Blame it on mom. She was a jazz freak and I grew up hearing Billy Holiday, Anita O'Day, June Christie, Ella and Louis, you name it. "The cats" she called them. She knew all the words and she'd sing to the records, snapping her fingers, looking at herself in the mirror, moving her hips. I remember sitting on the floor, holding the record jackets, looking at the pictures on the front then up at mom singing to herself. She sang when she did dishes or was dusting around the house. I can still see her holding a dish and washing it over and over while she sang,"When you wish Upon a Star"or "Stormy Weather." I can still hear her sing,"it's raining all the time..." moving her head from side to side while I sat on the floor playing with my Raggedy Ann doll.
I remember how she'd laugh at me when I came to her holding one of her Billy Holiday albums and I'd say, "Billy on. Billy on."
She'd say,"Ginger, baby, you're going to be a jazz singer when you grow up." She'd put the record on and I'd sit on her lap and listen to Billy singing,"Strange Fruit" and "All of me, why not take all of me." The record was scratchy and worn out,but I could tell how much mom loved those records and so did I.
Mom wanted to be a singer but got knocked up by some guy I never knew and had me. She worked at different jobs, dropping me off at Charlene's Day Care then picking me up on the way home. I remember Charlene—a big fat black woman. She laughed a lot—especially when she'd hear me sing jazz songs while I played. I'd sing "How High the Moon" or my favorite, "A Tisket a Tasket a little yellow basket." I sang it just like Ella and even did some scat singing—doowy-doowey, dee, dee, doo."
Charlene would say,"Chile, where you learnin' dem songs?" The other kids in the group sang nursery rhymes and songs like Twinkle Twinkle Little Star." I remember singing that song, but I'd jazz it up, standing in front of them, moving my hips from side to side like mom, and say,"sing it like this, "Twinkle...twinkle" and I'd snap my fingers and sing it fast, changing the notes so it had some feeling.
I know mom wanted to be a jazz singer but had to work to put food on the table. That's when she'd say,"I'd be a jazz singer if I didn't have to put god damn food on the table."
Her saying that made me feel sad and awful like it was my fault she couldn't be a singer. That's probably why she drank so much and would fall asleep drinking and smoking in her chair listening to Billy or Sarah. I used to see her when I woke up in the morning, sound asleep in the chair with the needle from the record player clicking and clicking. I'd turn it off and put the record back in the album then wake mom up and say it's time to get up and go to work. And I had to get to school—which I hated, by the way.
The drinking got worse and she didn't sing like she used to. Her long brown hair was getting gray and she no longer wore colorful scarves around her neck or even seemed to care about her appearance. She'd come home from work and the first thing she'd do was pour a drink, take a gulp, let out a loud "ahh" like she was finally getting some relief. She'd put on Billy or Ella and sit in her chair, smoking. Sometimes we didn't have dinner until eight or nine and dishes were left in the sink. I started doing the dishes and doing the dusting and by the time I was 15, mom was always so drunk, I'd eat by myself and try to wake her up. It made me angry when she'd drink because I'd come home and have no one to talk to. It was lonely. It was like living with a ghost.
It got so I hated coming home. There was hardly any money coming in. Mom was on welfare and we lived on food stamps. I hardly had any clothes that fit. My jeans were faded and really tight, my shirts were snug—especially around my tits and didn't even reach to the top of my jeans. The few skirts I had were way to short as I got taller. I noticed how boys at school would look at me and also older men couldn't keep their eyes off me. I have to admit I had a good body—nice ass, my tits weren't huge but they weren't little bean bags either. At first I was surprised and embarrassed. It felt a little strange, but then--I hate to admit this but I liked it.
When I was sixteen I got a job as a waitress at Roma's Pizza and worked there from after school 'til eleven at night. On Saturdays during the day, I was a cashier at the Save-way Gas Station and Convenience Store. I worked there until three and headed over to "Roma's" to work 'til midnight.
Well, I took my first weeks pay and tips and went to this cool thrift store—Second Hand Rose-- and got really funky clothes—way different than the other girls but I still wanted the guys to look at me. I liked looking sexy. I had long dark hair,halfway down my back and made sure that what I wore caught their attention. It was the mid-sixties and I became a kind of hippie—though I didn't know what that was. All I knew was I didn't want to be like anyone else and I didn't want to end up like my mom.
When it was slow at the Save-way, I'd look at the magazines near the door and see the covers with these sexy looking women wearing practically nothing, but you know, they all looked alike. I wanted to be sexy but not like that. I'd read articles about some of the actresses and their relationships and wondered if I'd ever have a relationship. I was fascinated by sex and loved playing with myself and wondering what it would be like to really have a man do it to me.
Lots of guys flirted with me at the Save way—some of them in their twenties, some a lot older and I liked how they looked at me and ask, "What are you doing after work?" Sometimes I'd smile back and never said anything but in my way I was teasing back. Even though I liked the guys teasing and flirting, still it was jazz that I cared about more than anything. I was always singing to myself, making up different ways of doing a song--fast, slow, playing around with the melody.
Forget about school. It didn't exist, though they tried to get me to come. School was unreal. It was crowded and I didn't care about what happened in 1812 or want to read the lame books they assigned like Silas Marner and I forget what other books that didn't have anything to do with my life. I had no friends. The girls cared about clothes, boys and dying their hair different colors. The guys were jerks and just wanted to get laid or play stupid video games. I didn't fit in that's for sure.
There was one guy I liked—Gabe. I met him when I was a senior and already eighteen. He always carried a guitar on his back and I'd see him on the fire escape practicing. He was a loner, like me. He had long hair and was definitely not a jock. He seemed serious, like he was always thinking about something. He was in my Algebra class and I could tell he was bored because all he did was doodle. I saw his doodles—music notes all over the page and lots of swirls.
One day after Algebra, I asked him if he liked jazz. He looked at me, startled, like he wasn't used to any one—especially a girl-- talking to him, let alone asking him a question but the first thing I noticed were his intense blue eyes when he looked at me.
"Well, I see you like music because I see you practicing on the fire escape and noticed your doodling in algebra." I paused. "Do you like jazz?"
"Kinda," he said. "I guess. My dad's a jazz musician. I've been taking classical guitar lessons."
"Classical,"I repeated. "Cool! I've never heard classical guitar."
"I play a little jazz," he said,"but I really love flamingo and Bach."
"You said your dad's a jazz musician. What kind? I mean. What instrument does he play?" I asked, as we started walking down the hall.
"He plays piano and has a jazz trio. His real job is an accountant, but he plays jazz on weekends at different clubs."
"I'm gonna be a jazz singer," I told him. It was the first time I said that out loud. I don't know why I said it and it scared me to blurt it out like that, but it also felt great to finally tell someone my secret thought, my dream. It felt right to say it to him because he loved music. There was no one else to say it to. Not at work. Not at school, until then, so I repeated it, just to hear the words again,"Yeah, I'm gonna be a jazz singer."
Gabe looked at me like I was from outer space then smiled,"Cool," he said. "Good for you. Not too many kids around here are into jazz."
We continued to walk down the crowded hall without speaking,but I knew both of us were wondering what to say next. It was weird to find someone who loved music like me that wasn't rock and roll. Finally, just before he stopped to go into his next class, he asked, "Would you like to hear me play the guitar?"
"Sure. I'd like that. Would you like to hear me sing?"
There was an awful silence. Finally I asked, "When?"