sapphonica@heidikole thanks Heidi đ your book arrived yesterday! Itâs shiny, haha!
âŠnote from my Twitter friend Holly Mae in Cardiff, Whales re her newly ordered copy of âThe Subway Diariesâ. Weâre all about the shine! đ
Â
sapphonica@heidikole thanks Heidi đ your book arrived yesterday! Itâs shiny, haha!
âŠnote from my Twitter friend Holly Mae in Cardiff, Whales re her newly ordered copy of âThe Subway Diariesâ. Weâre all about the shine! đ
Â
Me â âHey Danny, a cop just passed byâ
Danny â âReally? Where?â
Me â âOver there. But donât worry, itâs a female cop. The female cops donât really bother youâ
Danny â âOh yeah they will. Theyâll bother you. Theyâll bother you if they ainât got no lovinâ the night before. Yes they will. They get themselves some lovinâ then theyâll leave you alone.â
âŠ..Ah DannyâŠWe love you. You always say it like it is : )
Â
Oh â and these signs are some of my favourite in the subways. The MTA has been cutting so much service that riders are completely confused these days whatâs runninâ & whatâs not. So the MTA has now made it a practice to post âsignageâ everywhere telling riders kinda sorta whatâs running & whatâs notâŠyou know⊠basically, will you or will you not get to work, meetings, interviewsâŠ
An enterprising group has, throughout these cancellations & delays posted âcounterâ signs mocking the whole situation. I love thee things!
Peace đ
Friend â âSo, you been in jail?â
Me -âMe? No!â
Friend â âReally? âŠWow just seems like youâd be someone whoâd been to jailâŠâ
(One of my rapper friends while we were walkinâ along in Times Square havinâ a discussion on music, the streetâŠbeing arrested & the like.)
NOTE: Iâm takinâ ideas on the ârightâ response to this? Ideas? Please, do share ⊠: )
Â
My most favourite bookstore. Carla, thank you for sharing your vision with the world. Iâm honoured to have been accepted as part of your family. You will be greatly missed.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R7Awu-rR80w[/youtube]
Enjoy đ
Last weekend I performed at the DUMBO Arts Festival in Dumbo Brooklyn. I invited Luss, the rapper who had randomly jumped off the train a few weeks back & jammed w/ me, to join me and rap on a tune in my set. The Festival rocked & the set was superb. I met new friends & fabulous artists & musicians. All in all the day was a hit.
And hereâs is the link to my specific show/blog post:
http://dumboartsfestival.com/2010/08/30/heidi-koledaf-sidewalk-series
Tonight â a week later I headed under late â around 9 â turns out 9PM is a rockinâ time to gig on the âAâ in Manhattan, cause Manhattan is pretty much on itâs way to being completely wasted. Drunk Manhattan = happy Manhattan & yes it was a fun night on the Uptown 59th St platform, not to mention the obsessed Asian tourist who videotaped me for hours, dropping dollars in my case and perusing my merchandise with an oddly ACD air to him. Ah the colour on the platforms.
As I wrapped (damn having to pee!) I heard a sound, musicâŠâDanny!â I thought â âyay Dannyâs here!â I moved from a walk to a run, my gear trailing behind me on my dolly. Not sure what it is about the thought of seeing Danny that makes me run to see him & smile ear to ear â but it always does. I donât care whatâs gone on in my day â seeing & hearing Danny, sitting next to him on the subway bench changes everything. Maybe itâs because, you know how it feels like the world is getting faster and faster and itâs sometimes hard to keep up? Well, when you meet Danny itâs as if nothing has changed. Life is still smooth and simple and nothing feels crazy fast or outta control. Or maybe itâs because of his spirit â heâs unflappable, like a farmer. No matter what storms come his way; cops, bad days, good days, tickets arrests, court appearancesâŠjust like a farmer Danny, without question gets up and does what he does â tends to his music. Or perhaps itâs because he is from a different time in history and itâs a time and place I feel oddly connected to at my soul. He grew up in the fifties and sixties in the South when Southern blues and Soul were just beginning to be recognized in popular culture. What shaped him musically then is what moves me musically now. Maybe itâs just some past life thing for me â who knows. But whatever the reason, I love seeing Danny!
I ran up to him, gave him a big hug & sat down to chat & sing. A train pulled up and people put money in his duffle bag, most of the girls giving him a kiss on the cheek. Ah, Danny, Danny â you are the showmanâŠ
Â
âHey, Danny, this rapper and Iâve been collaborating on some Bill Withers stuff. You should hear.â
âThat sounds goodâ
âIt is. Itâs crazy how it all fits. Weâre trying to get it recordedâ
âYou should come on up on day and see the set up I have uptown, meet my guy who is an engineer. Maybe you can record it there.â
âReally? Wow thatâd be awesome Danny. Yes, Iâll come up this week. Cool.â
âSo, whereâd you find this rapper boy?â Danny asked with that thick South Carolinian drawl
âOh, he found me here on the âAâ
âYeah â that stuff happens on the trains.â Danny responded matter of factly as he turned back to look at his CD player siting in his lap.
Just then a guy wandered up. He was black, about Dannyâs age and height, just less of a tummy on him. He and Danny began to chat so I guessed they knew each other. The guy sat down and started to chit chat w/ me while Danny turned on his CD player again, gettinâ back to his show.
âDo you play the numbers?â the new visitor asked me?
âNo, I never haveâ
At which point the guy, whose name turned out to be Buddy, proceeded to tell me that he just won $500 today by playing the numbers.
âYeah, I win all the timeâ
âHow do you do that?â
âIâll tell you what sweetheart, Iâll give you some numbers, you go and play them and you tell me what happens.â At which point Buddy rattled off a list of numbers in groups of threes and fours, explaining how to buy the tickets etc etc all in great detail, since I have zero experience in playing the Lotto. I scribbled down the numbers with the notes he gave me on how to make it all work. As I did, I noticed Buddyâs hands. They were rough and swollen as if from years of hard use. âWhat do you do Buddy?â
âIâm a blacksmithâ
âReally? Like shoeing horses and all?â
âYup, shoeing horses, fixing Buses and bridges. It covers a lot these days.â Buddy continued chatting as I scribbled. He told me heâd just gotten back from repairing some fire engines. Buddy continued chatting about fire engines, shoeing horses, fixing buses. Amazing what the job of a modern day blacksmith entails.
âHey, Danny, I gotta run. See you tomorrow ok?â
âOk sweetheart. It always makes my day to see you, you know thatâ
âBack at ya Danny. Back at ya'â
Buddy and I wanted for the the train. We got off at 42nd. âHey, do you think IÂ can do those numbers tonight Buddy?â
âNaw most machines shut down at eight. But we can seeâ I followed Buddy as he led me to the first tiny convenience store we passed. âYour machine still on?â Buddy asked the guy behind the counter.
âYesâ
âOh my Gosh! Yay! Itâs open. Yay we can do this Buddy!â I was giddy not only cause I wanted to try out these numbers asap but also because really I had no clue what I was doing and far preferred Buddy being by my side when I plopped down his numbers each with a dollar attached. Buddy cashed in his $500 ticket (yes, my eyes were huge at all this) and we walked out.
As I walked home Buddy told me all about his childhood exploits as a kid in North Carolina and his schooling at the National School in Maryland, one of the first integrated (non segregated) schools in the US. He told me antic after antic about the years there and the trouble he got into as a kid. It was like watching a movie for me to hear the stories. Much like listening to Danny talk about his life as a musician. I wanted to hear stories forever/continue watching the âmovieâ but was fading so we parted ways and I walked home feeling like the luckiest girl on earth. Not only did I get to sing, make a bunch of straphangers happy, and see Danny, but I also got to, for the first time play the Lottery w/ an âexpertâ (if there is an expert at such an activity)
Anyway â Iâm fading now & have rehearsal tomorrow so Iâll say âCiaoâ for now, but stay tuned. We all wanna know how those numbers turn out, right? : )
Peace ~
Alice Tan Ridley (Fellow Underground performer & advancing contestant on Americaâs Got Talent) sent word back to all of us in the Underground. Thought Iâd share đ
âHi My People,
Yes itâs time to make the donutsâŠ
You all know that I will do my best, and I know you will too.
Hi you guys, so Iâve missed you all âmuchlyâ. Finally got a sec to write here & hope you all are doinâ super!
So last week @ 59th where Iâve been frequenting quite a bit these days, about 20 minutes into my groove a guy in an e green t-shirt wandered up and stood staring at me as I dove into my version of Den ise LeSalleâs âRight Side Of The Wrong Bedâ. He was average height, on the thin side and obviously not very wealthy, at least not demonstratively so, (one never knows who has what in a city like New York). His bright green shirt looked extra âemeraldyâ against his dark brown skin and he stood stransfixed as I sang. I thought perhaps as I sang and kept an eye on the guy who was standing super close, staring at me; âHe must know the song or something. It must remind him of something in his past.â Thatâs usually the case when someone stands and stares like that.
I wrapped the song and began to tweek my strings to get them back in tune since Iâd just replaced my old strings with a pack of brand new ones given my sweat from the summer had rusted the old set straight through and my instrument was beginning to sound more like a tractor with a dying motor than a guitar.
Anyway, as I was tuning the guy in a the green shirt spoke up; âIs that a Western guitar?â he asked
âUhâŠwell, I donât think so â itâs just an acoustic with a pick upâ
âBut is it a Western one?â
âUmmmâŠI donât think so, but uh, maybeâ I responded, thinking perhaps if I allowed for the possibility that my trusty Epiphone was, in face a âWesternâ guitar, he would stop asking.
âYeah, itâs a Western guitar.â He proudly concluded. I thought that was that on the inerrigation. Ha! Who am I kidding, itâs the subways, Iâve been down here for five years, I should really know better by nowâŠ
âAre you gonna be here in September?â
âUmmmâŠyeah, I think so, Iâm kinda here year round. So itâs a good bet Iâll be here in September, yupâ
âDo you have Western jeans? You know dark ones?â Ok â at this point I was ready to start in on my next set of tunes as there was a big crowd and as much as I enjoyed chatting about âWestern garbâ with this guy, I had some bills to pay.
âWell, I have jeans and Iâm not sure where theyâre from, but yeah I have jeansâ and I began in on my next tune. Once done, the man in the emerald âTâ, who had not budged, jumped right in; âHow about boots? Do you have those boots, the ones with the pointy toes?â
I bust out laughing as I acknowledged the dollars coming into my case from the other straphangers listening to my music; âHahahaâŠI have some boots, yes. And I might even have some with âpointy toesâ
âSo, you have to wear them, you know? In September. Youâll wear the jeans and the boots in September?â
Trying to control my giggles I responded; âOk, yeah, of course Iâll wear the jeans and the boots with the pointy toes in September. I gotta get back to my music now though. But nice meeting you!â And I started up on my next tune, the music and lyrics swallowing up the remaining grin still plastered across my mouth.
The day went on as planned and sans any more âwardrobe consultsâ.
Then, today, on the opposite side of the A,C,E @ 59th, the Uptown side (cause there was a sax player on the Downtown) â Poet Minor stopped by, ofered her smiling energy & snapped a shot â I love visitors!

âŠthen, not a minute after Minor left to go uptown, up saunters the same dude, this time in a blue âTâ. What are the odds? Why does the âcrazyâ always show up when the cameras are not rolling!
âHaha â hey!â I giggled and greeted my newfound wardrobe master, always intregued to see a familiar face, no matter how âout thereâ.
Without a word the guy opens his backpack and pulls out a folded, crumpled piece of paper. He unfolds it, smooths it out and turns it around to show it to me. Written on the paper are both the name, address and cost of a pair of dark blue Wrangler jeans. Omg this guy is intent on getting me dressed like a cowboy. What a hoot!.
âThis is where you can get the jeansâ he said to me.
âWow â thanksâŠI mean, yeah, thanks for thatâŠwhatâs your name, I forgot.â I said, knowing Iâd not ever been told, but not wanting to seem rude.
âJamal, Iâm Jamalâ
âWell, thanks JamalâŠfor the information. Thanks a lotâ
âSo you have the boots right, and you just wear a plain white shirt with buttons and ⊠and âŠâ And I could see his mind was going fast now, working overtime to dress me just right. âAnd a vest, you have a vest?â And before I could answer in the negative he kept going; âAnd a hat, you know one of those hats, the western onesâ
Ok, I was almost doubled over at this point. Of course no one else on the platform had any idea what our conversation was about or what was making me stifle laughter more than play music, but the commuters waiting for me to sing seemed intregued none the less.
âWell, I have some of that stuff and I really appreciate you showing me the store info and directions, thatâs really nice of you Jemalâ
âHere, itâs for youâ and he handed me the paper

âAwe, thanks Jamal. Iâll look into it. I gotta get back to playing some music here, but thanks so much.â Jamal gave me a look that made it very clear he really didnât want to leave until he was sure I would, in fact somehow get the exact wardrobe heâs so vividly seen me in for all of two weeks now. But he seemed to âget the hintâ once I stashed the folded paper and strummed my first chord of my next tune. That seemed to be Jamalâs cue to go cause he bowed his head and turned with conviction and walked away.
Man, what am I gonna say to the guy come September when Iâm still not dressed like a cowboy? I thought to myself as I floated back to my music. Well, Iâll cross that ridge when my possy gets to it đ
I figured that was my requisite dose of âcrazyâ for the day butâŠ.nooooooo, heck no in fact. I was nearing the end of my energy, not to mention bladder capacity, when a tattered looking guy sauntered over, and bent over my case. I didnât flinch but I have to say I had no idea what his intentions were. I almost offered him a candy and a dollar to try and abort and alternate plan he might have but before I could offer he bent down and picked up the âpublicâ copy of âThe Subway Diariesâ
Ok, okâŠcool, heâs gonna read the book. Thatâs cool, I thought to myself. The dude was more than dishevled, he had bags stuffed in bags and a stack of free papers from what looked like the past zix months that he wedged between his knees as he leafed through the book.
âMust be a wold adventureâ The black, deshevled guy said in an affected British accent, that oddly resembled a Monty Python character.
âYeah, itâs been an adventure for the past five years. Thatâs for sure.â
âWellâŠâ the Monty Pythonesque dude chimed in; âIâm a street performer of sorts myselfâ
âReally? What do you perform?â
âWell, I perform, but mostly above ground. Iâm a wizardâ He responded matter of factly.
âA wizard? Really?â
âYes,â the wizard continued, âIâm the wizard of New York. Theyâre doing a documentary about meâ and he bent down, leaning over my case. I wasnât sure what he was going to grab onto next, but to my relief if was my pen. He stood up and looked around and mimed writing, indicating he needed something to write on.
âOh, hereâ and I handed him the back to Jamalâs wardrobe instructions.
âPerfect, perfect. Iâll write down some information for you. Perfectâ And I started in playing again while the wizard meticulously scribbled on the back of the piece of lined notebook paper, for what seemed an eternity. âI take forever to write sometimes,â as he continued to slowly etch his words. Once he was done and Iâd stopped singing he handed it to me, âHere, itâs for you. Itâs marvelous, marvelous this world. Thank you for sharing the musicâ the wizard said as he tried to remember where the pen came from. I motioned to the case and he dropped it back in. And without another word he reached down and grabbed the half a years worth of newspapers from between his knees and hopped onto the waiting âCâ train.
I looked at the paper, not having a clue as to what he was writing all that time. I was fully prepared to see nothing that made any sense at all but no, there was a website a name of his documentary and an email address. Go figure. So here it is, so you all can google it for yourself. I know your curious : )

Ok- so that was my day.
How was yours? : )
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