The following is an amalgam of excerpts from the liner notes I
wrote for the CDs Welcome To My Job and Abba Dabba Dabba,
interwoven with thoughts as they come to me today, three days after
my friend Cub Koda died as the result of kidney failure at the age
of 51.
When he first read my notes to his 1994 CD, Abba Dabba--the
one where he's pictured on the cover playing a pink Danelectro
hybrid with fur binding while wearing a garish dinner jacket and
gorilla mask--Cub Koda asked if the opening wasn't "somewhat
apocryphal." No, I assured him, this is exactly as it happened.
You see, around May of that year, as I stated in the notes,
Cub provided me with one of those Kodak-moment/It's-Miller-Time
freeze frames--even though he was 1,200 miles away at the time. I
had just bought a '56 Chevy sedan delivery and was driving it back
from California alone. I'd packed fistfuls of tapes for the trip
but ended up almost exclusively playing stuff Cub had sent me: his
Welcome To My Job best-of; a primer on Detroit's Fortune Records
that he'd taped just for me; demented obscurities from his vast
record collection, like Tommy Tucker singing "The Ghost of Mary
Lou" and Andy & the Manhattans' "Double Mirror Wrap Around Shades";
and rough mixes of Abba Dabba. I was heading out of Van Horn,
Texas, it was dusk, and I had a Dr. Pepper between my legs and a fried
pie in one hand; I was driving the hottest rod within a hundred-mile
radius, and Cub was reaching for (and nailing) the high note on
"Village of Love."
It was indeed one of those stop-and-smell-the-bluebonnets
moments, and Cub was as integral a component as the whitewalls or
the sunset.
At that point Cub and I had been amigos for about five years,
galvanized by an all-nighter at a Denny's in Killeen, Texas, one
July night. We must have witnessed two shift changes, over grilled
cheese sandwiches, a couple of bowls of tomato soup, 40 cups o'
coffee, and a freewheeling, nonstop dialog that encompassed
everything from el-cheapo electric guitars to the films of Bela
Lugosi to what's the most out-of-tune blues record ever made--all
things Cub was an authority on.
As we were finally leaving the eatery, by now greeting the
rising sun, Cub asked me, "What's your favorite Bo Diddley song?"
Knowing I had to fish a little deeper than "Who Do You Love" to
prove that I knew my onions (one of the Cubmaster's patented
phrases), I cited "Background to a Music"--quite possibly the most
surreally stupid number in the Book Of Bo (which is sayin'
something). As I was driving Cub back to his motel, he played me a
cassette of his latest work-in-progress, Cub Digs Bo. "Well, hello
dere," began Cub Voice #27, in a Jerome Green/George "Kingfish"
Stevens vein. "I would like to get a job," answered Cub Voice #28,
as various other Kodas played drums, bass, tremolo guitar and
maracas. It was the perfect end to a marathon first meeting, the
audio equivalent of us pricking our index fingers and becoming
blood brothers.
Earlier that evening I'd already come to the realization that
I'd misjudged this Cub guy. Because, to be quite honest, the fact
that he'd played stadiums and had hit records with Brownsville
Station (most notably 1973's number-three "Smokin' in the Boy's
Room") didn't mean squat to me. I was far too sophisticated and
adult by the time they came along (hey, I was in college), and in
retrospect, they personified every spandex/shag-haircut/platform-
shoe stereotype I detested about '70s rock. Of course, if I'd been
four years younger, I would've been front-and-center at their
stadium revelries (hell, Foghat's and Grand Funk's, too), and if
I'd been four years older (Cub's age), I would've been auditioning
as his rhythm guitarist. (And never mind that I had a couple of
pairs of platforms myself.)
I first suspected that there was a deep end to the Koda pool
when I read his liner notes to a 1976 Chess reissue of unsung blues
visionary J.B. Lenoir. Describing the song "Natural Man," Cub
pointed out that the horn section repeated the same riff
irrespective of the chord changes, that the drummer whacked the
front-, rather than the back-, beat (on the 1 and 3), that J.B.
sang like "the bastard son of Big Boy Crudup and Little Anthony &
the Imperials"--and that these elements were exactly what made J.B.
the coolest. He wasn't making fun of the bluesman, but neither was
he shooting him full of formaldehyde. And one thing was abundantly
obvious--the same thing that was brought into sharper focus after
reading his Vinyl Junkie columns in Goldmine (and later
DISCoveries): Mr. Smokin' In The Boy's Room was passionate about
American music, preferably the raw, wild, lunatic-fringe variety.
Earlier in '89 this blues annotator became a penpal after he
solicited my aid in his quest for the Holy Grail of guitars, a
Jimmy Reed tiger-pickguard Kay electric. So when Cub and his then-
band, the Bone Gods, were stranded in mid-tour, thanks to the
breakup of the show's headliner, Black Oak Arkansas (Phase III), I
drove up from Austin. Needless to say, a short-notice fill-in
weeknight at a cavernous alcoholic amusement park in a Texas
military outpost (which Cub purposely mispronounced "Keileen," as
if it rhymed with "Eileen," all night) was hardly a "showcase." But
as I since found out was his wont, Cub played as if it were Elvis'
satellite Aloha concert from Hawaii. He howled and belted, he
literally led the band through their paces with choreography,
played one-handed guitar solos, and did everything but Al Jolson
bird calls. He wasn't about to get off that stage until he'd
connected with each and every one of the 50 or so people who'd
wandered in that night. And by the time the last chords of
"Smokin'" had faded, all 50, even those who weren't quite sure who
this bespectacled runt was when they'd walked in, knew they'd seen
a show by a true professional.
Of all the handles he wore in his four-decade career--singer,
songwriter, guitarist, harmonica player, multi-instrumentalist,
bandleader, rock journalist, CD compiler, cottage industry--I think
the one he was proudest of, and was most fitting, was Entertainer.
And that ability and sensibility went all the way back to his Gene
Krupa Meets Little Richard impersonations at talent shows when he
was five. By age 14, the Ann Arbor, Michigan, native had switched to
guitar and formed a trio called the Del-Tino's. The band's first
single, a cover of Roy Orbison's "Go, Go, Go," was cut in September
of '63, a month before Koda turned 15. "We'd been together maybe
six months," he told me, "so I'd been playing guitar for about six
months." (The sum total of the Del-Tino's' recorded output was
later compiled on an LP, Go! Go! Go! With The Del-Tino's; Sounds
Interesting Records, 1984.)
That band dissolved around 1966, when college and other
concerns intervened, and Cub gigged with various "neither fish nor
fowl" groups, including a Las Vegas lounge duo. In 1969 he formed
Brownsville Station, and as he stated in the liner notes to the
band's best-of compilation on Rhino, "The way we saw it,
rock'n'roll had taken a left turn straight into hell. We thought
that concept albums, drums solos, and wah-wah pedals were a spit in
the face of our musical forefathers. Our musical outlook was formed
by Phil Spector 45s, Link Wray, Chuck Berry, Little Richard, Bo
Diddley, and Ricky Nelson, while our stage act was equal parts Paul
Revere & the Raiders, James Brown, Brother Dave Gardner, Lenny
Bruce, and bad science-fiction movies. We never referred to
ourselves as a 'rock group'; we were a Detroit rock'n'roll band,
and damn proud of it."
The band toured the arena/cow-pasture circuit, opening for
everyone that was big and headlining over everyone that was about
to be big (Springsteen and ZZ Top, among them). They made all the
Midnight (or was it spelled "Midnite"?) Special, Don Kirshner's, In
Concert TV shows, and were, as Cub readily admitted with no
apologies or embarrassment, "emblematic of our times and
surroundings," with their shags, platforms, and Marshall stacks.
The aforementioned "Smokin'" put them on the map and in the Top 10,
not once but twice--later revived by Motley Crue, who presented its
composer with a double-platinum momento of their Theatre of Pain
album.
As the band became more famous, and his bandmates became more
desirous of success and "legitimacy" (as in the rock press
variety), Cub got deeper and deeper into "what I'm really about,
the music that was very passionate for me"--which surfaced in the
form of his one-man-multi-tracked-band tapes. As he explained,
"There was no one to play 'Ubangi Stomp' with at 3:00 in the
morning--except myself."
Although it wasn't released until years later, Cub's first
solo project was a country/rockabilly collection called That's What
I Like About The South. By aiming to "sound like a real good band
at a VFW hall on a Saturday night," Cub's solo outings sound more
real and full of energy than any pitch-corrected, Pro Tools-
enhanced recordings I've heard. And although when they eventually
began seeing the light of day, Cub was greeted with a new level of
respect from the roots/collector crowd, to my mind he still hasn't
received the recognition his talents merit as a singer, guitarist,
and just a damn fine musician--let alone stylistic chameleon.
Listen to his best-Jerry-Lee-Lewis-song-the-Killer-never-recorded
("Two Handed Love Affair") or tributes to Link Wray ("Ace of
Spades"), Roky Erickson ("We Sell Soul"), Chuck Berry (Cub Digs
Chuck), and Bo Diddley (Cub Digs Bo), and realize that the ass-
kicking garage band you're hearing is one guy and his trusty Tascam
4-track "Buick." If you're still not impressed, stick an ad in the
Recycler and try to find a drummer (or guitarist, let alone a
drummer/guitarist) who can cover a fraction of the styles Cub
embraced. The audition from hell: "Okay, all you've got to do is
play a blues shuffle so deep you can hear the traffic on Maxwell
Street, then some Detroit doo-wop with extra Royal Crown pomade, a
little surf music, some Louis Prima cacophony, New Orleans second-
line...."
But the most important ingredient in Cub's alter-ego tributes
and genre-pinballing was that he never submerged his own identity;
his personality, his voice, always shone through. "It's obvious
that I love a lot of different kinds of music," he told me, "so
what I want to do now is stretch the boundaries of so-called roots
music as far as I can, while making it singularly stamped with my
own personality. I'm not worried about sounding exactly like some
old blues or doo-wop record; screw that--I want to sound exactly
like me doin' that stuff."
"I've never understood how someone can obviate their own
personality to crawl inside somebody else's skin," he continued.
"If I can't bring something of my own self to it, it just doesn't
make any sense to me. And, to me, you should throw your heart and
soul into that music. The thing I don't agree with with the blues
nazis is, 'Oh, you've got to play it just like the original Checker
78.' If you mummify something and just turn it into a museum piece,
it won't live. That music's vibrant, and you've just got to play
that stuff like you're killing rattlesnakes in your backyard--with
a vengeance."
Thankfully, one of the strongest elements of Cub's
personality, musically and otherwise, was always apparent on his
records, and that was his sense of humor. Who but Cub would record
a field holler called "Random Drug Testing" ("Well, the boss man
said you gotta pee in the cup, pee in the cup, pee in the cup..."),
or ask the musical question, What if Howlin' Wolf had recorded
Broadway show tunes or Gary Lewis & the Playboys hits? Needless to
say, the mere idea, let alone the uncannily authentic sound, of the
Wolf singing "Shuffle Off to Buffalo" or "She's Just My Style" must
have given the blues-embalmer crowd massive strokes--a fact that
was no doubt that much more icing on the cake for Cub. And the thing
is, the stuff sounded oddly appropriate. Far from blasphemy, it
showed a level of insight that an army of guys with shades and
beat-up Strats will never reach.
And who but Cub would conceive and play out an almost Andy
Kaufmanesque in-joke (with only him and a few close friends in on
the joke) like his musical alter ego, King Uszniewicz? During the
latter stages of Brownsville, he and the road crew would record as
this horrendously bad fictitious oldies band (one rule being that
you could not play your usual instrument of choice, so I believe
that's the Cubster on sax), and actually press up a box or two of
singles and sneak them into the collectors' consciousness via
Goodwill bins. (The eventual release of these tracks on LP, by
Norton Records in '89, even merited a follow-up, so Cub rounded up
the Uszniewicztones and served up another hysterical helping of
musical shit on a shingle.)
Another equally important component to all things Cub was the
man's energy level, which only seemed to increase as he reached
middle age. In addition to always gigging, always having two or
three solo projects in the works and another half-dozen in the back
of his mind, his aforementioned Vinyl Junkie column (which ran for
20-some years), and more recently his work for the All Music guides
and authoring Blues For Dummies (IDG, 1998), raised the standard of
rock journalism, injecting passion and breathing life into that
jaded, tragically-hipper-than-thou arena. If Koda wasn't single-
handedly the heart and soul of rock'n'roll, he was arguably its
conscience.
When Brownsville imploded in '79, Cub took the reins of a rootsier,
more intelligent, "Brownsville the way I wanted to do it"
quartet, dubbed Cub Koda And The Points. They released only one
self-titled album (which contains a blistering treatment of Moon
Martin's "Cadillac Walk"), although when they briefly reunited in
1999 the results were released as Noise Monkeys (J-Bird Records).
Following the group's demise, Cub fell into perhaps his dream
gig, leading the late Hound Dog Taylor's bandmates, drummer Ted
Harvey and guitarist Brewer Phillips--the Houserockers! Though
scarcely noticed at the time by the Blues Intelligentsia (no, I'm
not gonna make an oxymoron joke here), this sawed-off upstart with
the Beatle cut proved that he could trade his platforms for a pair
of Stacy Adams and fill the shoes (well, come as close as anyone is
ever likely to) of one of the greatest juice-joint blues-rockers.
Just listen to these three pummeling "Highway 49" on their
eventually-released live CD (Cub Koda & The Houserockers Live At
B.L.U.E.S., 1982; Wolf Records, 1990). The most significant
acceptance he got was that of Brewer and Ted (and Eddy Clearwater
and Lefty Diz), who saw him as a peer; he just happened to have had
the good fortune to have had a big hit on the radio a few years
earlier.
In recent years, Cub toured on several of the summer oldies
packages at state fairs and such, but leave it to Cub to bring
integrity and dignity to that as well. He'd call me from the road,
sometimes excited, sometimes a bit weary, with stories of the one-
and two-hit wonders he was sharing billing with and sometimes
accompanying--Al "Show And Tell" Wilson, Donnie "Mission Bell"
Brooks, Sonny "Time Won't Let Me" and "Precious And Few" Geraci,
the Beau Brummels' Sal Valentino, the Dovells' Len Barry, and even
one of his Detroit heroes, Mitch Ryder. "If it ever got to the
point," he said, "where I thought I had lost the things that drove
me when I was 14 years old--that gotta-be-somebody instinct that
drives every performer--if I was just up there headed into
Hackland, I'd quit." But it never got to that point; he was active
to the very end.
It was the man who sang "Bristol Stomp" and 1-2-3," Len Barry,
who wrote the most eloquent testimonial for Cub's Welcome To My Job
retrospective: "Cub Koda is a Confederate cracker from Detroit.
Cub, actually, should be from the Australian outback or the 'Wild
Wyoming West,' where he cooked on cattle drives and played frontier
funk around the fire at night. The cowboys would tolerate his lousy
cooking because his songs were so full of love and understanding
for them. You see, where Cub really comes from is the heart; his
heart and yours. He's a miner, an automobile worker, and a farmer.
Cub Koda is a blue-collar cowboy whose gravel throat growls and
groans concern for you. He roars like a man and loves like a lamb.
He's like a doctor who says, 'Look what you've done to yourself,'
followed by, 'I can't save you,' followed by him ultimately saving
you. Cub Michael Koda is a bright, warm, kindhearted man who comes
with a lotta little boy in him. He has chosen to take his talent
that's fit for a king, and give it back instead to the peasants
from which it came. I consider him to be the poet spokesman for all
the people who work too hard for too little. He will always be the
empathetic personification of the union he represents: the B.C.D.--
'Blue Collar Dudes.' Cub Koda is my friend, and I love him."
The only thing I can think of to add to that (other than "Amen")
is that if you knew Cub, you really knew him. Even if you only knew
him through his writing, or saw the performer onstage, you were
looking straight into a very real, very human person--an extremely
personable, always accessible guy, not some star. And if you knew
Cub, you were likely to also know (or at least feel like you knew)
his beautiful wife of a quarter-century, Jeannie ("Lady J"), and
his parents, Max and Lois Koda--whom he never failed to thank on
one of his records. My deepest sympathies (and those of a gazillion
fans) go out to them. Hopefully this quote from one of my
interviews with Cub will give them some solace: "Best of all is to
know that I'm not just a name in a history book, that I actually
brought some life to the party. I've gotten to do things that most
people never get a chance to do; I'm appreciative of all of it. And
to realize that it's lasted, and that people like it and enjoy it,
that I've influenced other musicians--hey, man, what else could you
ask for?"
[Teisco Del Rey is a journalist and
surf guitarist who counts among his
biggest showbiz thrills playing maracas
and rhythm guitar behind Cub Koda one
night at the Continental Club in Austin,
Texas.]
(C) 2000 - Teisco Del Rey