's house in Helena about 17 years ago. However, Bob's zest for life has not faded in my mind. 

I first met Bob on a river trip 26 years ago. I was living in a shack on a dead end jeep road outside Whitefish. Bob was to join a troop of outdoor types including myself, Dick Garvey, Dick Dillof, Craig, Brad, Doc Stein and others for one of the infamous Missouri / Marias river trips through the Missouri breaks orchestrated by Railroad Dick Garvey. I had the privilege of having Bob as my only passenger in my jeep pickup that had around 250,000 miles. I immediately sensed a colorful character and and a piercing mind that tolerated no BS in his presence. Any form of arrogance or pomposity wilted by mere proximity to Bob. 

But my favorite memory of Bob has taken on the mythological proportions of my young years. 

About 25 years ago my friend Robin Thomas came for a visit from Tennessee via Amtrak. Robin was a fine musician and wit. Robin was killed in a car accident about 17 years ago. That leaves only Dick Dillof and myself as witnesses to this memory. 

Robin, Dick and myself left Dick's caboose in Paradise Valley and drove to a rundown apartment in Livingston where Bob was staying. We found Bob in the bathtub . The three of us sat back on the back legs of straight chairs and had a cheerful discussion regarding I remember not what through the open bathroom door. Next we watched as Bob put on some of his finest for our excursion. Dick already had on a preposterous cowboy getup including woolen poncho (Latin style) and a silk scarf tied around his neck to an impossibly tight degree. And what occasion would bring young bachelors to such a point? Why, Singles Night at the IGA food store outside Bozeman, of course. 

The store was on some highway outside of town. There we found lots of young men and quite a few women. I guess this was the 80's version of internet dating. Everyone was a bit nervous. After a bit of doddling, Dick, Robin and myself found that we were without the pleasure of Bob's company. However, fairly quickly Bob's famous laugh permeated the building. After persuing this auditory clue we found Bob in the back of the store ensconced between the pickles and the red meat. He was in one of two lines of alternating male and female participants in a potato passing race! 

At the moment I saw Bob he was trying to pass a potato from under his chin to a very buxom woman. It was his earnestness and bravado that stands out in my memory. 

I live in central Alaska on a homestead of my making. I've lived in Alaska for most of the years since I've last seen Bob. In his youth, Bob spent a summer on the Noatak river in N. W. Alaska with his parents who were expert wildlife photographers. He and I talked of paddling the Noatak but it never happened. I paddled the Noatak two summers ago with a Canadian friend. While fishing for grayling on an unnamed tributary I built a small rock cairn in Bob's memory not knowing the last day of his earth walk was near at hand. I imagine Bob's spirit watching over that country -- some of the wildest in the world. A landscape very suited to his nature. 

-Mark Taylor, Fairbanks Alaska, September 2010
Mark enjoying a moosehead


Wednesday, September 8, 2010

J.R. Rummel, artist, and Dave Thomas, poet, at Charlie's Bar

J.R. Rummel and Dave Thomas, years ago at Charlie's Bar, a legendary Missoula meeting place for the "cognoscenti" as Bob would say. Thanks to Dave for the poems he read at Bob's celebration at Pattee Canyon. Bob was a collector of J.R. Rummel's amazing prints and ceramic plates. (photo by Tim Irmen)

Bob and Lucky

Bob was thrilled to find a good home for his dog Lucky, with Jerry and Christina Kahrs in Gardner Montana. That's an intriguing shelter on the right. Large dog house, or one of Bob's many homes?  (photo by Ron Pihl)

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

My old buddy Bob Bauer -by Ron Pihl, Livingston Montana


August 21, 2010

Bob Bauer was a self described ‘Poetry Man’ and stonemason. Bob had a spirit that can only be described as contagious. Bob’s continued awe for the world around him gave us all a desire to see the world through his eyes – his curious, non – judgmental acceptance of “what it is” will always remain an inspiration for his friends.

Bob’s resume reads like the dust jacket of a Jack Kerouac novel. Bob was a construction laborer, gandy dancer, roughneck, herbalist and restaurateur ‘nobody canna like the Tropicana’. Bob planted trees for the Forest Service, sold vacuum cleaners door to door and taught himself how to play the banjo.

Bob became a fine stonemason who loved the geometry of stonework. Bob’s work can be found in Maryland, the Japanese Embassy in Washington, DC and throughout Montana. 

Work is not what defined Bob however; he was so much more than what he did to earn a living. Bob was a vagabond and charmer. He loved all kinds of music. He was passionately consumed with bluegrass music made by his friends and heroes.  He appreciated off-beat literature, music, styles, and philosophies taking on each as his own. 

Bob could break down barriers between people without consciously trying. He could disarm the most wary of strangers with his booming voice and friendly tone. Bob would mix with any social or ethnic group and win them over with humor and humility.

Bob loved women and they loved to care for Bob – you know who you are…

Bob had many nicknames given to him by friends with affection and humor, a few were Bauser, Cattail Bob, Bobwan, Boomin Bob and my personal favorite – ‘Scenic Bob Bauer’ which somehow seemed to fit although it makes no sense at all. There were many more I cannot think of right now – Marco would remember more. Not important, but fun to remember the times in which they were created.

Bob tried nearly every type of food regimen to come down the pike in the 30+ years I knew him. From the ‘beer and bacon diet’ that led him to wearing elastic pants to accommodate his expanding waistline to the raw food diet that saw Bob packing a large cooler full of raw vegetables and fruit to the jobsite instead of the usual workingman’s lunch box.

Bob seemed to wear a force shield that repelled money and material possessions. In his wake he left behind collections of cars, records, and various offbeat Americana collectibles that only he could see value in. He gave away money to strangers, made bad loans and just plain lost money. It never bothered Bob; I know he found joy in giving it away to less fortunate and even to those more fortunate than he.

Bob had more friends and admirers than anyone I know. Over the years more conversations have started with “what’s that Bob Bauer up to” than anything else I can think of including talk about the weather. From local old time ranchers to Bob’s most recent friends the question was always the same.  I guess this is because many of us wished to live vicariously through Bob.  Bob’s appearances brought many friends together to dance, sing, play music, tell stories, and laugh.

Most of all I will always remember what a spiritual person Bob always was. He had respect for things living, dead and inanimate – Bob would stop and remove dead animals from the highway out of respect for their spirit and dignity. Nearly every conversation with Bob involved laughter – he always brought out the best in people. From Vision Quest with authentic Medicine Men to Christianity – Bob always was conscious of the spirit world and passed on his beliefs in eternity for all of us to believe in.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Wheatgrass from Nashville Tennessee

Emily Cantrell grew and juiced wheatgrass for Bob most of July

WE'RE HERE FOR YOU, BOB! -the Celebration, Aug 26, by Randy Cook

Pattee Canyon Picnic Area C, Missoula Montana, August 26, 2020

"GYPSY LEGEND" - by Mark Gibbons, 2010

Old Bob Bauer says don’t you cry for me
‘cause I’m with the Menehune
runnin’ naked trough the trees.

Back from weeks on Kauai walking
In the forest under the sun, slurping mangoes
And making seed jewelry,
You told me the spirits taught you
How to listen beyond the machines, past the tinnitus
Roaring in your ears, so you could hear
The crickets playing their songs, and accompany
The wee folk on trowel or banjo.

The crickets know the Menehune  
Like the leprechauns. Crickets rule
The midnight hour, sawing the music of night,
The right time to fiddle with magic.
For magic needs the dark like legends
And crickets do, and I need some magic tonight.
I need you, want to channel you, my dear
Dead friend, gypsy lover of all that breathes,
Because you told me you weren’t surprised
Cancer arrived—you said your mind invited it to be.

I don’t know what you meant by that. So,
Are you at peace with your anger, now,
That bad vibe you claimed to ride for several years?
I’m sorry, but it’s hard to buy that admission,
Since I never saw you truly angry (like me).
I know some things can’t be explained, and I hope
Anger didn’t bring cancer to you . . .

Because I’m so fucking angry I could break
Down. And I have no patience for the healing
Pettiness of routine, no reverence
For platitudes or prayers. All I want
Is to scream, to curse, to sing and cry,
To smash shit, to punch walls, to count stars
In the sky. I’m dying for a bottle of whiskey,
Dying to forget and understand the succession
Of corpses, this plan (if there is a plan) our passions,
Our dreams, the toys, the noise, and then . . . gone,
Just fucking gone . . . and what follows:

Heartache and tears—the fear of not being here,
Of leaving, of losing what we have.
But you knew all you had was the day—
Nothing to lose—you used it all up
Or gave it away, a love lesson you shared
With the Menehune, the crickets
And me—now hiding undercover, out of sight,
Waiting for the dark night to bless me
With your Old Timey twang, hat tipped back,
Hair awry, and that gypsy smile kicking up
A life-lust in each of us, the jitterbug
Dust of your free-wheeling polka dream.

Saturday, September 4, 2010

Photos from the Celebration, by Al Cantrell

"Dobro Dick" Dillof demonstrated the old time banjo style Bob played. Bob called it "knockin' the banjo" after he heard someone in Nashville use that term for clawhammer style.

Parker Bauer (wearing a gift from Dick), Randy Cook and Dick Dillof


Valerie, Charlotte and Stephanie Bauer

Dick Dillof, Danny Sullivan, Ron Pihl, Brad Norburn, Phil Bullard, Marco DeAlvarado, Red Williams.

Virginia Sanderson and Brad Norburn

When we found the picnic site, Emily asked for a "sign" from Bob if it was right for the celebration. We noticed this "Good Food Store" bag in the firepit. "That'll do!" we both agreed. It was his home away from home.


Photos of Bob, from Al & Emily Cantrell

Bob in Germany, 4/94 (unknown photographer)

Bob lay on the grass in Athens Ohio, in the "year of the cicadas", 1998, and acquired some harmless bug friends.



Bob was proud of this hand-crafted  "Customer of the Week" award from his favorite Missoula music store.  1993

Bob singing with Jim Schulz in Helena Montana ~1995

Emily, Al, Lael Diehm (Gray), Bob, after our concert in a park in Kalispell MT, 1995

Laya and Bob drinking Cokes. ~1998

At the May Apple Stomp outside of Athens, Bob helps judge a dessert baking contest.  Emily won.  1999

We're not sure when or where, but Bob is making a point.
Bob's refrigerator, Livingston MT, mid '80's.
Beer and burgers. Bob the workingman, in Livingston MT, mid '80's.
We think Bob is selling his handmade necklaces here at the Hemp Fest, 2003, Missoula. Comments?
Bob's Pee Wee Herman doll, a regular visitor in Helena MT.

For better or for worse, with cheap cameras, these are photo reminders of fond memories of Bob's visits over the years, in Ohio, Colorado, and Montana.