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“Because once you depart from this one-way road of life, there is just no getting back on.”

Terrry Marotta Terrry Marotta

EVERYBODY Sing!

karaokeDown here at the karaoke bar on this warm summer night, with a moon slim as a dancer watching all the action, things are gettin’ pretty lively. Four young women have just told the Master of Ceremonies that one of them has turned 21 that very day. “Born in the mid-90s, and drinkin’ here tonight, people!” he calls from the stage to the rest of us“I have socks older than they are,” a mustachioed mutters, but the emcee does not hear him. Like a preacher with a killer sermon, he is busy building momentum.The first young guy up sings something so wildly off-key that only the two great-grandmothers at the corner table manage to smile their encouragement. Everyone else talks right over him, some of them wincing as they talk.Next, two ladies join forces for “We Are Fam-i-lee” (as in “I’ve Got All My Sisters With Me”) and the crowd stamps and whistles.Now the emcee shouts, “At this juncture, ladies and gentlemen, please welcome the best attorney on earth and on the moon, FRANK!”  and Frank takes the stage to deliver a tender ballad called “Tequila Makes Her Clothes Fall Off.”“OH yeah!” cries a young woman with a drink in her hand.Then, as if to illustrate its theme, she rises, her cocktail still in her hand, and begins executing that female dance move where a lady rotates her hips while languidly waving one hand in the air like a sleepwalker hailing a taxi.In response, a young man moves toward this young lady, perhaps because her clothes have in fact begun falling off, in a kind Venus-on-the-Half-Shell way. He smiles to show harmless intent, then yells at the top of his lungs into her ear, which is what people have to do in order to be heard in settings like this.She leans very far forward, whether in real or feigned deafness, prompting the three other guys who had come in with this brave swain to snap their eyes over to the slow loping rhythms of the ballgame on the wide-screen. No guy wants to be seen eyeing the cleavage of a girl another guy has begun the Great Dance with.Now a man and a woman on the high side of 60 are also smiling and attempting to chat until, with a sour face, the woman’s girl-pal moves between them and says, “We are out of here. NOW.” So this 60-something woman bids the gent goodbye, though not before hurling a nasty remark at the back of her departing friend.The gent just smiles philosophically as if thinking “Hey. Women: They come. They go. What are you gonna do?”Next, a young guy steps to the stage and does a hip-hop song about love and body parts. Now, a stocky girl takes the mike for a growly version of Nancy Sinatra’s “Boots.” After that, a smallish young man tackles Stevie Wonder’s “Superstition,” the one song I have just recently been told is guaranteed to bring any wedding dance-floor to soaring life.Finally, a man in his 70s comes forward and croons a pitch-perfect version of Louis Armstrong’s “Wonderful World” – at which point even that elegant slim dancer of a moon seems to bow in homage, just ever so slightly, in the moist summer sky.karaoke night  1

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Terrry Marotta Terrry Marotta

Follow the Bouncing Ball

Here by the beach, with a slender moon catching all the action, things are gettin’  lively at the karaoke bar. As I walk in, four young women have just told the Master of Ceremonies that one of them turned 21 that very day.From the stage he shouts to the rest of us, “Born as recently as the 90s, and they’re drinkin’ here tonight, people!" “I have socks older than they are,” a mustachioed man remarks, but the emcee does not hear him because, like a preacher with a killer sermon, he is busy building momentum.“Do you even know what a radio is, honey?” “Sure,” responds the birthday girl. “Didn’t I just ask to sing a Paul Anka song?”“Later, Darlin’,” says the emcee, for he knows he has to craft the evening carefully, let the amateurs take a few cracks at the mike, then bring up enough ringers to get things really jumping.The first young guy up sings something so wildly off key that only the two great-grandmothers at the corner table manage to smile their encouragement. Everyone else talks right over him, some wincing as they talk.Then two ladies join forces for “We Are Fam-i-lee” (as in “I’ve Got All My Sisters With Me”) and the crowd stamps and whistles.Next the emcee shouts “Now ladies and gentlemen, please welcome the best attorney on earth AND the moon, FRANK!” And Frank takes the stage to deliver a tender ballad called “Tequila Makes Her Clothes Fall Off.”“Yes!” cries a young woman with a drink in her hand. Then, as if to illustrate its theme, she rises and begins gyrating slowly while languidly waving one hand in the air like a sleepwalker hailing a taxi.In response, a young man moves toward this young lady whose clothes have in fact begun doing a bit of Venus-on-the-Half-Shell thing. He smiles to show harmless intent, then yells at the top of his lungs into her ear, which is what people have to do in order to be heard in settings like this.She leans very far forward, whether in real or feigned deafness, prompting the three other guys who had come in with this brave swain to snap their eyes over to the slow loping rhythms of the ballgame on the wide-screen. No guy wants to be seen eyeing the girl another guy has begun the Great Dance with.Now a young guy steps to the stage and does a hip-hop song about love and body parts.Now a stocky girl takes the mike for a growly version of Nancy Sinatra’s “Boots.”And now a smallish young man tackles Stevie Wonder’s “Superstition” the one song I have just recently been told is guaranteed to bring any wedding dance-floor to soaring life.Finally, a man in his 70s comes forward and croons a pitch-perfect version of Louis Armstrong’s “Wonderful World” – at which point even that elegant Fred Astaire of a crescent moon seems to bow in homage, just ever so slightly, in this moist August sky.

(oh yeah and in this video? That's me on the left ;-) :

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jmJjD33eKDU]

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