On a beautiful blue sky Tuesday, when the wind was down, you could hear Jimmy Wallace's saxophone cry from at least a couple blocks away.
Wallace, 60 and teenager trim, sat on a bistro chair outside Heimie's Haberdashery in downtown St. Paul, tooting his own horn as he has most pretty days since last summer. He knocked on the door at Heimie's a year ago, seeking to sell shoes. Instead, he helps the area around St. Peter and 6th streets echo with a soulful sound of blues, jazz and maybe a little television theme music thrown in for fun.
He said he appreciates the dollar bills dropped into his red velvet-lined case. But Wallace simply loves to play, anywhere, anytime.
"Oh yeah," he said. "I'm always looking for a gig."
Anthony Andler, the owner of Heimie's -- the kind of place that sells upscale men's clothes, shoes and hats and offers an old-fashioned shave -- considers Wallace a sound advertising investment. When he plays, people stop. To listen. To talk. Sometimes, to shop.
"It's a lot like in old days gone by, they had door greeters," Andler said. "Sometimes, when the weather's bad, he'll even set up and play softly in the barber shop.
"He kind of does his own thing. For him, it's a lifestyle."
The way Andler tells it, Wallace was a long-time shoe salesman looking to join the staff at Heimie's. The way Wallace remembers it, he was working at a nearby restaurant when, while taking a cigarette break, he saw the hats in Heimie's window.