Perhaps the trick is not to look at it too closely. Sure, you can acknowledge it, but to dwell on it too much can take its toll. That is how I feel about it at 10:27 AM on Friday, the 13th of March, 2026. It can all change at any time, of course. I am at the fruit stand listening to a co-worker’s tracks, she goes by the name Vitesse X, and it’s dream pop-ish with a drum and bass jungle frantically going on. It is a thing to behold with one’s own ears.
The fruit stand is quiet this morning. Some people, like Jimmy Chile, have been in since 4:30 AM, which is a godforsaken time for anything that does not involve sleep, though a long time ago that would be the time in the middle of a party. But that was the 20th century, and I do not do those things anymore.
Bill is home. Getting ready for another road trip, and Mike will be babysitting me once again. It seems that this plan works nicely for all concerned. My allergies have cleared up as the temperatures have dropped once more. My nose still has some abrasion from blowing my nose so often over the past few days.
The co-worker whose tracks I am playing is Jordan. She’s a 20-something young woman who seems to have got it together, though all I see is what she presents as she walks past my station at the fruit stand. It’s a long way from where things were 30 years ago at Skyline Studios and Right Track Recording.
I was thinking of Justin Luchter the other day. We got along fine. I found him to be a good guy. It’s been over 30 years since I’d last saw him. He was living with his Aunt Pauline in Brooklyn back then, and who knows where Justin might be these days? Maxwell’s soundman was between Ira Kaplan and Andy Peters, and I worked with all three. Justin got me the Skyline Studio gig, which didn’t last too long as Skyline was not in good shape financially and soon went under.
I tell the story, usually around the holidays, about having to hand out bonuses to coworkers at the studio, and me getting a 10% raise. I told them I would rather get a cash bonus instead of a 10% increase, but they insisted. Then, a few months later, since things were not going so well, everyone was having to take a 10% pay cut, which meant that where everyone else got a holiday bonus, I ultimately got nothing.
Still, it was a good experience overall. They had a reunion a few months ago, but I did not go. I do not like reunions unless they’re family reunions, and even then, I find myself dragging my feet. The last one in Bordentown was nice, and I remarked that it’s good to get together without a corpse in the room. Some people agreed, and some people thought it was a horrible thing to say.
