
ONE of South Africa's most brilliant musicians and songwriters, my good friend
Jim Neversink, fell victim to what can only have been a terrifying armed robbery at his place of work recently.
Now, despite being a supremely talented individual, a fact that has been widely acknowledged by music critics, as well as by his contemporaries in local and international music, Jim is forced to
work as a barman at
The Bohemian in Richmond, Johannesburg, to supplement the meagre income he receives for doing something that really deserves rich reward.
It was while tending bar here last Monday, that Jim and his colleagues were held up by two gunmen, while a third stood guard outside. They were forced onto the floor and threatened, before the hoods made off with The Bohemian's cash and staff members' cellphones and other valuables.
I'm not about to use this to launch into the all-too-common rant about excessive crime and the government's apparent inability to do anything about it. The crime rate is what it is, and can benefit from being put into context from time to time, as valuably done in a
recent blog entry by Matthew Buckland, who pointed out statistics showing Australia has a much higher rate of burglaries per capita than South Africa, not to mention Dominica, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, New Zealand, the UK, Poland and Canada.
No, a much more important point to make is that there is a superb, original musician out there, who is not receiving the support from the music industry that he deserves. On top of this severe misfortune, he has been illegally relieved of his cellphone and will probably even battle to scrape together the cash to buy a new one.
If you care about any of this but believe there is little you can do to help, you're wrong. All you need to do is head over to The Bohemian tomorrow night (Friday, May 25), pay the 40 bucks required to get in, and settle down for an awesome evening of loserbilly rock 'n roll courtesy of ace singer, guitarist and lap-steel player Jim Neversink.
That's all.
Photo ©JC Katzenellenbogen