Part I: River of Dreams
I clap my hands as
H₂Bro takes the stage, but in an instant my applause is drowned out by the
hollers and shrieks of the fans of “Wisconsin’s most hydrated cover band.”
Brothers Willy and Billy McHydro pose with charismatic smirks behind their mic
stands and guitars. As Willy sets down his first of what will eventually total
20 Deja Blues, Billy guzzles from a gallon of what he calls “Mother Nature’s
wet dream.”
What
began as a ruckus becomes pandemonium among 200 of the band’s “Drippies” when
Willy addresses them.
“I don’t know about y’all,” Willy shouts. “But
we are HYDRATED AS FUUUCCCKKK!!!”
Sensing synergy, Willy
nods, counts off to four, and picks the familiar, jagged riff of “The Ocean.”
Zeppelin was another band known for excess, but as I learn during our interview
at the after-party, the McHydros do things a little differently. They follow
their own stream—and sometimes that stream forks.
###
My ventures into the
Fond du Lac bar scene had decreased with the onset of my thirties, but the social
media presence of H₂Bro—coupled with my curiosity and love of live music—drove
me to cover this story. A review of their fan page informed the basics: They’re
a septet comprised of strings, rhythm, keys, and horns, led by two passionate
brothers who believe classic rock is as essential to survival as water itself.
That explains the group’s H₂Overindulgence, as well as their choice in covers: “Aqualung,”
“Catch a Wave,” “Black Water,” “November Rain,” and their ambitious medley
“Take Me to the River of Dreams.”
In
the wake of their stunning performance that Saturday night, I get my first
glimpse of friction in the brothers’ relationship, which could be described as
delightfully combative. Mere seconds after the final notes have resounded, the
McHydro siblings begin to bicker. The tiff has something to do with the encore.
As I approach for a closer listen, I overhear the last gasp of Billy’s tirade.
“You
vetoed my jam, so now we’re drinkin’ at Kim’s, bro.”
“That’s
all the way across town!” Willy protests. “And my house is just a block away.”
In a
disarming gesture, I cordially ask for a picture and autographs. Frustration
lingers, but a moment later, I’m nearly gusted a step backward by the collective
sighs they exhale. The tension dissipates. They acknowledge my request and
enhance the honor by signing the set list.
Twenty minutes later, I
find myself seated beside H₂Bro keyboardist Swinkle as he groans despairingly and
inserts his key into the ignition of his Volvo.
“You
OK?” I ask.
“We
gotta stop at a Kwik Trip,” he says. “‘Cause in three minutes, my bladder is
set to detonate.”
###
We’re the last to
arrive at Kim’s place. Diminutive and chic, with a demeanor that charms and
unnerves depending on high and low tides, Kim Bono is Billy’s girlfriend of
four months. Swinkle and I stamp and smear our wet shoes into the Welcome Mat
as the voice of an alpha male transcends the commotion coming from the
basement.
“Wet
T-shirt contest!”
In retrospect
I should not have raced downstairs with as much vigor as I did. Overcome by the
urge to see gorgeous Drippies soaked in translucent tops, instead I witness the
McHydro brothers thrusting out their chests and spilling water onto their plain
white tees. Again. It’s a replay of the stunt they pulled between sets at their
concert.
“We love to show off our nips!” Billy declares.
Willy commands a vote
from the partygoers. To the chagrin of his kin, he wins this particular contest
by a margin of 12-11. Willy is overjoyed, noting that their lifelong series is
now tied. Drippies and bandmates disperse to start an H₂O Pong tournament at a
far-off table in the basement, leaving us privacy to conduct an interview.
When
asked about their origins, Willy is proud to mention their parents, Hank and
Olivia McHydro, who met working at Fond du Lac’s water treatment facility in
1982.
“Mom and dad were true
romantics.”
“Yeah,”
Billy nods. “They banged on the catwalk of the water tower.”
“Twice.”
“And
here we are!”
Music,
fishing, and swimming were instrumental in the boys’ upbringing. In high
school, they co-founded the Super Soaker Club, and after graduation, the
burgeoning adults landed jobs as plumbers.
“Lots
of water,” Willy explains.
“Plus
some shit.”
“Right.
But hey, that’s life!”
The
brothers pursued a reprieve from the drudgery of 40-hour workweeks—as well as
“Water Nymphs,” as Willy puts it—and they found both, to a degree, by performing
in a number of cover groups over the years. Willy regards their stints with The
Sponges, Space Canoe, and Chmura Hot Tub Experience with mixed emotions.
“We
had some fun in those bands, but we kind of missed the boat. We just weren’t
going all the way. I mean, only about 60% of the songs we did were water jams.”
“Yeah,”
Billy says. “Then that Ice Bucket Challenge got super popular.” (In July of
2014.) “The message was clear: The people were getting psyched about H₂O. And
they needed a band to sing its praises. We wanted to be that vessel to dowse
them with hydro-melodic joy.”
“Like
a Super Soaker that spurts refreshing notes,” Willy adds.
I’m
amused by the harmonious nature of their insights. It’s as though the pair have
tapped into the same stream of consciousness. As with any brotherhood, however,
dissention happens. Having emptied his latest Deja Blue, Willy reaches for
Billy’s unmarked jug. In a flash of ire, the younger McHydro slaps away Willy’s
lunging hand.
“Get
your own!” he snaps.
They
glower at each other until I clear my throat, segueing to my next question.
“Is
it fair to say you two don’t always see eye to eye?”
“You
could say that,” Willy allows, sustaining his sideways glare. “Like, we have disagreements when it comes to set lists.”
“This
guy refuses to play ‘The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald,’” Billy says,
motioning his thumb like a dejected hitchhiker.
More bad news for the Edmund Fitzgerald. |
“Augh, that song is so
depressing,” Willy gripes.
“So
is ‘Like a Hurricane,’” Billy retorts. “But we play that.”
“That’s
not depressing, it’s bittersweet!”
“Semantics! Either way,
‘The Wreck’ is a work of genius.”
“Pfft,” Willy sneers.
“According to Kim.”
Kim. |
She materializes at Billy’s
side at the mention of her name.
“Indeed I did express
such a conviction,” Kim says. She swishes the clear liquid in her martini glass
with a studious stare as she caresses her boyfriend’s back. “Yes, I do hope the
band pays homage to Lightfoot’s true opus. My grandfather died aboard the
Edmund Fitzgerald… or he knew somebody who did, or something. What matters is the sorrow in my bosom. If not H₂Bro,
then who shall quench it?”
“Wow,
how eloquent,” Willy says in an icy tone. “Did your girlfriend go to junior
college?”
“You’re
Goddamn right she went to junior college!” Billy roars.
A nervous
bandmate intercedes to separate them. Todd, the drummer. He lures Willy to a
distant corner to do a “water-cooler stand.”
Social
awkwardness resurfaces and I make plans for departure. It’s 3:45 in the
morning. I phone for a taxi. While I wait, Kim gushes to her lover about the “organic,
haunting splendor” of the version of “The Wreck” from Lightfoot’s All Live album. Minutes later, Willy
returns, prompting scowls. The couple decides to resume their chat by the water
cooler.
Willy’s foot bumps
against the half-empty jug his fellow McHydro had placed on the floor. It seems
pretty commonplace, yet his brow furrows deeply. He scrutinizes the thing.
A
Drippie taps me on the shoulder and asks if I called for the cab parked in the
driveway. In a haste I scramble for my coat and say goodbye to Willy, but he
barely seems to notice as he bends down to pick up the jug.
I
hustle up the stairs. As I fling the back door open I’m struck with déjà vu
when I hear that same voice of an alpha male transcending the commotion down
there. But it’s an angry wail this time—ferocious enough to finally silence the
party.
“HOW
DARE YOU!”
I hesitate
but then I detect headlights reflecting off the garage door, fading in
intensity. My cab is leaving me. I chase after it. Running past basement
windows, I see blurred snapshots, glimpses of chaos, a hurricane of humanity
with two men at its epicenter, stamping in puddles of water, both screaming.
Everyone screaming.
The
cab stops and I get in—headed home to bed and then a deadline to meet. I’d left
at the crest of some gargantuan wave and I could only contemplate what it meant.
Part II: Who'll Stop the Rain?
It is with profound heartache that I must report the
breakup of H₂Bro. Though turmoil became obvious toward the end of my initial
interview with the McHydro brothers, it’s shocking that such an extreme measure
was taken so abruptly. After repeated inquiries, Willy was the first to return
my phone calls.
“Let
me give you the lowdown, Nate (sic),” he began. “Not long after you left kooky
Kim’s party, I sipped from Billy’s gallon. Big discovery. Of all the shady
shenanigans—he was drinking flavored
water!”
Aquafina’s
Wild Berry Flavor Splash, to be exact. Overwhelmed by the mob, the confession
was forcibly extracted from Billy—his older brother cinched in a “tittie
twister” as guitarist and H₂Bro loyalist Bo Van Dam intervened to “purple that
other nurple.” Willy has condemned the deception, calling it “unnatural.”
“That
phony,” Willy seethes. “This band celebrates Hydrogen twice and Oxygen once. It’s
simple. Pure. And we come to find out that lately he’s been chugging this
gutter runoff that’s only like 95% water. The audacity. Flavored water is for
sellouts.”
Willy
pledges the group will embark on a new era, already gigging on Friday, rechristened
as H₂Broh. With seven members reduced to six, keyboardist Swinkle has been
named Billy’s successor in the spotlight. Though he barely sang at the show I
attended, henceforth Swinkle will be called upon for lead vocals on nearly half
of their songs.
Suddenly
my phone beeps. I’m startled. Billy McHydro is on line two. I blurt a hasty
“Sounds good sorry gotta go see ya Friday” and end the talk to begin another
one.
Immediately
he bellows, “Say hello to Loudmouth Billy Bass!”
To be
clear, he pronounces it “base,” as in the instrument.
“First
show this Saturday,” he continues. “Rockin’ out in Kim’s basement. Gonna bass
jam lots of Earth, Wind, & Fire!”
I
stammer a question about the messy breakup with his erstwhile band.
“Fuck
both water and those guys,” he answers. “Kim turned me on to flavored water to
broaden my horizons, and if they’ve got a problem with that, then we’re done
doing business.”
“OK,
I get that,” I say. “But doesn’t it get tougher than that considering the
fallout included your brother?”
I
hear a disheartened gasp and then a tussle on the other line. The next voice I
hear is Kim’s.
“No more questions!
Billy’s frame of mind is very fragile and anti-water,
and so I forbid you to make him cry tears.
You vulture! Parasite! Hack… OK, do
come Saturday. Toodle-oo.”
She
hangs up. My weekend plans are set.
###
Friday
night. I make it to Tweed’s bar during H₂Broh’s sound check. There is more
elbow room than there was at the previous show. Already I sense disquiet among the
band’s faithful. Willy has a bass slung around his shoulder, meaning that the
group has downsized to not only one McHydro but also a sole guitarist. Uncharacteristically
troubled, Bo Van Dam approaches Willy.
“Any
word from… you know?”
“Him?”
Willy scoffs. “Pfft. Oh, probably falling a few glasses short of the doctor’s
daily recommendation—but who cares? Right, boys?!”
The
others murmur with obligatory support—except for the newly promoted Swinkle,
who has added a rainstick to his repertoire. Before hoisting a gallon to his
lips, he exclaims something that could be transcribed as:
“Peeeyaaaauuuu!!!”
Members of the audience presumably don’t share
Swinkle’s zest. Conversations are hushed. Spirits are curbed. The Drippie I recently
befriended nudges me, points to his H₂Bro shirt and then to Swinkle’s H₂Broh
attire.
“Can
you believe this shit?” He casts a stink-eyed gaze at Swinkle, who waves in
response and anxiously guzzles more. “One of us is a fraud.”
Everyone
winces as a metallic shriek of feedback pierces the air. Daunted but
determined, Willy clutches the mic.
“You
are all witnesses to something so big, so monumental,” he prophesizes. “It’s
titanic.”
With
that, Swinkle twinkles the keys to the sparse overture of “Across the Sea.” A
resounding strum, an earnest falsetto, and they’ve begun. The performance is
solid. I get a sense of genuine anguish from Willy when he belts out the
chorus:
“Why
are you so far away from me?/ I need help and you’re way across the sea.”
It’s
the highlight of the set. Willy struggles through the bass lines of the next few
numbers. The frustration overflows and he flubs lyrics. Poise evaporates. He
calls a desperate audible and switches instruments with Bo, groaning “Take this
accursed bass.” When he introduces Billy’s replacement to sing the next song, a
jittery Swinkle thrusts his rainstick upward and accidentally cracks a Drippie in
the nose. The band commences the mournful “Who’ll Stop the Rain” as she rushes
outside, nursing the wound. A few others follow.
“Don’t go lady!”
Swinkle pleads. “I got the cure for what ails ya!”
It’s
a hollow vow. His vocals are creaky and wavering—like a fickle cat who can’t
decide whether to hiss or purr. Matters worsen as the first chorus culminates.
“And I wonder, yes I wonder, who’ll stop the rain” is followed by a grueling two-minute
rainstick solo. Bafflingly, he repeats the solo after the second chorus. Ninety seconds into the interminable trickles, a
Drippie voices his displeasure.
“Terrible!”
he shouts. “Who’ll stop the rainstick!?’”
The
band is drowned in jeers. Mortification overtakes Swinkle. His bladder
detonates. Panicked beyond reason, he even sips more and repeats “no no no no” as the stain widens,
drops, and drips. The music dies. It’s an act of mercy. The crowd is either
laughing or leaving.
“He can’t handle his water!” Todd Pondo complains
with a spike of his drumsticks.
“Amateur!”
Willy rages. “In this band, we only wet our pants at the very end of holiday
shows!”
The
disgruntled frontman storms offstage and barges through the exit. As I walk
after him, the trombonist Chaz Winnebago blocks my path and offers me a liter
of “dank Ice Mountain” to not report what I’ve just seen. I decline. Outside,
Willy is gone.
###
Saturday. When I chat
with Billy and Kim that evening, he’s glum but she’s actually thrilled to speak
to me—only because I can verify the cataclysm of H₂Broh’s debut. He croaks a
barely audible “fuck water,” and then Loudmouth Billy Bass (pronounced “base”) adjourns
to plug in his gear. Kim detects my unease.
“Yes, I’m a teensy bit
concerned he’s not drinking enough,” she admits as she sets ablaze an H₂Bro
shirt. “‘Mother Nature’s wet dream,’ as he used to rhapsodize, was rather important to him. No matter.
He promised me he’ll have a drink after the encore, to celebrate, when he has
fully enraptured my mind, body, and soul—by playing ‘The Wreck of the Edmund
Fitzgerald.’”
Shortly before showtime, I’m struck by Billy’s
literal devotion to “going solo.” His bass and vocals create all the music.
Adding to the peculiarity is his choice of venue, of course. Kim didn’t obtain
any kind of license, but that doesn’t matter since the bar is totally dry:
Billy has forbidden the presence of water.
While
funky, the bass lines of Earth, Wind, & Fire hits “September” and “Let’s
Groove” sound eerily lonesome when plucked in a vacuum for eight minutes. Worse,
Billy’s vocal chords sound excruciatingly parched; he sings like Tom Waits
scalding in Death Valley, with none of the smooth jubilation required to honor
the Soul.
Drippies get restless. I lock eyes with a man endowed
with a massive afro. He looks familiar, but a moment later he turns away and
covers his face as though he’s embarrassed to be seen here.
“We
want a water jam!” someone demands.
Billy’s
haggard face crinkles with disdain. Then he twists it into a sardonic smirk. He
plays that ominous Dave Matthews Band song “Don’t Drink the Water” to a chorus
of boos. I feel overfilled with dread and so I scramble up the stairs, outside
for reprieve and a breath of fresh air.
Somebody
follows. The man with the afro.
“It’s me. Bo Van Dam,”
he says confidentially. “Worried about Billy, but I had to come incognito."
He adjusts his oversized novelty wig. I nod. His
eyes dart.
“Willy
would flip out if he knew I came. It’s bogus. Deep down he cares the most about
Billy. I know he’s stubborn, but come on! His own brother might not-drink himself to death.”
He
elaborates on how terrible he feels about the saga. While he does so, the low
vibrations stop. We hear a woman’s piercing shriek. Before long, a far-off
siren wails, gets louder. Two paramedics arrive and go down the steps with a
gurney in tow. Somber Drippies escape from the basement and linger next to Bo
and me. The first paramedic emerges through the doorway, his hands gripped to
the gurney, whereupon Billy lies wan and unresponsive.
“Worst
case of dehydration I’ve ever seen,” the EMT pronounces.
His
coworker nods gravely and they wheel Billy McHydro into the ambulance.
Then we hear a different
kind of siren, a protracted “Nooooooo”
that originates at a distance and quickly amplifies. Kim rushes outside, into
the open space of a world that can scarcely contain her primal scream. Tears
stream down her face.
“He never played ‘The
Wreck!’” she bawls inconsolably.
###
Part III: Bridge over Troubled Water
Billy McHydro had endured a severe bout with
dehydration as he recovered at St. Agnes Hospital for three days. When he
finally spoke to me over the phone, I was relieved to hear gusto in his voice again.
What restored that gusto should come as no surprise.
“When
I woke up to feel the IV drip coursing through my veins, it put me back in
hydration heaven,” Billy recalls. “I hate to sound like a rock cliché, but that
needle was a real lifesaver.”
With
Kim by his side, he convalesced. He was enlightened by a nurse who explained to
him the essence of hypotonic intravenous therapy.
“Yeah,
she broke it down talking some fancy science shit. Turns out there’s diluted
water in there, not authentic H₂O,” he says with a sigh. “That’s karma for you.
I felt guilty for digging impure water all over again, and much to my chagrin,
I realized Willy had been right all along.”
The younger McHydro was all too eager to
remedy his lack of a drinking problem. He downed a total 18 pitchers on his
second day in the hospital. Hours before his release, he became a hero in the
children’s ward by telling the youngsters to never give up as he poured several
“water bongs” for them to take down.
Upon departure from the hospital, Billy made
plans to write a full-length rock opera about a time-traveling Kramer from Seinfeld having himself a freak out for
the ages at Woodstock.
Those
plans were scrapped a minute later when Willy implored him to rejoin H₂Bro.
(Billy then sold me the rights to the intellectual property of “Kramer at
Woodstock” for a twelve pack of Deja Blue.)
“This
whole fallout has taught me a lot,” Willy tells me. “First and foremost, I miss
the hell out of my little brother. Second, our band sucks without him. I’m sick
of my own smartass parents asking if the second ‘H’ in ‘H₂Broh’ stands for
‘Hagar.’ Finally, I’m only going to be an asshole to the people I don’t like.”
When
questioned if he therefore intends to call for a truce with his sibling’s
polarizing girlfriend Kim, Willy snapped, “Of course it does, you scrawny jackass.”
“Truth
be told,” he elaborates, “I was a bit intimidated by Kim’s junior college
schooling—and maybe a little jealous. She’s actually inspired me to go to UW-Fond
du Lac. We got a contract to overhaul the plumbing there. Gonna solve me some
equations left on the chalkboard like the genius from Good Willy Hunt! (sic)”
I
catch up with Kim next.
“Perhaps
I’m imperfect,” she admits. “Only by withholding my lady flower from him Billy
did he finally cave in and experiment with flavored water. And in regard to
‘The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald,’ I do still adore it, but I just learned
my grandfather only knows a guy who knows
a guy who died aboard that tragic vessel. Thus my obsession may have been
slightly overstated.”
The mending trio agree to convene in Kim’s
basement for reconciliation. Following some nitpicky negotiations that by and
by manifest in Willy and Kim murmuring apologies at the exact same time at the
count of three, we linger awkwardly. At last the perfect tension-breaker occurs
to Billy. He gestures to me.
“I
sold this rube the rights to ‘Kramer at Woodstock.’”
That induces spasms of hysterical laughter from 75%
of the group. They celebrate my perceived folly by breaking out some of the
bottles that set me back nine bucks.
“A toast
to Nate’s (sic) unquenchable dreams!” Willy declares.
I leave minutes later with a parched throat.
Willy bellows up the staircase an invite to their reunion show at Ziggy’s. The
story’s unfinished so I can’t say no.
###
As a rock and roll
sentimentalist, it’s empowering to be greeted by the iconic riff of “Smoke on
the Water” when crossing the threshold into a crowded bar. I mingle and when I
spot Kim, I’m startled. Clad in a white band tee, she’s uncommonly bubbly. She
must have a twin, I surmise, but I realize I’m mistaken when she opens her
mouth.
“They’re going to play
‘The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald!’” she rejoices. “Let’s party!”
Its' a strange
combination of words from a strange girl. But I rarely have the heart to deny
anyone a high-five.
To
the crowd’s delight, aquatic classics by the likes of the Beach Boys, Creedence,
and Zeppelin precede the funeral dirge of Kim’s desire. At the end of a roaring
first set, the McHydros supply a final interview in which Willy fondly
reminisces.
“In high school, when
we were told there wasn’t enough money to fund the Super Soaker Club, it was
Billy who said, ‘We’ll just do it ourselves with a carwash fundraiser, so fuck
you, Principal Jones.’ ‘Cause my brother’s got character.”
“I owe it all to picking up that bottle again.”
“Some
dangerous shit.”
“Almost
killed you,” Willy says. “It’s a lot worse than flavored water.”
“Which
I only got into because my girlfriend pressured me.”
“Well,
many others are in the same boat as you.”
“Yeah,
it’s a pretty common story I’ve been hearing, at group meetings.”
“Nah, we make the most
of it. Sharing stories. Did I tell you I’m bringing back the Super Soaker Club?”
“Gnarly!
Get those fuckers hydrated, bro!”
H2Bro
trumpeter Tootie Dribbles nudges the McHydros and gestures at the stage. The
boys swat each other on the back in lieu of the hug they were building toward.
Anticipation
accumulates in Kim as the second set passes. She dances in big, mistimed jumps
from side to side with a swollen bladder and aching kidneys, oftentimes outside
the bathroom door, waiting for relief, both physical and spiritual. Of course
the latter is always more elusive. Every few minutes she snatches the playlist
from me and assuages her worried mind by pointing to the title second from the
bottom.
The
septet is so immersed in music that they don’t dare stray from the stage at the
end of their second set. Instead they guzzle copious amounts of Mother Nature’s
Wet Dream (aside from the newly disciplined Swinkle, who refuses a jug from Bo
Van Dam, points to his own crotch, and then taps a finger against the skull
that encases his wizened mind).
Bo
Van Dam turns down to practice a sharp, mournful twang in C major and Kim’s
fingernails dig excitedly into my forearm. When Willy sets his drink aside and
approaches the mic, a Drippie capitalizes on the magnitude of the reunion and
screams: “Speech!”
This
request is parroted and again and Willy is taken aback a few steps. I don’t
know this man well but for once I can read his mind. He doesn’t want to give a
speech. He thinks it’s cheap to analyze. The bored look on someone’s face when
you describe to them a profound dream you had, the surge of life that comes
from being inside a lover, or the horror of showing your ugliest humanity
always to those you love most and the redemption of being welcomed back… it’s a
burden to explain these moments, but Willy is up to the task.
“Love
is a compromise,” he says.
With
that the lead guitarist grits his teeth and plucks the sharp, mournful twang
Kim has been waiting for. Her fingernails scrape against my forearm as she
rushes toward the stage, maneuvering and shoving past less-enthused Drippies.
Willy defers vocal duty to his younger brother, strums his part, and stares at
a clock on the wall for the next seven minutes. Many Drippies follow suit. Few
leave. Kim is enamored. Billy sings.
“That
ship was the pride of the American side/ Coming back from some mill in
Wisconsin…”
Not
even mention of our home state can rile the crowd from their befuddled torpor.
But this unnerving, ongoing dirge has made Kim maniacally happy. Surprisingly,
when the song ends, her first response is not to applaud.
“Play
it again!” she begs.
But
Willy is quick to win back the crowd and he calls for the last song. Kim pouts
but soon recovers—realizing, I should hope, that love is indeed a compromise.
Waves
of approval rise from the Drippies as Willy picks the jagged from “The Ocean.”
Zeppelin was another band known for excess… I’m able to sing along and mimic
guitar riffs like a huge dork with the greatest of ease because this all feels so
familiar, as though I’m reliving the whole experience.
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