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Wednesday, October 11th: Buckethead, That 1 Guy
Buckethead
Narrated by Ronald L. Witherspoon
Bucketheadland Historian (taken from the Buckethead website)
Well every once in a while people ask me about Buckethead.
Why does he wear a mask and bucket. What happened to his parents. Is he
part robot, will he hurt us, is he really Colonel Sanders son, on and
on and on. Well I can't tell you everything about Bucket but I can tell
you something.
First of all you gotta understand Buckethead
grew up real lonely on that farm. He figured no one understood him. The
only thing they understood about him was how to treat him bad. To this
very day, believe it or not, Buckethead does not like to be shocked
with a cattle prod.
It wasn't all bad, though, on the farm.
As soon as he moved into the chicken coop he started to make new
friends. The chickens took real good care of him, and they liked him so
much they scratched his face off. Now he could wear a mask every day,
just like Halloween! He was the luckiest boy he knew. He didn't know
many other boys though, except those kids who lit him on fire that
time.
One good way to forget the smell of burning cartilage
was watching movies. Down the hill from the coop, and through a
knothole in the fence, was the drive-in theater. Every night at dusk
the boy could watch great movies like GIANT ROBOT or THE TEXAS CHAIN
SAW MASSACRE. The speakers wouldn't reach to the coop though so he
didn't even know what the movies sounded like. All he heard was
chickens when Leatherface would slam the big metal door shut.
So when he got to be about THIS tall Buckethead started playing his
little guitar. He would sit and watch the movies and his fingers
couldn't stop moving and now all the sudden there was music. And Giant
Robot would shoot rockets out of his fingers and who knows what would
happen.
Buckethead practiced so much he started to get real
good. But the people on the farm still made fun of him and smashed his
family's eggs. One night, after he got to be this tall, somebody threw
a bucket of fried chicken into the coop. Try as he might, Buckethead
couldn't put the chicken back together again. So he put the bucket on
his head, picked up his guitar and ran to the cemetery.
Buckethead was real sad but it seemed like he played guitar better than
ever. All the grey people and angels in the cemetery listened to the
music and it was so beautiful they just stood still and speechless. He
figured the spirits of all the fried chickens he ever knew were
channeling into him through the bucket, and he played until he
collapsed.
Well it prob'ly won't surprise you to hear that
eventually the sun came up and the rooster crowed. And some folks say
Buckethead had chicken grease and barbecue sauce smeared around the
mouth hole on his mask. Whatever happened that night, the bucket stayed
on his head, and in the morning it was filled full of chicken bones.
When they found him curled up in a grave like that the people on the
farm felt real bad, so they tried to be kinda nice to him for a while.
They brought him water in the morning and let him have their scraps.
For Christmas he even got an old shovel so he could look for more
friends in the cemetery. But the best thing of all was when the
farmhand showed him how to sneak into Disneyland disguised as a Pirate
of the Carribean or a Haunted Mansion ghost.
For the first
time in his life, Buckethead knew what he had to do. Disneyland was the
greatest city he'd ever been to. Everybody was nice, they talked to him
and sang songs, and they moved more realistically than his friends in
the cemetery. So he burned down his coop and headed for Main Street
where he started playing his guitar for E-Tickets. He learned all the
songs and movements but every time he tried to get a job as an
animatronic, they pulled him through a trapdoor.
Well if he
couldn't live in Disneyland he had to live somewhere. He knew that if
he built a park like Mr. Disney did, people all around the world would
come visit him. Or even if they didn't, the park would be full of his
audio-animatronic friends. He'd allow chickens inside, and he'd build a
huge cemetery in the middle with the statues and tombstones specially
lined up to create the best acoustics.
When Bucketheadland
opened quietly in 1989 most people couldn't even tell it was a park.
Its humble rides were made mostly out of rusty tractor parts and a
bunch of sticks and animal bones tied together with spider silk.
Buckethead knew he had to start working for money if he wanted to
maintain the park, and they didn't make E-Tickets anymore anyway. He
started cutting meat in a delicatessen, where he met Maximum Bob and
formed his first band, Deli Creeps.
For the next 13 years,
Buckethead travelled around the world playing guitar, recording
records, making friends, and learning the secrets of embalming, theme
park engineering and martial arts. He recorded many albums with himself
or his friends or in bands like Praxis, Giant Robot, Giant Robot 2, El
Stew, Thanatopsis, and Cobrastrike. He felt bad that he didn't have
time to play music for the drive-in, so he recorded some film scores
with Michael Kamen, George S. Clinton and John Carpenter. All of these
adventures strengthened Buckethead's imagination and helped the
Bucketheadland park grow into the world of dreams and nightmares that
we all love.
Nowa days you can still see Buckethead
wandering around the park at night, or peeking through a crack on the
other side of a wall you don't remember being there before. Don't be
afraid, he's a nice kid, and he wants to be your friend. In
Bucketheadland he never gets lonely.
But if you see him on
stage somewhere or playing with his dolls, for crying out loud don't
make fun of the boy. He's had a tough life and he's worked hard getting
where he is. So what if he looks confused up there. You would too if
you'd been through all that. He just wants us to accept him. Don't
stare at him or overcompensate and be too nice. Come on people lets use
some common sense here, we don't want to set him off. Thanks.
Ronald L. Witherspoon lives in Colma, California with five dogs and a
snake. His writings have appeared in Amusement Journal, Carnival
Scholar Quarterly and Atlantic Dark Ride Monitor. He has been a leading
expert on Bucketheadland since 1992.
NOTE: Few details
of Buckethead's life are known. Some individuals may have been
composited and events may have been altered chronologically. Stories
may be apocryphal, hypothetical, metaphorical or completely made up.
Bucketheadland attempts to keep this attraction as close to current
scientific consensus as possible, within or without reason.
That 1 Guy
Mike Silverman (a.k.a. That 1 Guy) is a classically trained bassist. From the age of 15, this gifted musician seemed destined for a musical career his parents could be proud of: playing bass in promising ensembles, winning a Dave Brubeck Jazz Scholarship competition, studying classical upright at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music and jazz bass at Los Medanos College. But at some point on the path to respectable mainstream success, something went fantastically wrong.
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