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🕵🏾♂️💼 CML Lavish D – “Where’s Waldo” (but he wrote the diss on a typewriter) | 1930’s Blues Version Recorded at The Velvet Paper Room, Sacramento – February 1932 The newsroom lamps burn low, the whiskey’s sweating on the desk, and you hear keys before you hear chords — CML Lavish D is typing before he’s singing. His newest blues number, “Where’s Waldo (1930’s Typewriter Blues),” ain’t just a record — it’s a printed threat. The song opens with the clack-clack-ding of a typewriter like a tommy gun in a library. Then the upright bass creeps in slow, tip-toeing like someone lookin’ for a man who don’t wanna be found. Lavish leans into the mic, fedora low, cigarette half-ash, and mutters: “Where that boy hidin’ at? I been typin’ all night, baby — tryna spell his location.” The piano chuckles. The horn section snitches. Somewhere in the back, a secretary gasps into her lace gloves. This ain’t sweet blues — this is polished-shoe pressure. A diss record dressed like a business memo. A threat delivered with carbon copy. The Sacramento Herald wrote: “Never seen a man fire shots with a ribbon ink refill.” By the final verse, Lavish slams the typewriter carriage to the side, stands up slow, adjusts his suspenders, and whispers into the mic: “Ain’t no hiding in this city, baby. I’ll type till I find you.” The band lets the last horn note hang like cigar smoke over a confession booth. 👉 CML Lavish D – “Where’s Waldo (but he wrote the diss song on a typewriter)” Proof the blues don’t need bullets… when you got bold font and bad intentions.