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Ruby Tuesday

OSU campus bar Ruby Tuesday, Columbus, Ohio

Not to be confused with the national restaurant chain, the Ruby Tuesday at 1978 Summit Street is an OSU campus institution. A mellow dive, Ruby’s is basically your proper English pub, outfitted almost entirely with wood and a dark, smoky atmosphere that grows incrementally warmer the foggier it becomes. They opened their doors in August of 1973 and soon became a local favorite – all the more so, over the ensuing years, as virtually every other legendary campus tavern has bit the dust.

A creaky wooden beer stained floor and matching bar, matching tables and chairs and stage further accentuate this idyll, not to mention the mostly killer jukebox. Above it a chalkboard calendar charts the musical acts due up this month, horrendous though most of them are. Two pool tables near the front door and real darts, an elaborately stained glass window on the other half of the bar and the kind of chattering hippie clientele that unites the thread of conversation, on quiet nights like these, from one end of the building to the other.

When we first become aware of the joint, we’re living within stumbling distance at 1990 1/2 Summit Street, and are regular patrons soon enough. We walk two doors down to Ruby’s, where the rustic ambience blasts away our cabin fever. Here the sun slants through the stained glass of their elaborate front window, in warm shades reminiscent of a roaring campfire. More than anything, Ruby’s is a western saloon from the end of the 19th century, and if they’d only replace the jukebox with a beer soaked piano, the illusion would stand complete. Sometimes I imagine that I’ll glance through a pane of that multicolored window and feast my eyes upon a rutted dirt road with horse drawn carriages, a few stray tumbleweeds.

Were this the case, then our favorite Ruby’s regular would assuredly hold the post of town marshal. Unfailingly attired in cowboy boots and faded jeans, a thick salt and pepper mustache and button down shirt, he occasionally adopts a brown leather vest and ten gallon hat as well. Roaring down Summit Street in his enormous yellow 1970s auto, its muffler painfully ineffective, he parks in front of Ruby’s, breezes through the door arm in arm with his gloriously middle aged wife. Smiling in benign abstraction at everyone she encounters, the lady I peg as our mining boomtown’s lone seamstress, or perhaps the proprietor of its thriving whorehouse. A coy flapper girl perhaps, should she dress the part, were she twenty years younger.

As the sun sinks into purple twilight, this bluesy hillbilly outfit takes the stage. Pitchers of beer abound, and the air is alive with a dozen disparate conversations, audible alongside the band without drowning it out. On this side of the bar, they dim the lights down to accommodate a flickering candle atop each table, and we’re reclined here absorbing the group’s twangy wares. Though quite competent at what they do, this isn’t exactly our cup of tea, and we await the moment our quarters come up on one of the pool tables.

The band finishes its first set, yet this ungodly feedback fills the air, leaving the guitarist onstage to investigate its source YEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE and as Alan descends a flight of stairs to the basement restroom, the guitarist inspects his axe EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE he inspects his amplifier. He stands there literally scratching his head, but this voluminous, continuous squeal divides the atmosphere like a bandsaw EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE and the din grinds down to absolute standstill, pin drop quiet if not for the banshee shriek. Miffed by this mysterious malfunction, the guitarist begins unplugging their equipment, walking off with a shrug.

It is only when our mustachioed town marshal spins around from his bar stool to face the crowd do we divine the genesis of this marathon wail. Drawing deep within his powerhouse lungs for one last triumphant hurrah, he concludes this raucous endorsement HAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAWWWWWWWWW!  and grins with obvious delight, knocking off the dregs of his beer mug. He stands and grabs a pool stick as the bar explodes with laughter, and the conversation eventually swells back to life.

“What the fuck was that?”  Alan asks, returning from below.

“It was him!” I cheer, pointing at our friend.

Christ that was loud,” Alan declares.

His wife showering smiles from her own barstool, our hillbilly friend rustles up a redneck partner and in tandem, they own the table. Our quarters come up and we meet them head on, but they eat up an hour draining our pockets, reigning triumphant. And yet within this window of fierce struggle, while the first band wraps up its show and a second nearly identical group begins, we manage just three games.

In shooting the breeze with his fellow patrons, pausing for giant gulps of draft beer, the average time elapsed between the arrival of his turn and that which he actually shoots approaches five minutes.  With every female entering the saloon, regardless of age or appearance, our goodwill ambassador slings an eardrum puncturing whistle in her direction. He lines up to take a shot, then straightens, turns to somebody at the bar behind him in resurrecting a prior conversation.

“Anyway, as I was saying……”

Maddening, if not so hysterical.

In lieu of a good woman, or for that matter any woman at all, we turn to Ruby Tuesday instead. Drink, pool, music: not the least bit novel by way of escapism, but solace plenty in times such as these. She’s always here for us, welcoming us into her womb, no matter how varied and strange the occasion. Walking in one drowsy weeknight unawares, A Clockwork Orange is flickering on the giant screen behind the stage, and we laugh our asses off watching Damon squirm in his seat.

“What the fuck!?” he bellows, “I don’t get it!”

Super Bowl Sunday Alan and I wander in to watch the Packers trounce the Patriots upon the same rolled down backdrop, shocked at the enormous food buffet provided to patrons gratis. Pizzas and meatballs and wings of every imaginable variety, it’s a far cry from the bland, dry popcorn secreted by that machine in the corner, typically our only sustenance here. But they likely banked enough dough that night selling booze and beer to the massed throng of screaming savages to pay rent for a year, justifying the banquet’s expense.

Aside from bartender Randy’s scowl, our sole entertainment most evenings is the more familiar standby, live music. Yet even such a tried and true commodity is never formulaic, despite their apparent intent to book an endless succession of jam hearty hippie bands. Somehow, be it opening act or otherwise, wild cards slip through the ranks, chaotically diverse in style as well as quality. An enchanting neo-psychedelic band named Sugar Pill, for instance, with a lead singer in granny glasses and a paisley shirt, tall and white with a huge jet black afro. A bad by-the-numbers metal band called Chaos Theory. The worst band of all time, Weave, comprised of four overly earnest dorks playing generic college rock, a torturous affair redeemed only by their cover of Duran Duran’s Rio.

Far more typical is a jam band Damon and I catch here one night, four older gentlemen known as Men of Leisure. Arriving during the final notes of one set, we endure a forty five minute break before they take the stage again for their last – no band was ever more fittingly named. Though now nearly two in the morning, a point where most attendees have either left or no longer care, their first tune alone clocks in at eight minutes, and the rest stray not far from this mark.

From the outset, we’re convinced they suck mightily. The chops heavy quartet – drummer, guitarist, bass player, and saxophonist – proffer a loose vibe a la Local Color, but lack both the style and the grace of that band, playing the part of Southern rock and roll vagrant to the other group’s west coast acid hippie. Bored to the point of nearly weeping, we endure three such meandering epics, and are too lazy to relocate ourselves before they begin a fourth.

Yet this particular song begins with a captivating James Brown style groove, before flying off, halfway through, into a Neil Young-ian feedback tangent. This singular feat alone is enough to win us over, and we’re rooted to our chairs for the duration of their performance, which extends well beyond two thirty. Men of Leisure ultimately win a thumbs up, but for every one of them there are four or five Weave around town, a half dozen Chaos Theory. Ruby’s embodies this basic musical pie chart as well as any campus bar, and still we can’t refrain from coming here, drawn by the lopsided uncertainty of what we might find.

You might expect that with a live music palette this diverse, the clientele is by default hip to diverse jukebox tuneage as well. Yet there are apparently limits to this theory. I dare play the half hour Pink Floyd epic Echoes, which is fine and dandy until the music breaks away to that long section where there’s nothing but chirping seagulls or whatever for a solid two or three minutes. Randy preempts by storming over to the jukebox and skipping the rest of the song entirely, advancing to the next selection I’d picked with the press of a button. Applause breaks out in disparate corners of the bar, as three or four individuals clap their hands, shout their thanks to him.

An opening act now mounts the stage, Johnny Smoke. Hailing an hour west, from the eclectic rock and roll city of Dayton, Johnny Smoke hurl themselves into a breakneck set of punky pop.  But while the songs are unfailingly catchy, not to mention a far sight better than the standard fare here, an air of mediocrity pervades the performance, the musicianship itself. Their lone ace lies in the hand of a lanky, disheveled lead singer, who, while not vocally gifted, is nonetheless a ham actor born to be hogging the stage somewhere.

“If it weren’t for beer and pot, I’d be dead,” he announces, straight faced, between songs.

They launch into a tune concerning old Def Leppard and ZZ Top shows witnessed at the Hare Arena back home, in a jaunty vein akin to all that’s come before. Yet their set soon draws to a close, and the bar is swelling with an odorous flock intent upon catching tonight’s headliners. Judging from the crowd, we speculate another hippie jam band awaits us, an assumption soon proven correct.

Mary Adam 12 is the moniker this outfit operates under, but they just as easily could call themselves Local Color II or Men of Leisure Lite, a watered down version of what we’ve already seen done better. Sure, with a half dozen musicians who clearly know their instruments backwards as well as forwards, and a short, chubby chick doing a credible job on lead vocals, they stop short of outright hackdom. But every song they crank out sounds identical to the one before, and each is at least two minutes too long, a frightening cocktail for any group. Not to mention one that sounds like half the other bands we’ve heard around town, considering themselves a modern day Dead and cultivating a mob of would-be flower children wherever they wander. The music, accordingly, is an unrelenting, unwavering hippie shuffle – chick, chick chick; chick, chick chick; chick, chick chick – tedious as hell three cuts into the set.

Adhering to this vibe, the crowd seems also a strip mall version of the Local Color following. The swirly, elbows bent hands raised dance prevails here, predictably, but the girls are generally less hairy and the guys more inclined to shower, with both sexes dressing sharper, as a rule, than their Not Al’s brethren. A number of the same individuals assuredly populate both crowds, true, and yet whatever their particulars neither party has a problem displaying its affection for the meandering kaleidoscope of sound. Maybe if Alan or I are on drugs, like everyone else appears to be, then we might enjoy this grand spectacle better. We aren’t, however, and we don’t.

As much as we frequent this place, however, it’s only natural that we begin recommending it to others. Among the first such beneficiaries of our kindness are Mandy, Melissa, and K.C., a trio down visiting from our hometown area of Mansfield. Mandy especially falls in love the instant she sets foot inside the place.

She gapes at the bare wooden floors, scuffed, unvarnished, she marvels at the modest unoccupied stage. K.C. digs our favorite neighborhood haunt, too, mostly because this is one of the last establishments around still featuring actual cork dartboards. Everywhere else we encounter computerized plastic monstrosities, which tally the score, though offering nothing for aesthetics, the weight and feel of an actual steel tipped dart in hand, the joyous jolt of a successful toss.

Beer pours heavy from tap into pitcher, as we coalesce around a thrown together table on the other half of the bar. Setting up camp between the dartboards and the stage, pushing together three small square tables into a larger conglomeration. In teams of two we wage war upon the cork, each game an attempt to dethrone the previous winners. Adamant but the notable exception of Damon, who’s half crocked before we leave the house and spends his time trying to worm down September’s pants.

In the tavern’s cobwebbed basement, dust gathers on the ghosts of a bygone era. Robust years where a second bar, buried underground, thrives in autonomous glory and the booths, now dry rotted, cater to capacity. I look at these stained cement walls, barely visible in the lone light hanging at the foot of these stairs, and think of decade old conversations that died and dried against them, buried in spots by the handwritten, magic marker graffiti. I like to believe that the redolent swirl of voices and smoke and throaty barfly laughter never dissipated, but gradually morphed, through some mysterious alchemic process, into the mildewy stench that saturates the air down here.

Gone beyond reclamation, the basement serves no purpose at present other than he and she restrooms that were never relocated. Upstairs beside the first pool table, a fist sized hole in the floor peers directly into the ladies’ facilities, but this piece of information amounts to no more than a useless, well known curiosity. Voices occasionally float skyward from below, and nothing else, for not even we are perverted or depraved enough to risk sneaking a peek. Collapsing face first in a crowded room, cheeks flush against the floorboard as eyeballs strain and rotate in their sockets for one meager illicit glance, yeah, this might ruffle more than a few feathers.

OSU campus bar Ruby Tuesday close up
OSU campus bar Ruby Tuesday, up close

II.

Arriving home brings with it the kind of pleasant surprise often stumbled upon when, not only did you have no idea what somebody was up to, but it never occurred to you to wonder about it in the first place. Feeling completely drained already by the holidays, I’ve intended to just chill at home – even on a prime weekend night such as this – and yet here’s Alan, unexpectedly haunting these grounds.

“Leigh’s coming over, and a couple other people from work,” he says, “you up for heading over to Ruby’s with us?”

I can’t imagine what kind of twisted conversations must have befallen them, to make this sound like a reasonable option. Leigh’s obviously easing up on the schedule a bit to even make it out tonight, and beyond that I get the impression that slumming it here on campus is a cheap little lark, a low rent vacation. Ooh, let’s go see what those weirdos are up to down there! That will be a fun change of pace! Furthermore, owing to their tendency to schedule nothing but hippie jam bands basically every night of the week, coupled with our overindulgence in the place our first six months or so living here, Ruby’s has just about excised itself from our repertoire.

It will soon emerge that the ringleader behind this brilliant enterprise is a newcomer to our circle, a guy from the airport called Snoop. His given name is Kevin, but apparently nobody uses that. Alan warns me in advance that this dude is a little off in the head – in the best sense of the phrase, though, meaning a fearless party animal who, reminiscent of our former mentor Doug, is too out there to even recognize any boundaries.

Leigh is next to arrive, bringing with her some Rachel chick from the airport. Rachel is a sweet though slightly heavier blonde with a really pretty face. To paraphrase Damon, let’s just shorthand these attributes in a neat, simple phrase and call them trouble. Perhaps for the best, though, she’s also underage, a fact which is surely the impetus for this decision to drink on campus. No sooner have we set foot inside the door, too, does Snoop enter the fray with guns blazing, so to speak, affording an instant glimpse at his fabled shenanigans.

A pair of bartenders neither Alan nor I have ever seen before are slinging drinks tonight. Snoop saunters up to the bar and casually requests two pitchers. This duo, which seems to be issuing orders jointly, demands that if he wants pitchers, they’ll need to see the IDs for all parties involved. So now Snoop returns and, as the bar is packed and we’re kind of standing off in a remote corner, he hatches a plan that Alan and I should go up together, request the same quantity of pitchers. Surely these guys aren’t paying that much attention, it will appear as it’s just the two of us.

But of course this turns out to be a waste of time. Our buddies are nothing if not observant, and had seen the entirety of our small crew walk in together. If we want pitchers, then all five of us need to approach the counter with licenses in hand, now. Sheepishly, without much commentary, we do just that. The bartenders pour us the pitchers, though dispensing only four glasses – a move that doesn’t require any explanation – and telling us to sit within sight of the bar.

We stand around for a moment, at Snoop’s murmured insistence, before he tilts his head for us to follow him over to the bar’s dim other half, the side with the stage. Here we are able to cram into a table shielded from the bartenders’ view, courtesy of a thick central support beam. Yet both come running over within a minute’s time and neither barkeep seems to find this stunt very amusing.

“I told you guys to sit where we could see you!” one says.

“But she doesn’t even drink!” Snoop protests.

“Okay, but if I catch her with a beer in her hand, she’s outta here and so are you, since you bought the pitchers!” the more vocal bartender contends.

“Alright!” Snoop returns in a raised voice, and the one bartender leaves. The other, his silent buddy, sticks around and explains:

“Sorry, we don’t mean to be dicks, but the bar got hit for a thousand dollar fine last week ‘cause the cops came and caught someone underage drinking. So now we’re really paranoid…”

“Hey, that’s cool,” Alan says, responding a little more favorably to this guy’s approach.

“Yeah, that’s cool,” Snoop and I concur, murmuring our assent. Then this bartender, too, walks away.

The end result, however, is that Rachel’s too scared to drink anyway. We keep ourselves entertained nonetheless, first via an increasingly rare real dartboard with steel tipped projectiles, then in placing our quarters up and commandeering one of the pool tables. When the pitchers are drained, Alan and Snoop continue pounding bottled beer at a furious clip, Leigh and I in much more relaxed fashion. By the time two-thirty rolls around, ol’ Kevin here is pretty damn loopy – although I have to admit that, while subjected to heaping doses of his off-the-wall humor, he’s kept the antics to a minimum since those introductory stunts.

Flipping on the house lights, our drink slingers begin shouting for everyone to leave. They collect any vessels encountered, whether empty or otherwise, and usher patrons toward the door. Then for some reason there’s a guy in a full-blown Viking helmet, shouting in a proper Scandinavian accent for effect, standing on top of the bar.

“GO HOME!” he commands, “GO HOME BEFORE I HAVE TO CHASE YE DOWN THE STREETS AND BEAT YER SKULLS IN!”

III.

Below are some of my original notes on shows glimpsed inside Ruby Tuesday – and I should caution, particularly if you or a loved one has graced that creaky old stage, a few of these reviews are not for the faint of heart…

Heavy Weather:  

Most of the acts gracing the stage at Ruby’s generally fall into the category of half-baked hippie jam bands. Terrible as a general rule, at least to anyone not blazed out of his mind on weed or psychedelics, but even so we can’t seem to stay away from Ruby’s entirely. Something to do with the warm atmosphere and its proximity to our home enables us to tolerate these nine piece cannabis laced outfits, even at their most droning monotonous extreme. For every Local Color, a tasteful, competent middle aged cover band specializing in cuts from the halcyon 60s, there’s a Heavy Weather plugging in and firing away here. It’s not so much that Heavy Weather’s bad – in fact they’re quite good at what they do – it’s that there are a hundred other bands around town proliferating the same material, the same vibe, a musical equivalent of the peace sign.

Johnson Brothers: 

Then again for every Heavy Weather there’s a dozen Johnson Brothers, groups even further down the food chain. A massive tribe of black guys who specialize in jittery funk, the Johnson Brothers command a sizable following wherever they go but to our overexposed ears nothing about them stands out as noteworthy. At first you’re enthralled with their musicality alongside everyone else, until three songs into the set when you realize whichever tune they play is going to sound exactly like all the others preceding it.

Lost Dog:

We manage the wherewithal to brave the elements and stroll a whopping two doors down to Ruby’s, to check out that Lost Dog band we spotted on the flier that night out with Cary. Chilling out at a dimly lit small table in the stage half of the bar, we feel like dupes when this band strolls onto the stage and there’s no blonde chick, or any chick for that matter, anywhere among their ranks. By appearances, she may have just been some random photo chosen as bait on their flyers. 

“What the fuck!?” Damon curses, when the group launches into the first of many covers. A decent outfit doing passable takes of songs everyone has heard countless times on the radio, okay on a technical level but damn near tortuous to our ears. The other problem is, I would guarantee there’s a band calling themselves Lost Dog in each of this nation’s top 200 cities, and then some.  

“Maybe she’ll come out a few songs into it,” I theorize. 

We sit through two solid sets, though, with no sign of our lady. But then, as the band emerges from their latest break for a third, who should grace the stage with them but said blonde of our dreams, the girl we’ve absently drooled over from afar. Here she had been chilling out by the bar all along. 

Short yet possessing one mighty fine body, she moves really well and has a good voice. And yet, still, the best thing going for her is that figure, and she knows it. Twice as many people, mostly guys, are gathered standing if not dancing in front of that stage the instant she claims it. Later still, mysteriously enough, Damon and I decide to troop up to Sugar Shack to really cap off this night, and pass her on the sidewalk beside Ruby’s. 

“Great show,” we tell her, and aren’t exactly talking about the music. 

“Thanks,” she replies with a smile. Somehow, I’m pretty sure she knows exactly what we mean. The whereabouts of that proverbial butter on her bread is no great mystery. 

Thirteen O’Clock:  

Not expecting much, Alan and I grab drinks and a pool table on the other side of the bar, as far away from the stage as we can arrange ourselves. Friday night means paying a cover charge, but damned if we’re going to listen to this stuff, at least in any capacity greater than incidental background music. Imagine our surprise, then, when Thirteen O’Clock graces the stage, a ragtag rockabilly combo who effortlessly manage to blow away our lessened, jaded expectations.

Thirteen O’ Clock, man are they ever the real deal. These cats are just it. The nimble fingered bass player employs only an upright, while the drummer spends their whole show standing, his energy and ebullient smile radiating enough warmth to flatten the entire room. Rounding out the threesome is a singer/guitarist who nails the whole thing perfectly, sneering and grinning as the moment demands, their sound reminiscent of the Stray Cats but only to a degree. With a style independent of anyone else we’ve seen around town, they’re far away the best band either of us have seen down here, even more so than Local Color. To compare the faceless mobs following those Johnson Brothers around against the relative obscurity Thirteen O’Clock toils in underscores the crapshoot nature of this music business, catering to a public that values hype over substance and likes their entertainment nothing if not spoonfed. For two hours, Thirteen O’ Clock sails full throttle through their frenzied set, and we’re held rapt in their sway.

Welfare Gypsys: 

Later this same night, an odd collection of souls by the name of Welfare Gypsys inherits the stage, squashing all momentum their opening act has created. Sure, they’ve got their own unique sound, too, but not in a good way, not in any positive way at all. The word eclectic springs to mind although in its truest sense that term is used complimentary, which means that here it doesn’t apply.

They have some long hair Joe Satriani wannabe on lead guitar, a guy who looks and plays as though he’s bounced from one musical equipment store to the next for the past ten or fifteen years. This old hippie left over from a Vietnam protest in the sixties plays acoustic, while the lead vocals are handled by a soulful black chick with a deep, resonant voice far too powerful to be slumming amidst these hacks. Meanwhile, two clean cut kids straight out of some frathouse hold down the bass and rhythm guitar, respectively, with the spiked haired blonde kid from Thirteen O’ Clock manning the drums.

Fittingly, the music they play is also a total hodgepodge of styles. The first song they launch into is a cover of Christopher Cross’s Sailing and while opening with such a pisspoor choice is debatable, it is true that by doing so these Welfare Gypsys almost ensure that they will improve as the night progresses. Simply put, there’s nowhere to go but up. After this abominable leadoff track a number of like candidates follow, none of it holding together very well until midway through the first set. By now they’re at last able to lock into a steady groove, but the unfortunate repercussions are that we’ve already heard too much dreck to care.

Gravy: 

When darkness falls, we saunter next door to either drown sorrows or celebrate, depending on which end of today’s burning powder keg wick we choose to focus upon. Another cover charge and another series of stoner hippie bands await Alan and me, but we’re too worn out to wander much further from the house.

Gravy’s playing when we arrive, a bunch of good old boys specializing in hillbilly rock, a welcome respite from the endless parade of sunny 60s jams we’re accustomed to hearing here. Beers in hand, we grab a table near the back of the bar, finding comfort in the deepest, darkest corner, away from the prying eyes that a well lit room makes possible. Upon sitting down, the first song we witness Gravy rip into is a cover of Willie Nelson’s Whiskey River, which they stomp and shred to pieces, a romp so majestic that ol’ Willie’s probably hearing them, too, in whatever corner of the world he’s withering away in at this very instant.

“OWW!” Alan shouts.

“HOO-EEEEE!” I add.

“WHOOO-DOGGIE!” he enthuses.

“Whiskeeeeeeeyyy Riverrrrrrrrrrrr!” I call out for good measure, as the band begins its next song.

So impressed are we with this sizzling slab of Southern boogie that Alan and I shout out “WHISKEY RIVER!” at the end of every song Gravy plays, but they refuse to oblige us with an encore performance. The crowd surrounding us, tucked away in their isolated circles of candle lit tables, pays no mind to our overtures, though then again for drunken maniacs to hoot and holler song titles here at Ruby’s is nothing out of the ordinary.

     In between acts we’re hanging out by the bar, talking to some more coworkers of mine, Jackie and Scott. Jackie’s a plump, short little hostess, always laughing at everything regardless of its humor content. She’s embarking tomorrow on a trip out west to visit some guys in Colorado who used to wait tables at our restaurant, in essence the same trip Tiffany just returned from. Scott, meanwhile, is a long haired dreadlocked kid who cooks in our kitchen part time, when he’s not busy playing with yet another local hippie jam band, Uncle Sam’s Dream Machine. He hasn’t been employed at our restaurant long, and I get the feeling he won’t stick around much longer, either.

Men Of Leisure: 

Next up on stage are those boring old bastards Men of Leisure, the most aptly named group in history. We reclaim our former table, Alan and I do, whereupon I immediately begin timing the band from the first note they play. A prior victim of theirs, I’m curious to examine not only how few songs they cram into a set, but how long each song stretches out, as well as what portion of the evening, exactly, these Men of Leisure spend on break.

A hybrid of sorts between Gravy’s hillbilly stomp and the meandering bongo-redolent noodling of everyone else who graces the stage here, this sums up the Men of Leisure in a nutshell. These guys all look to be in their 40s and thus should not only know their way around a decent classic rock catalog but also how to crop their selections down to an acceptable length, but these overindulgent wankers have no concept of either. Their first song alone I clock at ten minutes, and it’s the shortest of their set. Four songs total lasting just short of an hour and they’re off the stage again, gone outside to smoke for half hour break number one. Alan and I are debating whether or not to stick around for set number two when a welcome face drifts past and plops down at our table, that of Jenny Hughes. Rare among my female coworkers, I feel a kinship with Hughes, that she can relate to my crazy lifestyle. She too has lost her license due to various infractions stemming from an insurance lapse, she too has a pair of roommates sharing an upstairs house on campus. One of these roommates, a meek, pale and skinny little blonde chick by the name of Jenny Kramer, has tagged along and dropped into the other remaining chair at our tiny corner table. Their spotting us back here is a minor miracle, though one I’m thankful has transpired.

Most groups are in the midst of a third set by this late hour but they’re just beginning their second, yet it’s difficult to fault these guys for the lackadaisical approach. Bands around here can get away with playing just about anything, for any length of time, so long as it has the appropriate trippy groove they can all shuffle to, one that enables them to spin around in circles while making animal mating calls.

The girls return this time with a half full pitcher of beer, laughing as they claim they’re too drunk to finish it. Alan and I have our own pitcher we’ve barely even made a dent in, but readily accept their offer, as Hughes gracefully sets hers next to ours. Then they bow out into the night, bidding us adieu, leaving us to smolder in their wake.

“Whew, she’s hot,” Alan gasps, his perspiration visibly intensified just from that brief interaction with the Jennys.

“Yeah, she is,” I agree. Kramer’s cute enough in her own right but I know he’s talking about Hughes, I don’t even have to ask.

      Later we’re standing by the bar, preparing to leave, when Seresa drifts in. Cafe Bourbon Street is dead tonight, she explains, and they decided to close up early. Alan and I are just finishing up our last cupfuls of beer as she grabs a bottle, slugging it down at a pace to rival ours while the three of us huddle in a loose semicircle. Gorgeous as she is, though, even a master conversationalist like Alan can only muster up so much small talk with her, a relative stranger, and after our beers are finished we’re the next ones out the door.

IV.

Okay, so I’m admittedly kind of torn as far as how to post events calendars for these various bars around town. At the moment, I’m leaning toward posting these in the venue itself, instead of the yearly roundups, unless I have something significant to say about the event. So without further ado, fueled by the pure randomness of what I happen to be working on right this second, let me kick off the Ruby Tuesday event calendar for the year 2000:

1/8: The Shakewells 

1/13: Peach Melba & Bender 

1/14: the aforementioned Foley. Maybe they’ve straightened some things out, a couple of years down the road, or maybe we just left that other gig a little too early. Either way, at this point, they are booked to play Ruby’s every Friday, so you can pencil them in from here on out, until further notice.

1/15: Bob City with Spiveys & Mitch Mitchell’s Terrifying Experience 

2/24: Peach Melba

2/26: Toast

2/28: Local Color play here every Monday, of which this is one.

2/29: Every Tuesday, meanwhile, brings with it an open-stage night called Dan’s Acoustic Revolution. Ladies get in free.

3/1: And then each Wednesday, there’s a reggae night featuring The Flex Crew.

3/2: Spider Frendz headline, with support from A Planet For Texas, Missing Girl, and The Staggers

Fridays (as of at least Jan-March) – Foley 

Mondays (as of at least Jan-March) – Local Color 

Tuesdays (as of at least Jan-March) – Dan’s Acoustic Revolution (open stage; ladies get in free) 

Wednesdays (as of at least Jan-March) – Reggae night with The Flex Crew 

3/9 – The Shakewells 

3/11 – Bender, Jared Oriams 

3/16 – Rays Music Exchange 

3/17 – St. Patrick’s Day Bash featuring Bob City, Black Love, The White Outs, The Fur Traders 

3/18 – Willie Pooch or Foley or both (conflicting ads) 

3/23 – Jack Neat (according to ad – they’re actually listed at Oldfield’s on High as well) 

3/24 – Knee Jerk Reaction 

3/25 – Uncle Sam’s Dream Machine 

5/27 & 28: Quarkstock 2000 prog/space fest featuring Quarkspace and 7 other bands 

8/16 – The Shantee. Miles and I catch this show, it’s fantastic.

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Arlington Cafe

Rear entrance at Arlington Cafe, Columbus, Ohio

My jaw nearly hits the floor to see this place now. Can there possibly exist a more indelible message that nothing ever lasts? Most of my friends were never fans of this fabled club on West Henderson, whereas I was an early convert. Yet what seemed immediately after ascending to its all-time apex and winning over even those staunch holdouts, doors began shuttering and cobwebs descended from the rafters.

Arlington Café was always a bit of an anomaly, but made its idiosyncrasies work. Situated at the end of a shopping center counting Kroger as its anchor tenant for eons, in front of a sleepy upper middle class neighborhood, by day this bar was a dark dive which working class drunks were fond of slipping off to for their liquid lunches. Then come nightfall, shortly after the DJ slid into his glass lined booth and began cranking out modern dance mixes, it came alive with a completely different and still younger clientele, albeit one all the daytime regulars felt perfectly comfortable rubbing elbows against, having perhaps never left themselves even after the final happy hour bell finished ringing.

Much of this was attributable to at least four distinct moods to be found within its cavernous interior, and perhaps as many as six. Achieved effortlessly, I might add, a natural extension of its contour, flowing with contrivance. Contrast this against busted downtown experiments like Long Street, a much ballyhooed dance club which hit everyone over the head with all their themed rooms, tallied some staggering crowds in the early going, and soon bit the dust. Meanwhile, Arlington Café thrived, expanded, even, as it annexed the shops in front and added a second, massive dance floor.

Our initial visit to Arlington Cafe occurs, like so many other adventures from this era, at the behest of John H. A girl he used to date is a barmaid here now and he wants to check out this scene. On a night full of firsts, lasts, and loops back around from one to the other, the same evening that Damon and his ex-girlfriend Angie (meaning ex-girlfriend even at that moment; he had a current girlfriend, Shannon, who was not present for these festivities) and I happen to catch the final hockey game at OSU Ice Rink, we agree to meet John and some of my other coworkers out here, at this unfamiliar club on Henderson Road.

We follow his mysterious instructions for finding this place, which does add to the intrigue level, although not strictly necessary. Parking in front of the Henderson Road Kroger, there is indeed a long, dark tunnel carved between that building and the cluster of others fanning off to the right, in proper strip mall fashion, a passageway barely wide enough to fit two directions of foot traffic. Yet upon emerging on the other side, behind Kroger and the bar, you discover there’s a perfectly usable parking lot back here, not to mention another on the side, both of them accessible from nearby Nugent Drive. Still, as far as first impressions go, it’s hard to quibble with his recommendation of this ultra weird but cool Batcave entrance.

How they attract any patrons is actually somewhat of a mystery itself, explainable only by word of mouth. There’s no advertising whatsoever, not a single sign on the street nor in front of those stores, which would indicate any place of business exists back here. And yet much to our surprise, as we duck inside the back door, this place does boast a sizable crowd, despite bordering on a not quite insanely happening, middle aged to verging on senior part of town.

Which isn’t to say, despite the crowd, we are initially blown away by this club. We find ourselves in this slightly more subdued, rear lounge type room, and it’s a total yuppie haven – at least tonight. The lights seem way too bright for a drinking establishment, the wall to wall carpeting a bit more plush than is customary. As expected, the clientele is skewing a little older, older even than Banana Joe’s had last week. Everyone stands around in their Dockers and Tommy Hilfiger attire, and it’s all very tasteful and vomit inducing.

To say we feel a little out of place is an understatement. Angie looks good, of course, but Damon’s wearing a tie dyed Pink Floyd tee shirt, not to mention the mountain man look he’s still rocking, with the shaggy beard and the hair halfway down his back. In keeping with this “nice guy routine” I’ve adopted since the fall, which was also in large part inspired by John’s example, it’s true that I have thrown on some better clothes before heading out here – but wouldn’t say I am entirely comfortable with this scene, either.

But this is just one room, we remind ourselves. A room which features a vaulted glass ceiling – various people through the years will tell me this was retractable, even, though I never witness such and doubt that tidbit’s veracity – lording over a small dance floor, a horseshoe shaped bar, and seating on a couple of different levels, while the eastern, more spacious room beyond features all of the same, pretty much (minus the vaulted ceilings) but with a larger dance floor where the DJ plies his wares from a walled in nerve center, alongside scores of pool tables and a juke for non-disc jockey curated nights. And in later years, after the businesses in front were annexed, still larger dancing regions existed for would be booty shakers, in front of those pool tables. Giant TVs mounted everywhere, of course, and the lighting I recall as being colorful, neither too bright nor too dark regardless of the hour or day. But mostly what I remember are the forever changing vibes, dependent upon whatever moment you chose to show up.

The three of us venture over to the other half. Damon and Angie grab a beer at this side’s bar, while I, though playing the designated driver card, am in fact almost out of discretionary income for the night and have to seriously conserve my bullets. Once those two have drinks, we begin our meandering search for my past and current coworkers, a small cluster of whom should be here by now. 

Kristin is the first such person encountered, sitting in a booth with her fiance. Though she stopped working at our restaurant almost a year ago, and I’d never fraternized socially with her before she quit, this is the second occasion we’ve bumped into each other since – once, a passing, shouted conversation at the insanely packed Cornerstone bar on campus, and now this. While I hadn’t noticed much about her appearance during the previous encounter, tonight she represents Exhibit Z in how if girls mange to at least look average in your dreadful waiter’s attire, then you know for a fact they’re going to represent as borderline hot at minimum in street clothes. Which I nonetheless always forget anyway. 

As we settle into this spacious booth, sitting high enough off the ground that your feet more comfortably dangle mid-air rather than reaching for the ground, I hear someone calling my name, and it’s her. Upon joining them, I have a chance to appraise her up close and in better lighting. She rates highly on the score card despite both of those potential obstacles, in tight jeans, a black top and a little bit of makeup, not to mention the classic hair style which you don’t see much of now, though it’s been in fashion through the ages and surely will be again: the long, straight brown locks, parted down the middle without fanfare. As for her man, he seems affable enough, but is the sort of blandly, vaguely handsome and inoffensive sort whose features tend to melt into oblivion even as you’re sitting across from the guy. 

Somehow arriving after us, John H soon enters via the side entrance himself, wearing the black leather jacket which, as possibly expected, always makes him look more GQ than ruffian. Moments later we are joined by Amy K and yet another former coworker, Andrea. When you either actively or randomly hang out with the same people two or three nights a week, it’s easy to take for granted how low key and complication free said individuals always are. And falling between the cracks of this discussion in particular are the affable, party compliant females upon whom we’ve never imposed any designs. They represent a sub-category of those we take for granted, and Amy falls into this especially deep abyss, even though she’s technically classified as our superior on the job. Meanwhile there’s Andrea, she of curly, short dark hair and at present some almost secretarial glasses, sloshed already as she seemingly always is. Yet another casualty in the war of attrition any place of employment represents, the service industry in particular and, like Kristin, encountered more since she left than when actually working alongside us. The last occasion, at one of Swabby’s pandemonium drenched performances, John told me he’d heard she “fucks like a rabbit” but admitted he never made any efforts himself. 

It says a lot about the aircraft carrier sized booths here that eight of us could squeeze into one without too much difficulty, though Damon and Angie want a little privacy, and will commandeer the next one over as soon as it becomes available. As we are sitting with bottle cap tossing distance of the pool tables, Amy and Andrea challenge John and me to a game or two. Meanwhile H is filling me in on his history with this barmaid, also named Amy, someone he knew back home in Cleveland. Both moved down here to complete degrees at OSU. Both have subsequently dropped out well shy of these degrees. 

The roving waitress attending to these masses at the sea of pool tables is this highly flirtatious redhead whom, John and I both agree, sure seems like she’d be exceedingly easy to nail. On occasion you can kind of tell the difference between someone hustling guys for tips and someone who actually follows through on this slutty aura. This appears to be one such instance, a thought further confirmed when John’s ex tells us that this chick is crawling with diseases. 

Damon and Angie have disappeared for the time being, locked into this apparent quest to get hammered and reignite their intimate history, in whichever order that has to happen. They will eventually reemerge, much more crocked than I last saw them. Damon mentions wanting to acquire a twelve-pack at Kroger before it’s too late, for whatever afterhours shenanigans transpire, a cause that even I deem worthy enough of a few dollars’ donation. 

For a welcome change, I have my game on at the pool tables, and we destroy these ladies. Yet in keeping with her alleged character, Andrea meets not one but two dudes at a nearby table, inviting both of them back to Amy K’s house for some post-closing-time fun. By this point Kristin and her thoroughly respectable man have long since left, for only the fanatical remain, these societal dregs for whom remaining out at 2am on a weeknight in an older skewing neighborhood sounds fantastic. Andrea asks John and me if we care to join them over at Amy’s place, but we beg off of this assignment and politely decline.   

The comedy continues as the house lights come up, as bar tabs are presented. Smashed beyond repair, Damon and Angie sit cackling at the next booth over, when Amy K and Andrea realize they don’t have enough money on them to cover the bill they’ve been handed. Between the six of us we can’t even finance it, for John confesses to the same sorry state as me, that he hasn’t so much as a nickel on his person now. These strangers Andrea has corralled into our midst shrug with blank faces, too, believing correctly that this is not their problem. 

The girls head back to Amy’s place in Dublin with these two guys. Without managing anything concrete in connection with this ex tonight, aside from possibly building bridges to the future, John goes home alone. Meanwhile as I’m chauffeuring this pair of inebriates in my backseat, I note that it feels like a perfectly good omen that they purchased a twelve of Lowenbrau, this exceedingly obscure beverage they’ve picked up with no knowledge of this drunken epic with Alan two months ago, during which he and I made the exact same choice.

II.

In late 2019 I make a point of driving past, just to see what kind of condition this place is in now. It’s hard to fathom that such a prime piece of real estate has sat empty for so long, yet this is apparently the case. Of course, at this point, if a new owner wanted to bring such a venture back to its former glory, you would probably need to annex one of the businesses that actually face Henderson, so people could see this operation was back on the map.

As it stands now, I was worried at first that even the “bat cave” entrance had been wiped out, because you can’t quite tell if approaching from the parking lot’s west side. This is still intact, however, and I used it for this literal stroll back to memory lane. At the top of this post, you can see what the rear entrance looks like now, and here are also a couple photos I managed to grab of the interior:

Back room of former Arlington Cafe

Back dance floor at Arlington Cafe

Finally, here’s some video footage of your journey from the front parking lot to the back entrance of the club: