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Category: rock/pop

Friday, 12/4/09

The Man Can’t Bust Our Music. That’s the advertising campaign Columbia Records launched in 1969. Actually, though, this wasn’t quite true, as I’d learned the year before. One night in April of 1968 (just a few months before the Democratic Convention), when I was 15 years old and our parents were out of town, my brother Don and I went to the Electric Theater on Chicago’s north side (later known [after a lawsuit] as the Kinetic Playground) to see the Velvet Underground. This was just a couple months after the release of their second album, White Light/White Heat. After the show, as we were leaving and heading back to the car, we were stopped. The Man. Unmarked Car. Busted—curfew rap.

*****

Next Tuesday, Lou Reed and other members of the Velvet Underground (Maureen “Mo” Tucker, Doug Yule, David Fricke [no John Cale]) will be appearing at the New York Public Library, for an event that’s being promoted this way:

The Art and Soul of The Velvet Underground

In the historic ferment of Sixties rock, the Velvet Underground were the perfect band in the right city, New York, at a crucial time.

For five years – 1965 to 1970 – singer-songwriter and guitarist Lou Reed, bassist and viola player John Cale, guitarist Sterling Morrison and drummer Maureen Tucker, with the German vocalist Nico and bassist Doug Yule (who replaced Cale in 1968), broadcast the real life of their home town – the sex, drugs and art; the furious street energies, hidden pleasures and desperate romance – in an unprecedented pop music of vivid storytelling and transgressive excitement.

On stage and on their four influential studio albums, the Velvets invented the many futures of rock – punk, drone, free improvisation, lyric candor – in songs and performances that made the group notorious, with the pivotal help of their early manager and mentor, Andy Warhol. Legendary status came later, after the group broke up and Reed and Cale went on to bold prolific solo careers.

Today, the Velvet Underground are the stars they always deserved to be, with a rich and still mysterious story that continues to unfold: in the new visual collection, The Velvet Underground: New York Art, and tonight, in this unprecedented reunion of Reed, Tucker and Yule – the words, music and rhythm of The Velvet Underground.

Talk about breathless: “[h]istoric ferment,” “unprecedented,” “transgressive excitement,” “the stars they always deserved to be.” Maybe they could begin the evening with an introduction I heard, many years ago, when Martin Mull played the Quiet Knight (making the singular plural [unless, that is, Lou thought the singular would suffice]):

Here he is, Ladies & Gentlemen . . . a legend in his own mind . . .

*****

The Velvet Underground

“Sunday Morning”

***

“I’m Waiting For The Man”

***

“Beginning to See the Light”

Wednesday, 12/2/09

At the risk of sounding like the geezer that, daily, I seem ever more intent on becoming, how amazing it is to live in a world where (last night for instance) my older son Alex, sitting in his room in Cambridge, Massachusetts, can think of sharing some music with me one moment, he can email me a link the next, and I can click on it and listen the next.

Animal Collective, “What Would I Want Sky”

Friday, 11/20/09

Elvis Presley, Michael Jackson: what other artist was a big influence on both?

Jackie Wilson (Mr. Excitement), “Lonely Teardrops,” live (TV broadcast), 1958

Monday, 11/16/09

Saturday morning, driving down to Champaign-Urbana to visit my younger son Luke (Dads’ Weekend at the U of I), when the radio signal on Scott Simon’s NPR show started to fade (interviews this week with Wes Anderson and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar), I took out this CD and slid it into the dashboard player—something Luke gave me, a couple years ago, for Christmas.

Wyclef Jean, Carnival II: Memoirs of an Immigrant (2007)

“Sweetest Girl (Dollar Bill)” (with Akon and Lil Wayne)

*****

“Any Other Day” (with Norah Jones)

*****

“Fast Car” (with Paul Simon)

**********

lagniappe

A native of Haiti, WJ established a foundation to provide aid to the people of that country, which can be found here.

Haiti is my native country, one I know as the first black nation to gain independence in 1804. Most other people seem to know Haiti only by the statistics about how bad things are there. The majority of its 8 million residents live on less than $1 per day. Unemployment is close to 80 percent, and more than half the population is under 21 years old. Haiti is the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere.

I have been spending a lot of time talking with people in my native country to try and understand what is behind these statistics and the past escalation of violence, all of which brings tears to my eyes. I have had conversations with gang leaders, met with the police officers and sat down with the leaders of the militias and the army. I have talked with Haitians from all walks of life, all colors of skin, all backgrounds and beliefs. From all these people I hear only one thing in my head and feel only one thing in my heart–that there is only one Haiti. Every Haitian loves their country like a mother loves her child.

I see old women with large bags of rice on their heads and men on street corners selling sugarcane and mangos, all just trying to survive with a strong sense of pride. Walking past a church in my village, I hear the congregation singing an appeal to God to hear their cries and grant deliverance to Haiti. Through experiences like this, I sense where my mother and my father got their strength. Now the whole country needs to reach deep into the spirit and strength that is part of our heritage.

The objective of [my foundation] Yéle Haiti is to restore pride and a reason to hope, and for the whole country to regain the deep spirit and force that is part of our heritage.—Wyclef Jean

Saturday, 11/14/09

Here’s more from a band my older son Alex opened my ears to after seeing them, in July, at New York’s South Street Seaport.

The Pains of Being Pure at Heart

“Everything With You”

*****

TV broadcast

Want more? Here.

Friday, 11/13/09

After this, what’s next for Mr. Pop (as he’s known in the New York Times)—a revival of The Three Penny Opera?

Iggy Pop, “King Of The Dogs,” live, France, 2009

*****

Here’s a shout-out to my brother Don, who recently gave me—for my fifty-zillionth birthday—a copy of Mr. Pop’s latest, Preliminaires, which includes this parvum opus. Who could have imagined, back in August of 1968, during the Democratic Convention in Chicago, when we were in Lincoln Park listening to those other Detroit/Ann Arbor guys, the MC5 (who the next month signed with Elektra along with the Stooges), that we’d be listening to this forty-one years later?

Monday, 11/9/09

My 18-year-old son Luke, who was home from college over the weekend, played me this track yesterday—something by another college guy, 21 years old and a senior at Duke, who leaves campus every weekend to do shows all over the country. We were driving into the city and Luke, who’d burned this on a CD, slid the disc into the dashboard player. “I love this song,” he said. “It makes me feel good inside. It’s the beat. And his voice is so good.”

Mike Posner (with Big Sean), “Speed of Sound” (2009)

Want more? Here.

lagniappe

The most difficult part of the [music] business today is deciding whether I should commit the dollars to signing an unknown or wait until the artist has a hit. Then there are guys like Mike Posner. I would bet on him for the future and today.—Marty Bandier, the 68-year-old chief executive of Sony/ATV Music Publishing

Saturday, 10/31/09

If you’re looking for something to listen to while checking your email, don’t bother with these clips. Once you start watching them, you won’t be able to stop.

Janelle Monae, “Sincerely, Jane”

Take 1: Philadelphia, 2008

***

Take 2: Los Angeles, 2008

Wednesday, 10/14/09

Kinda cheesy. Utterly irresistible. When it comes to pop music, what more could you ask for?

Memory Tapes, “Graphics”

Want more? Here.

Friday, 10/2/09

Who says white folks can’t dance?

Del Shannon, “Runaway,” TV Performance