The Congress Theater.
When Chuck Berry, 84, collapsed from unknown causes on stage Saturday night in Chicago, the concert venue was not some glitzy down town tourist trap.
Berry slumped over his keyboards at the Congress Theater. A 2,900 seat, faded architectural gem originally built in the 1920’s as a golden movie palace. The Congress sits on Milwaukee Avenue. Twenty-one blocks northwest of the center of Chicago. Once an unpaved Indian Trail from Chicago to Milwaukee, along which all sorts of flim flam fast buck artists plied their trade alongside hard working people who got up before dark most mornings and did their jobs.
Not all that long ago, there were more Polish people clustered on and around Milwaukee Avenue than there were in most Polish cities. The potential next Mayor of Chicago lives in a condo off Milwaukee Avenue while he waits for his rented house to be empty. And the outposts of the arts, galleries, places where people read poetry dot the urban landscape in tiny storefronts with rhymes of what’s edgy, new and the next big thing.
So the place where the great rock and roller put his head down is a vibrant, alive avenue where people live close to each other, where they go to work, make art and dream big. A place with a history.
Berry was checked out in an ambulance. Then he came back on stage and tried again.
He came back on stage and tried again.
The crowd had mostly emptied out, but Chuck Berry came back on stage and tried again.
And just as he did that, somewhere, hurling out in the farthest regions of space, way beyond any known galaxy—the well known story goes—the space capsule sent from our planet out to the heavens in about 1960; that space capsule reached its destination.
The people of that faraway planet opened it up, saw everything we had stuffed inside. The holy texts of the world’s great religions, some equations scribbled by Einstein, a Picasso, a volume of Romeo and Juliet, a Bach Cantata, a Vonnegut book, Keith Jarrett and Duke Ellington recorded, penicillin and the polio vaccine.
There was more. There were items that showcased us at our best.
But the last item was a plastic disc. An old 45 rpm record. Our brothers and sisters, being way beyond us, immediately knew how to make sound come from this “45.” It was a Chuck Berry record.
And those people from that faraway planet listened. Then they wrote a 4 word reply. Stuffed it in the capsule and sent it hurtling out to find us.
It should be here any moment.
What was their four-word response?
"Send more Chuck Berry."


Salon.com
Comments
Brilliant post, Guy!
Lezlie
When Maybeline was #1, I dated a redhead from No Riverside.
I had a '51 Ford convert, a flathead V-8.
She drove Daddy's '53 Cadillac.
We actually used to race out on 31st St west of Mannheim Rd(LaGrange Rd) when it was a country road.
That was "our" song.
Not only do I not know whatever happened to her, we're all old and it's not concrete all the way to Iowa.
Don't die, Chuck.
Paul Haider, Chicago
♥
Thanks to all who stopped by and helped sing for them. May we keep that song going in whatever way we each can.
On another note -- pun intended -- I once had the privilege of meeting and making music with Keith Jarrett's brother Scott, who is equally gifted musically, and an excellent songwriter to boot. Note to God: Send more Jarrett's -- and while you're at it, send more Studs Terkel's, Nelson Algren's and other Chicago Guys.
However, several years ago I viewed a Chuck Berry retrospective. The finale was the master singing, simply and sweetly, "A Cottage for Sale." I've never heard it rendered more movingly.
Chuck Berry is a monumental presence on the musical landscape.
One of the items which I left out of this account, was that no one at this concert asked for a refund.
"Cottage For Sale" is a sweet little piece. Another seldom remembered moment showing Berry's versatility is a slow blues piece on an 8 string Fender steel guitar at the end of the Keith Richards financed film, " Hail ! Hail! Rock and Roll !" : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=36LT3xaAJ20
Get well Chuck.
Go head on, Tulane...
He should be commensurately as rich as we have been enriched.
I do believe his bitterness has mellowed over the years. Chuck is a very complicated man.
For years he would show up with 10 minutes to set up the band. He never kept his own group. He played unrehearsed with musicians he never met. Guys that loved him and his music in every venue in the land. I never missed him when he came to my town . He is an inovator of epic style. A personal hero of mine that has spanned near as many generations as Sinatra.
God bless Chuck Berry.
Thanks Chi Guy.
Thanks so much...and I am very proud this iwas given an EP and placed on the cover.
Haha, Bobbot, yeah, reputed to be a bit of a perv. Owell.
I hope he's still playing because he loves it and not because he needs the dough, and of course, I hope his collapse was not caused by anything serious.
As far as sexual deviance is concerned.. recording women on the toilet is pretty tame. At least he likes women.
This is hardly the post to resurect Chuck's skeletons. But that’s Salon…