Chuck Berry was sitting in the third row when the band’s manager walked to the microphone and said they needed a guitarist. Nobody in that theater knew who was in the audience. Chuck Berry stood up, walked to the stage, picked up the guitar, and what happened in the next 40 minutes is still talked about by everyone who was there.
It was October 1958, and Chuck Berry was in Chicago for reasons that had nothing to do with performing. He had finished a run of shows the previous weekend and had taken 2 days before his next booking to move through the city quietly, visiting old contacts, eating at places he liked, existing for 48 hours as something other than a name on a marquee.
He had bought a ticket to see the Delmore Brothers Review at the Aragon Ballroom on Lawrence Avenue, a traveling showcase that featured four acts across 3 hours and drew the kind of crowd that still believed music was best experienced in a room where everyone was standing close enough to feel the bass in their chest. He had seen the review twice before in other cities and had admired the way it was put together.
Unpretentious, loud, generous with its running time, the kind of show that reminded him why he had started doing this in the first place. He was not there to be recognized. He was not there to be called upon. He was there to watch. He found his seat in the third row at 7:40 and ordered a Coca-Cola from a passing vendor and settled in with the particular contentment of a working musician who is for one night not working.
The house was nearly full. The lights went down at 8:00. The first two acts went without incident. A vocal group from Memphis who had a good sound and tight harmonies. A piano player from Detroit who played too long but played well enough that nobody minded. The crowd was warm and responsive.
The room doing what rooms do when the music is honest and the people came ready to receive it. The trouble started between the second and third acts. The third act on the bill was a guitar-led quartet called the Raymond Cross Band out of St. Louis, whose lead guitarist, a 24-year-old named Dennis Farrell, who had been building a genuine regional reputation for 2 years, during the piano player’s set that had progressed by the time the stagehands were switching the equipment from concerning to impossible. Dennis Farrell was in the backstage bathroom unable to stand without assistance and was not going to be playing guitar for anyone that evening. The review’s manager, a compact and perpetually agitated man named Howard Giles, who had been running traveling shows for 15 years and had encountered most categories of disaster, assessed
the situation in about 90 seconds and arrived at the conclusion that he had a theater full of people expecting a four-act show and a gap where the third act was supposed to be. The remaining musicians of the Raymond Cross Band could play something without a lead guitarist, but what they could play without a lead guitarist was not what the audience had come to hear, and Howard Giles knew it.
He walked to the microphone. “Ladies and gentlemen,” he said with the forced calm of a man managing a crisis in public, “We’ve got a slight situation. Our lead guitarist for the next act is under the weather tonight. We’re going to need a minute.” He paused. He looked out at the audience.
He said the thing that traveling show managers say when they are out of options and hoping for a miracle. “If there’s anyone in the house who plays guitar, now would be a real good time to let us know.” The audience received this with the mixture of sympathy and entertainment that audiences extend to unexpected problems that are not their own.
In the third row, Chuck Berry heard the request, looked at the stage, and experienced the 4-second internal conversation that he would later describe, in one of the few times he spoke about the evening, as the simplest decision he had made in years. Not because it was obviously correct, because there was no version of sitting back down in his seat that felt like the right thing to do.
He stood up. The people seated around him turned to look. A few of them recognized him in the way that people recognize someone whose face they know but whose name takes a moment to locate. A woman two seats to his left said something to the man beside her. A teenager in the row behind him went very still.
Chuck Berry made his way to the end of the row, walked to the side of the stage, and found Howard Giles at the bottom of the steps. “I play guitar,” Chuck Berry said. Howard Giles looked at him for a moment. He was a man who prided himself on knowing faces in the music business, and the face in front of him was triggering something in his memory that had not yet fully connected.
“You do,” Howard Giles said. It was not quite a question. “I do,” Chuck Berry said. “What do they play?” Howard Giles turned and called to the Raymond Cross Band who were standing in a loose group at the side of the stage watching this conversation with the concentrated attention of men whose entire evening depended on its outcome.
“What’s your set list?” The bass player called back six song titles. Chuck Berry listened to each one. He knew four of them completely. The fifth he knew well enough. The sixth he had never played but had heard enough times to find his way through it. “That works,” Chuck Berry said.
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Howard Giles looked at him for another moment. The connection in his memory had been made. His expression changed. “You’re I’m the guitarist for the third act,” Chuck Berry said. “You want to do this or not?” They did it. Chuck Berry spent 6 minutes backstage with the Raymond Cross Band. The bass player, a drummer, and a keyboard player who had been watching their lead guitarist deteriorate with increasing alarm since soundcheck and were now operating on the particular focused energy of musicians who understand that the show is happening regardless and they need to be ready for it. Chuck Berry went through the set list once, established the keys, identified the places in each song where Dennis Farrell had been doing something specific that the band expected and that Chuck Berry would need to either replicate or redirect, and reached an understanding with each musician about what the next 40 minutes were going to
require. The keyboard player, a man named Albert Ross who was 31 years old and had been playing professionally for 12 years, said afterward that the 6 minutes backstage were as educational as anything he had encountered in his career. Not because Chuck Berry explained anything at length, he didn’t, but because of the speed and precision with which he absorbed the information he needed and discarded everything else.
He asked three questions. Each question was exactly the right question, and no other questions were necessary. Howard Giles walked back to the microphone. “Ladies and gentlemen, we found our guitarist. The Raymond Cross Band with a special guest on lead guitar, Chuck Berry.” The theater took a moment to process this. Then it processed it.
The sound that came out of 1,800 people who have just understood that the person who is going to play guitar for the next 40 minutes is Chuck Berry is different from the sound of ordinary anticipation. It has a quality of disbelief in it, and then belief, and then the specific joy of an audience that understands it has accidentally stumbled into something it did not pay for and does not entirely deserve and is going to receive anyway.
Chuck Berry walked out carrying Dennis Farrell’s guitar, a 1957 Gibson ES-335 in a cherry red finish that he had never touched before tonight. And the theater got louder. He plugged in. He adjusted two settings on the amplifier without consulting anyone. He played one chord, listened to the room, adjusted one more setting, and turned to the band. “From the top,” he said.
What followed over the next 40 minutes is the part that everyone who was there has struggled to describe accurately ever since. Not because it was indescribable, but because description keeps falling short of the specific quality of what it felt like to be in that room. Chuck Berry played Dennis Farrell’s guitar as if he had owned it for years.
The four songs he knew completely he played with the full authority of someone for whom these songs were already solved problems. The only question was how to make them live inside this specific room with these specific people on this specific night. And he found that answer in the first eight bars of the first song and did not let go of it.
The fifth song he navigated with the fluency of a man who has been playing long enough that partial knowledge is sufficient. He knew where the song wanted to go and trusted his hands to take it there. The sixth song, the one he had never played, he played anyway. He found the key, found the structure, found the place where the melody lived inside the chord changes, and played it with such apparent confidence that nobody in the audience or on the stage understood that he was making substantial portions of it up in real time. Dennis Farrell, who had been helped to a chair in the wings and was watching through a gap in the curtain with a wet cloth on his forehead and a temperature of 102, said afterward that the sixth song was the one that stayed with him longest. Not because it was the best, it wasn’t, or not technically, but because he could hear from the wings exactly what Chuck Berry had understood about it in the 30 seconds before it
started and what he had decided to do with that understanding. And what he had decided was more interesting than anything Dennis Farrell had planned to do with it himself. The 40 minutes ended. The theater was on its feet. Howard Giles was standing to the left of the stage with an expression that had moved some distance from the agitation of 2 hours earlier and arrived somewhere that looked a great deal like a man recalibrating his understanding of how evenings can go.
Chuck Berry handed Dennis Farrell’s guitar to a stagehand, said something brief and inaudible to the bass player, who nodded once with the expression of a man receiving information he is going to keep, and walked back through the wing and down the steps and returned to his seat in the third row. The show continued.
The fourth act played. The evening concluded in the normal way of evenings. Afterward, in the lobby, Howard Giles found Chuck Berry putting on his coat. “I owe you,” Howard Giles said. “You don’t,” Chuck Berry said. “At least let me.” “I bought a ticket,” Chuck Berry said. “I came to watch a show. I watched a show.” He buttoned his coat.
“Tell the young man to rest. The fever will pass. He plays well.” He paused. “He plays the changes correctly. He just needs to trust what’s past the changes.” He walked out into the October night. Dennis Farrell recovered in 3 days. He returned to performing and continued to develop as a guitarist for another decade.
He told the story of that night for the rest of his life. The fever, the gap in the curtain, the 6 minutes backstage, the sixth song, the thing he had heard Chuck Berry do with the changes that he had spent years afterward trying to replicate. He said he never entirely replicated it. He said that was the point. “He wasn’t doing something I couldn’t do,” Dennis Farrell said in an interview given 30 years after that October night.
“He was doing something I hadn’t yet understood I needed to do. There’s a difference.” He paused. “I’ve been closing that gap for 30 years. I’m still closing it.” Howard Giles used the story in the introduction of every show he promoted for the next 20 years. Not the whole story. He understood that the whole story was not his to tell.
Just the version that ended with Chuck Berry returning to his seat in the third row. “The man bought a ticket,” Howard Giles would say to whatever audience he was introducing a show to. “He stayed to play. And then he went back to being part of the audience.” Howard Giles would pause here because he had learned over 20 years that the pause was necessary for the thing he was about to say to land correctly.
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