Read What Would Kinky Do?: How to Unscrew a Screwed-Up World Online
Authors: Kinky Friedman
Tags: #General, #Political, #Literary Collections, #Humor, #Essays, #Form, #Topic, #American Wit and Humor
GETTIN' MY GOAT
Unfortunately, Goat saved the last dance for me. We first met in L.A. in 1976, where Goat got his name. It was given to him a few years earlier, along with adult-size portions of smoke and mushrooms, by a medicine man named Yippee!, a
Yaqui Indian from Acapulco. Yippee! took the then twenty-one-year-old David Carson on a "vision quest" to show him that music was the power that would change the world. "You're a Native American," said Yippee!, and Goat told him truthfully that he was part Cherokee. That was good enough for Yippee!, apparently, who then led the young Goat to the Sunset Strip, where he introduced him to the members of a band called the Doors and one called Iron Butterfly, plied him with more marijuana and mushrooms, and then took him down to South Central to see the first American appearance of Hugh Masekela.
Somewhere in the middle of this vision quest, everything seemed to stop. Goat saw a light pulsating in his chest and realized that he was outside of time and body, watching himself in a movie. "I feel like I have the power to do anything," he said.
"Then go on and try," said Yippee! "Your name will be 'Goat,' and that will stand for Go on and try." With varying degrees of success, Goat has ever since.
I had drifted out to L.A. myself, trying to get a record deal peddling a quasi-legendary living room tape of the Texas Jew-boys. Goat was living out of his car, parking it at night at Errol Flynn's house. We met as a result of both of us hanging out with Bob Dylan. Half the free world was hanging out with Bob Dylan at that time, of course; the other half was trying to understand his lyrics.
The first time Goat met Bob was at a semiexclusive Hollywood after-party at which Goat chose to perform upon his homemade instrument of choice, a three-stringed jawbone of an ass, his own version of Bob's popular song "Sarah," an elegant, poetical ode to his wife of many years. Few in the room knew that Bob and his wife would soon be going through divorce proceedings. This, indeed, may have been the mitigating factor for why Goat and his sacred jaw-bone did not get thrown out on his ass.
Goat's version of the song went something like this: "Sar—ah! Sar—ah! Spirit of dawn, child of the night / Sar—ah! Sar—ah! Shut up, you bitch. I'm tryin' to write."
A deadly silence filled the room. The faces of everyone appeared ashen with horror at this blasphemy. A large, impeccably dressed black man walked over to Goat and began gently but firmly removing the rather arcane instrument from the offending musician's cold, dead fingers. Then Bob himself got up and came over to Goat. Some strange sensibility struggled across his inscrutable countenance; every eye was upon Bob's face until at last, chimeralike, he smiled. "I like your song," he said.
Almost immediately the small crowd began laughing and chuckling. "That song actually was brilliant," the publicist observed. "I must have had a nail in my head."
Eventually, I lost touch with Goat. I went on the road with Bob, and Goat, I presumed, went with God. In those days, there sometimes didn't seem to be a hell of a lot of difference between the two. I did see Goat again in the early eighties, when I was performing at the Lone Star Cafe in New York, and he showed up dancing onstage, wearing a giant stuffed polar bear's head.
Goat would never speak when he wore the polar bear's head, but he would sing one song. That song was always "Big Balls in Cowtown."
But Goat Carson was much more than a helper monkey whoring himself for the amusement of the fickle masses. Goat was also a visionary, a veteran soul imbued with a deep, poetical nature that often manifested itself precisely when the chips were down. Witness this virtually spontaneous little poem Goat delivered to the crowd at the wake of our mutual friend Tom Baker in New York in 1982.
He just sat down on that same barstool,
He was still living for the day
He still wasn't worried and he still wasn't married.
Don't count on tomorrow, he'd say.
Between the gutter and the stars,
People are what people are.
Tom Baker was a friend of mine.
Our American lives had intertwined in L.A. and New York, and now they would shatter and split. After the death of the Bakerman, a personal fast-lane hero of mine, I returned to Texas while Goat remained in New York. We did not see each other for almost twenty-three years. I wasn't even aware that Goat had moved to New Orleans or that he'd become an ordained street preacher there for the past twelve years. It would require an act of God to bring us together again. An act of God in the form of a woman. Her name was Katrina.
* * *
Goat showed up at our house in Austin in much worse shape than I'd expected. A complete emotional wreck, he walked in with nothing but the clothes on his back, a satchel containing various gris-gris concoctions, and a small bundle of sacred rabbit furs that were eaten by the dogs when I took Goat out for Mexican food. The next day we both watched New Orleans die on television. Goat had gotten out just in time.
I took Goat up to the ranch near Kerrville, in high hopes that he might do some work with the animals at Utopia Rescue Ranch. He shared some of their background being homeless, stray, and traumatized, perhaps. I thought, this could be a cathartic experience. These hopes were dashed quite early, however. My evacuee, so he informed me as he proceeded to decimate my liquor cabinet, did not believe in work. The credo of his flock, the Black Mardi Gras Indians of New Orleans, was "Always for Pleasure." This did not bode well, I thought, but trying to tell a homeless person to go home is almost like trying to run for governor of Texas as an independent. In the days, weeks, and years to come, Goat seemed to become happier and happier while I began to wake up every morning in a black, suicidal rage. But I'm getting a bit ahead of myself. Let's go back to early times, and I don't mean the whiskey. That was already gone.
If you're going to be an evacuee, I told Goat, you've got to dress like an evacuee. We went through my wardrobe of eclectic, perhaps over-the-top items, many of which I'd hung on to for sentimental reasons. Almost all of them seemed to fit Goat well, so I said, "Take what you like," and he did. He cut such a fine figure, indeed, that when the
Kerrville Times
interviewed him, they put his large photo on page one, wearing all of my clothes from head to toe, including rattlesnake boots with the rattlers' heads still attached. I wasn't really envious; it was just a bit unnerving watching Goat strut around the house drinking beer for breakfast in my favorite bathrobe (given to me by Miss Texas 1987) with his slothful scrotum hanging out while singing "Big Balls in Cowtown."
Then there was the matter of the telephone. Since I've always believed the Internet to be the work of Satan, the phone remained my lifeline to the world, especially in the heated last months of the gubernatorial race. Goat was monopolizing it like a one-man Jerry Lewis telethon. Not only were most of the calls and messages seemingly for him, but he was also racking up phone bills during all hours of the night, calling other victims of the hurricane as well as his many musician friends.
I hated to be an insensitive host, but I needed the phone as well. The last time I'd checked, I was still running for governor and besides, Cousin Nancy (of Utopia Rescue Ranch) and I had been working frantically to save twenty-four greyhounds trapped in a New Orleans attic by rising floodwaters. Now Goat began a frenetic series of calls to Dr. John, the Neville Brothers, Levon Helm, and many other musical luminaries, telling them Kinky was bringing twenty-four greyhounds out of New Orleans. As Goat yapped on and on, I confess to have been basking somewhat in the sunlight of my good works. The truth, unfortunately, did not manifest itself for several more days when Goat turned to me in my favorite Billy Joe Shaver T-shirt and said, "When are the greyhounds getting here?"
"We're working on it," I said. "Cousin Nancy's gotta make room at the Rescue Ranch for twenty-four more dogs."
"The greyhounds are dogs?" said Goat, removing my reading glasses from his nose in astonishment.
"Yes, Goat," I said patiently. "They're dogs."
"Jesus with jugs," said Goat. "I thought they were buses."
Things went downhill from there. The care and feeding of Goat became more all-consuming, tedious, and expensive with each passing week. Not that Goat wasn't a soulful, talented, well-intentioned man—not to mention, a man of the cloth—it was just that the cloth, in his case, was a little coarse. It was not unusual for him to drink a case of beer a day. At dinner parties and restaurants he would sometimes take his teeth out and make loud, obnoxious spitting and farting noises into his hands, creating a New Orleans beat-box. He often would endlessly describe sexual desires toward women in television commercials, declaring them "table" or "not table," and always providing running commentary on all bodily functions in colorful, though somewhat graphic language, such as "letting the possum out."
Don't get me wrong. Despite some rather glaring personality and hygiene drawbacks, there were, as well, many spiritual and charmingly human aspects of this modern-day holy man. First of all, he did not proselytize. This can be important when you're a Jew and you have a street preacher living with you. The reverend, indeed, proved himself to be not only eccentric but refreshingly ecumenical as well. During Thanksgiving, for instance, Goat opened the proceedings with what he called the Cowboy Prayer, i.e., "Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, hold this horse while I get on." As an afterthought, the Native American essence of the man also manifested itself. Goat's Indian Thanksgiving Prayer went as follows: "Thanks for nothing."
When Goat was not on the phone at my desk, he busied himself sitting in my chair, wearing a terrific Hawaiian shirt I'd forgotten I had, drinking beer, and watching the History Channel with almost pathological persistence. He moved so little, I worried, indeed, that Goat might himself evolve into an historical artifact. I had never personally been responsible for the health, education, and welfare of an evacuee, and given the fact that he might well have been traumatized by the experience, I still did not see how the therapy of sleeping, drinking beer, and watching the History Channel was ever going to get Goat off his ass and back to New Orleans. It was time for tough love.
I assigned Goat the daunting task of being the nanny for my five dogs, the Friedmans. Some say the Friedmans are spoiled rotten and very difficult, demanding dogs, but this is not precisely true. They are merely older dogs who, like older people, have become set in their ways. Soon the Friedmans could be seen following Goat like a flock over the hills and valleys of the ranch. Perky, Mr. Magoo, Brownie, Chumley, and Fly all seemed to be quite fond of Goat and to accept him, more or less, as their spiritual leader. Goat himself fed this religious fervor by dressing the part. Wearing my black Willie Nelson sweatshirt with the hood over his head and carrying a large staff, he looked like a cross between a biblical shepherd and the grim reaper.
Using his New Orleans background, Goat soon began cooking for the Friedmans as well. One dish that seemed to really catch on, he named the "Triple Dragon." It consisted of bacon, chicken livers, and chicken gizzards. It wasn't long before the Friedmans, normally a rather cliquish clan, had welcomed Goat into the family. The one holdout was Mr. Magoo, who, while he was fond of Goat, would never permit him to sleep in my bed when I was on the road.