
I have had a colorful career. Currently I am a commercial pilot working for an aerial mapping company. I'm originally from the Kansas City area but I travel the United States in a single engine Cessna doing all that nifty "satellite" photography you see when you try to find your house in one of those online map applications. Actually, I am not a photographer at all. I fly the airplane. There is an on-board computer that tells me where to fly and controls a pretty high-tech camera array. I do get the chance to snap some cool pics with my own digital camera.
I spent many years in the music business. Drummer, then bassist, songwriter, recording artist, engineer, producer. The whole time, convinced I'd be a rock star. I have played in arenas, in cities where I had sold a significant number of records, where the radio stations were spinning our single and the crowd was singing my lyrics back to me. Not everyone that dreams of being a rock star is able to experience that and I wouldn't trade it for the world. But, as it turns out I'd have to settle for being a semi-success (or a semi-failure). Selling 30,000 copies of a release in pre-iTunes 1994, while nothing to sneeze at, was not nearly enough to make a dent in the industry. Still, there are stories to be told from that era. The question is, Do I have the courage to be interesting? How much can I tell from those days without hurting feelings, wrecking relationships, embarrassing myself and alienating myself from people in the music biz. I may have to change names to protect the innocent and the guilty.
I am also politically outspoken and that presents a danger as well. I recently lost a friend to a political disagreement, although I suppose one could look at that as Darwinistic, inevitable, necessary.
I guess we'll see how this experiment works. If you are still with me, THANK YOU. I'll try not to waste your time.
Bryan