MUSIC CORNER
Thugz invade The Pink
By Robert Feuer
BEHIND THE
stage at the
Pink Ele-phant
tavern in Monte Rio
is a painting of an
old-time bar scene
in which a large -
breasted, scantily
clad bartender serves
a customer while a
similarly adorned
woman dances with
a bear in front of the
bar.
This picture served as the backdrop on a
misty December night when the band, The
Thugz, brought their road show to the tavern
known to locals as “The Pink.”
The Thugz have been around since a 1999
engagement at the Blue Heron in Duncans
Mills. The band’s name is an abbreviation
for the phrase, “Tribal Hippie Underground
Zone.”
Their music consists of mostly Grateful
Dead songs, mixed with songs by Bob Dylan,
Lucinda Williams, Bruce Cobum, Donovan
Leitch and other artists.
Mike Campbell, who founded the Thugz,
said he and the band members like the Dead
because “their music encompasses so many
styles and has an element of improvisation.”
The Pink Elephant is not spacious. To
accommodate the band, the two pool tables
had to be squeezed into a comer. The dance
floor was alive with bodies,
young and old, grooving to
Mike Campbell on guitar
and Sylvia Murphy, the
white-haired keyboard
player.
These two do most
of the singing, and they
harmonize well, working
from a repertoire of 150
songs. They are backed
by Chris Lushington on
a headless, 5-string bass
(for an extended lower
range) , and newcomer
Shawn Britton on drums,
who likes to wear a top
hat with a “Rat Fink” T-
shirt.
The Thugz opened with
a 60s psychedelic Donovan number, “Season
of the Witch,” followed by the Dead’s “Friend
of the Devil,” whose choms repeats the
phrase “a friend of the devil is a friend of
mine.”
Campbell was bom in Bangor, Maine
but was transported to Fremont, CA at
age four by his parents. The family had a
cabin in Cazadero where they took frequent
holidays. When Campbell fled Fremont in
the 1960s to “escape the asphalt,” he said,
the River area seemed a natural connection
to his past, as well as a place with many live
music venues.
“All the San Francisco bands like the
Grateful Dead came from the city to play
here,” Campbell noted; He recalled long-
gone venues like the old Rio Nido dance
hall and the roller rink behind the Rio
Theater.
Nowadays, Campbell observed, the
music scene is shrinking. “There are a lot of
musicians but not ma&y venues,” he said.
Campbell lives up the coast in Timber
Cove where he found a good deal on a house.
Murphy also lives ift the Timber Cove area.
Both Campbell and Murphy are teachers
by profession. Campbell recently retired after
20 years as a music teacher at Tomales High
School. Murphy, a Berkeley native, currently
teaches in Fort Ross School.
Murphy recently recovered from a bout
with cancer. Throughout her chemotherapy
treatments, she continued to perform on
keyboards, although she temporarily lost her
singing voice,
Campbell, whose first instrument was a
bugle his father brought back from World
War II, found it a natural progression to join
the school band as a trumpet player. He had
learned to enjoy “making a lot of racket,” he
said.
When the Beatles hit the scene, he
immediately wanted a guitar, like everyone
else. His parents told him only “riff-raff” play
the guitar and bought him a ukulele, instead.
Campbell recalled with a smile that listening
to him try to play rock music on a ukulele
drove his parents “nuts,” so they finally gave
in and bought him a guitar.
On a side wall of the Pink Elephant a naked
temptress poses invitingly. On the opposite
side, behind the bar, a pink elephant chases
a man grasping a beer bottle through a
jungle.
According to Tim Parker, a native of Monte
Rio who bought The Pink in August, the
paintings, which were “donated” in lieu of an
out- of- control bar tab, are from the 40s. As a
possible sign of changing times, Parker has
painted the exterior of his recent acquisition
green.
Parker has big plans for the Pink
Elephant. Along with his recent revival
of live music, he plans to book comedy
nights. The Pink is now serving food and
is awaiting a permit to add on to the rear
of the building, which currently drops off
precipitously to Dutch Bill Creek below.
Until a few years ago, there was a storage
room in the back that crashed into the
creek during a storm, creating a sobering
experience for bar patrons.
Dilapidated buildings adjacent to the bar
were recently demolished and have been
replaced by a wooden fence with photos of
Monte Rio in the 1920s. Pictured is a seven-
stoiy hotel, one of the first hotels in Sonoma
County, when a railroad ran through the
center of town.
As the night wound down, the band did
their version of Dylan’s “Love Minus Zero
/
No Limit,” and ended with “Bird Song,”
written about Janis Joplin. The hour was
late, but the dancers wanted the show to go
on forever.
“When the audience gets into it, it’s a
journey,” said Campbell. “Sometimes, on
stage, I forget myself and I’m in another
world, a different state of consciousness, like
a meditation.”
In time Campbell looks forward to
more gigs, more original songs, and some
recordings. For now they’ll be performing
on Thursday nights at the Pink Elephant,
and at other venues in the area.
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