As a self-confessed music geek, I am obviously quite enamored of the whole 33 1/3 series (originally published by Continuum but now apparently Bloomsbury? - http://333sound.com/) and own several, (though not nearly as many as I want/need!). This past Xmas someone quite near and dear to me gave me Bryan Waterman's contribution to the series: Television's Marquee Moon. This record is definitely one of my "Desert Island Discs," and I agree with something Waterman writes early on about how it's an album that really sounds like it came not from any particular time period, barring any sonic nuances/limitations more expert ears might pick up on that betray when it was recorded. Of course, it is hard, if not impossible, to listen to it, or any album for that matter, without placing it in the context of when it was recorded. Waterman devotes a lot of his book to this, giving us the whole setting for how the CBGB's mythology was seemingly created by two Rimbaud-inspired white dudes loitering around the Lower East Side in the mid-70's (probably not the greatest idea at the time) and happened upon a guy hanging up a banner for his club, asked for a gig, and then the rest being history. Whether or not it really happened that way, as Waterman points out, is really beside the point. The fact is Television, though not the first rock band (or band) to ever play CBGB, nevertheless became the band that brought it to prominence, resulting in the scene it became and the legend it spawned. And their whole back story, about which Waterman goes into considerable detail, is kind of essential as far as informing what eventually became the album Marquee Moon, i.e., the friendship/creative-spiritual partnership/falling out between co-founders Richard Hell (Myers) and Tom Verlaine (Miller). (Verlaine mentions his former collaborator in the last verse of the second song on the album "Venus.")
So what about the book itself as a critical analysis/love letter to one of (IMHO) the greatest (debut) albums in rock? Again, not wanting to be hypercritical, I would say I really enjoyed it on the whole. Being a university professor and scholar, Waterman did an amazing amount of research for it. The bibliography is a veritable smorgasbord of resources about those halcyon days. It's amazing to me how much is written about this stuff, and how good the writing was back then, (and how the quality of music criticism seems to have gone way downhill ever since). He also approaches the analysis part as you would expect from an academic, at times perhaps a little over the top, although I think this music warrants it. A lot of these books are written by scholars and academics, so this is to be expected. (I know there are some blatant exceptions, e.g., the one for PJ Harvey's Rid of Me and Joe Pernice's one for The Smiths' Meat Is Murder, neither of which I have read yet.) As a musician, it seems a little more could have been devoted to the music itself, perhaps from a technical standpoint. Waterman does have an entire chapter where he writes something about each song, but at times it seems there is so much more one can say (inevitable for any such book though, especially one for this series). And, being a drummer, I have always felt that Billy Ficca's playing on this record is extraordinary, and never receives enough credit or attention. He does stuff on every track that to me is so creative and interesting and that I imagine most, rock drummers anyway, wouldn't think of. One can clearly hear his Tony Williams/jazz influence throughout the record. One of my favorite moments is at the 3:14 mark on "Friction." Of course, the guitar interplay between Verlaine and Richard Lloyd is stellar and defines their sound, and Fred Smith's melodic, supportive bass playing completes the sound of the quartet. I also think the book ends kind of abruptly, with Patti Smith at the closing of CBGB in 2006 essentially telling the crowd that Verlaine, unable or unwilling to be present, is there in spirit. I guess it makes sense though that any book about Marquee Moon is inevitably going to have CBGB as one of its focuses.
Look, sure there is a lot that Waterman could have done differently, but there is really no way that I am not going to enjoy a book about Marquee Moon from the 33 1/3 series. And his suggestion to listen to the album on headphones while trolling through the Lower East Side of Manhattan at night is one I hope to be able to do someday.
Friday, January 3, 2014
Wednesday, January 1, 2014
Hello 2014 and Big Star movie
As
the credits roll at the end of what is arguably the greatest
human achievement ever, upon which civilizations, religions,
philosophies, etc., can and should be built - "This Is Spinal Tap" -
Michael McKean, in his hilarious portrayal of the fictional band's lead
singer and guitarist David St. Hubbins (the patron saint of quality
footwear) responds to the question of what he would be doing with his
life if it weren't for rock and roll with "I dunno. Probably be a full
time dreamer." Well, that is definitely a sentiment I (and I would
venture many more of you out there) can relate to very well. I mean,
isn't the thing that grabs us at a young age and leaves its indelible
footprint on our souls, like when concrete is first poured and is
beginning to harden, the thing that makes the most lasting impression,
regardless of whatever else we go on to do with our time here on Earth?
Isn't each and every one of us, to borrow another wonderful Tap moment,
(also from that same series of interviews during the credits), part
preserved moose?
Well,
in this spirit, and as another middle-aging Gen X-er whose
love/obsession for all things rock and roll - with a focus on the
"Golden Age" of the middle 1960's through the middle 1970's - I submit
to you another music blog and welcome you to the inaugural post.
Perhaps
in this age of information overload and mass media saturation, wherein
each of us can only realistically access a tiny fraction of what is out
there as far as music, film, books, etc., it seems more likely than ever
that more and more of the "worthy" ones are going to fall through the
cracks, i.e., remain in relative, if not total, obscurity, perhaps to be
"discovered" eventually someday. This is of course nothing new in art
(look at folks like Mozart and Van Gogh for crying out loud!). As far as
rock and roll/popular music bands/artists, it seems more and more
similar stories are popping up and gaining notoriety, e.g. the Oscar
winning "Searching for Sugar Man" http://www.sonyclassics.com/searchingforsugarman/ documentary about the discovery and
resurgence of Sixto Rodriguez, and the much less acclaimed but no less
worthy documentary about singer-songwriter Emitt Rhodes "The One Man
Beatles" https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-One-Man-Beatles/194683281519. We love stories like this, about people who deserved more
success during the time they were doing whatever it is they do and, at
least on the surface, seem like victims of circumstances beyond their
control (although perhaps they also had a role in how things turned
out), and then are discovered later on and given their due recognition.
For those who have passed on, this is their way of achieving
immortality, perhaps small compensation for what they had to endure
while alive, but redemptive and vindicating nevertheless.
In
rock and roll, there are countless stories like this, and there are
going to be more and more books, movies, etc., made about these
bands/artists (I happen to know at least one very well). A whole cottage
industry either already exists, or is in the works, of stories about
bands/artists who, in a parallel universe, are well known, appreciated,
and adequately compensated for the amazing work they do.
One
of my Christmas gifts this year was the DVD of the film about, as its
tag line reads, "the greatest band that never made it." This is of
course Big Star, the name of the documentary "Nothing Can Hurt Me," http://www.bigstarstory.com/
which is a line from the Big Star song "Big Black Car," from their third
album, which never had an official title, but has been dubbed "3rd" and
"Sister Lovers." I first saw this film last April, when it had its
Southeast premier during the Florida Film Festival http://www.floridafilmfestival.com/, and, as a big fan of
the band ever since the early '90's, when I, along with countless other
Gen-X indie rockers, discovered and shortly thereafter came to revere
them, I absolutely loved the film. In fact, it exceeded whatever
expectations I may have had about it. In fact, such was my mania for it
that I resolved to wake up early on Record Store Day a couple weeks
later so I could procure the limited edition yellow vinyl version of the
soundtrack on Omnivore Recordings, http://omnivorerecordings.com/ (an endeavor which ended up being a
five hour wait on line just to get into Park Ave CDs http://www.parkavecds.com/ in Orlando, an
experience I vowed not to repeat).
In
the main film, we get the whole backdrop of the late '60's Memphis
music scene which ultimately led to Chris Bell, Alex Chilton, Andy
Hummel, and (only surviving member) Jody Stephens, working together at
Ardent Studios to craft their perfectly realized power pop confections.
We are then taken through the making of and circumstances surrounding
Big Star's three official albums, all of which are different from each
other, but brilliant in their own unique ways, to main songwriters Bell
and Chilton's post Big Star careers/endeavors, to the creation of the
Big Star cult. Along the way we hear from friends, classmates,
collaborators, critics, fellow musicians who continue to carry the Big
Star torch, and, most poignantly, family of the band, all of whom
contribute important, insightful commentary. One of the most touching and sad
moments in the film for me is toward the end when Chris Bell's brother
and sister are being interviewed and his sister is tearfully trying to
articulate her mixed feelings about her brother's contribution to music
at the cost of his no longer being with us, which her brother is able to
say for her, something like "You'd rather have him than his music."
Like
so many great stories, it is ultimately about triumph over tragedy
(although I can see Alex Chilton's two outstretched middle fingers aimed
directly at me from beyond the grave as I write this). Chris Bell, Alex
Chilton, and Andy Hummel may be gone forever as physical
manifestations, but we will always have the music they made while they
were with us. I am not a critic either. I am not going to expound on
what the filmmakers could have done "better" with this picture. I have
read a few what I consider unfairly lukewarm at best reviews of "Big
Star: Nothing Can Hurt Me," including one from my local rag Orlando
Weekly at the time of its Florida Film Festival screening, as well as a
recent one in Rolling Stone. In my humble opinion, the film is as worthy
an addition to the increasing canon of great rock docs as its subject
matter is to the increasing list of great bands/artists whose work
deserves all the recognition it never rightfully received during its
time and place. I loved it! I learned a lot about one of my favorite
bands of all time! I will watch it again and continue to listen to and
derive immense pleasure from the music of Big Star.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)