
During that time Houston night clubs had short shelf lives, and it wasn't uncommon to go to a newly opened club that had the same address of one you'd gone to faithfully in a previous incarnation, but had undergone an extreme makeover. Sometimes it was an old club name in a new location with a younger clientele.

I was hitting the gay ones such as Studio 13, Uptown Downtown, Incognito and others as well during those times, and my party options became national in scope once I started working for CAL in 1987.
In all the non-gay ones I hit in H-town, there was one common denominator besides the deejays and the same party animals of my generation frequenting them. It was a tall, light brown skinned balding gentleman we called Pops. Pops would try to hit on the ladies, fail miserably at doing our latest dances, do silly stuff to make us all laugh and get the deejay's attention for a shout-out.
After wearily watching Pops' antics for the umpteenth time while hanging out one night at a northside spot called Boneshakers in 1983, I turned to my then homie Eric Shepherd and said, "Shep, slap me if I get to be Pops' age and I'm still trying to hang out in clubs."

Hello? I'm old enough to be their mother. Besides, if I'm hanging out at a club these days it's going to have a jazz band playing or the music being spun is old school R&B.
One reason I don't hang out in the GLBT clubs is because I'm boycotting two of them for hosting SQL performances last year (and they know who they are). I don't spend my hard earned bucks in establishments that disrespect me or my culture.

The other thing I'm not down with is being the old girl at the club. Visions of my twenties and Pops keep dancing in my head. I also believe that clubs are a young person's playground. I believe we all have a certain amount of time and our youthful moment to spend in them, then need to move on. What do I have in common with the zygotes who are running around trying to get laid besides cultural history and transgender status?

So I guess I could suffer being the old gal in the club every now and then for art's (and sometimes activism's) sake. Who knows, I may get lucky and find someone my own age to hang out with while I'm there.
But I'm still not spending one dime in those two clubs that hosted SQL performances.
2 comments:
What's 'SQL'?
Gennee
Genevieve, that would be Chuck Knipp a.k.a. Shirley Q. Liquor. It's a blackface minstrel show, and not a very good one at that. Check some of Monica's older postings on that subject.
I don't go to clubs, either, unless it's the type of club where you sit down at a table and enjoy good food, good drinks, and live entertainment - acoustic music, jazz, or perhaps standup comedy. Most of the random noises people dance to these days, sucks like an Electrolux. I also want to see open season declared on the fools that go to clubs on meth, crack, or Ecstasy, as well as the amoral murderers who try to slip Mickeys to people, in the form of rohypnol or GHB. May they rot in hell.
I'd rather stay home with my own record collection, all things considered.
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