Golden Oldies, Gold Diggers
Lafayette's reigning lounge singer masters everything from Neil Diamond to 50
Cent.
By Stefanie Kalem
Published: Wednesday, December 7, 2005
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It's around 10 p.m. on a Thursday when the Rude Bros -- two twentysomething dudes clad in T-shirts and lit up to eleven -- careen into Petar's Restaurant and Pub in Lafayette. Shouldering through the crowd of surgically preserved middle-aged couples, pigtailed and cautiously inked St. Mary's coeds, |
THE LOWDOWN
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and white boozehounds of all ages, the Bros make their way to the section of bar that wraps around "Diamond" Dave Hosley's keyboard. One of them hangs back; the other hollers over Hosley's tip jar. "Dave! Dave!!!"
The fortyish singer has just finished dedicating Chris DeBurgh's "Lady in Red"
to a table of ten Red Hat Society ladies, those "women of a certain age" who
don purple dresses and red hats while flash-mobbing themselves everywhere from
Disney World to Golden Gate Fields. As he turns to Rude Bro #1, Hosley's
modest blond pompadour bobs slightly, a smile firmly fixed behind his headset
mic. "Hey," he offers.
His calm demeanor does nothing to soothe the blotto fanboy. "He wants you to
play ... he wants you to play ..." Rude Bro #1 points helplessly to his goony
buddy.
"You let me know when you decide," Hosley deadpans, hitting a few buttons on
his Roland keyboard and Dell laptop before launching into "Unchained Melody,"
dedicated to a recently engaged couple. When he's done, Hosley turns back to
the Bros, still agitating at the tip jar. "Have you come up with anything
yet?" Hosley grins politely, but it's clear they've only got a few seconds to
make their request; two women are already jockeying at the jar, dollar bills
in hand. "Yeah!" the first Bro screams. "He wants you to play Nelly! He
doesn't think you'll do it!"
Goony Rude Bro #2 beams, goonily, from the bar.
"Okay," Hosley replies, pressing a few more buttons. Hot in ... he barks into
his mic. So hot in herre ... so hot in .... The St. Mary's girls swarm the
floor. A yuppie couple (yupple?) show off salsa moves. When Hosley gets to the
line Girl I think my butt gettin' big!, he pantomimes checking out his own
ass; the Rude Bros high-five.
It's just another night at Petar's, a Lafayette institution since 1959 wherein
ivy covers the dark-wood walls, just about everyone is a regular, and Hosley
has been the in-house entertainment since 1986, when the Berklee School of
Music grad followed a woman out to SF from Connecticut. Diamond Dave is often
compared to Oakland's legendary Rod Dibble, that walking encyclopedia of song
who has been enabling crocked crooners at The Alley bar for four decades. But
there's more than a tunnel separating tony Lafayette from egalitarian Oakland
now; when Hosley came on board at Petar's, the joint had a distinctly Alley-esque
setup, wherein one female piano player had been leading sing-alongs since God
was a little girl.
Diamond Dave shouldered the unenviable task of killing off karaoke for good.
"All they said was, 'By the way, if someone asks for the microphone, just tell
them you can't give them the microphone, that you're the only one that's gonna
sing,'" he recalls. "They didn't say, 'People have been coming in for 25 years
and expecting to sing, and all of a sudden this thirty-year-old guy is going
to tell them, I'm sorry, you can't use the microphone anymore.'"
But Hosley's predecessor moved up the street, and the old-timers went with
her; five or six years later, he had his own crowd. Now you can see him every
Wednesday through Saturday, from 8 p.m. "till the music stops." Diamond Dave
is an all-occasion crowd-pleaser: Everything from the Killers to the
Romantics, from Cole Porter to Big & Rich resides under his MIDI belt. When he
does Rod Stewart's "Have I Told You Lately That I Love You," he does so
complete with Rod Rasp(TM); when he plays "Copacabana," he busts out live
congas.
And when the crowd wants hip-hop, Hosley provides. Though a white guy dropping
Sir Mix-a-Lot on the 'burbs certainly smacks of irony, Hosley wields enough
sincerity and enthusiasm -- not to mention chops -- to effectively knock all
comparisons to SNL-era Bill Murray right out of your sneering head. And he's
rewarded with a rabid fanship, one that largely couldn't tell R. Kelly from R.
Crumb if it weren't for his playlist. "And," he adds, "they probably don't
catch a lot of the lyric that goes by, which is maybe good."
It was mid-2003 when Hosley started cutting his Darin and Diamond with urban
bling. Patrons kept asking for 50 Cent's "In da Club," so Hosley took it home
and tried it on for size. "And I'm thinking, 'Mr. Late-Forties White Lounge
Guy doesn't have any business singing this song,'" he explains. "And so I kept
rehearsing it, though I didn't have the guts to play it during the night. And
then this black chick that I know came in and said, 'C'mon, you've got to do
50 Cent!' And I said, 'Honey, I don't know if it sounds good.'"
So he proposed a deal: He'd try it if she'd offer a brutally honest critique.
His friend loved it, and so did the rest of the crowd. Now Hosley adds new
hip-hop numbers to his set on a regular basis; Kanye West's "Gold Digger" is
next.
"In a way, it's simple," Hosley says. "You're always looking for something
that's in their consciousness somewhere, that you're going to be able to
connect with." On the same Thursday night the Rude Bros begged for Nelly,
Diamond Dave charmed an elderly couple onto the floor with Elton John's "Your
Song"; the gentleman mouthed the lyrics into his lady's ear as he danced her
around. "If you don't get the guy in the corner with the latest Killers song,"
Hosley concludes, "you might get him with a song by Johnny Cash. Or he might
be a reggae fan and he likes Bob Marley or something. I'm just trying to hit
as many bases as I can."