Copyright 2016 by Dave Holmes
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by Crown Archetype, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.
crownpublishing.com
Crown Archetype and colophon is a registered trademark of Penguin Random House LLC.
Epigraph on courtesy of Frank Turner.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Holmes, Dave, 1971
Title: Party of one : a memoir in 21 songs / Dave Holmes.
Description: First edition. | New York : Crown Archetype, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, 2016.
Identifiers: LCCN 2015047486 | ISBN 9780804187985 (hardback) | ISBN 9780804188005 (electronic)
Subjects: LCSH: Holmes, Dave, 1971 | Holmes, Dave, 1971 Childhood and youth. | ComediansUnited StatesBiography. | Television personalitiesUnited StatesBiography. | Radio personalitiesUnited StatesBiography. | Authors, AmericanBiography. | Gay menUnited StatesBiography. | Coming of ageUnited States. | Self-acceptanceUnited States. | Popular musicUnited StatesMiscellanea. | BISAC: BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Personal Memoirs. | HUMOR / General. | MUSIC / Genres & Styles / Pop Vocal. Classification: LCC CT275.H6446 A3 2016 | DDC 780.92dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2015047486
ISBN9780804187985
ebook ISBN9780804188005
Cover design by Jake Nicolella
Photo credits:: Jim Smeal
v4.1
ep
Contents
To Dad, Mom, Dan, and Steve, for messing me up the exact right amount.
Life is about love, last minutes and lost evenings,
About fire in our bellies and about furtive little feelings,
And the aching amplitudes that set our needles all a-flickering,
They help us with remembering that the only thing thats left to do is live.
F RANK T URNER, I Knew Prufrock Before He Got Famous
Of all the epic stories, both factual and fictional, that we have passed down through history, I identify most strongly with the journey of the Bee Girl in Blind Melons No Rain video. If you didnt happen to spend your life in front of a television in 1992, heres the situation: a plucky, bespectacled girl, maybe nine years old, has dressed up in a cheap bumblebee costume that looks like it was made by a parent in a great big hurryand all she wants to do is dance. Throughout the video, Bee Girl tap-dances her little heart out, giving everything shes got to everyone she meets, and over and over shes met with stone faces. Move it along, the people of the town seem to tell her as the song shambles on. Nobody is interested, but does she give up? No, she does not. Ive got spirit yes I do, Ive got spirit, how aboutyou? she wonders. Are you my people? Do I belong here? No, no, and no.
And then, as the song reaches its post-Nevermind, preRusted Root, Woodstock 94bound crescendo, Bee Girl approaches the wrought-iron gate of a peaceful pasture, and with a look of pure amazement and joy swings the gate open to reveal a whole field of frolicking bee-people. Bee-people young and old, black and white, each united by their unfortunate costumes and love of dance. She is home. She has found her people. There you are, you imagine her saying with a sigh.
I remember seeing this video for the first time in collegemiserable, half-drunk on Keystone Light, a Camel Light smoldering my mouth, about to desperately tap-dance my way through another social interactionand saying out loud: I fucking get you, Bee Girl.
My names Dave Holmes, and I have spent most of my life being the odd man out. In retrospect the only bad thing about that is how much time I spent thinking it was a bad thing.
I hunted high and low for my place in this world. I changed myself around every which way to make myself normal. I tried to be each of the five archetypes from The Breakfast Club, all four of the Facts of Life girls, every one of the emotions inside Hermans Head. I tore it up, you guys. It didnt work, exactly, but if my unquenchable thirst for acceptance sent me on a long series of wrong turns, Im exactly where I want to be now. Im not going to tell you that I found my field of frolicking bee-people inside me, because then I would have to close my laptop, fill my pockets with stones, and walk into the ocean. But if you find youre reaching that conclusion on your own, Im not going to stand in your way.
I did a lot of embarrassing things and put myself through a lot of useless trouble on the road to accepting myself, and it would have been a much more painful experience had I not had access to the most powerful stimulant known to humankind: the music and popular culture of the last forty years. I came of age in the time of the Monoculture, when we were all watching the same three networks and listening to the same Top 40 radio stations. My identity was formed in the eras of Thriller, The Cosby Show, and Nirvanaall those stories ended well, right?and when I felt like I didnt have a friend in the world, they were there for me. I had intense love affairs with albums. I saw movies so many times I could direct them from memory. I spent so much time in front of MTV it finally gave up and invited me in.
In my younger days, my preferred method of communication was a mixtape (and then a mix-CD, and then, ever so briefly, a mix-MiniDisc). I could tell people I liked them, or that I wanted them to like me, or that I was breaking up with them, or that I understood they were breaking up with me (but if they could just understand how I felt, maybe theyd change their minds) in ninety minutes of music. Its the way a nonmusician could make his own album, the way a kid too scared to speak his mind could get his point across.
Its still my favorite thing to do, and you better believe I tried to sell my publisher on getting this into the marketplace as an Apple Music playlist, but these book types insist that you use words. So here they are: stories of the blessed and stupid life of a kid on the margins, and the music that moved it forward, in book form, which I figured I should hurry up and do before we start passing down our histories via emojis and GIFs of Rue McClanahan. I put it together like an album, with a few interludes in between, like how hip-hop albums used to have skits. (But maybe theyll, you know, age better.)
I hope you like it. I hope I bring back some memories or help you understand a beautiful time in recent history that is absolutely gone forever. And if you are in the middle of your own desperate tap dance right now, I hope that you can learn from my mistakes.
Just stay with me, and well have it made.