So I’m sitting here in the Portland Coffee House on Adler and Broadway in downtown Portland. Just enjoying a Almond Mocha something and a cream cheese bagel. This place will be my office for the next couple of weeks. Free WiFi access and a central location with big windows make it the perfect impromptu office. Just a stones throw away is Pioneer Square, one of the most interesting people watching places I know. But it’s cold out and I prefer to stay in the warm.

Shannon plays her guitar on Broadway in Portland, Oregon

As the evening draws in a girl with a metal leg has taken her place by a telephone kiosk, setting her stage for another gig to the passers by, most of whom won’t pay her the slightest bit of attention. Her guitar is strewn with stickers and is arguably in better shape than she is. She tunes up, then starts to sing, and boy does she sing.

A few minutes pass and no one has yet placed even a dime in her scraggy red hat she placed in-front of her. Passers by glance at her, trying to look distracted by something else in order that they can pass by without paying her for her song. It’s not especially cold outside, but it’s not so warm that I’d want to be playing guitar.

A man steps into the phone booth and places a call. He’s an artsy looking man, the kind of person I would expect could easily afford a mobile phone, but has taken the decision not to have one so as not to support the corporations that rule the digital airwaves. He looks serious and he makes his call, but at no point does he notice the girl as she continues to play to her passing audience.

A homeless man is the first to place money in her hat. He stops to listen for a moment, she glances at him and acknowledges his contribution. He nods his head to, it might have been to the rhythm if only he were sober enough to keep the beat. He steps back clumsily into a wooden sign for Chu’s Chinese Restaurant where the ‘Sinner menu’ is served all day according to the sign. He steadies himself on the sign, then turns and wanders off in the direction of Pioneer Square.

It’s getting darker, the passing cars have their headlights on. A few more people stop to give the busker a little appreciation and spare change. I buy her a coffee, add some milk then take it out to her with some sugar and a plastic spoon.

“It’s cold and you look like you could do with a coffee.” I say
“Hey thanks dude.” Her eyes look at me and she smiles broadly. Two paths that might not ordinarily cross meet in the briefest of moments with a coffee and a smile.
“It’s not much but it’ll keep you warm for a while I think.” I place the coffee beside her with the spoon and sugar then walk back into the warmth of the coffee house and take my seat by the window once more while she adds sugar and stirs her coffee. She takes a sip then puts it back down and carrys on with her show.

Her songs barely break through the noise of the Mocha’s in making and the quiet jazz that mingles in the warm air with the aroma of fresh coffee. A few more people pass by and place money into her scraggly red hat. I wish I could hear her as she reaches for high notes, passionately strangling the neck of her six string guitar for the chords that will pay for her dinner. It’s a performance worth watching, worth every last cent of the coffee beside her.

Three black guys with dreadlocks in their hair take the seats in-front of the coffee house, box seats for this particular show. One of them comes into the coffee house to buy the drink that will buy them all the right to sit there for a while. He’s followed in by a chill, as if accompanied by an unseen ghost. Outside his friends exchange banter with this afternoons performer.

She begins to sing again and her new audience clap and whoop in appreciation, raising two beer cans and a coffee in a toast to her music. She closes her eyes and cranes her neck back as she sways to the notes of her song. The lyrics of her song are swallowed up by the surrounding streets, they disappear between the crowds of people, passing cars, and the standing buildings, like commuters getting off a bus and dissolving into the city. She’s singing for money right now, but I have a feeling she’d be singing no matter what. Her metal leg and scraggly red hat, that is slowly collecting a few dollars, look like they have seen a few stories and songs unfold.

Eventually it’s dark outside. She stops singing and smiles at her new found temporary fans sitting on the chairs in-front of the coffee house. She takes a few moments and slowly lights a cigarette taking a long slow drag of smoke deep into her lungs. Then she picks up the scraggly red cap putting the money into her pocket before slowly packing away her guitar, standing awkwardly to her feet collecting herself before walking off into the darkness of the evening.

Their is no after show party for this performer. The show is simply over. But if you missed it then don’t worry, there will probably be another show later on this evening some place not to far from here.