321 50 105MB
English Pages 628 Year 2002
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5 HAL'LEONARD
-
Cover and
interior illustrations
Copyright
©
2002 by Joe
by Jon Langford.
Harrington
S.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any other information
storage retrieval system, without permission in writing from the Publisher, except by a review-
who may
er,
quote brief passages for review.
Published by Hal Leonard Corporation
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P.O.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Harrington, Joe S.
Sonic cool
:
the life
and death of rock
'n'
roll /
Joe Harrington.
lsted. p.
cm.
Includes bibliographical references
ISBN 0-634-02861-8 1.
(alk.
Rock music-History and
aesthetics.
I.
(p.
)
and index.
paper) criticism. 2.
Music-Philosophy and
Title.
ML3534 .H395 2002 781.66'09-dc21
2002014827
Printed in the United States of First Edition
10
98 7654
3 2
1
America
1
Content* v
Preface
Acknowledgements
ix
Chapter
1
The
Chapter
2
Where The Music Came From
Chapter
3
Elvis
Fifties
Gotta
1
Gun
13
3
Chapter 4
Kill the Business
59
Chapter
5
The
Beatles
97
Chapter 6
The
Rolling Stones
Chapter
Bob Dylan
141
Chapter 8
The
155
Chapter 9
The Back to
Chapter 10
The
Chapter
11
Excess
257
Chapter
12
Days of Malaise
293
Chapter
13
Punk
321
Chapter 14
The
395
Chapter
Post-Everything
Notes Index
7
15
for Sonic
Revolution
the Roots Revival
Struggle
Eighties
Cool
121
209 235
453 557 563
o
o
THIS SHOULD Bl mi
LAS!
BOOK
millennium, that which passes tionship with the
Rock
o
Rock.
\uoi"l
and
is
o
Surely, here at the onset of the
product of
a
t
retired this
process forms an inter-
us own, as evidenced by a wave of books
cheapening oorporatization of popular music appear tor
completely different evo-
a
new
lutionary process, and a nonorganic one. Surely this esting thesis
many
years to come.
and come to
signify-
It's
—
—
on the
subject
no doubt continue
that will
Which
past.
—not so much
written (once again, they undoubtedly
will),
is
books shouldn't be
that other
but that this
the
is
first
I
first
conceived
this
book some twenty-odd years ago,
did not believe an adequate history of
that
as
having final-
it
was because
Rock
existed.
Although other books may
have loosely traced Rock's chronological history, they seldom explained tial
book
(crushing conclusion).
When I
to
the whole point about
approaches the whole topic of Rock (and the phenomenon thereof) ity
the
i.e.,
probably about time that the word Rock be
music from the
being the "last" book about Rock
new
popular music bears only a faint rela-
itself off as
of the past
o
meaning. There were, of course, books
filled
its
essen-
with great essays about the topic, 1
from Marcus's Mystery Train to Guralnick's Feel Like Goin Home,
as well as a host
of great biographies (Nick Tosches' Jerry Lee Lewis epic Hellfire immediately
comes
to
mind) and
oral histories {Please Kill Me).
But what
something that explained the phenomenon of Rock strously popular,
and also
why
it
was destined to
—why
fail. I
guess
it
I
I
was seeking was
became so monconceived
it
as
an
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
vi
epic that sent,
would
along with
As
a
its
'n'
phenomenon, the kind of
belief that
Rock
—
Roll lifestyle has lasted, too
as
'n'
moment
engage
in).
Roll inspired in
any major
latest fashion
In
fact, it
the single
most important disseminator of freethinking
Rock
(as well
Roll was
'n'
—one
goddamn
itself,
important, not only as music but as a way of life
that, in
offered a viable alternative to the accepted hegemony. But the fact that
fact,
Rock, in
its
soul-selling inevitability, in turn
tion of conformity actually
means
that
its
became perhaps the ultimate
capitulation to the corporate
If
one sees the history of Rock
Roll as analogous to the Bible
'n'
book
believe there's a moral to this
god was
—
let this
—and
Testament. This book
do
New
an attempt to reconcile the Rock of the Baby Boomers
is
and the post-Punk Rock of all subsequent generations.
symptom of the world ultimately growing larger
disparate diversions in
I
be Rock's apocalypse, with the
chapter entitled "Punk" as the dividing line between Old Testament and
a
bas-
kind of self-fulfilling prophecy of biblical proportions.
a dire
was
city,
statement of
could be argued that, within the popular culture
as free love). In the annals of twentieth-century art forms, 7
in
(not to mention the self-destructive practices they routinely
Rock has been
pretty
its lis-
mere entertainment. The
one can witness
judging by the hordes of kids walking around in the the
to repre-
musical legacy.
teners was, in a very real way, closer to religion than
Rock
ROLL
Rock has come
the cultural manifestations that
tie in all
N'
its
wake. In the
'90s,
we'd see
The
culture of the '80s
—and leaving
this
a
thousand
more emphatically
in
the form of fringe religious, political, and sexual preoccupations of all varieties.
Rock
'n'
Roll itself would fragment into so
no longer any consensus even
The
thing that
the subject of so
was the For
first
Rock
This
Rock
'n'
Roll
is
book
as
more
tory of
'n'
many exhaustive
tieth century.
also
made Rock
what "Rock
is
'n'
Roll
folklore
I
more than
it
that
it
is
intrinsically related to the culture overall.
history. That's
it is
why some may
argue that
many groups
individual artists, but also
made
think those other books have perhaps missed.
Rock than
so
Roll" actually was.
—but ultimately inaccurate—surveys
the story of
Rock because
'n'
perhaps the greatest oral history of the twen-
is
something
subcategories that there was
Roll unique and the thing that has
form of music that was
this reason,
It's
as to
many
why I
like to
think of this
the history of Rock. this
or
whole genres
book cannot
artists are
(for
serve as a truly proper his-
ultimately excluded
—not only
example, the whole worldwide satanic
PREFACE
metal subculture is
barely in this
is
book at all. But like
Studies," if you will
—
far as history goes,
is
Techno
music). Michael Jackson
hot topics of postmodern research
all
book deserves
this
made myself almost
a subject I've
As
hardly even mentioned, nor
vii
to be written.
fatally familiar
This
one
is
author's view of
with for nearly three decades.
gets harder to pinpoint any kind of
it
—"Cultural
mass consen-
sus after the dissipation that occurred after Punk; starting then, the history of
Rock becomes Everything"
Limp
—
point
at a certain
it
closer in spirit to Richard Meltzer's
and the Pop
little
best to see Sonic Cool as not so
it's
Narcotic,
the final chapter
is
entided "Post
simply doesn't matter anymore; leaving
Bizkit out of the text does very
Perhaps
why
utterly subjective. That's
The
to alter
much
its
theoretical conclusions.
a straight history but a
Aesthetics of Rock,
book
Joe Carducci's Rock
and LeRoi Jones's Black Music: more of a theoretical/philo-
sophical entity as opposed to an all-inclusive "study." It's
called Sonic Cool because those are the
two
—despite the trappings —was, once "Cool" — the posture of Rock and the Rock
the sound of the music, which
is
upon ture
a time, the
—
the
is
main
more
ment that was
thing.
facile side
cultural
cul-
of the music's success, perhaps the seductive ele-
ultimately responsible for
Rock becoming
The
the Entertainment Industrial Complex. shall the
—
it
er.
it is
twain meet.
only Rock
In this sense, Call
it
And although
Revolution. Either way,
it's
they'll call it?
of Rock.
over.
But
if
The
true
left
something
meaning of Rock,
feel free to write
Or
fact, I
its
call
it
by no means lament
was going to
last forev-
future will bring something else.
exists. If you
history or
I
the history of the Cultural
call it
somehow I've missed my
some
essential
element ol the
sociopolitical connotations,
by
your own goddamn book.
Joe
Who
Rock, they're clutch-
call it
think
out, or failed to explain
its
of what
(Tom Wolfe was another inspiration).
they continue to
ing onto something that no longer
mark, or
eulogize this
Cool is satire as well
a cultural history
knows what
I
a fixture
point of the book: Never again
There was no guarantee
'n' Roll.
So?iic
sides of Rock's soul. "Sonic"
S.
Harrington
Portland,
Maine
April 18, 2002
all
means
Digitized by the Internet Archive in
2012 with funding from
The Archive
of
Contemporary Music
http://archive.org/details/soniccoollifedeaOOharr
So IT'S FINALLY COME DOWN TO TfflS, HUH? I call
a
the holy trinity
dream
—the three people who were
into not only a reality but
told
is
I call
John Strausbaugh:
the
As
"Beyond
When
I first
my concept for Sonic Cool sometime in early 999, he was already familiar with my style, and in a way, he'd been partly responsible for
him about
eminendy
helping nurture
New
feel like a conspiracy.
of their own, which
among them
the Call of Duty" category. First
chiefly responsible for turning
what eventually got to
far as credits go, this triumvirate is in a class
what
First off, thanks are in order for
1
it,
as he'd already
published more than
fifty
reviews of mine in die
York Press, the paper he edited. It should be noted here for posterity's stake
that he's the best editor I've ever
had the pleasure of working with,
for the simple
reason that he eschews the usual schoolmarm-ish precision bullshit, easy-reading tactics,
and putting-words-in-writers'-mouths practices of most
so afraid of their
apparendy get ers. It
own shadows and
a quick-fix kick
so unsure of their
own
editors,
who
are
literary oats that they
out of emasculating dieir legions of underpaid writ-
was Strausbaugh who recommended an agent
turned into the second conspirator of the
trinity.
for
me, Jim Fitzgerald,
Luckily for me,
who
who had very lit-
tle
experience treading in these waters, Jim was the possessor of a genuine Rock
'n'
Roll sensibility that
is
rare in
most
literary folks.
From
the beginning, he
believed in the project and never once flagged in his support. It
lap of
was
Ben
this
kind of dedication that eventually landed die manuscript in the
Schafer, at that time the editor at
Hal Leonard. Ben was another
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
x
N'
ROLL
godsend: not succumbing to the pressures of the politically correct and thus
robbing the book of
thought police, the
way
it
its satirical
implications just for the sake of appeasing the
one most responsible
he's the
was intended
to.
As we embarked on
the very beginning that he was truly "in to have crossed paths with
say that perhaps
wingspan
no other
when he
finally
and
joke,"
coming out
Ben proved from
this project,
I feel
very fortunately
I'm very confident
at this point in time.
when
I
editor would've given a first-time author such a wide
sees
thank John Cerullo
it,
during the two years
And
him
on the
book
as well as unflailing support.
I'd also like to
ner
for this
as well as it
at
Hal Leonard
everyone else
at
for recognizing a win-
Hal Leonard
for their support
took to complete the project.
thanks also to the great Jon Langford, for coming up with an appro-
priate cover illustration that
Thanks
matches the irreverent
spirit
are also in order to the following people
insignificant
way
to the final
outcome, be
it
of the book
who
by loaning
a
itself.
contributed in no
record or two; pro-
viding advice, guidance, or moral support; as well as any ideas, thoughts, punch lines,
or even a sentence or two that
I
might have appropriated wholesale:
"Metal" Mike Saunders, Eva Neuberg, Jon Decker, Dave Daley, Jon Reisbaum,
Jim DeRogatis, Ted Drozdowski, Joan
Foley,
Robert Brooker, Ben Goldberg, Lisa Kearns,
Tony Mayberry,
MC
Kostek,
Steve Perry,
Mike Doughty,
Gilbert Doughty, Brendan Bourke, Spencer Gates, Steve Aylett, Tris McCall,
Anna Keith
Price,
John O'Hara, Barbara Manning, George
Wasmund, Robert
Steve Manning,
Morris, Jeff Morris,
Tsetsilas, Peter Lebares,
Randy Haecker, Chris
Ron Schneiderman, Bob Dubrow,
Kris
Jacobs,
Thompson, Connie
Adams, Angus Merry, Rick Oulette, Ben Lowengard, Spencer Ackerman, Erin Franzman, Terri Hinte, Todd Cronin, Andria
Lisle,
Warren Lemond, Rick
Grazul, Jacob Hoye, Jeff Niesel, Jeff Dice, Patrick Corrigan, Cassie Gagne,
Lael Morgan, David Tyler, Chris Busby, Laurie Blackwood, Ippolito, Brian
Coleman.
Extra special thanks
Mark
Pam Nashel, Nina
to:
Delerium Archives, David Simpkins, Lauri Bortz,
Dagley, Marianne Nowottny, Allison Tanenhaus, Erin Hosier,
Warren, John Fahnley, Julie Underwood, Kris Irving, Scott Irving,
Susan and
Max
Jim
Gillespie,
Tim
Tom
Shea, Chris
Pinfold, Steve Prygoda, Sue Minichiello, Carl and
and Miles Treicel, Noel Ventresco, Craig Ventresco, Lisa
LeeKing, Lisa Carver, Dave Goolkasian, Sean Dillman, Penny Day, Julie and
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
xi
Jere Nickerson, Daniel and Cecelia Nickerson, William Hobbs,
Pam
Smith,
Raymond
Andy and John and Carol Bogner,
Ross, Michael
Treemarcki,
Tom
Galinksy,
Mafrici, Liz August,
Eric and Rachel Youngling,
Matt Martinez, Adam
Tim
I
forgot.
Stern,
David
Smart, Bernard Stollman, Johnny
and Mellow Lomba, Phuong Baum, Anne Streng, Patrick Doris Storer, and anyone else
Andrew and
Sabatini,
Mum,
Dad,
To Jon Fox,
who
started
it all
and always kept
it
real
Chapter
1
THE DRTtiE* In the
'50s,
a decade of expanding goodwill, few people doubted their
GOVERNMENT. AMERICA, AFTER
ALL,
HAD
WON THE
WAR. Young
spent a couple of years fighting overseas were anxious to buy families in the
new
culture
—
new
particularly television
the world because they'd saved
refrain).
homes and
—that promoted
War it
II
a
new kind of affluence.
daddies whose right
("and don't you forget
it
it,
They'd fought abroad to defend the American way of
they were reaping
raise
plenteous Utopia of postwar America. Around them raved a
This was the bounty of the World it
men who'd
its
was to inher-
kid"
went the
life,
and now
rewards. But there were millions of people whose lives
went on, devoid of the American Dream. For those who were
behind, the '50s was an extremely grueling time
left
when conformity was rewarded and
The
specter of the witch-trial-like
one thinking of dissent.
It
was
political dissidents, druggies.
or of neatly
mowed
was judged with suspicion.
individuality
McCarthy
hearings put a lot of fear in any-
—
definitely an era of hiding in the closet
But these "dissenters"
lawns and Leave
it to
existed,
beneath the exteri-
Beaver benevolence.
In the recent past, Franklin Roosevelt had been such
a
that he almost put the Republicans out of business. People for the Depression,
years helped
and FDR's emergence
him achieve
the social and
a
for gays,
as a
popular president still
blamed them
world leader during the war
prolonged presidency that enabled him to complete
economic agenda
that
was the
New
Deal. His inevitable succes-
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
2
sor,
Harry Truman,
ethic
solidly
embraced
ROLL
small-town, Midwestern working class
a
and was given to plain language. But Dean Acheson, Truman's Secretary
of State, came to
Harvard,
a
embody
the Eastern establishment: Educated at
product of Wall Street, he was young,
affairs, chiefly
Even
Eurocentric.
after
ed to concentrate more on European In his that
N'
first
fell
to
terms of foreign
Communist
he tend-
rule,
affairs.
year as Secretary of State, Acheson was dogged by an incident
would prove
to be a historic turning point in the
Whittaker Chambers,
own
his
one named Alger Hiss was
at
by the Republicans
Cold War:
A man named
background quite dubious, charged that
one time
the time, Hiss was the head of the vilified
China
rich, and, in
Groton and
member
a
of the
Communist
some-
Party.
At
Carnegie Endowment, an organization long
Although Hiss eventually got out
as a liberal organ.
of the whole thing on a charge of perjury, the main target amongst Red-haters
was Acheson, who continued to support Hiss long
The
event that really jump-started the Cold
testing of the nuclear
modern
folklore, this
bomb on August 29, almighty force
dirty Reds, could extinguish
all
1949.
that, in
after the trial
War was
was
over.
the Soviet Union's
Soon the bomb became
an instant, in the hands of those
the things Americans had fought so hard
wasn't that long ago that Soviets and Americans had fought side by side in
War II, but by becoming our nuclear equals, the as the
part of
Soviet
for. It
World
Union had now emerged
new enemy.
On other fronts, the contours of society were changing: Harry Truman would be the last president not to go to college.
The
country was entering a whole
which the overriding goal of most Americans would be going to be a world where one could hang a
to succeed. It
heroes
be the
last
With
(like James
Curley and
also the
literally
some
last
of the unbuffed
politi-
could display his bloodlust in public.
issues of national security.
Cold War, spying and
J.
espi-
These were the years when
looking in every garbage can for "commies."
golden age of die FBI, led by
proven, had It
who
the escalating nuclear arms race and the
Americans were
was no longer
Huey Long) just as Eisenhower, his successor, would
of the real brave war heroes
onage became huge
era in
man from a tree if one didn't like the color
of his skin. Harry Truman came from the Old School, the cal
new
Edgar Hoover (who,
It
was
as history has
secrets of his own).
was an era of fear and entrapment,
gogic senator from Wisconsin,
who
at
as
proven by Joe McCarthy,
one time
let it slip that
he had
a
dema-
a list
of
CHAPTER
THE FIFTIES
1:
3
"205 proven commies" in the State Department. This was
in
of the modern-day press scandals, as the hearings were
media events, and everyone from
nationally televised coffee-getters
among
the
the
first
first
big
politicians to actors to
was accused.
McCarthy hurt Truman. He because he
many ways
made them look
soft
also hurt the
Democrats
on Communism. The
final
in the long-term,
blow came during
Korean War, when Truman replaced the ever-popular General MacArthur
the
with Matt Ridgeway. This caused MacArthur to accuse the president of "not
wanting to get the job done." To most Americans, MacArthur was hero admired for his outspoken bravado.
Now
from the president, he was even
direct orders
that he
less
a national
was no longer taking
checked in
his criticism.
In those days, people's speech wasn't policed by politically correct do-
gooders, nor was their conduct checked by international bodyguards. This was still
the day and age
policy leaders
mies.
the Soviet
of hip thinkers
try's
Union and
stakes got a lot higher,
Most people now lot
—not
just
working
—openly admitted that they wanted
With both
bomb, the
when people
class zealots,
to totally
but national
maim
their ene-
the United States having access to the
and the public relations rhetoric
intensified.
realized that this rhetoric could have fatal consequences.
—
artists as
well as academics
A
—began questioning the coun-
overt nationalism, but for the most part Americans in the '50s continued
to have blind faith in their leaders (and deftly built
The
'50s
saw the invention of
inconceivable during the war years
"leisure time,"
bomb
shelters).
which would have seemed
when men and women worked day and
night to keep the war effort running effectively.
With
the rise of
new
technol-
oil
—the birth of electronics and the conversion of coal-fueled energy crude This meant the average work—industry was becoming more
er
was able to work fewer hours for more money. Americans became consumers.
to
ogy
efficient.
itself
They began
to
spend money on
mobiles in order to gain status
home
among
furnishings, clothes, cuisine,
and auto-
their peers.
Cars, for instance, had once been thought of only as a
means of transport.
But with the mass production of autos that accompanied the postwar economy, automakers society.
like
General Motors began to design cars for the different
So while
or truant
a
Pontiac was a sporty model perfect
officer, the
for, say, a
strata
of
horse breeder
Cadillac was aimed at corporation heads, movie
snirs,
and
the owners of baseball teams. As the desire to succeed was being bred in
all
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
4
ROLL
N'
Americans, the Cadillac became the ultimate status symbol. That's Elvis finally
automobile
made
had
still
professionals.
the
it,
The
thing he did was to buy a Cadillac. Back then, the
first
mystique to
a
it,
and mechanics were looked upon
meant
increasing need for gasoline
that soon the
as
the Road, his epic saga
chance of such
of
The
isolation. it,
common
Despite
all
thriving
knew
that
if
they could reach
all
those
many
cases,
was the
industrial stronghold, the
United
denominator.
of this.
With
as a military
and
its
lack of true culture.
the rise of pop culture, this country
beyond even the Iron Curtain (although
independent contracting,
modest income to buy
it
a house.
stretching out, with the
it
The
would extend
was
'50s cul-
its
strictly
hush-hush).
With
the birth of
in the postwar years:
had become more affordable for the American of
right in the urban center for
The automobile had
eliminated the need to
employment purposes. The
more
cities
moving
affluent occupants
were, in
to the
live
fact,
oudying
was the beginning of suburbia, which opened up even more
regions. This
avenues of leisurely pursuit
around the water cooler
at
—which
work
ultimately led to Americans standing
talking about their
new
air conditioners.
chain stores began opening up: Korvette's, Woolworth's, and
retailers.
Eugene Ferkauf, the founder of
what made the new consumers not fear debt.
in
Americans, encouraging them to buy into what
Housing had changed dramatically
other
little
America of Wall Street and Madison
"mainstream" culture. Which, in
as
prominence
its
tural influence
The
in rural outposts
100 years, after the '50s there was
was routinely mocked by Europeans for
changed
were towns
were several more millions to be made. American enterprise was,
would become known
States
in
because they
a sense, reaching out to rural
lowest
On
on the American highway.
life
changed much
Avenue wouldn't allow folks there
New
Jack Kerouac was putting the finishing touches on
in the first half of the century there
that hadn't actually
that soon the giant
American road would look exactly the same from
York to Florida, even
Although
as skilled
on every highway. This
chains like Gulf and Esso were going to be popping up
meant
why when
And
ones born into
a
different
their children, the
from
was that they did
dreaded Baby Boomers, would be the
world where disposable income was
first
a given.
Postwar Americans were more adventurous than their parents
were willing to explore new boundaries in order to
the
once noted that
Korvette's,
their parents
all
fulfill
in that they
their ambitions.
They
— CHAPTER
1:
THE FIFTIES
5
were willing to marry outside of their own religious or ethnic backgrounds, or relocate to
new
areas if the promise of a
automobile and
jet also
Americans believed
made
new
this possible,
but
it
in the endless possibilities of the future.
stations,
but
fast
living farther
all
that
came with
it.
It
was
of the stand-up hamburger stand: McDonald's and the
like
on
way
its
out, as people
also the
There were
also
all
kinds of
were increasingly willing
new
to forsake things
more
which went along with the
rise
of television and
Americans who'd earned the right to
in general for
The combination of increased leisure
privileged in yet another
economy being working
way
were getting more sophisticated
really
'50s.
The new motel
kids.
so good,
many
as the proverbial
their parents
and grandparents
—and thus jaded—
earlier in that,
of them could afford to have their
"soda jerk" after school.
their parents' houses
chains
Thus, the Baby
helped jade those kids even faster was the fact
of the '50s mythology, and for good reason:
from
sedate lifestyle
leisure.
were family motels that encouraged you to bring the
What
more
dinner," for
Holiday Inn and the Ramada Inn. These
proliferated: first the Sheraton, then
weren't. Kids
a
quickly.
time and the proliferation of the auto-
mobile helped expand the tourism industry in the
Boomers were
"TV
instant foods, like the
beginning
The down-home
like.
personal service and a familiar atmosphere in order to eat
instance,
from the
food as well. This was the beginning of the "rat
—the hustle and busde and
diner was
—these
The new reality of commuting produced a need for faster services
not only gas race"
The
it.
was more than that
Americans were becoming more mobile and thus workplace.
demanded
job or career
and mingle with
it
The
car
life.
widi the
own
cars by
would become part
enabled teenagers to get away
their peers.
The
car helped bring
about the sexual revolution as well by revamping the whole notion of courtship: Sexual initiation was naturally a lot easier in a car than barn.
And
the
new
it
had been
drive-in theaters gave die kids a destination (or an
in, say, a alibi).
Television was another big factor in die increasingly early sophistication of the
Baby
Boom
generation. Television wasn't only changing the lace of enter-
tainment and advertising, but
politics as well.
shows dominated the world of early out that televised events
mob
trial
like the
McCarthy
pulled the highest ratings.
how some husbands
returned
television,
Although comedy and variety network owners were finding
hearings and the famous Costello
There were even newspaper
home
after a
articles
about
hard day's work and found their
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
6
wives glued to the TV, housework undone, supper
ROLL
N'
unmade
(a cardinal sin in
those days).
People were growing accustomed to seeing events actually unfurl instead of reading about them after the sition to the
saw on
Vietnam War
fact.
This would be
in the next decade.
and what was happening
television
young couples were now
ing developments where they hardly
show
closer to the characters in a
knew
like /
The
line
in real life
away from
living far
a pivotal factor in the
oppo-
between what people began to
their families in
their neighbors.
fade.
Many
brand-new hous-
They began
to feel
Love Lucy than they did to the people
around them.
TV was so important that, in ing firm to teach Ike
changed the
how
1952, the Republicans hired a huge advertis-
new medium. This permanendy
to groove to the
face of politics in America. Prior to that, political
been unrehearsed. By contrast, he was always
Ike's spots
cast as the returning
thing stupid (which he was
campaigns had
were concise and well edited so that
—and
War Hero
more than capable
of).
cut off before he said any-
This was
a technique that
both Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan, the next two Republicans elected president in the twentieth century, If
Eisenhower was
just learning
his vice presidential candidate,
coup with
his
supposedly
would incorporate.
how
to master the
medium
of television,
Richard Nixon, was soon to pull off
a
major
Checkers speech. To answer questions about the acceptance of
Nixon
illegal funds,
called a
major press conference, televised
in
prime time by the three major networks, during which he played on the sympathies of his audience
by
installing his wife as a
the family dog. This helped teach politicians a
prop and making reference to
new
tactic
—mainly
ber that the print media was irrelevant to "real Americans."
medium
it
was
still
Eisenhower and
his generation
the country, and the America they
remembered was
the-century childhood. As a whole
new
fields
tion, the
age.
remem-
TV was the
new
with which to reach the mainstream.
In those years,
ing the
to
of
art,
governing
Many of the The Kinsey
was published
who were running
the one from their turn-of-
generation of young minds was uproot-
entertainment, technology, science, medicine, and educaclass
was
still
very
much
tensions of the time arose
based in a
from
Report, Sexual Behavior in the
in 1948.
Kinsey tried to dispel
much
this rather
simpler day and
obvious paradox.
Human Male by
Alfred Kinsey,
many of the common myths about
CHAPTER
1:
THE FIFTIES
7
sex in those days, such as the belief that masturbation led to brain that homosexuality
was
a
form of mental
damage or
He also concluded that healthy
illness.
sex led to healthier marriages and that premarital sex tended to produce better
marriages. Although these opinions
they were very controversial in the
The
Sexual Revolution was
already working
long before
all
thinking was
The
on the
seem
common knowledge
nowadays,
'50s.
still
a
birth control
the old taboos
like
few years away, but medical science was pill,
and when
it
finally arrived,
went out the window. In the
'50s,
it
however, such
almost inconceivable except to a small minoritv of
still
Catholic Church
still
held that the
Pill
wasn't
liberals.
and prophylactic devices interfered
with the natural progress of God. But young families, even religious ones, had
found God's progress to be too
With
realms as childbirth a mystery.
make
The
People
life
seven kids.
which
pass "family planning,"
the course of nature
six,
itself.
of a burden, even in the Promised Land.
young
the advent of birth control,
they should have to have
to
much
families figured there
The American Dream came
essentially
meant
American
All of
was no reason
that
to
encom-
newlyweds could regulate
—even such previously sacred
life
—was becoming programmable. Life was becoming
felt less
explainable
—
less
of
indebted to the things they had previously relied on like religion, for instance.
courts were also changing.
The new Chief Justice
of the Supreme
Court, Earl Warren, was a former Republican governor of California with very
moderate tendencies who sought to declare since the
Jim Crow laws were passed
er but not equal"
racial segregation illegal.
Ever
in the late nineteenth century, a "togeth-
dictum had existed in the United
States, particularly in the
South. This discrepancy was in complete defiance of the Fourteenth
Amendment, which of equal protection states
said that state
governments couldn't deny Blacks the right
—which, argued Warren, was
exactly
what the Southern
were doing by segregating public schools.
In 1951, in Brown
Brown had
vs.
the
Board of Education
,
a
Black welder
named
Oliver
with the court in Topeka, Kansas against the local school
filed suit
board, claiming that his eight-year-old daughter had to travel twenty-one blocks by bus to attend an all-Black school. Eventually the case worked to the
Warren court
regation
illegal.
enforcement
its
way
and, in a historic decision, they unanimously declared seg-
The
officials
hard part, though, was ahead for the courts and
who had
to
make
the law stick.
It
law-
was one diing to put
it
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
8
on the books, but
know
it
at the time,
know was
we were about
but
that a
a different thing entirely.
was
it
come dangerously
U.S. would didn't
to enforce
People didn't
to enter a violent period in
close to a second Revolution.
press corps
was to
The
their cause.
racial
how
they also
it.
sympathetic the
stigma would also start
broken down by the presence of Blacks in sports and Rock
to be
which the
What
whole generation was going to get high on
Southern Black leaders were surprised to find out
mosdy white
ROLL
N'
'n'
Roll. In
1955 both Chuck Berry and Little Richard would place records in the Top Ten,
and Elvis Presley, vibe,
a
white Southern performer said to be haunted by the Black
was bubbling under.
In the nation at large, the event that seemed to galvanize the racial struggle
was the murder of Emmitt
Till that
summer
(1955). Till was a fourteen-
year-old Black proto-gangbanger from Chicago; his mother had sent to visit an uncle,
Moses Wright, who
cotton country. During his
lived in the thick of the Mississippi Delta
Till apparently
visit,
whisded
within earshot of her redneck husband. Later that day, the
and when they
find the body,
at a
white woman,
man and
his crack-
and threw him into the Mississippi River,
er cronies bashed Till's skull in
weighed down by the fan from
him south
a cotton gin. It did,
it
took authorities three days to
was badly decomposed. They sent the
corpse back to Chicago, at which time the boy's mother decided to hold an
open-casket funeral, exposing the brutality of the crime to anyone with the guts to look.
off the
The
national
hook only
The
media had
a field day.
The
Black population was growing. Particularly in the northern
Ever since the
mosdy
'40s, a large
cities like
ers, as in
like
would never
In these
of the workforce.
rampant racism
Toledo and Cleveland, Blacks found that they were
sumers themselves. But the
by TV shows
cities like
portion of Southern Blacks had been migrating
able to get decent jobs with decent
that Blacks
a sizable part
for work-related reasons, but also to escape the
of the South. In
fested
murderers got
further emphasized the racial divide.
Chicago and Detroit, Blacks already made up
north,
fact that Till's
wages
in the factories
idyllic picture
Leave
it to
and thus become con-
of the American Dream, as mani-
Beaver and Ozzie and Hairiet, was something
feel a part of.
TV programs, the formula was the same: two kids (usually broth-
the case of both the Cleaver and Nelson families), the omniscient,
all-
powerful father (who worked somewhere during the day, although the series
CHAPTER never
made
clear where),
inevitably white, as
Obviously,
were
It
and the
THE FIFTIES
someone was being
left
virtually
to the rebellious factors that
culture at large.
While
just
There was always the
television
star
a
more
A
being most vulnerable
its
cleansed version of America,
unsettling vision of American
new
trend.
of American cinema, had emerged in 1954 on the heels of
Streetcar
One
That
James
life.
Named Desire
—
a stir
Elvis
with his sexually charged per-
was watching). Younger,
and even more confused, Dean was an immediate sensation following in East of Eden.
in the
threat that the Beaver might "go bad."
Marlon Brando (who'd already created in
as
as well
beginning to manifest themselves
was portraying
Hollywood was presenting Dean, the new
were
their social contacts.
all
out of the American Dream. In Ozzie
was always the younger son who was seen
as Beaver, it
formance
and
They were
housewife-mother.
dutiful
their neighbors
9
thing about
Dean was
that he method-acted,
he became the role he was playing. His next
is,
eponymous
Rebel without a Cause, suited
fused loner
who
flirted
him
prettier,
his
debut
which was
a
role, in the
perfecdy: mainly, that of the con-
with danger and blamed his parents for the way he'd
turned out.
Young Americans no longer
The
advent of the
Cold
War
—helped
felt tied
mores of
to the sexual
—and the great Fear
bomb
was prevalent during the
that
foster the philosophy of "why wait
The whole
were much more
tomorrow?" Not
'til
—
in terms of premarital sex, but in terms of everything instance.
their parents.
like
buying
notion of buying on credit came about in the
likely to
a
just
house, for
'50s.
People
eschew caution when they truly believed that tomor-
row might never come. In 1954, Joe DiMaggio, perhaps the greatest baseball player of his era,
married Marilyn Monroe.
The actress had made a name for herself that year by
being filmed in The Seven Year
same time,
a
Itch
when
the actress was
Hollywood. Hefner used these to launch
whole idea of "scoring"
as a lifestyle
came
a
At the
new concept
young and struggling
new magazine
about, and
plethora of "alternative lifestyles" to crop up. a
skirt.
young Methodist named Hugh Hefner had dug up some smutty
pictures of Monroe dating back to in
with the wind blowing up her
it
called Playboy.
The
didn't take long for a
The very notion of "lifestyle" was
because, previously, people had never had the leisure to afford
such dalliance. Playboy, on the other hand, was devoted to the pursuit of lifestyle as a
form of identity
(in this case,
the swinging bachelor).
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
10
Playboy was and
N'
essentially a soft-core sex magazine.
is
ROLL
Their bunnies were
(and are) airbrushed kewpie dolls, almost always white, fresh-faced bimbos
who,
in the personality profiles that
photo spreads, confessed
harder-core pornography around, even in the '50s, but Playboy appealed
more than
to a certain mentality
and
hi-fis
their
homemakers and man-pleasers. There had always been
that they longed to be
much
accompany
liquor,
and seduction
to actual prurience. tips
There were
articles
from Hef himself. Playboy was
treating sex as a reward for success and affluence. In other words,
much
very
tied into '50s ideals,
about
essentially
was
it
still
no matter how much Hefner loathed
his
straight-laced upbringing.
In 1956 the surprise best-seller of the year was Peyton Place, written by a
hard-drinking woman
of
a small
town
in
named Grace Matalious about the backdoor indiscretions
New
Hampshire. Like the Kinsey Report,
Rock
Playboy,
'n'
Roll,
and the films of Marlon Brando, James Dean, and Marilyn Monroe, Peyton
Place
showed the seething
adultery, abortion,
sexual underbelly of
American
society.
Topics
and incest were, in those days, seldom talked about.
small towns like the one Metalious wrote about. It proved that sex
.
.except in
The book
revolutionized the
paperback book industry by proving that a book was after
it
had peaked on the
copies, less
best-seller
lists.
and
sells
Americans were anxious to read about other people's indiscretions, even weren't willing to admit their own.
like
if
they
oncoming
infinitely resalable
even
Year after year, Peyton Place sold more
and even inspired a television show by the same name (which more or
brought about the soap opera
The
craze).
heroines of Peyton Place were not only sexually liberated, but also frank
and up-front about their desires and disgruntled about the myth of the
American Male
as
breadwinner and provider.
along with the advent of the
Pill, this
No
one knew
it
at the time,
was an important step
in the birth of
Feminism. Indeed, the author, Grace Metalious, was an independent
who'd been married small
town she
a
called
few times and was
a
but
woman
well-known nonconformist
in the
home.
In the '50s, women's independence was actually discouraged by magazines like Redbook,
the few
1
McCalPs, and Ladies'
women who
Home Journal. These magazines argued
did go to college and try to pursue a career
something wrong with them. They were have a career instead of raising
a family.
vilified for
But
a
few
that
must have had
wanting to be single and
women began to ask the ques-
1
CHAPTER
tion:
:
THE FIFTIES
"Whose American Dream is it anyway?" Even
lege with the idea of embarking
her
1
little
on
to be optimistic about.
able thing they could
wife and mother.
The
do with
1
if a
woman did graduate col-
a professional career, the outside
Women were
their lives
being taught that the most valu-
was to
culture at that time took
world gave
fulfill
their preordained roles of
no account of women who might
possibly desire to be neither.
During the
'50s
it
seemed
like
everyone was
at
war with someone
Black against white, young against old, communist against against everybody.
Nowhere
did the frictions of the era
else:
CIA
capitalist, the
come
together
more
dramatically than in the upstart musical form that was soon to be labeled "Rock 'n'
Roll."
create
However, the musical
Rock
'n'
—
as well as cultural
Roll had been going
on
—
factors that
for half a century.
had helped
Chapter
2
Ml)?K CV\Mf
T^0 M
Popular music in the twentieth century came from a variety of
down-home
SOURCES: Country, Folk, and
music.
Its
roots go deeper than that:
much
twentieth-century American song derived from British and Celtic bal-
ladry,
brought to these shores by nineteenth-century immigrants.
major influx came from Africa. As Blacks came to ery,
and
as slavery started in the
South, perhaps
this
we
The
other
country because of slav-
should start there.
Slaves in the field had every opportunity to invent
only salvation for them at that time was the church
new work
itself,
songs.
The
and that was the
other side of the slave's musical experience: spirituals. These spirituals were structurally very similar to the Anglo/Celtic folk ballads. It
that these
two sources would merge,
was inevitable
particularly after emancipation,
when
Black performers were allowed to play music in front of white audiences for the
first
time.
As the twentieth century dawned, Blacks and whites were drawn together by the demands of industries such
However,
in the rural South,
as
mining, railroads, and manufacturing.
change was slow to come. In
this region,
music
was the only thing uniting Blacks and whites. There were very few telephones, paved roads, or homes with plumbing. Blacks and whites lived
The poor Southern redneck in reality
much
like the
(the "prole" or "plebe" of
in total squalor.
European descent) was
"nigger" he so despised.
There was something about
the isolation
— Black or white —
that bred
a
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
14
need for song. With
only uplifting part of the day travel in the air (spiritual)
to live for besides
little else
with very
and white
when
God,
it
ROLL
N'
was
the folk gathered for singsong.
guidance, and, after a while,
little
the
A song can
some of the Black
work songs became intermingled. Hence, the
(ballad)
sources of Blues, Folk, and Country were very similar. This
because they
is
known by both
described hardships like poverty and sickness, plights
and whites
many ways
in
Blacks
This was the preoccupation of the rural farmer, share-
at the time.
cropper, and mountaineer, and this was the source for almost
twentieth-cen-
all
tury song forms.
In the days before mass communication, ized and distributed all
This
is
of the songs were popular-
by the traveling tent-shows, medicine shows, and
of which featured
display.
many
live
circuses,
music along with the vast array of "freak" acts also on
how vaudeville
many white
spread, and minstrelsy also, as
per-
formers appeared in blackface, which was another way for the Southern white to denigrate the Negro.
The emergence
of the railroads helped break
rural South, helping bring people
Slowly, the South
grew into
a
—
particularly Blacks
more
Louis, Atlanta, and Houston.
as the chief source
perspective
The
like Nashville,
Most of all,
on the hopelessness of their own
to the bigger cities.
Memphis,
best expressed through music (think of
all
it
situation
where rapid motion (and thus "transcendence") was
world
now
This notion was
possible.
the train songs), and,
come
a
more than any
closest to replac-
lives.
a culture
popping up
New Orleans,
—here was
of its
own
that
came from the
against the Lord. This less-than-holy ethos derived chiefly districts
by the
changed people's whole
other cultural preoccupation of the century, music has
Music created
—
railroad also helped replace agriculture
of southern industry.
ing religion in people's
the isolation of the
industrialized region, as people
thousands flocked to urbanized centers St.
down
in the larger
Southern
cities.
devil
and competed
from the blue
The two
chief
light
American
musical forms that began the century, Ragtime and Blues, were both Blackderived. This contributed to the "evil" connotations of the music because, to
most
whites, those "jigaboos"
The Ragtime as the
were speaking
publication of Scott Joplin's craze. It couldn't
in tongues.
"Maple Leaf Rag" sparked
a
nationwide
have been only Blacks that bought the sheet music,
arrangement was intended
as
much
for pianos as
it
was banjo, and most
5
CHAPTER 2: WHERE THE MUSIC CAME FROM Blacks didn't
own
pianos at the time
—these instruments were
play items for rich plantation owners.
when they saw
The
1
only time Blacks saw a piano was
the one in the lobby of the pubs and taverns and whorehouses
in the bigger cities,
where
This was where the
first
ing Joplin, who'd
named
"house" pianist would often perform until dawn.
a
wave of Black Rag composers originated from, includhis
famous rag
after a
popular club in Sedalia,
Missouri. Later Ragtime pianists like Eubie Blake and Jelly Roll endless variations of the
came
chiefly dis-
still
Morton played
same bar chords, creating many of the
"licks" that
Most of these were
disseminat-
to characterize twentieth-century music.
ed to northern regions through the sale of sheet music.
The first exposure many Southerners was through the invention of the
radio.
got to nonindigenous forms of music
Not
only was
it
a
cheap and abundant
narrowed the gap between urban and
source of entertainment,
it
Southerners heard the
latest
rural cultures.
wares from Tin Pan Alley, and Northerners
smelled the turd of nationally syndicated programs like National Barn Dance
and The Grand
OV
at precisely the
same time
were the
first
Opry. Southern white Country music had been developing as
Black Blues and Ragtime, and these radio shows
to expose this kind of rural
stomp
to the nation at large.
An important part of Country music's development was the introduction of stringed instruments like the fiddle, banjo, mandolin, and guitar.
These were
the primary musical tools of Southern Folk expression, but, for the
first
half of
the twentieth century, this was a world ignored by the music industry (save for
the field recordings of John
Lomax, which he began making
in 1933
sponsorship of the American Council for Learned Studies). story as always:
Northern music
biz
It
under the
was the same
moguls feared that the raw technique of
the Southern rural musician, Black or white, would repel the sophisticated
urban consumer. Until they realized that the rural market represented
new untapped
source of revenue
(sell
the
a
whole
Southern trash back to the
Southerners, in other words).
The when
rise
the 78
of the recording industry occurred in the early twentieth century
RPM
chief source of
phonograph record supplanted the
home
entertainment.
Among
the early record labels were
Vocalion, Victor, Paramount, Columbia, and Okeh.
stunned by the invention of the radio, because
People could now, with the
initial
cylindrical disc as the
it
The
record industry was
meant
a decline in sales.
purchase of a radio, hear an unlimited source
16
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
of music for
free.
The
ments to develop
industry was
left
having to mine
whole new audience
a
—and
ROLL
N'
less radio-friendly seg-
that turned out to be Southern
Negroes and rednecks.
Okeh record label recorded a young Black vaude-
In the spring of 1920, the ville
named Mamie Smith
singer
singing "Crazy Blues." This recording set off
boom and made Okeh into a ranking record label. A market for Black
the Blues
music was found to
exist
among Blacks. Okeh's Ralph Peer dubbed the new cat-
egory "Race Music." By the mid-'20s, "race" line, and
all
the major labels had introduced a
RCA even started its own "race"
subsidiary, Bluebird, in 1933.
Although most of the Black records came not from rural but from urban sources,
vendy
was discovered that Southern Blacks were buying the recordings
it
as
Northern ones. This sent enterprising
men
as fer-
Peer into the Deep
like
South seeking more "authentic" exponents of "race music." While they were
down
whole new source of white
there, they discovered a
Many
of these
records were
hillbilly
what Columbia tagged "old
The Brunswick
"hillbilly"
made up of fiddle
familiar tunes," or
Okeh
players performing
called "old-time music."
was preserved throughout. By being the
to record these sounds, these performers succeeded in turning
Alley,
no
By
music into a
new form
far,
what was once
of American popular music (to
rival
Tin Pan
the most important practitioners of this popularized folk art were
a traditional
first
of the Southern "American musical families" to hail
background and achieve commercial
tions of songs like
"Engine
Blues," and "Will the Circle
143,"
success.
Their rendi-
Man
"Wabash Cannonball," "Worried
Be Unbroken" were the ones
that taught these
songs to most Americans. Although Carter Family recordings weren't big ers,
first
less).
the Carter Family, the
from
as well.
meanwhile, called their early Country sides "songs from
label,
Dixie." In any case, the rural flavor
rural "folk"
music
sell-
they proved to have incredible resilience in the years to follow, helping to
shape the whole mythology of the American South coming out of the Depression.
The
Carters also helped shape the sound of Country, which in turn
helped shape the sound of Rock
'n'
Roll.
Mother Maybelle
Carter's finger-pick-
ing lead-guitar style popularized the Gibson hollow-body guitar, making
predominant instrument
one of the
first
Country
in
Country
acts to
it
the
& Western music. The Carters were also
become known primarily through
they seldom ventured north of Virginia.
recording, as
7
CHAPTER 2: WHERE THE MUSIC CAME FROM
The era
other major country recording
artist to
1
emerge out of the Depression
was Jimmie Rodgers, the so-called yodelin' cowboy. In sharp contrast to the
Carters'
image of down-home
Rodgers represented the more
stability,
—that of the hard-luck
side of Country music's identity
man. Rodgers was in many ways considered the later
bestowed upon
actually
The
sounded
fact that
Hank
first
as artists like the
South who,
woe. During the Depression,
that
made
like
Bob
Dylan).
his legacy.
many Black Blues
Rodgers, told
tales
singers
of hard times and
many pioneering Country-Blues
singers and gui-
their recording debuts, helping to popularize traditional material
would form the root of modern,
recorded the
first
"Milk
Cow
by
others). But,
far,
electrified Blues. Sleepy
John Estes
Blues" for Victor in 1930; Bukka White, mean-
while, popularized the "Fixin' to
among
style of
Carter Family and Jimmie Rodgers
emerged, record labels were starting to document the rural
a fate
Williams and others (on some occasions, Rodgers
he died young, from TB, only enhanced
coming from the
and singing brake-
white Blues singer,
weird precursor to the "talking"
like a
At the same time
tarists
loser
restless
the
Die Blues"
most
redone by Bob Dylan,
(later
influential Blues pioneer to record during
these years was the mysterious Robert Johnson.
Johnson was
originally a disciple of the skilled guitarist Charley Patton,
often credited as being the Father of Delta blues. Patton's use of the twelve-bar (or,
in his case, the thirteen-and-a-half-bar) structure
with which he utilized
it
on such
Blues," and "Rattlesnake Blues"
classics as
—not
to
and the rhythmic density
"Pony
mention
Blues,"
"Revenue
his gravelly voice
Man
—was the
source behind the subsequent Delta style of such practitioners as Johnson,
Howlin' Wolf,
Muddy Waters, Elmore James,
Johnson was the
Jimmy Rodgers, he be the
devil's
first
and John Lee Hooker.
of Patton's descendents to achieve notoriety, but,
died at an early age. In Johnson's case, his death seemed to
work, and part of his mystique was
ing career, he was almost always conjuring the like
"Hellhound on
exchange for his virtuoso guitar
man
that,
during his brief record-
evil spirit
through evocations
My Trail," "Me and the Devil Blues," and "Devil Got My
Woman." There were even rumors
a
like
style.
that he'd sold his soul to the devil in
His strange vocal
style truly
sounded
like
possessed.
Johnson's legendary recordings for Columbia in the mid-' 30s set the stage for
many subsequent
Blues and
Rock experiments, introducing
a lot
of the
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
18
'N'
ROLL
hard-luck cliches, sexual innuendoes, and basic rhythm patterns that would characterize both genres. Nearly
all
became "standards"
his songs
in
one form
or another, particularly "Terraplane Blues," "Love in Vain," "Stop Breaking
Down," "Dust My
which
Blues," and, especially, "Standing at the Crossroads,"
introduced the whole mythology of Johnson's ill-fated deal with the devil, as
Highway
the crossroads off of
61 in Clarksdale, Mississippi was where he'd
supposedly sold his soul.
Johnson died wife of a 'n'
as a result
man who'd
hired
of poisoning in August 1938 after
him
flirting
to play a house party that night. It
was
Roll murder. Johnson had a reputation for being a heavy drinker, a
izer,
this
and
a hell-raiser.
made him
Hank
the
Along with
first
his supernatural obsessions
with the a
Rock
woman-
and early death,
burnout legend, setting the pace for Charlie Parker,
Williams, Johnny Ace, James Dean, Elvis Presley, Eddie Cochran, Jim
Morrison, Sid Vicious, Lester Bangs, John Belushi, Johnny Thunders, and
all
the rest. So the cast was set already. In 1938.
Many innovators
of Rock
the '30s: Howlin' Wolf,
'n'
Roll were already perfecting their technique in
Muddy Waters, Bukka
Hooker, and Sonny Boy Williamson.
White, Elmore James, John Lee
They were
all
more or
but
less peers,
it
took their eventual migration to the big cities to draw attention to what they were
doing (the root of which Chicago, although
all
Hooker
went back to the actually
Delta). In
ended up
most
in Detroit.
cases, this
meant
But that wasn't for
another twenty years. In the 1930s the "urban blues" of performers like Big Bill Broonzy and
Tampa Red were among
the most popular. Both of these artists can be credit-
ed with expanding the basic line-up of the typical Blues band, from what was often just a singer/guitarist, string bass, and piano to perhaps
two
guitars
and
a
couple of horns plus the normal rhythm section. This was a natural result of urbanization: Broonzy, for example, was originally to
Chicago
in the '30s.
them emulated
Larger venues meant larger and louder bands. Most of
the large
Although white,
from Mississippi but moved
Swing bands of Duke Ellington or Benny Goodman.
Goodman was
accepted by Blacks for allowing the revolution-
ary Black guitarist, Charlie Christian, to record for the
The Swing boom was the
inevitable by-product of the
ting better and people having
the
like.
When World War
first
II
more money came
along,
to
time.
economy finally get-
spend to go to dance
Swing was another way
halls
and
for people
9
CHAPTER 2 WHERE THE MUSIC CAME FROM :
one another and to forget about
to get closer to
1
their troubles
and about their
loved ones being overseas. Swing was purely an American phenomenon:
because
seemed so
it
patriotic,
The Dorsey
the day.
Swing endured
as the
primary "pop" music of
Benny Goodman, and even Duke Ellington
Brothers,
provided the soundtrack for the generation coming of age in the '40s
—the
same generation who would spawn the Baby Boomers the next decade. Jazz was not a popular
were
gins
in the
New Orleans was tiracial
over.
whorehouses of
New
made up
its
New Orleans proved to be
The
its
inception in the '20s.
Its ori-
Orleans's legendary Storyville district.
always one of America's bawdiest
melting pot that
Mexico,
phenomenon upon
cities,
considering the mul-
population. As a port of entry in the Gulf of
an inviting horn of plenty to
sailors
from
all
population consisted of French, Negro, English, Creole, Spanish, and
Native American
was shaped by
folks.
The
this diversity.
culture
The
English model, and instruments
it
—the sound of which
produced was Jazz
early Dixieland brass bands like the
were based on the
cornet and clarinet seem to have been
introduced by the Creoles.
The
Creoles were not found in the more landlocked regions
Essentially Black natives of the
West
Indies, they spoke
brand of French that influenced the intonations of Jazz
like
Chicago.
an especially sweet
itself.
American music
in the twentieth century
belonged to everyone from Native Americans banging
on
"coon songs" of Southern Blacks, to the wailing of
their drums, to the
mountain
hillbillies,
tricky-men.
cy perhaps
It is this
its
to conservatory-trained neocool classicists, to
kind of diversity that has
most valuable and
In the late '20s and early
outlawed
many
made
this country's
jazz
musical lega-
lasting gift to the world.
'30s, Jazz
was economically tied to Prohibition, which
of the places jazzmen had previously played. For
whole format of the
"band" was scaled back
many years,
or two from this
New Orleans pioneers like Louis Armstrong and his Hot Seven. With modern trumpet
could have an individual voice, even with a
The bands
only got bigger
when
it
legitimate innovators did
playing, proved that a
fairly large
once again became
Even though Big Band ultimately became more some
new phe-
taking place in the form of the Big Bands, who'd learned a thing
group, Armstrong, the pioneer of
soloist
the
—the most the speakeasys could
hold were three- or four-man bands. With the repeal of Prohibition, a
nomenon began
Tin Pan
band behind him.
legal to drink.
a
form of Pop than
come out of it. Edward "Duke"
Jazz,
Ellington, the
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK 'N' ROLL
20
Washington, D.C.-born orchestrated composers. respectability as
pianist,
He
emerged
was
Goodman or the
as the reigning leader
among
also the only Black to achieve the
fully
same
others. Ellington wrote "scores" not only for
made many of
ensemble, but individual sections for each player, which
his
works, especially the later ones, almost neo-Classical pieces.
During the Big Band
era, a similar
phenomenon was sweeping the southwest
region of the United States. Labeled "Western Swing," the music of bands like
Bob Wlls
&
His Texas Playboys was a combination of traditional down-home
Country sources and the more elaborate Big Band format. The Western Swing bands employed
brass, reeds,
and woodwinds
like the
Jazz bands, but also fea-
tured fiddles and maintained the distinctly Southern personality of the region.
Wills was by far Western Swing's most important practitioner. Born in East
Texas in 1905, he was subject to a variety of influences most purely Southern parties weren't
—not only Anglo,
but also Chicano, Black, German, Cajun,
Native American, and Mexican. According to Country music historian
Malone: "A passion for dancing was this
heterogeneous society musical
modifying the old Southern rural
The whole then,
all
tations
common among
styles
style."
"western" of Country
these groups, and in
all
flowed freely from one or another,
'
& Western came from this element. Until
hick expression had been called "Hillbilly,"
much
like all
Black manifes-
were lumped under the heading of "Race." Starting with the huge
room bands of Texas and Oklahoma,
important cowboy hats have become to Country music
some of the
ball-
the whole Western motif and the mythol-
ogy of the cowboy began to be absorbed into music. Everyone knows
those days,
Bill
participants actually
(if
not Rock
how
'n' Roll).
In
were cowboys, and the mythology
of the Old West has been prevalent in the culture ever since. As far back as 1910,
John Lomax published Ballads.
Gene
his
popular songbook Cowboy So?igs and Other Frontier
Autry, the "singing cowboy,"
made
about the Old West proliferated, and of course with the image.
It
and ride the dusty
all
Dime
store novels
know what Hollywood
did
was only natural that the cowboy element of "kick the stirrup trail"
would become
point where, by the late '30s, the
we
millions.
a
popular motif in popular music, to the
you had Tin Pan Alley hacks
affecting the
ways of
Old West and Bing Crosby singing "San Antonio Rose." In
1934, Wills
—
a
fiddler
by trade
Oklahoma, where, throughout the
'30s,
—moved
his
Texas Playboys to
they held residence at one of Tulsa's
1
CHAPTER 2 WHERE THE MUSIC CAME FROM
2
:
Academy. Although the Playboys were
largest ballrooms, Cain's
down-home
stressing a true
flavor,
were with so-called Country.
Me"
Behind
The
definitely
they were as adept at straight Jazz as they clarinet playing in Wills's
(1941) was very close to
"The
Girl
Left
I
New Orleans Jazz. The steel guitar work
of Leon McAuliffe went on to inspire the whole form of Country music, lending the "crying" sound that would sic
Country made by people
when
Ellington's band,
like
become such an
integral feature of the clas-
Hank
a
Williams
decade or so
the Playboys rocked, they rocked
"Four or Five Times" sounds rhythmically very much
Rock
'n'
But
Roll standard "Don't that's just
the
You Just
own
like the
way American music was progressing
once. Regions and cultures were
still
their version of
New
Orleans
Know It."
mid-twentieth century. What's really amazing
allow each one's
—
Like
later.
happening
at
enough from one another
to
is
sealed off
was
in the early- to
that
it
all
However,
individual characteristics to flourish.
these
all
disparate styles
were starting to merge through the various migrations that
were occurring.
The sounds
beginning to sound more
of Black, white, urban, and rural expression was
alike.
Radio abetted
this
homogenization. Because of
the Depression, the record labels had consolidated into three majors: Decca, Victor,
and Columbia.
sidiaries,
Two
own
sub-
more rawboned
acts.
of these, Victor and Columbia, had their
Bluebird and Okeh, respectively, to handle the
Decca, under the leadership of Dave Kapp, sought to expand their roster as well.
This was an important part of Country music's eventual evolution into
"popular" category, which would in turn influence Rock
were finding
out, particularly after the Depression, that
worth hanging onto, even
Swing no doubt did
would years
to
sounded
like
nonsense
Northern executives and
Roll.
The
labels
whatever sold was
—which much Western
talent scouts, just as
Rock
later.
With bands not only to larger
if it
'n'
a
swelling to larger ranks themselves, but also playing
and larger audiences, there was
a
need to increase volume. This was
most commonly achieved through the use of
amplification.
historic turning point because, thereafter, the electric guitar
This was another
became the most
popular and sought-after instrument in American popular music. Blues
were experimenting with the instrument
none of the national exposure Swing ensembles
offered.
at the
that being in
same time, but
artists
certainly with
one of the Big Bands or Western
— SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
22
Electrification
made
plished this
by jimmy-rigging
own
already introducing their
ume
September
controls. In
ROLL
debut in 1934 with Bob Dunn's work with the orig-
its
Musical Brownies, one of the
inal
N'
a
first
outfits.
Dunn accom-
keg amp. However, by 1936, Gibson was
electric
'36,
"country jazz"
models with
built-in pick-ups
Leon McAuliffe had
huge
a
hit
and vol-
with "Steel
Guitar Rag," which helped popularize the sound of the electric guitar to the
whole nation. Within
couple of years, the Black guitarists Charlie Christian
a
and Aaron "T-Bone" Walker defined how the instrument would be played for generations: Christian with a fluid style that
ment
and Walker with a
as the lead voice,
less
polished but
the instru-
more emotional
of "picking."
style
After Prohibition ended, jukeboxes
and taverns that were
now
became increasingly popular. Beer halls
allowed to operate needed some sort of musical
entertainment to keep the drinkers happy. ent,
more or less introduced
Not all
and the jukebox presented the perfect
of them could afford
live tal-
alternative: a coin-operated
phono-
graph containing a vast number of records. In 1933 the Wurlitzer
became the
first
to
market the invention
Company
—by 1940 more than 300,000 juke-
boxes had been sold. In the ensuing years, the jukebox would play a pivotal role in the emer-
gence of the whole "kiddie kulture," with
its
steadfast presence in the malt
shop
and other teen haunts. In the prewar years, however, there were no teen clubs, and the primary function of the new invention was to provide entertainment for the patrons of drinking establishments which, in the wild Southwest, called juke joints or,
According to
more
Bill
likely,
Malone:
were
honky-tonks.
"When country music entered
the honky-tonk,
it
had to change... the older pastoral or down-home emphasis... could not survive in such
an atmosphere. Songs about 'poor old mother
Country Church' seemed somewhat out of problems and changing
social status
at
home' and
'the
Old
place. ..Instead, songs reflecting the
of the ex-rural dweller became paramount."
2
In other words, the songs became topical, and nine times out of ten the topic
was drinking. This
Rock
music, that
the kids
who
is.
at this
The
is
the kind of environment
culture
of Rock
'n'
Rock
'n'
Roll grew out of
Roll was eventually taken over by
time were virtually nonexistent.
The
average honky-tonk
musician worked some obscure hard-labor day job and then played music night.
Even Bob Wills was
a factory
all
dock worker throughout much of his early
CHAPTER 2 WHERE THE MUSIC CAME FROM
23
:
career.
This
an element clearly missing from modern music.
is
The honky-tonk also represented the move back toward the small-band format.
They
were, after
merely drinking bars and not large dance
all,
By the
could accommodate the huge ballroom crowds. pulling sizable crowds of servicemen,
civil
local folk.
mythology of the
became interwoven
Much became
as
fight
ample breeding ground for tonk pianist
Country music's
this
"The only
recalled:
who worked
while
I
played."
there,
would come and
there was
class:
still
honky-
bawdy environment was an As the popular honky-
style.
place a piano playing kid like
set
class.
The
ladies of the
on the piano bench and
that Christian guilt about
bluesmen and subsequent rockers added was yet,
at the
songs
fan
'
Wasn't exactly high
happened
legacy.
as a result, cheatin'
were prevalent
whole new musical
a
Moon Mullican
New Orleans,
of violence, and the whole
could get work in those days wasn't exactly high
evening,
me
a lot
in
as drinkin' ones. Floozies
tonks, but, like the bordellos of
me
There was
of the violence was over women, and
rampant
were
defense workers, and other outsiders
who often clashed with the fist
halls that
early '40s the tonks
a gleeful sense
of
sin.
it!
What
This hadn't
but the factors marking honky-tonk's proliferation were leading to
something more closely resembling the American Rock band. Musicians were
still
using fiddle and stand-up bass, but the electric guitar had been added as a full-time effect
among most
bands, and for the
panying Western-style bands important pre-Rock units
as
also.
first
time drummers actually began accom-
This was undoubtedly
Hank Williams & His
a big influence
on such
Drifting Cowboys.
Another dynamic that influenced the proliferation of the small bands was
World War
II.
sonnel in the
band made
it
With
so
many men being
mammoth easy to train
drafted,
it
was hard to keep up per-
Big Band or Western Swing orchestras.
The
new members and
The whole
replace departed ones.
country was in a state of mobilization anyway, and
it
small
was not unusual for some-
one to suddenly move to another region entirely because of service or the promise of war-related employment. This panic-stricken sense of flux would
permanently change the tempo of American culture.
As
for the small-band concept,
which music was composed.
It
would
it
life
—and
intensify the shape of its
would change the whole manner
also put
more emphasis on
the individual
musician, not to mention the singer. American "popular" music soon
almost exclusively a vocal
art.
in
became
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
24
ed
N'
ROLL
The war effort affected the recording industry in other ways. The war-relatdemand for shellac instigated a freeze on supply. The record industry was at
the
bottom of the need
list,
even though shellac was a
vital
ingredient in the
manufacture of phonograph records. As a result of the war, studios were unable to operate at full capacity because personnel
were scarce and new machinery was
unobtainable.
In the midst of
all this,
there were other circumstances that
nently alter the face of American popular music.
On
would perma-
Dec. 31, 1940, a contract
between the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) and the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers negotiations,
NAB,
ASCAP
NAB
so
Inc. (BMI).
set
Going
up
expired. In subsequent
apparendy made demands that exceeded the wishes of their
own
licensing association, called Broadcast Music,
against a giant like
published in this country since 1884, thing they had going for
which meant that
(ASCAP)
them was
ASCAP, which owned most of the music
BMI naturally started head butt first. One
that they
were owned by the radio
their stuff was guaranteed to get airplay.
the broadcasters banned
all
ASCAP material from the
On January
publishers like Acuff-Rose and helped break
Tin
Pan
Alley's
monopoly on composing.
When
the two sides settled their differences in October 1941,
material billy
BMI
had
rank in the entertainment world. This encouraged the great flow of
coming from nontraditional sources
music, and, eventually,
Rock
musicians' strike that occurred settled.
1941, rise
number of independent
its
1,
which gave
airwaves,
to a
secured
stations,
James C.
Petrillo of the
'n'
months
Roll.
to proliferate: Blues,
Adding
after the
Be Bop,
to the confusion
ASCAP/BMI
hill-
was the
controversy was
American Federation of Musicians claimed that
the jukebox industry and the radio stations were putting musicians out of work
and
insisted
on
establishing funds, payable
ployed musicians.
by the record
industry, to
When his demands weren't met, the American Federation of
Musicians went on strike in 1942. That meant no licensed recording. labels like
actually a
Decca and Columbia were
boon
unem-
to the
left
The
big
only with their backlists. This was
many smaller independent labels, which popped up
to
fill
the void and which endured long after the strike was settled due to the quality
of the music they produced.
One
such independent label was Capitol. Founded in Hollywood by the
famous Tin Pan Alley tunesmith Johnny Mercer, the company was able to
pil-
CHAPTER 2 WHERE THE MUSIC CAME FROM
25
:
fer the film industry for talent while taking
advantage of the large number of
Southern and Southwestern musical performers who'd flocked to California during the war. In the ensuing years, Capitol would introduce ing figures in Country
&
Western: Tex
Ritter,
from Frank Sinatra
field,
lead-
Buck Owens, Tennessee Ernie
Ford, Merle Haggard, and the Louvin Brothers.
midable in the Pop
many of the
They
proved quite for-
also
to, eventually, the
Beades.
By
the
they weren't even considered an independent anymore, but one of the
'60s,
four major labels.
The
boom of the
great thing about the indie label
beneficial to musicians
who were
'40s
was that it was most
playing musical forms that
R&B.
wise been ignored, such as Hillbilly, Bebop, or
may have
Labels like Blue Note and
Savoy were responsible for epochal recordings by jazz pioneers
and
J.J.
By being
know and
—the independent
labels
were
'n'
Roll.
Because they
a big step
—the
towards integra-
together on the same record labels, Blacks and whites came to
ultimately share each other's idioms.
A perfect example was the legendary King label, Cincinnati,
Sam
Miles Davis
with the dregs of the recording industry that no one else wanted
left
rednecks and Blacks tion.
like
Johnson, but they also dabbled in the newborn "jump" Blues idiom,
which, through a myriad of twists and turns, led to Rock
were
other-
Ohio
Phillips
in
1
944.
Nathan was
as
founded by Syd Nathan in
important a pioneer of early rock
and was one of the many Jews who took
a liking to the
new
as
R&B
format, which, as a musical form, was an important melting pot of styles and cultural elements.
by Grandpa Jones, "Hillbilly '50s,
King
originally
Moon Mullican,
Boogie" in 1945 was
King had branched
in the
new "jump"/R&B
the
which meant more
two
a
as a hillbilly-based label
with releases
and the Delmore Brothers, whose raunchy
worthy predecessor to Rock
off into a sister label called Federal,
Nathan encouraged both rial,
began
'n'
Roll.
By
the
which specialized
vocal groups like the Midnighters and Five Royales. his
white and Black
artists to
royalties for the label.
cover each other's mate-
This not only helped integrate
distinctive styles
of white Country "boogie" and urban Black "jump"
way
for important crossovers, like Elvis Presley covering
Blues, but paved the
Arthur Crudup. King signing a
finally
got lucky and beat Chess Records to the punch by
young singer/composer from Macon, Georgia named James Brown,
who would go on twenty years.
to influence the direction of
American music
for the next
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
26
immense
In the postwar years, the country was undergoing
end of the war freed Americans from material there was a great urge
on the
ROLL
N'
restraints.
prosperity.
The
Having "won the war,"
part of the populace to live
it
up. Recorded music
The World War II daddies had just come home and were having parlor parties with lots of drinking and a few discs always on the phonograph. The flourished.
significant advances that furthered the accessibility of
made
record industry had
RPM record was being phased out in favor of the lighter 45 RPM and the 3 3 RPM LP, which really didBy
recorded music.
n't take off
'til
the '50s, the heavy, disc-like 78
the mid-'50s but eventually
Before the grim specter of the Cold
came
War
to dominate the industry.
set in, the
period of great jubilation, and everyone wanted to
let
go
postwar years were a a
little.
the various genres of music that arose during those years said
Honky-Tonk, Boogie Woogie, Bebop, Rock expressions signifying wild times.
Some
'n'
Roll
—
The names
it all:
all
of
Juke, Jump,
joyous-sounding
of the craziest stuff that ever rocked the
Earth came about in the years 1945-1950.
During those
years,
a
large
number of Country musicians recorded
Boogie material, starting with the Delmore Brothers and running through such important pre-Rock gins of Boogie
artists as
Hardrock Gunter and Roy
Pinetop Smith recorded "Pinetop's Boogie Woogie" for Brunswick. its
A mining
share of brothels and redneck bars, and these were
the origins of the new, repetitious style perfected by pianists like Smith
were faced with having to keep the action going ronment, the sound, the
ori-
date back to Birmingham, Alabama, where, in 1928,
Woogie"
town, Birmingham had
The
Hall.
feel,
all
who
night. In this ribald envi-
was more important than the individual song
(or
player) per se.
In the pre-Rock years, Boogie basically
meant. .Rock. .
Boogie Woogie!" Sisters
understand."
than
The old fogeys would say, "Waaah,
The form reached
it
was
Which
is,
a
term that
those kids and their
the height of absurdity
when it
the
Andrews
was never a
meaningless term that meant "noise parents didn't
of course, exactly what Rock became.
had some help getting there from Louis Jordan, the only Black artist other
Nat "King" Cole to
he cut
catch-all
performed "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" in 1948. But
"form" anyway;
It
Woogie was another
cross over to the
his classic sides for
Decca
Pop charts in the pre-Rock era.
in the mid-'40s,
When
Jordan and His Tympani Five
were the essence of the commercially successful Boogie band,
as
evidenced by
CHAPTER 2 WHERE THE MUSIC CAME FROM
27
:
songs with
titles like
"Choo Choo Ch'Boogie," "Boogie Woogie Blue
The
and "Blue Light Boogie."
Plate,"
important thing about them was, despite the
fact
Jordan was the obvious frontman, the rhythm section actually swung, providing
many of the rhythms
The term "jump
that
later constitute
blues" originally
there was a recognizable
time
would
meant bands
new genre emerging
of honkers and shouters
jive
Rock
like
'n'
Roll.
like Jordan's, but,
by the
'50s,
that not only included the good-
Jordan, but the harder-edged guitar-ori-
ented urban Blues coming out of places like Chicago. For want of a better term, it
& Blues, but it still basically meant Black music, much like the
became Rhythm
old "Race" category had, since side the
more raucous new sounds. Although
more meaningless either
Nat "King" Cole and the Ink Spots charted
rhythm
today, as
constitutes
"R&B" no
made
use of the verb
to rock:
Wild
Bill
Roy Brown, "Rock the House" by Tiny Grimes, and Harris.
Most of these came from
Although there was no
labels.
longer possesses
'
Moore's "We're Gonna Rock,"
Noel's "Rockin' Jenny Jones," "Rockin' at Midnight" and
record
even
term rvck'n ?vllwas already in use. Between 1947-1952,
"Rockin' Boogie" by Joe Lutcher, "Rockin' the House" by
by Wynonie
it's
or Blues.
Interestingly enough, die several songs
most of what
the term has endured,
along-
if to
She Wants to
Do Is Rock"
the smaller Black- or hillbilly-oriented
common thread between any of these artists, all
ethos, with
V roU during
this period,
an emphasis on tempo and volume.
even hissed over a Johnny Otis release in 1949: records ever made," as
Slim, Hatrie
"Good Rockin' Tonight" by
"All
of these songs, and others using the term rock or rock
embraced a feel-good/luck-all
Memphis
"Mnimmnn! One
Billboard
of the loudest
suggest this was a bad thing.
Real "country music" was coming to an end due to the appearance of the quixotic
Hank Williams, who,
try stars.
uptown.
many ways, was the
last
of the real rural coun-
Williams embraced the contradiction between down-home and
On
the one hand, his roots couldn't have been
other, the fact
tailor-made '50s.
in
more
rural.
On
the
he had a performance-ready band behind him and that he wore
cowboy suits made him one of the
Through
his
"Country music"
success
after
first
true recording "stars" of the
emerged the subsequent Nashville
Hank became
as self-conscious
override:
and commercially
ori-
ented as any other form of Pop.
The
son of
a farmer,
Mt. Olive, Alabama
Hank Williams was born
in 1923. Illness having forced
in the small
Papa into
community of
a veteran's hospi-
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
28
tal,
boy was
the
raised
by
mother,
his
ence on her son for the rest of his Ellington, Elvis, Jack Kerouac,
life.
Lilly,
But
who
like
Andy Warhol
ROLL
exerted an overbearing influ-
with
—
'N'
this
many a mama's boy
—Duke
smothering maternal
influ-
ence helped shape the psyche that would create great works of art.
As early
age fourteen, Williams demonstrated a prodigious talent for
as
music-related endeavors. Like most country
enced by the popular Honky-Tonk and
Tubb and Roy
Ernest
Acuff, but also
artists,
hillbilly
Williams wasn't only influ-
performers of the day such as
by the many Black Blues
doubt heard growing up in the South. His big break came in he signed on
as a staff
months
Hank
Built, as
Connie
recordings for the Sterling
a recording contract
in
A few
with a budding
MGM, which probably could be called the House That
Williams was their
first
hillbilly artists,
successful artist (you can thank
him
for
was probably
in part
Hank's career was marked by alcoholism. In his
due to feelings of guilt stemming from
cated relationship with his mother. But
formers
like
him were emerging
it
also
in the Texas
that there
was no
cretins (the
air
name
folks at the
but they saved him
of
art,
Grand
and
Ok
a place it.
all
and
hats, despite the fact
—unlike
later t-shirt-and-jeans-wearing literally
because they realized genuine backwoods talent
They made
the kid a
Elvis.
But even
star, just like
at the
in great pain for several reasons, including his
nature and his wife Audrey's
infidelity,
in a slighdy stooped
Add
sweating their
Opiy had been warned about Hank's drinking,
—unsuccessfully—to do with
prescription drugs.
Tommy Duncan
there was to do was. ..drink!
attempt
made him walk
fact that per-
conditioning, because they really believed that, as enter-
they saw and heard
Hank was
suits
Ramones, AntiSeen, Nirvana). They were
asses off in the
The
Bob Wills and
Playboys would wear heavy cowboy
they should dress "proper"
tainers,
had to do with the
his compli-
straight out of the backyard shithouse to take
over the world. For instance, a decade before,
when
Company
Francis, in other words).
Like most case, it
first
Rose helped Williams secure
new company named
when
late 1946,
(which Billboard had dismissed as "way back in the woods").
later,
he no
songwriter with Acuff- Rose. Fred Rose had apparendy
been bowled over by Williams's
New York
artists
and
they'd later
height of his fame,
mom's overbearing
also a congenital birth defect that
manner and
necessitated the use of
many
—which he combated with beer—the
to the stage heat
myriad of mind- and body-numbing pills and you have the makings of one truly
CHAPTER 2: WHERE THE MUSIC CAME FROM twisted individual. This set a pattern that
would continue
in
29
Rock
Roll for
'n'
the next fifty years.
Williams also held the unique distinction of being the
"Move music
At
least
on
was
an oddity
what
also
Hank
befell
with crushing
By then he'd
a holiday).
a national hero,
among the still
finality
to the
or
enshrines
when
who
Before
Hank still
called
sing: "I've
'em
had
a
he/she
New
Day
Year's
in 1953,
but a flame burned inside of him that made him
him today with
is
on
already been fired by the Opry and had remar-
is
ultimately what killed
the post-everything crowd.
so-called artist
is
him but
Is it
post-
self-conscious of the time he/she
unselfconscious about the time but
by it? That's the question posed by someone thousands
ol'
like
rhythms of Black
age 29 (he had to die cryptical-
at
people of his time, which
modernism only when the lives in,
was because songs
that
much
as
"hillbilly"
been bad."
he died unexpectedly of a heart attack
He
ried.
—
white
he had the self-deprecating sense of humor to
it's all
Bad luck
ly
Blues charts
they did to Honky-Tonk. Nevertheless, I'm sure
as
luck and
when
&
on Over" and "Rootie Tootie" owed
It
"niggers." lotta
Rhythm
over to the
artist to cross
first
like
is
misunderstood
Hank Williams,
as well as the
followed in his wake.
Hank
sputtered out, he'd returned to the place where he'd begun:
the Louisiana Hayride, the Oprys only regional competition and one even
more
open to raucous brands of hick hoedown. As the Opjy became more famous and Nashville-oriented,
it
Lawrence Welk and
a
became more generic and
less rustic, like a
grim foreboding otHee Haw.
hick version of
Hank was drunk off his feet,
holding a guitar with horseshit under his fingernails and high on whatever prescriptions
Young.
he could get
And
The
his
hands on. Hell, he could've ended up becoming Neil
don't think for a
moment that Neil Young
doesn't
know
Louisiana Hayride originated in Shreveport, Louisiana,
on
powerful station with a 50,000-watt signal and central proximity in a (Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas) that was experiencing an area's
expanding gas and
oil industry.
economic
The show was
KWKH,
a
tri-state area
revival
broadcast
it.
live
due to the
from the
Shreveport Auditorium every Saturday night, which was traditionally the wildest night of the
week
could appreciate a split
for the
stiffs.
They came out
to drink
and naturally
Hank Williams, who joined the show shortly after its debut and
from the Opry
fellow badasses:
working
a
year
Webb
later, a
Pierce,
trend repeated by coundess Country greats and
Faron Young, Johnny Cash, and George Jones.
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
30
By
far,
Williams-like success.
actually
ROLL
the most famous alumnus of the Hayride was Elvis Presley. Before
he joined, Elvis was
as a rule,
N'
just
another country bumpkin with aspirations of
Growing up
Memphis,
in
and the version of "Old Shep" that he
Elvis heard the Hayride almost later
appropriated for his
own
belonged to Hayride regular Red Foley. Like Williams, Elvis was naive
and passionate enough to dig the Black music of the region without the stigma
some others attached
to
When Elvis arrived,
it.
he was abetted by several
drummer,
ple "arriving" with him, like D.J. Fontana, his
from the Hayride;
(b)
about broken marriage and the
like,
to target, "the kids."
in his quavering, hiccuping voice.
Phillips;
and
—
it
was in
Amongst
his
where they never even had
to
(c)
a
Hank Williams sang ilk
were
nervous movements,
prairie regulars, there
of scorn and condemnation for him. But soon Elvis and his
ilk
was a
lot
would transcend
worry about what such hayseeds
thought.
Which would become
he picked up
but what Elvis and others of his
expressing was pure adolescent frustration
into a world
many more peo-
whom
Sam
people to help him along, like
whole new segment of the population
and
factors: (a)
the whole point of
Rock
'n'
Roll.
Chapter
3
ElviS sOttA Gun There were other weird pockets of alternative culture growing IN
POSTWAR AMERICA:
The
biker clubs, for instance.
original Hell's Angels
actually a grudge-harboring collective of shell-shocked
were the days before the bastions of
war veterans. These
political correctness
had established any
kind of "therapy" for such displaced souls. So-called crazies were
on
their
own
(lest
were
more or
less
they wanted to end up in one of the notorious "snake pits"
with pants-pooping droopy-haired
Grumpus
lookalikes). Bikers
were veterans
who
couldn't adapt to the "morality" that had seized American culture in the
'50s.
They
also couldn't
fit
in with the table
manners of June Cleaver. They
were animals, and they remained animals even '60s.
as
they rode hippie winds in the
That's what the hippies never figured out: these guys were
war veterans
as
opposed to anti-establishment creeps. They were harboring such repressed anger and resentment that
it
would
inevitably erupt into violence.
ed the wide-open spaces that riding their hogs provided.
women, too
—the
seeking their
The
own
fallen daughters
liberation
from
And soon
They needthey'd have
of every bedroom community,
who were
'50s-style training-bra too-goodness.
biker and the redneck mentality often merged. As everyone from
Charlie Rich to AntiSeen would eventually prove, rednecks were the original longhairs.
In the South, where poverty was of Blues.
Hank
more
real,
Country music served
Williams, the most popular Country
artist
as a
form
of his time, was
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
32
essentially
doing
To
it
ROLL
Robert Johnson's. Williams would one day of mule manure before
a lot
'
like a hillbilly."
today's superhip
as
"You got to have smelt
explain his Blues this way:
you can sing
pure
a Blues as
'N'
might seem inconceivable, but once upon
a time, in
the South, before the automobile, before movies, before paved roads even, the
The
barn dance was the big event on Saturday night. chicken-eating and bottle-passing, with cal
some
idea
was simple:
local yokels providing the
lots
of
musi-
accompaniment. This uproarious form of hokum was so popular that when
radio began the barn dance
popular programs:
like
would serve
The Grand Ole Opiy, for instance.
Broadcast over 50,000-watt
WSM,
ed radio program, setting the stage for
the Opiy was the
Symphony
heavily syndicat-
first
Sid and
all
the
this
was pure hick shriek with Minnie
Pearl's
skits as well as
an enormous variety of corn-fed
talent:
from Tennessee, seed
some of its most
as the blueprint for
Monroe, Eddv Arnold, Bob Presley.
Wills,
Hank
rest.
Coming
improvised hay-
Roy
Acuff, Bill
Williams, and eventually Elvis
Based in Nashville, the show helped establish that
city as
an important
Country music Mecca.
The Opiy was
broadcast for four and one-half hours per night, so the per-
formers had to be good to sustain the length of the performance. reached the point yet where
it all
MTV or even before that. But in do on
ter to
hours.
It's
a
Saturday night than
a pretty safe bet that
became 1947,
bullshit
—
many people
was
a different
By
world then.
And
it
the
didn't have anything bet-
MADD mothers thought.
was the South.
the '50s, Hillbilly music had
who plied
would, starting with
they were passing the corn-liquored bottle the
become
radio stations broadcast Opn'-like shows. teurs
it
so popular that
Most of
muse only because they loved
it.
more than 600
the performers were ama-
As
could not "give up their day jobs." This put them
Bill
more
Monroe noted,
have come
billy
full circle.
meant something
hillbillies
would've put
But the difference was,
like
what
to
make of Hillbilly
day job for
dock loading, not copy shop
a fist
Billboard, the leading
a
they
in line with today's
we
real-
Southern
hill-
"indie" rockers as opposed to major label glory seekers. In fifty years, ly
hadn't
glued to their radios for four and one-half
sit
whole time without one single concern about what It
as
We
a
slacking.
These randy
through the face of today's super-ironic hordes.
music-trade publication in the nation, didn't
know
music's rising popularity. Before 1942, the magazine
CHAPTER lumped
Hillbilly with "foreign"
3:
ELVIS
GOTTA GUN
numbers, meaning
came from abroad. But
at that
time sounded
whatever Europe
as alien as
offer.
By
1942, things weren't
ry did
what
do
along, and ever since:
all
recordings
listed beside
to the metropolitan editors of Billboard, the sounds
coming from the Deep South had to
enough, the
that, ironically
most genuine of American white song forms was being that
33
civil
much
better.
The new "Western &
servants and pandering half-mad politicians had been trving to
lump "white
trash" and
Negroes
the early '50s that Billboard finally inaugurated
n't until
Race" catego-
together. its
It
was-
"Country
&
Western" category, forever changing the definition of American popular music.
Now
such disparate elements as Western Swing, rural white Southern Blues,
and Appalachian Bluegrass were united in the public consciousness.
Country via
not only
&
Western music was reaching
Hank Williams, who was
but also Nashville's emergence
its
golden period in the early '50s
honky-tonk
basically the last of the
as the epicenter
of the Country music-making
business. Nashville represented the commercialization of the form.
The
hewn honky-tonk style was absorbed by the new rockabillies who tended their
home in Memphis.
Nashville, meanwhile,
stylists,
rough-
to
make
became kind of the Tin Pan Alley
of the hick world.
"We made
this
town," said Frank Rose, one-half of the famous Acuff-Rose
publishing partnership that acted as the phoenix for Nashville's rise to promi-
nence. As the firm gained credibility, they began to attract songwriters
baby dun been
who soon
left
me"
stream of aspiring
learned to pen the classic country song: "llaaah,
or, later
on, "JYaaaah, the plant
laid off n' drinkin' all day."
The
reshaped the sound of Nashville.
dun closed down
mah
again/I
addition of the pedal steel guitar (heard
most prominendy on the recordings of Webb
the sobbing tone lent
a
Initially
Pierce, as played
by Bud
Isaacs)
pioneered by West Coast musicians,
Country music the "crying" sound
that
became
its
trade-
mark.
Another important innovation was the invention of the which Fender introduced freed both Blues and bass.
Country
artists
As Country music historian
roamed car,
in the '50s.
Bill
Held
like a guitar,
electric bass guitar,
the new instrument
from the heavy burden of the stand-up
Malone noted: "When bands no Longer
across the country with the 'bass fiddle' tied to the top ot the touring
an era in American music had truly come to an end."
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
34
Fender had already introduced and
had met with phenomenal
it
came
to
its
electric guitar a
success.
dominate the sound of Country
important guitar manufacturers
like
The
&
ROLL
N'
couple of years
earlier,
"cool" twang of the instrument
Western
for years to
come. Other
Rickenbacker had sprung up on the West
Coast during the postwar years. With more and more musicians getting
a
hold
of the instrument, they were bound to produce a sound that resembled Rock 'n'
Roll,
even
if
they didn't have any idea what they were doing.
In 1947, Arthur Smith, a country-poke from Charlotte, North Carolina
who'd
West, had
later relocate to the
that helped popularize the
a
sound of the
huge
with "Guitar Boogie," a song
hit
electric guitar nationwide.
At approxi-
mately the same time, Les Paul was making his historic recordings with wife
Mary Ford
that not only used electric guitar but such revolutionary
new
recording techniques as multitracking as well. Paul would go on to design his
own
line
The
of guitars for Gibson, which became Fender's biggest competition. guitar was, for the
most
among vagabond
instrument proved so popular
immense
popularity, the guitar
which was another reason the
part, portable,
became the
musicians. Because of
catalyst for virtually
all
its
of the sub-
sequent major musical developments of the next twenty years. Because of the accessibility
and low cost of the equipment, performing musicians were able to
literally revolutionize their
sound overnight.
It
wouldn't be long before what
they were playing would evolve into something resembling
The volume and
guitar
you
new
'n'
as
Roll.
drummers. This was another step
Roll, because the success of
on the backbeat. Or
'n'
both amplified
electric bands, usually featuring
bass, created the necessity for
towards Rock firmly
of the
Rock
most good Rock
Chuck Berry would soon
say: "It's
'n'
Roll rests
got a backbeat
can't lose it."
In
many historical movements,
the pivotal events occur chiefly by accident,
and Rock's early years are riddled with examples of such fortuitous happenstance.
Take the case of Ray Butts, for example
actually the architect of the Rockabilly sound,
Butts lived in
Memphis during
the era
—here was the man who was
and no one's ever heard of him.
when Rock
'n'
Roll was exploding.
According to legend, he hand-built four amplifiers with echo
built in.
Although
such devices were soon to become commonplace, Butts's amps were originals.
Who were the four people who ended up with the amps? the next generation of Southern guitar-speak:
Only
the founders of
Chet Atkins, Scotty Moore, Roy
— CHAPTER 3
:
ELVIS
GOTTA GUN
Orbison, and Carl Perkins. According to Perkins: amp... I wish
was
a fool
and sold that
That amp did something those echoplexes
hadn't.
I
"I
35
was a sound of its own.
It
was the Sun sound
in person."
can't do. It
3
Despite Ray Butts's innovations, not to mention those of his messengers, the "Sun sound" was not born overnight.
The South may have been an incred-
ibly fertile musical region in the early '50s, but other than the increasingly slick
music-biz region.
Mecca of
Nashville, the mainstream record industry avoided the
Even the majority of new
"indie" labels that were handling the
Rock sounds were geographically too musicians.
King was
new pre-
out of bounds for most Southern
far
Chess was in Chicago, Specialty and
in Cincinnati,
Modern were in Los Angeles, and Atlantic and Savoy were in New York. King had already taken
like
Black
artists
a big step towards
Rock by blending white and
within their rosters. This was an idea that no doubt caught the ear
of Sun Records founder
indigenous to the
Sam
Phillips.
Such musical miscegenation was already
Memphis region, which is why in
Presley claimed to be equally influenced by B.B.
As has often been since he
became
stated, Elvis
a talent seeker
was the
— doing
all
way: Phillips hadn't
He'd
initially set
artist Phillips
Artists
man who
farm near Florence, Alabama in 1923, fields as a child
had been seeking ever
and Repertoire (A&R) work But
it
didn't start out that
man who
out to find "a white
out to find a Black
set
his early interviews Elvis
King and Hank Williams.
for the aforementioned indie labels in the late '40s.
blues."
Labels
could sing the blues. Born on a
Sam
Phillips
had worked the cotton
alongside Blacks. According to Phillips, hearing
work songs and
spirituals
could sing the
them
sing their
while they baled cotton sparked his interest in Black
musical expression. Something about the emotional force of the idiom captivated him, and
it
was
this
primal experience, similar to the one experienced by
Alan Lomax, that indirecdy led to the foundation of Sun Records (and subsequently the birth of
Rock
'n' Roll).
A career in radio helped land Phillips in Memphis in city cal
was an incredibly diverse spawning ground
developments,
tion,
the It
WDIA,
many of them
station, B. B.
first
706 Union
all-Black format in the country.
King, was
was hearing King that eventually led
dio, at
number of important musi-
aided by the presence of an excellent radio sta-
which pioneered the
DJs on the radio
for a
1945. At that time the
Street, in 1949.
a
Blues performer in his
Phillips to set
Having begun
up
One
own
of
right.
his first recording stu-
his career as an engineer.
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
36
was able to make demos of
Phillips
ROLL
the local Black musicians in the area,
all
including B. B. King and Howlin' Wolf.
N'
To supplement his income,
Phillips also
recorded speeches, weddings, funerals, and graduations for a fee and continued to
work at WREC
Rhythm
ket for
&
radio in
Memphis.
Chicago and Modern
—he knew that
fool
mar-
a
cities
and
Chess
successful in persuading faraway labels like
in L.A. to lease his wares.
the province of Joe, Jules, and Saul Bihari, and their
Modern was release
was no
Blues had sprung up, particularly in the Northern
on the West Coast, and he was in
Phillips
first
was Hadda Brooks's "Swingin' the Boogie." Brooks was another impor-
tant transitional figure in the history of Rock, a pianist
who boogied
gie ad infinitum, even going so far as to boogalarize
Boogie." That was
name of Rock
The
potential talent.
who made
the
time
would make frequent During one such
was made
a classical reference
young
thereafter, they fired
Clarksdale, Mississippi,
trip to
jazz musician
didn't suit the Biharis (they
trips to the
Memphis
Deep South
in the
Phillips.
The
pianist
named Phineas Newborn, whose
were looking
Newborn and
named
in search of
they discovered B. B. King,
under the aegis of Sam
his first recordings
the sessions was a
Shordy
first
"Concerto
in
Roll.
'n'
Biharis
definitely
Grieg
the boo-
for a
more down-home
replaced
him with
a
on
style
quality).
cocky kid from
Ike Turner. Clarksdale was the site of the leg-
endary crossroads where Highway 49 met Highway 61, which was where
Robert Johnson supposedly sold
low that Turner, who'd sprung
would only go
his soul to the devil. It
literally
to fol-
from the same Delta mud, was one of
the gutsiest musicians of the era.
Like
Sam
Phillips
and B. B. King, Turner had an
the late '40s, he'd been a latest in
Brown.
DJ on WROX— "We rocks!"—where
jump Blues by people It
was during
earlier career in radio. In
like
Louis Jordan,
this stint that
he
first
Amos
he'd played the
Milburn, and Charles
met King, which
is
probably
how
he ended up playing on the session. Turner was not only ambitious but also versatile:
cous
Although he played
combo of
before
Sam
Bands
his
Phillips
own, the Kings of Rhythm. was holding the microphone
like Turner's
cians to hail
fairly straight for B. B.
King, he also led a more rauIt
was only
in front of
a matter of time
them
were important, because they were the
from the South who
didn't rely
on the
first
as well.
Black musi-
oral tradition passed
down
they drew as
much
by Blues musicians from Charley Patton on up. That
is,
CHAPTER 3: inspiration
from radio and recordings
clubs and honky-tonks. This
What
Blues.
Someone
like
On March Avenue studio found impact
major
as a
Chicago
as
band
for instance,
One
man. For another,
one of the early Rock
first
same raucous
Union
Phillips's
Rock
it).
helped establish
Sam
Not
'n'
surprisingly,
Roll record" (and
Phillips
"Rocket 88"
Sam
Phillips
However, by 1951 there were alreadv
vein, but perhaps
take a
none
as gloriously irre-
little pill."
Beyond
compose the song. The
recording was actually by Ike Turner's Kings of Rhythm, but on the label "Jackie Brenston."
This must've angered Turner
band was more or
less his baby,
but
"Rocket 88" became the best-selling
Sam
Berry would have his
Phillips
first hit
that,
—mainly Jackie Brenston, who was merely
the bass player in Turner's band, although he did
ting both Chess and
a pro-
helped establish Chess Records in
my car's gonna
was credited to the wrong person
Sam
the saxophone was slightly off-key, and the
all,
proclaimed, "Everybody in
it
it
Roll labels.
'n'
have you believe
like to
sponsible as "Rocket 88." After
it
For one,
a
did.
of them, "Rocket 88," was to have
in several different areas.
several records in the
lyrics
Kings of Rhythm
like the
to cut four songs.
A&R
mar-
exotic
had no chance of appealing to
1951, Turner and crew assembled at
3,
more
they were in the process of was modernizing the
has often been referred to as "the
would sure
possibilities:
in the
forms of instrumentation, and more sophisti-
Son House,
larger audience, but a
37
they did from what they heard
as
opened up many
riages of musical styles as well as
cated lyrical insights.
GOTTA GUN
ELVIS
it
record of 1951
on the map). Not
—
several years later
said
at first, considering that the
couldn't have angered
R&B
it
him long when
(in the
surprisingly,
also
on Chess
process put-
when Chuck
—
it
would be
with "Maybellene," a rollicking car song in the "Rocket 88" tradition.
Like a lot of the indie labels that were springing up in the postwar years specializing in Black this case
Rhythm
&
Blues, Chess was a family-owned business, in
by two brothers, Phil and Leonard Chess. Like the good Jewish busi-
nessmen they were, they'd sensed
&
a
market growing for the new Black Rhythm
Blues ever since the Delta bluesmen began flocking to Chicago in alarming
numbers during the years before World War
II.
The Chess
brothers, in tact,
operated a succession of after-hours clubs where Black and white musicians
hung out together and jammed reasoned that
if
until sunrise.
Like
Sam
Phillips,
Leonard Chess
he could somehow capture the sounds he heard
he could tap into
a revolution.
So he
set
up
a
in these clubs,
makeshift studio, in
this case in
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
38
N'
ROLL
the garage, and persuaded local singers and musicians to record. It didn't end
however: while Leonard dealt with operations back home, Phil scouted
there,
him
the country looking for talent. This led
At that time
Phillips
to
Sam
Phillips.
was leasing most of his material to the Bihari Brothers
Los Angeles, and Ike Turner was acting as
his
go-between. But when Chess some-
contract while he was supposedly under license to
how secured Howlin' Wolf to a
and severed the
Modern, the
Biharis accused Phillips of double-dealing
ship. Phillips
had no choice but to rush readily into the arms of Chess, the
main competition. The Chess brothers were employ
Phillips's estimable talents in this area.
naturally
more than
Thus they began
nership that continued until Phillips launched his
own label,
relationBiharis'
willing to
a fruitful part-
Sun, a couple of years
When he did, he was clearly influenced by Leonard Chess's recording meth-
later.
ods
in
—
microphone and
like rigging a
loud speaker at both ends of a sewer pipe
a
to produce echo. According to Leonard's son, Marshall,
work
for the Rolling Stones, the big thing
drum, drum, and more drum. to bring out a heavy beat."
I
was percussion:
went on
later
"My
to
wanted
father
think he was responsible for doing that to blues,
4
Chess Records was fortunate that
Muddy Waters
who
a lot of the greatest Delta
bluesmen
and Howlin' Wolf had moved to Chicago in the
'40s.
like
These
artists
helped build Chess as a serious label with their new, more urbane Blues
styles.
An
artist like
now found drinkin'
Muddy
TNT/I'm
displayed by
pistol in
your
like
later.
Be
it
was kind of a strange premonition
Satisfied": "I feel like
snappin'/My
to
Make Love
to
You" and "Hoochie Coochie
classics for the first line
of Black and white Blues
There's a reason this music caught on with white kids
Keith Richards, Eric Clapton, and Mike Bloomfield: Blues represented
kind of underground. ists
In this way,
Waters was truly threatening to the
face.")
Man" became readymade decade
like
in "I Can't
Want
like "I Just
revivalists a
someone
'50s.
Rap (Muddy even sang
Songs
in the heart of the Delta,
smokin' dynamite/I hope some screwball/Start a fight."
white-bread world of the
goddamn
who was born
himself in the heart of the American Dream. His reaction: "I'm
The machismo
to
Waters,
It
was only
later, in
the hands of the prissy folk-revival-
of the Kennedy years, that Blues would become a sacred institution.
Muddy Waters would Chess was putting out
finally all
a
be given his just due. However, in the
these great records, artists like
'50s,
Muddy were
Then when
consid-
CHAPTER ered the their
scum of
GOTTA GUN
ELVIS
3:
39
the Earth by the recording industry. But they were having
impact nonetheless.
Another important thing about was one of the
to Rock): he
unprecedented in the
field
first
to
Muddy
(and another important precursor
employ
a full
of Blues at that time.
name: McKinley Morganfield) was making the parameters of his chosen
Which
so
It's
clear that
six players,
Waters
a self-conscious decision to
(real
expand
art.
probably could not be said about Howlin' Wolf, Muddy's Chess
counterpart,
who was
band containing
who
epitomized "raw talent" in the form of an unwitting mystic
down-home he
to the fact that
actually frightened people.
Wolf (a.k.a. Chester
pound behemoth, born and bred
That was probably due
Burnett) was a surly, foul-mouthed, 300-
in the Delta, black as night,
who
never
appealed to the same supper-club set as B. B. King and eventually Muddy. That's because Wolf's whole delivery was a primal yowl tinged with anger and sadness, perhaps a
little too
close to the spirit of the Blues to ever cross into the
mainstream like so many of his peers. ly
came
In
hands of the Brit brigade
at the
Wolf was
The little bit of acclaim he received most-
actually
November
one of the
artists
a
who were
his recordings).
later.
Chess discovered through Sam
1952, Phillips launched his
flood of indies
decade
already having
own
some
label,
Phillips.
Sun, to compete with the
chart success (some of them with
In August 1951 the Dominoes' "Sixty Minute Man," released
on the independent Federal
label, surprised
Syd Nathan, by jumping onto the pop
everyone, particularly label owner
charts.
This was especially surprising
because "Sixty Minute
Man" was
somewhat bawdy
("20 minutes of huffin'/And 20 minutes of puffin '/And
lyrics
20 minutes of blowin'
my top").
a bluesy tune with a rattling guitar riff
Within the next couple of years,
Black vocal groups would cross over onto the Cadillacs,
Charms, Penguins,
plethora of others
Sam
Phillips,
who
named Rattle tially
Bill
came
right off the street. This
who'd been recording Black
Haley had
a
after
huge
charts:
talent for years.
he founded Sun,
a
He
more
the Orioles,
Spaniels, Chords, El Dorados, Teenagers,
literally
been aware when, the year
Pop
several
and
was not also
and
lost
a
on
must have
white performer from Ohio
hit covering Blues shouter
Joe Turner's "Shake,
& Roll." Here was a novel idea: a white guy bastardizing what was essen-
an authentic piece of Blues.
about a long time.
It
was an idea diat
Phillips
had been dunking
— SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
40
The
on Sun Records were mostly authentic Blues by people
early releases
Dr. Ross the Harmonica Boss or Little Walter.
like
weren't selling. Phillips kept thinking: "If
could sing the blues million in the
—somebody
I
of dress. As
Here was
Phillips
But he did find the
He
didn't quite
he really
clothes,
Marion
did. I
had to
hick working class
this typical
laid yet.
And
like
his first guitar in 1946,
everywhere
it
Phillips" for
was
It
the
my dog once."
nobody with
—not because he knew how it
back
call
when he was
because, like a big security blanket, Elvis Presley
his
map
"He wore
Keisker, recalls:
stars in his eyes.
Hank Williams,
from the too-close-to-his-mommy syndrome. bought him
make
put Sun on the
artist to
who
remembered the boy because of his flamboyant
Phillips's secretary,
Probably hadn't even been
him
records, but they
form of a young truck driver who'd been bugging "Mistah
most outlandish
ried
Good
could only find a white boy
I
could make a million dollars."
else did.
weeks to record him. style
ROLL
N'
his
the
mom,
boy suffered
Gladys, who'd
eleven years old, and he car-
to actually play the thing but
reminded him of
his
mommy.
Already
was establishing the little-lost-rebel-boy persona that would carry
for the rest of his years. Phillips
record
had
a service
whereby, for two dollars
—but you only got one copy
to cut a record,
it
was
as a
a gift to his
singing, practicing for hours to
a
pop, anyone could
kind of keepsake.
When
make
a
Elvis decided
mother. He'd always been interested in
sound
like
the crooners he listened to
on the
radio or the Blues artists he heard around
Memphis. The record he cut that day
was actually kind of conventional:
of Ink Spots songs,
Where Your Heartaches
and "That's n't forget
The Then
it
a pair
about the boy in the pink
some
Begin." But for
Happiness"
reason, Phillips did-
suit.
idea of trying to find a white kid to sing the Blues kept plaguing him.
dawned on him one day
eyes in the form of Elvis.
young boy, he ran
him record
six
that the solution
was right there before
As the legend goes, when
blocks to the audition. At
straight Blues, but in a
first it
cosmic twist of
decided to cover a Blues song on one
side,
the other. In both cases, Elvis improved
and
on the
a
ly believed
his
Phillips finally called die
was
Phillips' idea to
fate, Elvis
Country
&
and
his
have
band
Western one on
original versions. In the case of
Arthur Crudup's "That's All Right," the Blues number,
he was
"My
many
people mistaken-
Presley was Black. But Elvis wasn't consciously emulating anyone
just letting his
emotions go overboard with unabashed youthful exuber-
CHAPTER ance. In "Blue
big regional
Moon
3:
GOTTA GUN
ELVIS
of Kentucky," the
41
Monroe number
Bill
he changed the whole tune around so that
hit,
instead of swung. It
ent styles of music
is
significant that Elvis
on
would choose
had been
that
it
a
literally jumped
to record
two
differ-
debut record and make them sound strangely akin.
his
The common denominator between both
Blues and Country was the funky
down-home
go of his/her emotions and not
quality that enabled
self-conscious about
'n'
to the
it
was through
feel
his realization
finally take place
(hence
Roll").
assembled behind Elvis provided the perfect back-
More
unique musical vision.
Elvis's
spurred him tial
and
two musical forms could
The band Sam Phillips drop for
let
Elvis realized this,
it.
that the synthesis of these
"Rock
one to
than
likely,
it
was they who
on. Scotty Moore's guitar playing, for one thing, was as influen-
whole school of Rock guitar players
as
Chuck
Berry's; Bill Black's
stand-up bass playing was the prototype for the whole subsequent Rockabilly style
of slap-bass playing; and D.J. Fontana's
that distinguished this music cats.
Together these four
once and for
men would
drumming had all
from
rhythm
the steady
Country
that of straight
virtually invent the Rockabilly craze, a
Southern white invasion of would-be Country pluckers infected by the Rock 'n'
Roll bug.
As
for Presley's vocal quality,
experience to speak pete with
more
of,
he
may
have been
a hick
with no worldly
but he infected each tune with enough gusto to com-
sophisticated Blues and Hillbilly singers. His manipulation of
Black idioms while
still
taposition of wide-eyed
maintaining his choirboy persona was the perfect jux-
wonder and
lascivious intent, a confusing but
paradox that suited the increasingly confused
mood
engaging
of the times as well.
There's an insurgency to the sides Elvis and his cronies cut for
Sam
during the years '54— '55 that gives the impression that no one involved
what they were doing was sides,
in
felt
when we
first
This sometimes chagrined
Phillips,
a
demo
But Elvis was
a
of "When
genuine
thing he did. That's
among
actually get to hear a specific style of music being
born. Elvis was one of the
on
that
any way "ordinary." Like Charlie Parkers Savoy
or Robert Johnson's Columbia recordings, Elvis's Sun sessions are
the few instances
Elvis
Phillips
It
recording
Rains,
stylist
who
who It
artists
who wanted
creative
freedom.
can be heard admonishing die young
Pours": "Don't git too complicated, bah!"
imparted his unique trademark on every-
why even though
Elvis
seldom wrote
his
own
material, he
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
42
own
soon came to
The minute to
ROLL
the versions he cut of other people's songs
"Hound Dog,"
being
N'
Mae
originally a hit for Willie
"That's All Right" was waxed, a
"Big
—
case in point
Mama"
Thornton.
dub of the song was delivered
Sam Phillips' friend Dewey Phillips, who hosted the popular Red, Hot and Blue
radio
program
Memphis. Although the two
in
Phillipses weren't related, there
was something thicker than blood between them bribe for airplay, a
common practice among disc jockeys at the time,
would soon come back undoubtedly
why
a (local) star
form of
(a
a factor that
haunt them when the Feds caught wind of it). That's
to
song
Phillips played the
thirty times
although the song went nowhere nationally,
and
—mainly payola
it
one night.
made number one
paid
It
off:
Memphis,
in
was born.
Elvis didn't "invent"
Rock
'n'
Roll, but his
"Good
subsequent recording,
Rockin' Tonight," showed he was making a self-conscious attempt to introduce the masses to
what had already made
a believer out of
him
form of Roy Brown's 1946 original on King). The way
(in this case in the
Elvis introduced the
word
song, with a mighty reverberating hiccup that elongated the salacious proportions,
was
like a
premonition of all that was to come. Keeping
to the spirit of the first single, the B-side, "I
Shine," was a
more Pop-oriented number,
Don't Care
originally
if
the
done by
line "we're
gonna
kiss n' a-kiss n' a-kiss
n'a-gunna
Sun Don't
Patti
1950, but Elvis's version shed the gentility of her version, to say the
he sang the
"well" to
Page in
least.
kiss
When
sum more"
he got downright excited and almost started panting in an open display of lust that must've dismayed City Fathers in
Anytown U.S.A.
circa 1955.
Hence
the
—hence the King!
controversy
on
In 1955, Elvis was verging that time.
Although
his
sound was
territory that
was
virtually nonexistent until
a mixture of both Black
and white resources,
because he was white he got lumped in with the Hillbilly singers.
The Country
audience was none too enamored with the young kid, not to mention the
Country music establishment. the
example was when Elvis
Grand Ole Opiy. The figureheads of that organization
tain terms:
Elvis
"go back to driving
borrowed
eventually ended that
A good
it
up
represented
ing performance
a lot of his
there.
him
a truck, boy." Elvis cried all the
image from Hollywood, so
But Rock
'n'
it's
Not surprisingly,
in
went on
no uncer-
way home. no
surprise he
Roll was different from the movies in
—not pictures of movement, but
movement
art.
told
finally
a living, breath-
Elvis gained a lot of recognition
from
his
— CHAPTER 3: frenetic stage act. Until then, very
GOTTA GUN
ELVIS
43
few musical performers did more than
just
stand there and play (although contemporaneous sax blowers like Illinois
Jacquet and Flip Phillips were
literally rolling
on the
Philharmonic Shows). Elvis also had mighty appeal he was actually
all
description of a kind of music
whose
and the concept of "getting
stupid-ass studio
put
another way,
it
I
at the time, it
essential elements
real gone."
"magic" of the early Sun studios
some
symbol even though lay his
Sam
was
once described the
Phillips
way: "I didn't want to get those people in
this
and lead them astray from what they had been doing. To
didn't try to take
to feel ashamed. I
them uptown and
dress
them
By
definition of
Rock
1955,
'n'
up. If they
Roll, in
Rock most
5
Roll has there ever been?
'n'
senses,
was already
My
Front Door)" which was the same thing
Mama
as saying,
"Let's get real gone." Later that year, the Cadillacs (black Cadillacs, that
claimed:
"My name
is
Speedo."
What
obviously communicating in a whole
nonsense to the uninformed
Rock
'n'
tradition
pro-
were
kids
like freakish
the squares).
—mainly that the song became popular
of their local theaters. Even though
opus with adenoidal vocals
than the movie
itself,
The song had
first
after
incidence of a
it
was featured
movie was Richard Brooks's teen-delinquent drama,
The Blackboard Jungle, which caused teens
a clattering
sounded
"Rock around the Clock." Here was the
in a movie. In this case, the
seats
that
The
is!)
Roll was given a mighty boost in 1955 by the unprecedented suc-
cess of Bill Haley's
modern
(i.e.,
the hell was a Speedo?
new language
more
a reality. Several
songs had "crossed over": the Eldorados had declared "Crazy Little
(Come Knockin' on
want
didn't
I
wanted them to go ahead and play the way they were
used to playing. Because the expression was the thing."
What better
a pretty apt
were the echo chamber
had broken-down equipment or their instruments were ragged,
them
charm.
came out of the combination of Hillbilly and Rock.
probably wasn't called that
it
as a sex
"Aw shucks, ma'am!" But in his naivete
thumbs:
Rockabilly essentially
And even though
floor during the Jazz at the
—
all
over the country to rip up die
it
wasn't really that
much
it
turned out to be
a
of a song
bigger sensation
another unprecedented move.
actually
been recorded
a
year
earlier,
and Haley was no
overnight sensation. He'd been playing music since he was thirteen, mostly Hillbilly with a
DJ
at
some Western Swing dirown
WSNJ
in Bridgeport,
New Jersey
in.
At twenty-one, he took
and then transferred to
a
job as
WPWA in
— SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
44
became program
Chester, Pennsylvania, where he
other famous performing DJs
Haley was gives
—
you some idea what they sounded
&
Like
Blues.
Howlin' Wolf,
B. B. King,
They were called
also in a band.
director.
Rhythm
the time, Haley mixed in his share of Black
ROLL
N'
a lot
And
of DJs at
like a lot
of
Rums Thomas
the 4 Aces of Western Swing, which
like.
In 1949 the Aces became the Saddlemen, once again sticking to the
Western theme. They signed with
would soon come
to
Atlantic,
dominate the
released their share of Hillbilly.
Adantic, both flops. In 195
1
field
Ahmet
R&B
of
The Saddlemen
Ertegun's upstart label that
but
that, at that time, still
only released two records on
Haley signed with Decca, took off his cowboy hat,
fashioned a "spitcurl" on his forehead like Alfalfa, and put on a trashy dinner jacket. And... Rock 'n' Roll
was born?
Well, something closely approximating
Black-sounding
Country/R&B
as the
Sun
artists,
fusion. Finally
He
Haley was nevertheless working on
changing the band's name to
Comets, he was the undisputed upbeat "dance" music.
leader,
and he preferred
also helped popularize the
The Comets
Haley
&
the
a clean
but rollicking
term Rock
V Roll with a
weren't a manufactured "product" either, but a legitimate
touring/performance unit. As a friend's dad, in
Bill
a similar
"Rock the Joint" and "Rock Rock
string of recordings using the phrase, such as
Rock."
anyway. Although not as overtly
it,
Old Orchard Beach, Maine, once
who saw them perform
told me:
in the '50s
"Waaaah, they had that whole
pier a-rockin'l"
In 1955, Chess also had
its first
Moonglows, whose "Sincerely" was
share of crossover success,
basic Ink Spots crooning with
in,
important pioneers:
Bo Diddley and Chuck
a short ly
all
was
from
assert the
importance of the
rhythmic phrase repeated constantly.
made Rock
some orgas-
distinguishable
Berry.
riff in It
was
What
Rock this
these two did once
'n' Roll,
which meant
development that
from the forms of music that
it
final-
had originated
—mainly, Country & Western and Rhythm & Blues.
Diddley
(real
name
is
in dispute but
may have been
another Mississippi product transplanted to Chicago. at
with the
and then widr the launching of two of Rock's most
mic groans thrown
and for
first
age ten and was one of the
first
Ellas
McDaniel) was
He learned to play guitar
musicians to really appreciate the
new
tech-
nological aspects of the instrument. This accounted for his weird use of vibrato as well as the fact that he played a custom-designed square-shaped guitar.
\ I
CHAPTER 3:
ELVIS
GOTTA GUN
—songs
Diddley himself was no square, however
like
45
"Hey Man" and "Cops
and Robbers" were streetwise screeds that foreshadowed Rap: the former
on the whole school of "your
girl's
narrative of street crime with
Bo
—
guitar riff
playing narrator. As for the basic
thumping two-chord pattern
a
that doubled back
probably one of the two or three most-copied Rock
mized by Buddy Holly's "Not Fade Away," Johnny Jive," the Strangeloves' "I
Bowie's
"Up
Soon
Now," U2's
Is
way
of twentieth century Jive this
made
the
first
record to be called
many
and
it
came out of the
ghetto.
Rock
They
Sullivan's Toast of the Town.
was only 26 years old and
1955
I
maybe
his
that of the early
more "upbeat" it
the
Hand
the Smiths'
"How
in the annals
—we
was one of the
I
that
in 1991: "I
even started
called
it signifyiri
Blacks on
first
me
Ed
$750...
was the way things went."
he was another Chicago (by way
like
who was
(read:
Rock
urged, at the behest
'n'
Roll) material.
But
was no more compromising, sound-wise, than
Chess Records masters.
and with early material
fact,
(as epito-
Light," David
importance
for rap
of St. Louis) bluesman (and full-time hairdresser)
he wrote the stuff himself and
"The
it's
capable of conforming to the public's expecta-
tions without necessarily "selling out." Sure,
of the Chess Brothers, to try
&
"Willy
paid Elvis $5000 but only gave
just figured
Chuck Berry proved more
—
time
Roll by Alan Freed.
'n'
The same
in
all
magazine interview
in a Premiere
And
Pie's
Bo Diddley
on the beat
other examples).
summed up
that hipshake thing that Elvis copied.
of
"The Hungry Wolf,"
the Hill Backwards," X's
Bo, never one to feign modesty,
riffs
Otis's
Want Candy," Humble
"Desire," and
a play
so ugly" dissing; the latter a pretty graphic-
It
was downright raw,
as a
matter of
"Thirty Days" and "Maybellene," he achieved
the ultimate, electrified hybrid of chord-based Blues and
Country
clatter (his
runs were almost Bluegrassy).
Berry was extremely
versatile:
takeoff years before "bluebeat" had
pardy Berry-based). As exploit
—with
a
a lyricist,
somewhat cynical
"Havana Moon" was an almost Jamaican its
day (proving
that,
when
women
was "Sweet
meaning
did,
it
was
Berry wrote the book in terms of teen
twist. After
all,
he was already thirty when he
wrote most of his golden gassers. Given his degenerate history as aged
it
far as
under-
go, perhaps the only lyric he ever wrote that he truly believed in
Little 16."
to songs like
His love for having honeys
"Wee Wee Hours"
Go," about not being able
shit
as well as
to find a public restroom.
on
"No
his face gives
new
Particular Place to
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
46
Despite his perversions, however,
Rock to
Chuck
Goode,"
ROLL
has been one of the most copied
from Lonnie Mack
guitar stylists, inspiring everyone
Johnny Thunders. He's
N'
to Keith Richards
been one of the most venerable composers:
also
on
own
"Johnny
B.
dance,
an American standard that has been translated into
is
Berry's autobiographical take
his
mythical ascenjust
"popular" category of music, from Country to Reggae to Disco.
of sideways mobility, Rock was not to remain an isolated
The book was
were listening
just didn't
feel
as
among
Rock LPs before
Phil Chess.
You could
kind
for long.
the
tell it
"From what our
was crossing
over.
We
6
first
to
market Rock
of Tin Pan Alley-derived
'n'
Roll as a dis-
filler.
like
Chuck
The
fiction
the Beades were utter crap does a grave disservice to
brave, groundbreaking work.
In this regard, the Vee Jay label of Chicago rivals.
this
phenomenon
evidenced by the '50s albums of artists
minimum
a
it.
was gonna be."
it
own,
its
where there was
all
some
big
brothers were
tinct category of
that
You could
to.
know how
The Chess
Berry,
With
already being written.
"How did we know it was changing?" recalled kids
about every
seemed
to be Chess's closest
Like Chess, they specialized in relocated Delta transplants such as John
Lee Hooker and Jimmy Reed. Hooker was his early
work
for
Vee Jay,
actually based out of Detroit,
as well as the sides
he cut before that for Modern,
were some of the recordings that helped define the generation.
Hooker was one of
the
first
electric guitar to the next
to appreciate the varying degrees of
control that a musician could exercise over noise
He
itself.
understood the
amplifier-as-instrument concept and the fact that the resulting
between guitar and
amp
and
power
struggle
could be intensely gratifying in an almost sexual way.
This was the part of his whole routine that influenced such latter-day destructos as Jimi
Hendrix and Bernie Worrell of P-Funk, who were
an update of his Blues
Jimmy Reed, on
a
decade
distinctive
Reed repeated
riffs,
Like
it
regards to their
was that they were
the need for any extraneous bullshit.
very singular idioms to death because they that
a further
own
his classic shuffle ad infinitum. It wasn't as if
these guitarists were limited in capacity; n't feel
upon which
Bo Diddley and Chuck Berry in
laid.
doing
later.
the other hand, built the foundation
groove could be
basically
Most
knew
likely,
this
would get them noticed. Like the makers of all
stylists
who
did-
they plundered their
would be the trademark
—the man who spun
folk art
— CHAPTER 3:
—
the pottery vase or whatnot
it
ELVIS
wasn't so
ing perseverance to the task at hand.
GOTTA GUN much what
lizing
actual
made and
Rock
it
was memorable,
'n' Roll,
sparsely orchestrated.
Jimmy
in
Reed's
That meant
uti-
such makeshift techniques as banging two blocks together to replicate
drums ("Big Boss Man"). This
crackers like the Velvet it
they did, but their undy-
was so repetitious
It
other words. True to the primitive ethos of early recordings were often crudely
47
was more
of the early
a case
definitely influenced future skeleton-
Underground, but
this wasn't intentional primitivism
of make do with what you have, go for the feeling
Rock records were made cheaply because
willing to spend
Vee Jay simply
much time
didn't have
or
money on Rock 'n'
Many
the major labels weren't
Roll,
and the indie
labels like
any money.
Sonny Boy Williamson was the drawn into the Pop
first.
perfect example of an authentic Blues artist
cultural landscape
idea of harmonica-as-lead-instrument,
by accident. Williamson perfected the and
his
arrangements were
still
based
almost entirely on the twelve-bar form, but he wasn't opposed to taking the Blues uptown either, as such material as "Help
Me"
harder time grooming him than some of their other
demonstrates. Chess had artists,
a
and Sonny Boy was
never able to fully cross over, even though most of his sessions were recorded
with the same musicians
who backed
all
of Chess's major
artists:
Otis Spann,
Willie Dixon, etc. In the end, he helped develop the language of the harp as a distinct voice, influencing
Bob Dylan, among
such players as Paul Butterfield, Tony Glover, and
others.
Elmore James was another transplanted Southerner who
left his stylistic
groove on the future of uptown music making. Literally the son of
a
whore
from the heart of the Mississippi Delta, James stood 6'2" and was drunk most of the time.
By the time he got to Chicago,
he'd already been playing for years,
having been one of the actual proteges of Robert Johnson. His voice was
a cur-
dling high-pitched blare, which was only matched by his guitar, a distorted staccato burst of notes that ripped with passion and abandon. If
argument
for
why
the Blues had to be electrified, Elmore James would be
prime example. His simple songs came tion,
even
if
many
one needed an
alive
through the wonders of amplifica-
of his "classics" sounded surprisingly similar: "Dust
Broom," "Shake Your
Money
Maker," "Standing
at the Crossroads," et
Along with Jimmy Reed, Elmo was the absolute king of repetition. For son, he
a
My al.
this rea-
was similarly enshrined among the next generation of musicians, par-
— SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK N' ROLL
48
from England
ticularly those
like
Green of Fleetwood Mac. In which helped build
Bouncing from
his
own
his
myth
took
time, however, his reckless lifestyle
to future generations
label to label (Chess,
ed legacy was spotty, to say the revival really
Brian Jones of the Rolling Stones and Peter
—damaged
Modern, Trumpet,
He
least.
Philo,
his career.
etc.), his
record-
died in 1964, right before the Blues
off.
Although the Blues had become an unexpected urban phenomenon, for purveyors
it
was not an easy
life.
The
exposure, the fame, the biracial audiences
brought new problems that bluesmen from an
all
Johnson
for instance, never
in the '50s,
it
was
a
world
had to
face.
earlier time, like
Robert
For many prominent Blues musicians
with contradictions.
rife
A
perfect example of the
down-home-goes-uptown paradox was Lightnin' Hopkins. The
legendary-
Texas guitarist began in the '40s with a rural-sounding arpeggio-filled
However, by the mid-'60s, he was sporting
Rock
'n'
bona
fide staple, "I
Roll, as evidenced
Want
by the
its
a
neon
and playing
electric suit
Show and Dance featuring the
classic Electric
to Play with
style.
Your Poodle."
Blues had always been a ribald form, and bluesmen had always been out-
spoken.
Not
just in the case
of sexually explicit material, but also with politi-
cally laced broadsides as well, like J. B. Lenoir's
the
many
"Eisenhower Blues"
as well as
anti-Prohibition and pro-marijuana Blues from the 1930s, or the
antisegregation material from the '40s. But as Blues
with the Pop market, the
The New
lyrics
became increasingly teenage-oriented.
Orleans pianist Fats
Influenced by Boogie
Woogie
became more intertwined
Domino
helped
pianists like Albert
filter
this
Amnions and
transition.
raised in the
same whorehouse environs, Domino was comfortable with blues ("Please Don't Leave Me") or standards (the infamous "Blueberry Hill") but tailored many of his songs to the
Pop or novelty market. This made
bleach "I'm Walkin'" in the same Richard's "Tutri Frutti." rolling a
Domino
that Pat
bear persona helped establish
classic
Domino
as
Orleans was coming into
music went.
The
precedent for the
Boone would destroy
"Blue Monday."
as a definite
its
own
A big,
crowd
artist save
Little
with a land of
"My Girl Josephine,"
he sold more records than any other Black
New
easy for Ricky Nelson to
hit his stride in the mid-'50s
boogaloo personified by such songs
Shame," "Boll Weevil," and the
'50s
way
it
"Ain't
That
lovable teddy
pleaser,
and
Nat "King"
in the
Cole.
as a regional entity as far as
Black
New Orleans sound was established by Dave
CHAPTER 3:
ELVIS
GOTTA GUN
Bartholemew, the popular bandleader of the '40s the musicians
who
helped define the
drummer Earl Palmer, Louis Armstrong
&
city's
49
who more
or
saxophonists Lee Allen and Alvin Tyler.
His Hot Seven
cast a
still
less
tutored
all
musical tradition: Fats Domino,
The
influence of
mighty shadow over the
city's
New Orleans music distinct from that
musical heritage, and one thing that made
of other regions was the emphasis on swinging Jazz-like rhythms and instrumentation. As far as recording goes, the harbinger for the
was Cosimo Matassa's embellishment to
This made for
J&M
a "live"
where they employed
Studios,
Sam Phillips
at Sun:
"New Orleans sound" a similar lack
of
no overdubbing and not many rehearsals.
sound that jumped right out of the radio once the
fin-
ished product had been waxed.
No singer
one tested
World War
—reading
for
his
Rock II
Roll had
'n'
Daddy
—
in his
was going to cause some
room
a
his children
could understand
—
dumbsquat who
a
blasting a Little Richard platter. Obviously
like total noise.
without limitations. Think of
it
the
sanctum he'd fought hard
Daddy-o,
perfectly because they'd
how most
Little
He'd never heard anything
and didn't even possess the frame of reference to understand
that before
grown up
older Americans view
in a
like
it,
but
world
Rap nowadays
have a pretty good idea the kind of reaction that greeted Rock
and
you'll
Roll
—only
a
thousand times worse because when Rock
simply was no precedent.
on the senses (and
And no one was more
sensibilities)
—along with
Elvis,
Chuck
Berry, Jerry
the true mythic heroes of early
'n'
'n'
Roll arrived, there
responsible for this total assault
of the American public than Little Richard.
Born Richard Penniman on December
Elvis,
—
friction, especially because, to
Richard undoubtedly sounded
is
to epitomize the instant-
on the older generation. There was
in the living
room
young
Little Richard, a
evening paper, and there was sonny boy
hadn't done shit yet this
approach more readily than
from Macon, Georgia who perhaps best came
ly polarizing effect
typical
this
Rock
about a day's travel away by
car.
both were products of poverty, Elvis
5,
1935 in Southern Georgia, he
Lee Lewis, and Buddy Holly
'n'
Roll.
The
at least
He
—one of
was born the same year
similarities
ended
there: although
had the love of a nurturing
Richard, on the other hand, grew up the son of a boodegger
as
who was
family.
not tol-
erant of his son's slighdy effeminate characteristics. Enraged by his son's flam-
boyance, he tossed Richard out at an early age. Richard joined a traveling show, which, considering the circumstances, was probably akin to saying, in the words
— SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
50
of the Geto Boys: "Nigger you
wuz onna goddamn punk
N'
ROLL
tank." Probably
some
of the crusty old clowns and vaudeville sleazers manhandled the young boy, but
you
can't rape the willing, as they say,
seemed predisposed
The
Little Richard,
and
almost from birth,
to sybaritic excess.
turning point came
when
white club owner and his wife adopted
a
Richard. Before long, the boy began to perform at the Tick Tock Club, a
Macon hot credits the
spot
owned by
the couple,
Ann Johnson.
—he apparendy
why
Atlanta and landed a contract with that have since
After reading his autobiography
won
a local talent contest at
RCA. There he made
a series
WGST
in
of recordings
been underestimated in the annals of pre-Rock. Given what was
at the time, Richard's early stuff was as
Kings of Rhythm.
It's
just that his later
thing else that these early sides
axiomatic as that of Ike Turner's
work would
would come
seem
to
away
so totally blow
can already hear the roots of what would soon follow. a
it's
lusted after her big country bosoms!
In 1951, at age sixteen, Richard
going on
still
Johnsons with being the only true "family" he ever had and claims
he wrote "Miss Ann" about easy to see
Johnny and Ann Johnson. Richard
irrelevant.
The voice,
every-
However, one one thing
for
—was already powerful. Like
combination of raw bluster and Gospel testimony
a lot
of performers, Richard just needed a
Little
indie that
Used
to
nurturing.
Richard ended up on Specialty Records,
had had
a crossover hit
a successful
Los Angeles
of sorts with Guitar Slim's "The Things
Do." At the time, Specialty president Art Rupe was recording
his sessions at al
little
J&M,
so
it
was perhaps inevitable that
a lot
I
of
Little Richard, a region-
product, would record there. But Little Richard turned out to be not just
another
homegrown
screaming wild
singer plying the
man who made
—he
same Cajun/Creole mix
was
the whole country uptight! Newspapers wrote
about him as early as 1955, before Elvis even, trying to discredit him, but can you discredit someone who's purposely crass? Unlike, Little
say,
Fats
how
Domino,
Richard had no shame (which, along with the fact that he put parents in
a state of total fear,
was another
Little Richard's first big hit
generation of Uprights that
a
Rock
die line
'n'
LaBostrie's
a lu
symbol of Rock being born).
was "Tutti
Frutti," a
song that made
a
whole
—parents, broadcasters, college professors—proclaim
Roll was just a
"wop bop
vital
bop
a
bunch of screaming nonsense. And
wop bam boom!"
non-Hit Parade-intended
original,
(If
all
because of
they'd only heard
Dorothy
which was apparendy so pro-
1
CHAPTER
3
:
GOTTA GUN
ELVIS
5
fane that even the normally uninhibited Little Richard was
What spirit
Little
Richard brought to
it
were
From
a
Elvis to Jerry Lee,
Bo Diddley wore
glasses
colorful bunch, outrageous and,
ever seen anything like
Bop
a
the
instance, Little
them
and played
by nature,
—except
"Wop Bop
a
crazed roosters.
like
Screamin' Jay Hawkins crawled out of
feet.
a rectangular guitar. vital,
Thev were
a
simply because no one had
in the circus.
down
kids got the message, right
Lula" and
"The all
cape and makeup with an eight-inch pompadour. Elvis and
Jerry Lee played the piano with his
The
For
style.
other rocka-hillbillies piled their hair atop their heads
a coffin.
it!)
virtual cartoon characters!
That's what's missing from today's Rock: true
Richard wore
to sintr
was, as Richard Meltzer once noted,
of wrestling." Capes, gowns... a persona!
original rockers
ashamed
Lu Bop."
"Be
to nonsensical expressions like
Factors such as this have subverted the
language ever since (eventually leading to Rap
as well as Ebonics).
As non-
English speaking immigrants continued to pour into the country over the next
few decades, the language became even more diluted. Rock linguistic filter as well as a musical one, as
it is,
by
its
'n'
Roll served as a
very essence, a microcosm
of the larger "melting pot" (see Richie Valens's "La Bamba," for instance).
was
also, as
people were finding out, chiefly
attempts of instrumentalists like
Bill
opposed to the vocal music of the the like
—the
weren't so
lyrics
a vocal art despite the finest
Doggett, Ace Cannon, Link Wray,
etc.
As
—show tunes and
earlier twentieth century
much
compositional as they were slang. This
outraged the denizens of Tin Pan Alley as
Time and
It
again in the following years,
much
Rock
as
lyrics
it
did English teachers.
helped introduce slang
expressions into the mainstream vocabulary.
The same
year Little Richard broke with "Tutti Frutti,"
experiencing his
initial
burst of fame with "Maybellene,"
about the automobile. Once again,
it
was
a
new suburban
subway-taking Tin Partners couldn't understand. In the to ballads,
which meant songs with
about love. But with
artists like
a
who was
rock song
culture that the
IRT
had stuck
neat morality play enclosed, or song's
Chuck Bern;
so topical in future years. Folk music, which
artist
a classic
past, lyricists
lyrics for the first
almost journalistic sense of describing actual events, which
was actually mired
Chuck Bern- was
in tradition until the
is
is
time took on an
why Rock became
usually given the credit tor this,
advent of
Bob Dylan
primarily influenced in his formative years by
in the
Rock
'60s— an
*n' Roll.
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
52
To
Time and
from "Rocket 88"
ROLL
more symbolic of their self-made
the '50s generation, nothing was
culture than the automobile.
N'
kid-
again, rockers celebrated their wheels,
which
to "Maybellene" to the Flamingos' insane "Buick 59,"
featured coughing, upchucking noises and auto-destruct sound effects. It was
only matched in tastelessness by the Treniers' "Get
another stunning premonition to Rap/Hip Hop,
that, in
who gets the boot and n't
has to walk
Phillips's grasp.
nition.
the tale of a chick
because she would-
By now,
media
RCA was busy trying to sway Elvis out of Sam
the singing hillbilly had garnered considerable recog-
Even the Girand Ok Opij had relented and
attention.
The
up
Sam
Elvis's
Phillips kicked himself
new manager was
named Colonel Tom a ten-foot
Parker.
a
boy perform. So
in a massive swirl of
many
it
was
hype and
RCA final-
now seems
like the
shelf life during the ensuing years,
times.
former tent-show barker and carney hawker
Given
dancing bear,
the
contract for what
sum of $40,000. Considering Presley's
I'm sure
world
Elvis's
let
November 1955 when
turning point came in
persuaded Phillips to relinquish
paltry
Richard were making their grand
Little
inevitable that, before long, he'd be swept
that Parker's experience included giving the
no wonder
it's
Elvis
became such
a crass specta-
once he'd succumbed to the Colonel's grasp. By the time Elvis signed with
RCA, show al
the Car," a song
put out.
entrance onto the national scene,
cle
tells
home from Lovers' Lane
At about the same time Chuck and
ly
Out of
the cast was biz!
set:
Rock
And no form
'n'
Roll had
of music ever
become
made
itself
and aesthetic corruption so early in the game Part of the reason was Elvis.
Colonel time
Tom did.
RCAs
molded
He
set the
carnival, spectacle, wrestling,
so readily available to spiritu-
as
Rock
'n'
precedent
or,
Parker had already successfully managed
best-selling
Country
artist,
Roll.
more
accurately,
Hank Snow,
at that
and Elvis was certainly ripe for being
into a national superstar. Actors like
Marlon Brando and James Dean
had already captivated the nation with their sullen demeanors and amoral preoccupations, and Elvis was nal pecking order of
primarily a musical
phenomenon Elvis's
ization of Rock, period. as
bigger because he didn't belong to the inter-
Hollywood. At
music "industry." But
two years
much
least at that time, Elvis's success
that occurred outside of the
signing with
So there you have
RCA it
still
framework of the
represented the commercial-
— Rock
an uncorrupted force. Despite the
was
'n'
Roll lasted
fact that
some of
all
of about
Elvis's later
CHAPTER 3:
stuff
proved that he was an adequate
Roll. Elvis lost that
help get their rocks
after
heavy breathing. In ticularly in
own
Elvis.
Elvis
whole
cults
was exploding
all
Navy and had
to Sid Vicious.
all
star.
Sam had
a
over the nation and imitators started springing
Phillips? Well,
whole
if
Sam
maybe not Malcolm
stable, and,
'n'
Roll was so
'n'
were going
to be as big as
One
eponymous
of the great characteristics of early Rock
Beyond
it.
that, 'n'
'n'
anyone could outdo the Roll in the '50s was, above
breed of musicians better epitomized
neers of Rockabilly, that
major
of course, most of them did go on
acknowledged masters of the game because Rock
And no
Roll
new at that time
Yelvington, but he was every bit as
Roll was that anyone could play
moment.
Rock
didn't quit the
not fortune.
as Elvis (albeit less polished).
a
in the
Phillips knew, Carl Perkins could be the country's next
some degree of fame,
all,
a
would form around Vincent, par-
didn't realize that not all potential rockers
For
Well,
Launched by Capitol
who'd been
because he lost the Big Cheese. Rock
just
recording to
rods to
England, where he served as the role model for the original
—from John Lennon
Sam
that
new hot
the Norfolk, Virginia native would have
right. Vincent,
later years,
up everywhere, what of Sam
game
'n'
went much further than the King did with sex-crazed yelping and
leg,
As
Rock
of the cornfields and
the kiddies had to find
just fine in this capacity.
RCA acquired Elvis,
Rockabilly outfit in their
"Teds"
as
with "Be Bop a Lula," and his Blue Caps were an able-bodied
a big hit
bum
be construed
"stylist," it can't
Then
53
off.
Gene Vincent would do few months
GOTTA GUN
when Colonel Tom swept him out
pointed him towards... Babylon.
a
ELVIS
this
most insane of musical forms. From
than the pio-
their hiccupping
vocal reverberations to their bizarre style of dress (high collars, pink suits, classic
leather James
Dean
most of 'em were hicks
garb), these
raised
mad
cats
on the Grand
doing that they ended up playing
this
were
Ok
"real
Op?y,
music in the
it
gone"
all
right. Since
was purely
first place. It
their
own
was only the
humbleness of their surroundings that provided them with the kind of isolation necessary to
come up with something
provided the blueprint, but musically after
he
left
Sun
The sound
—and much more
to
so pure and untainted. Elvis might have it
had very
little
to
do with
Elvis, at least
do with Malcolm Yelvington.
of Rockabilly came from echo. This was a perfect example of
how technology was now playing a major role in the music business, sometimes
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
54
a
bigger role than the "artists."
see major musical trends
Metal
—
electric guitar
ROLL
again over the next few decades, we'd
— Disco, Synth-Pop, Rap, even to some extent Heavy The
their very existence to technological advancements.
owed
that
Time and
N'
was
a
prime example
—
in order for
something to "rock,"
Moore,
to be electric guitars. Instrumentalists like Scotty
seemed there had
Carl Perkins, and James Burlison (of the Rock
it
Roll Trio, another pioneer-
'n'
ing Rockabilly outfit) were the catalysts, popularizing a wealth of amplification
techniques that would resonate around the world. Consequendy,
would-be Country
Of Sam
artists
were turning to Rock.
Phillips' original
Sun
roster,
none were
really
Johnny Cash. The drum-based density of something Suede Shoes" was (and
still is)
Rock
'n'
Opiy. Unlike the well-rehearsed
always be controlled, and sometimes
was
as
much
artists
save
Carl Perkins's "Blue if,
an instru-
as
from the Western pickers on the
Country music of Nashville, Rockabilly was
punctuated by the sense of raw discovery
it
like
Country
Roll by definition even
mentalist, Perkins obviously took his cue
something new
many white,
—amplification,
when
after
all,
couldn't
a surprise to
the original rockabillies hit
These guys may have been hicks more than
them
was to their audience.
as it
hipsters,
upon
but they were blatantly
degrading the whole God-fearing mentality of the South with their deliberate vulgarity.
And when they finally got the chance to flee
Perkins, for instance, find?
The
to England.
And when he
got there, what did he
Beades!
Of all one most
went
the region, they did. Carl
the acts in
Sam
Phillips' stable, the
most outrageous one
likely to rival Elvis's sacred stature in the
Sun
roster
—and the
—was Jerry Lee
Lewis, whose inflammatory stage act and persona could rival Little Richard's.
Lewis was
a
white country bumpkin pianist from Louisiana whose primary
influences were honky-tonk artists like
These
artists
able to the
Moon
were on the verge of Rock anyway, and Lewis was readily adapt-
form due
to his deliberate outrageousness.
Swaggart claims that Jerry was "hossing" around to Lewis:
was
just
"Oh sure.
more
Many
Mullican and Merrill Moore.
.
.1
had an act then, of course
naturally good."
as early as it
Jimmy
age nine. According
was not quite
as polished.
.
.it
7
of Lewis's early performances were in the church, but as he grew
older he drifted toward the houses of ill repute like so
probably because, at that time,
I:
His cousin
that's
many
where the money was.
other musicians, It
was
in such
an
— CHAPTER 3: environment that he picked up
GOTTA GUN
ELVIS
his ribald technique,
the piano bench over and other theatrical maneuvers. pianist
Roy
Hall performing the original
55
which involved kicking
He
"Whole Lotta
also heard Hillbilly
Shakin' Goin' On."
Hall was another interesting pre-Rock character, and he befriended both Elvis
and Jerry Lee, schooling them in the early days before either became
famous.
By the time Sam this side
found Lewis, he was the most raucous performer
Phillips
of Little Richard.
flashy hillbilly perfect his
The
advent of Rock
'n'
Roll
no doubt helped
brand of arrogance. Part of Rock
this
Roll being born
'n'
was the birth of a kind of "superstar" that had never existed before
—
flashy
and
outrageous. As Peter Guralnick noted: "Jerry Lee... perfected the art not only
of deliberate outrageousness but of creating a distance between himself and the
outrageousness which permits
on the proceedings
all
ly godlike
That's
to be extravagant
same time."
at the
Making commentary on
him
and to make commentary
8
the proceedings: This was a kind of mythic, near-
understanding of the world that previous entertainers never had.
why
the masses gobbled
it
up with the kind of fervent devotion usually
reserved for holy rollers.
The
early
commercial. scared. Elvis
Rock may have been
And when and
tested,
Little
down were
for instance, got
own
cousin,
little
Army and God,
their formerly rocking selves.
quickly tamed in other ways: both
hung out
news
was nevertheless
it
even some of the true pioneers grayed, or got
Richard chose the
means of redemption from back
deliberately crass, but
respectively, as
Those who
didn't
Chuck Berry and Jerry Lee,
to dry for little-girl lust. In Jerry Lee's case
that spread like buckshot through the
was
it
his
media and brought
a
of the Southern bedroom/backwoods tradition to the eyes of the nation.
Although the kids couldn't have cared of which there were
the moral watchdogs of the 1950s
—weren't about to
many
when he showed no remorse money-making teen
less,
idol as
let
for his brazen act.
Lewis
slid into a
Lewis off the hook, especially
Sam
Phillips
had
lost
another
period of blacklisted notoriety
before being redeemed as a successful Country artist in the next decade.
At the time,
Phillips's
trough of potential Elvises was
Roy Orbison came up with "Ooby Dooby," an
still
knee-deep. Texan
all-time Rockabilly classic later
covered note-for-note by Creedence Clearwater Revival. But Orbison never really
caught on until he'd changed his
style completely,
becoming die con-
— SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
56
summate crooner he was Phillips
in the '60s.
By
N'
ROLL
was slowly seceding from the record
The Sun
industry.
Studios would
remain an active base of recording for years to follow, but Sun's days vative label
record, "Suzy a
Q" by
an inno-
Chess cut
rivals at
a Rockabilly
Dale Hawkins.
performer would come along to shake up the whole Pop/Rockabilly
paradigm. In 1956 in Clovis,
New Mexico,
that could loosely be termed Rockabilly. Holly's
more on Western and even Pop worthy precursor
to the
sensibilities,
modern Rock
own
a series
Petty
of recordings
songwriting was based
but his band the Crickets were a
Roll line-up.
'n'
Norman
producer named
a
would-be superstar named Buddy Holly through
led a
as
were numbered. The industry had caught up with the echo-laden
sound created in Memphis. Even Sam's old
Soon
Sam
and
that time he'd left Sun,
The
fact that bassist
Jerry Allison used a Fender electric bass as opposed to the stand-up bass, which
was
still
the standard at the time, was a big influence
on
future performing units
the Beades, for instance). Petty's embellishments weren't always for the
(like
better,
however, particularly after 1958
potential
"teen idol."
when Holly began being groomed
The maudlin
on songs
string arrangements
as a like
"Reminiscing" and "Lonesome Tears" were dangerously close to Connie Francis. Like a lot of great
Rock
Holly started to go downhill when he Crickets, he cut "It Doesn't less
prone to schlock than
new one
business. really
The
knows what
his influence
But
lost his original band.
he died in
a
a
due to the
the
first
plane crash soon after that means no
his true musical aspirations were.
fact that
Brothers. their
it
thing's for sure
was the Everly Brothers, large-
The
from that
city to
paid off for years to come.
unique harmonizing talents
father, Earl Everly.
act
they were a Nashville product.
successful recording artists
tradition in
One
was immense, particularly on the next generation.
youthful audience, and their
of the
twenty-one-year-old kid in a whole
The most successful Country crossover ly
Buddy
Without the
this wasn't a self-conscious "sellout"
—Holly was
fact that
Elvis to Alice Cooper,
Matter Anymore," which proved that he was no
Elvis.
type pulled by today's goats
from
artists,
The
Everlys were in fact
attempt to reach a more
They began
as children in a family
developing
group led by their
Everly Brothers were heirs to the whole brother-duet
Country music that included the Blue Sky Boys and Louvin
They may have worn
tight pants
and swung their guitars around, but
harmonies were perfectly angelic. Songs
like "All I
Have
to
Do Is Dream"
CHAPTER 3: ELVIS GOTTA GUN
57
and "Devoted to You" were hypnotically close to dream music, way ahead of the
Memphis pack
No
harmonically.
less a
personage than John Cale has
claimed that certain tonal qualities perfected by the Everlys were the inspiration for
some of the primal noise pioneered by
the early Velvet Underground.
In Hollywood, the proximity of the film and
on would-be
stricter standards
TV industries imposed even
"rockers." Take, for example, Ricky Nelson.
—
Like the Everlys, he was part of a show-biz family real-life
family of
TVs
in his case, the popular
Ozzie and Harriet. Using the show as a springboard,
Ricky launched a career
while certainly manufactured, was not entirely
that,
devoid of passion. Backed by an excellent band featuring the exceptional gui-
James Burton, Ricky was an above-average
tarist
What You
tion into songs like "Believe
singer, putting
Say" and "Hello
honest emo-
Mary Lou." Nelson
proved his sincerity by choosing to pursue a more purist singer/songwriter path
opposed to the crooner
in the '60s as
And
(including Elvis).
before
it
The
had
really
to prove
Rock
'n'
he wasn't stuck in that
Roll artist from L.A.
ing talent was Eddie Cochran. artist
epitomized by
many of his
era,
'50s peers
he rebuked "retro"
begun, in 1972, with the hit "Garden Party."
other white
Rockabilly
style
He
who proved
to have endur-
wasn't a Hollywood brat but a legitimate
with an even more sophisticated knowledge of sound than his
Southern counterparts, thanks to his proximity to the legendary Gold Star studios.
Far from being a pawn to some producer, Cochran produced his
sions,
wrote
his
own
cardboard box for a
songs, and was responsible for such innovations as using a
drum
actual sonic sphere of
saying
"why not?"
in
Rock
in the
their respective fields.
"Summertime 'n'
Roll
is
Blues," once again proving that the
very close to avant-garde. Cochran was
same way John Cage or Cecil Taylor were saying
And "why not"
is
Cochran's musical influence spread tions.
own ses-
it
in
often the root of true genius. all
the
way
across
two musical genera-
His innovative technique of aligning the bass and guitar to the same har"heavy" sound that would subsequendy influence die
monic frequency created
a
Ramones: compare
"Suzy Is
instance.
The
their
Sex Pistols went so
a
Headbanger"
far as to
to his
cover the
Else," Cochran's 1959 juvenile delinquent anthem.
Cochran became
whom he moved
a
to
"C'mon Everybody,"
latter, as
To
a car accident, as the curse
his
well as "Somethin'
Rockabilly purists, Eddie
venerated institution second only to
England before
Gene
Vincent, with
—Cochran's—untimely death
of Buddy Holly continued.
for
in
I960
in
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
58
N'
ROLL
Right about that time, Elvis was getting out of the army, but he didn't go
back to Rock
'n'
He — and
Roll.
mostly Colonel
agenda in mind, mainly to become
ment
business, even
if it
a
Tom—had
a
much shrewder
long-term commodity in the entertain-
meant staying
Hollywood
in
for ten years
making
lousy movies. People didn't realize at the time, but this was to have a grim effect
on the whole Rock oping:
Rock 'n'
'n'
Roll process.
We were already seeing the pattern devel-
Roll had in a few short years already
chandising and crass commercialism.
It
music the world has ever known, but in porate devil,
Rock would invent
would ultimately rob or ambition.
it
doomed itself to mass mer-
would soon become the most popular its
assimilation to the wills of the cor-
a system of control
and dissemination that
of its intrinsic value: the ability to
rock, free
of pretense
Chapter 4
JKiLLTHE"&u?nMEtt We
MAY be FORGETTING SOMEONE HERE: Thomas
Edison. Because
if
there
hadn't have been any reproduction of sound, there wouldn't have been any Jazz,
Rock 'n'
Roll, record business, nothmg. Despite the popularity of hoedowns
and
jamborees in the early half of the twentieth century, recordings have proven to be the most effective means of bringing music to the masses. Edison's blueprint for recorded sound
came from
ured that any instrument that could carry the
the telephone
human voice
—he
fig-
could also retain
In a weird predecessor to today's answering machine, Edison's
first
it.
sound-
recording device was designed to deliver messages from people with a phone to
people without one: a talking telegraph, in other words.
When
completed, the phonograph was cylindrical in shape and capable of
both recording and playback. Edison tested the machine by reciting "Mary Little
but
Lamb."
when he
February
He
did,
19,
had to give
a
it
good old-fashioned crank
he was amazed by what he heard.
it
thereafter, thus
a
to play back,
The machine was
1878, and initially marketed as a novelty.
Phonograph Company was formed shortly
to get
Had
patented on
The Edison
Speaking
beginning the record-
ing industry.
Flash ahead ten years. grant
named Emile
efficient
A young,
self-taught scientist
Berliner discovers that a lateral-moving stylus
means of recording than Edison's model.
disc itself
and German immi-
—from cylinders to
flat sheets,
Berliner's first
which are more
is a
upgrade
more is
the
easily transcribable.
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
60
ROLL
N'
makes
Eventually, Berliner discovers that a coating of zinc with an acid solution
reproduction possible, and there you have
While height of cylinder
all this
its
was taking
it:
the
first
records.
place, Edison's cylindrical disc player
World War
popularity. It wasn't until the beginning of
became
Through newer and
entirely extinct.
was I
at the
that the
finer recordings, disc
manufacturers were able to produce more enduring works, such as whole operas,
on
Columbia and other
disc.
mocked
early producers of cylinders
this
with ads that accused the makers of records of only reproducing "cut and dried
which
subjects,"
of course, what the whole history of recorded music was
is,
going to come down to eventually.
Shordy before
cylinders
Company emerged
went
all
the
way
into the clunker, the Victor
The
to court America's nascent record-buying public.
switch to platters had spurred a flurry of recording
activity.
The
"music busi-
ness" had officially begun. This created the need for composers of the popular
songs that would a record, but
want
come
to
dominate the Hit Parade. Anybody could
not anyone could compose a tune that millions of people would
to hear again
and again. Record companies found that
the appetite of the mass populace, they had to feed Swill
is
always mass-produced.
It is
them
does
is
named because they
go pop.
The
fall
of swill.
never a frontier explosion, soul purge,
Rhythm
Folk music, Blues, Soul, Gospel,
in order to satisfy
shovels
or spontaneous eruption like Hillbilly, Bluegrass, Country
egories are so
now make
&
Western, Jazz,
& Blues, or Rock 'n' Roll. These cat-
describe a certain style of music. But
only thing that qualifies music as "pop"
is
all
Pop
the fact that
it's
popular.
America's foremost music composing factories were
lower midtown neighborhood of
New
York,
all
located in the
named Tin Pan
Alley.
same
Through
years of bar mitzvahs, piano lessons, and synagogue singalongs, these boys had
learned a nice erally
way with
bang away
Put into
a tune.
until they
a factory setting,
came out with
a song,
men
where they would
like
lit-
George Gershwin
and Irving Berlin were soon to become the best-known composers in the world.
The
hacksmiths
musical legacy of the
who
rolled out of
first
half of the century was dominated
Tin Pan
Alley: Berlin,
by the
Gershwin, Cole Porter,
Johnny Mercer, Rodgers and Hart, Rodgers and Hammerstein, Hoagy Carmichael, and others. Standards
—so much
From
their repertoires
came the Book of American
so that forty years later, John Coltrane
would
still
be play-
1
CHAPTER 4: KILL THE BUSINESS ing them, and
be
Bob Dylan was heard
6
to remark: "Eeeeh,
none of us claimed
to
good as Johnny Mercer."
as
Pre- 1910, the only way a composer could profit from his/her compositions
was through the
sale
there arose whole
of sheet music. However, once recording came about,
new
questions about rights of ownership, such
composer be compensated
up the
issue of royalties.
for every rendition of his/her
But the
as:
should a
work? This brought
issue didn't really accelerate until the advent
of radio, which meant that anybody could just pluck any song off the steal
it.
That
is,
air
and
wasn't protected.
if it
This caused the formation of the ASCAP, or American Society of
Composers, Authors, and Publishers. However, "American Society" once
ASCAP
again didn't include Blacks or rural whites.
domain of Tin Pan
Alley,
and for years they had
what broadcasters were allowed ly
came
to terms with radio,
of Broadcasters
name
says
it all:
to play
which
felt
men who'd more
BMI
basically
"recording
artist"
—which meant
opened up the door to
geous to
on
But
ASCAP never proper-
1940 the National Association
a
between
all
who
could be considered
they had to do was put out
a record.
a
This
wealth of musical resources, including ones ASCxAP
ASCAP
BMI was
or less received their musical training in
belonged to anyone
would've never bothered licensing
whereas
in
air.
monopoly over
the need to establish
vaudeville,
song,
why
a contractual
BMI — Broadcast Music, Inc. The "broadcast music." Whereas ASCAP had been the domain of
song-and-dance
difference
is
on the
was the publishing
and
—
like
BMI
Blues and Country
was that
ASCAP
copyrighting the performance
& Western. The
was copyrighting the
itself.
This was advanta-
BMI because, by that time, the "hit parade" was almost totally reliant
radio.
In the years preceding the inroads had already been
made
ASCAP/BMI in
controversy,
some important
American popular music. In 1938, the
Vocalion recording of Big Joe Turner and Pete Johnson doing "Roll 'em Pete"
became the
biggest-selling Blues record since
Mamie
Smith's "Crazy Blues" in
1920. This reawakened the industry to the expanding growth of the Black
record market. Within a few years, thousands of independent labels had opened
up
to
accommodate such Black-oriented
Many times,
fields as
Bebop, Blues, and Gospel.
the labels recorded white Hillbilly artists as well (King Records in
Cincinnati, for instance).
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
62
music
in
American popular
City, at
one time America's
new idiom
"Roll 'em Pete" showcased a whole
—the "blues shouter." Coming from Kansas
ROLL
N'
lewdest locale, Turner was a veteran of the red light districts that also produced the ful
Count
Basie Orchestra,
whose version of Swing was
more
a great deal
soul-
than that of their Northern counterparts. Along with fellow shouter Jimmy
Rushing, Turner helped introduce
a
more robust style of vocalizing to the pop-
ular idiom that contrasted with the polished slickness of
Cab
example of Turner's impact was the success of Frankie Lane, the
employ the "shouting" technique
singer to
Como
Perry
and Frank
as
A good
Calloway.
first
opposed to the crooning
white
style
of
Sinatra.
Another important development was the advent of the boogie woogie piano style, as
Lewis,
epitomized by barrelhouse pianists
alert the public to the arrival
culminating in a
whole
Cow Cow
Davenport.
series
of this
new idiom. The result was
"Boogie Woogie."
it
The
of popular recordings with Boogie
much
to
a series of rip-offs
Will Bradley Orchestra
Woogie themes.
Swing" concerts in 1938 featuring Ammons, Lewis,
Johnson, and Count Basie can be seen as the craze,
Woogie Trio and played
Carnegie Hall in 1938 and '39 that did
Tommy Dorsey's
If the "Spirituals to
Woogie
Meade Lux
Lewis, and Pete Johnson formed the Boogie
a successful series of concerts at
made
Albert Amnions,
Yancey, Clarence "Pinetop" Smith, and
Jimmy
Ammons,
like
can also be seen
when many
year
as a
of the Boogie
"official" start
significant changes
occurred in the relationship between Black and white musicians. That year, the
Famous Door, series
a nightclub in
of engagements by
ly the club
New York,
Count
owners sensed
it
opened
Basie. Far
its
doors to Black patrons for a
from an
altruistic act,
was commercial suicide
it's
more
like-
to continue their whites-
only policy, considering that 90 percent of Basie's audience was Black. That
same
year, the Black Blues singer Billie
Holiday joined the Artie Shaw Band. At
Goodman
around the same time, the Benny
musicians, including vibraphonist Lionel
Orchestra hired a series of Black
Hampton,
pianist
Teddy Wilson, and
electric guitarist Charlie Christian.
Under FDR,
Blacks were allowed union
This went for musicians nightlife, cities like
as well.
This created
membership a
for the first time.
whole new element of Black
where Black musicians found themselves
infinitely
employable. In
Detroit and Chicago, where America's increasing industrialization
had resulted
in better opportunities for Blacks,
some of them were
able to
open
CHAPTER 4: KILL THE BUSINESS
their
own
sively.
nightclubs where they could employ Black musicians almost exclu-
Although
ing what
it
was
appeared on the surface that Blacks were
it
be part of American
like to
and Blacks
gated,
63
finally experienc-
country was
society, the
segre-
still
faced discrimination wherever they went. But in the
still
music industry, Blacks were about to exert a newfound importance on the buying trends of the public.
Although there were
as
many
Black Big Bands as white ones, the popular
Swing bands who dominated the Hit Parade
white. But overly slick pros didn't appeal to a significant
now had buying power ally
compelling
style
Hampton, the
a repetitive
new
a
style called
Louis Jordan lized typical
Arnold Shaw: I
that
more emotionthis
genre was
who'd played with Benny
Rock
Illinois Jacquet,
riffs,
with a honking
"Flying High" intro-
& His Tympani Five, who recorded for Decca in the '40s, utia
more downscaled format (hence "Tympani
who'd played and sung
"I didn't think I could
did everything they did."
There were many (chiefly the draft).
was
later
chiefly
"jump Blues."
Swing rhythms but in
Five"). Jordan,
vibraharpist
were
number of Blacks
cater to their tastes, a
not unlike
riff,
saxophone solo by the Texas-bred tenor duced
'40s
of music emerged. Perhaps the pinnacle in
"Flying High" by Lionel
Goodman. Based on
To
of their own.
and
in the '30s
By
in the Big
handle
a
big band. But with
the time
my little band,
on
Bands to shrink
Be Bop and Rhythm
on the
ceedings and concentrate
told
'
factors that caused the Big
a conscious decision
Band of Chick Webb,
&
Blues had taken hold,
part of the musicians to scale
a smaller unit.
in the 1940s
down
it
the pro-
the music of the Swing
Whereas
bands had been chiefly designed for dancing, the new music was more
lyrical
cerebral. In the case of a performer like Louis Jordan,
he was
and in
many ways
able to incorporate both Black
metamorphosis. This ensured Black.
As
a result,
Jordan
&
his popularity
his
crossed over during the '40s,
and white resources
in order to achieve this
with white audiences as well as
Tympani Five racked up
many
of them with
a
a string of hits that
"novelty" base: "School
Days," "Caledonia," "Ain't Nobody Here but Us Chickens," "Five Guys
Named
Moe." But these weren't mere novelty sides, because the musicianship was and because Jordan was typical
jump Blues
ence on
Chuck
to
a brilliant arranger
Caribbean rhythms
Berry).
Jordan added
a lot
who
tight
incorporated everything from
in songs like
"Run Joe"
(a
big influ-
of comic voices and other laugh-get-
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK N' ROLL
64
ensure his popularity with mixed audiences. This
ters to
up
readily
ways, the in turn
by nascent Rock
Bo Diddley
Rollers (like
'n'
Tympani Five were the blueprint
spawn the Rock revolution.
Bill
&
many
for instance). In
R&B jump bands that would
for the
Haley
would be picked
trait
the Comets, a white act
who
Decca, copied Jordan's whole sound and, in 1945, the popular
also recorded for
white bandleader
Woody Herman
And Jordan
covered Jordan's "Caledonia."
was years ahead of his time in terms of promotion, creating what amounted to the
first
"videos," in the
that could be
shown
in
form of cinematic shorts featuring the band performing movie theaters between
features.
Another thing Louis Jordan accomplished was to bring Black popular slang into the mainstream.
Whereas, for years, white bandleaders had been trying to
parrot Black hipster jive and had been
making
fools of themselves, Jordan's use
of the vernacular was "authentic." Jordan's records were the
first
many
time
whites encountered the nuances of hip urban blackspeak. In this sense, the
Tympani Five were not only
a
premonition of Rock, but Rap
as well.
In the years following Jordan's ascendance, Blacks began to see the
first
signs of mass acceptance in the recording field. Part of this
was the war ending:
the recording industry was booming, as were
There was no
age of shellac now. Record companies had a
with
new
talent.
There was
catering to Black recording
The
industries.
little
more freedom
short-
to experiment labels,
many
postwar economy had convinced
many
a proliferation artists.
all
of small, independent
people that starting a small, independent record label was a worthy entrepreneurial venture.
Even Black
Capitol,
artist:
by no means
a Black label,
made
their first million with a
Cole's early recordings were
Nat "King" Cole.
consisting of bass/guitar/piano before he branched off to
recordings in the crooner style. the
Pop
One
of these,
"Mona
made with make
a series
There were other
—so
Black ersatz crooners, like the "Singing Private," Cecil Gant
in the U.S. at
made
his first record, "I
Wonder," he was
Army. The song never crossed over on
one point the
label that issued
it,
a
of
Lisa," crossed over into
charts and eventually sold half a million copies.
because at the time he
a trio
still
Nat "King" Cole
named enlisted
scale,
but
Gilt Edge, reported that they were selling
100,000 records per month. Surely that kind of success inspired the rush of small, independent labels that late 1940s.
were popping up
all
over the
West Coast
in the
CHAPTER 4: KILL THE BUSINESS Further developments were occurring in the music.
Not
only were the
hits
65
field
of commercial Black
of the Ink Spots and Nat "King" Cole adorned
with the kind of lush arrangements usually afforded white crooners
like
or Sinatra, but in L.A., the revolutionary electric blues guitarist,
Walker, cut his
first sides
"Mean Old World" and
for Capitol.
Baby" were Rock prototypes, considering that they lineup about ten years before the
Walker would go on
to greater
fact: bass, guitar,
fame
T-Bone
Got
a
Break
utilized the classic
Rock
"I
piano, drums, and
when
in the '50s,
Como
no horns.
electrified Blues really
caught on.
The
proliferation of independent labels caused
music to reach a mass audience. With no indies relied
reason,
on
local talent or
most of the
whole new
A&R budgets to speak of, most of the
on demos people sent them showcased an
early independents
strains of Black
in the mail.
eclectic
For
this
mix of talent. The
whole range of Black music was changing so rapidly that terms
like
"boogie
woogie" or "jump Blues" suddenly became antiquated because they weren't inclusive enough. Billboard,
which
records into a catch-all chart called the
On June
all
"race"
"Harlem Hit Parade," came up with
perfect appellation for the wide variety of Blues."
had been dumping
until that time
new sounds
25, 1945, they instituted the
new
had any records place in the actual "hit parade," National, Apollo, Jubilee, DeLuxe, and
These were the records being played
the
emerging: "Rhythm
&
category. Before they ever
labels like Exclusive, Savoy,
R&B
King had number-one
in Black bars
hits.
and nightclubs, and
at
dances and hops in Black high schools.
With
the advent of
airwaves opened
up
catered to the independent labels
to foreign sounds. In order to
playing records on the licensed to
BMI —which
BMI, came
air,
air time,
the notion of
with royalties paid to musicians and songwriters
into being. In order to
whole new industry emerged
fill
—the
—mainly
accommodate
this process, a
that of the radio station "jock,"
who spun
records and shilled for sponsors in between. Eventually the "DJs," as they were
almost instantaneously branded, became personalities in their
was
all
own
adding up to the kind of environment in which Rock could
As the
'50s
right.
This
flourish.
dawned, there was a new generation forming, one who'd never
known a nonnuclear, nonelectric world. Teenagers became downright possessive about their music, but in order for that to happen the older, wiser, somewhat
more jaded DJs had
to
come along
to introduce the transistorized generation to
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
66
the almighty Beat.
ing
it
for realizing
DJs
to the
it
to the rest of the world): the hillbilly Boogie
shout, and the factors that
So
Hand
grit
ROLL
one thing (and thus reveal-
Woogie, the
it
(as a
was
it
DJs that invented Rock 'n'
actually the
was no surprise that
R&B
as early as 1948, a
on
his show.
KFVD
in L.A., until
Negro
audience, Jazz wasn't cutting at that
someone
told
him
Roll, at least as a
it
time meant Cecil Gant,
economy had brought more than
At
first
anymore.
He
Nat "King"
phe-
&
Rhythm
Blues
DJ named Hunter
he was playing Jazz on
wanted
to reach the
soon switched to
R&B,
Cole, Louis Jordan. For the
R&B
development.
2 million people to California,
The wartime
many of them
This led to the expansion of the Watts section of Los Angeles, one of
the largest concentrations of Blacks in the country. that a lot of the independent labels formed. ally
white
that if he really
next couple of years, L.A. was the hotbed for
Blacks.
Roll.
'n'
music, the ingredients were already there as early as '46-47).
Hancock was showcasing
which
Gospel
R&B weren't that far apart. And it was all these
of
In Los Angeles, where a lot of the impetus for postwar occurred,
sanctified
would eventually come together under the banner of Rock
in a sense,
nomenon
lowdown
N'
founded
to keep a
in a shoebox:
shoebox on
his
messages, and unpaid
among
However good
was
environment
in this
of them, Specialty, was
owner Art Rupe paid some guy two bucks
desk to
bills.
file all
The
important of the early Rock Little Richard,
One
It
'n'
a
liter-
month
of Specialty's correspondence, phone
label eventually
became one of the most
Roll merchants, featuring the recordings of
others.
their intentions,
independent record label owners, whether
Black or white, met with resistance from the industry at large. There was no the major labels were going to let these upstarts encroach cally a
monopoly. So they made
it difficult
for the indie
began to
accelerate, the pressing plants
the major labels
when
making them
the sales of
—many of them co-opted
—had no choice but to
relent, if
Allen,
press the
R&B
in
records
some way by
only for commercial purposes.
Meanwhile, DJs across the country were getting hip to the the South, white disc jockeys like
basi-
owners to gain access to
pressing plants, limiting the quantity they could press and
records in the middle of the night. However,
upon what was
way
R&B
buzz. In
John R. Richbourg, Gene Nobles, Hoss
and Zena Sears were making believers out of people. Because these jocks
played mostly Black music, their programs were relegated to the late-night hours. As far as parents were concerned, the DJs were messengers of a bad vibe.
CHAPTER 4: KILL THE BUSINESS The
67
DJs, on the other hand, understood this kind of notoriety perfecdy, and
the best ones played
No
it
one applied
up.
this principle
more
effectively than
Rock
notoriety served as a gateway into
'n'
Roll.
Pennsylvania in 1921, son of a traveling salesman, Freed
Alan Freed, whose
Born
in
Johnstown,
moved
to
Ohio
short-
he was born. In high school, he played trombone, eventually leading
ly after
own combo
called the Sultans of Swing.
Goodman, among
big fan of Benny
When the
Big Bands
others. Later on,
hit,
his
he became a
when Freed was
present-
ing his spectacular concerts at places like the Brooklyn Paramount, he claimed
he sympathized with the kids
who waited in line for hours to get tickets because
he'd done the same thing with a nutshell:
Goodman. That was
he sympathized with the
Freed's
Freed's whole aesthetic in
kids.
whole approach to broadcasting was indeed
proselytizing. After a
WKST in New Castle, Pennsylvania, Freed settled in Akron, where he landed a job as the host of a local TV show. Unfortunately, Freed wasn't the most photogenic individual, and he didn't have TV appeal. DJ
stint as a classical
at
However, he'd soon find
his real niche in the
world of radio.
Like most disc jockeys, Freed bounced around the
point in Freed's career
During
By June 1951
WJW in Cleveland. This stint proved to be
he was working for
ular music.
dial a lot.
—and, curiously enough,
the turning
in the history of Western
that time, a business called the
Record Rendezvous Shop,
run by someone named Leo Mintz, became one of Freed's sponsors.
Mintz Black
told Freed that he'd recently
R&B
records like Lloyd Price's
surprise to Freed, as he'd tip sheets at the
a lot of requests
from white
One day kids for
"Lawdy Miss Clawdy." This came
as
no
been following such developments through industry
time and was about to go to an all-R&B format.
Calling his late-night playlist
had
pop-
almost entirely to
He
show the Moo?idog House
Rhythm
opened
&
Freed confined his
Blues and punctuated his presentation
show every night with
with hipster
jive.
"Blues for a
Moondog" by Todd Rhodes,
his
Party,
a
record on King called
a Black record featuring the kind
of
honking saxophone solo that had by now become the mainstay of R&B. Because his vocal chords had been damaged due to an earlier operation in
which he'd had some polyps cauterized, Freed's voice was low and this reason, a lot
of people assumed he was Black, and he
rectify this misconception.
gravely.
For
made no attempt
to
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
68
Freed became hugely popular
ROLL
N'
Cleveland during the early
in
'50s.
This
enabled him to organize a series of concerts that were profitable not only to him
WJW as well. One particular package show, held at the Cleveland Arena
but to
on March of Black
21, 1952, helped bring national attention to the rising
Rhythm
&
Moondog Coronation
Blues. Called "the
estimated 25,000 to the arena to see such acts as Billy the Orioles, the local as
Moonglows, Charles Brown, and
others.
Ball,"
&
Ward
phenomenon
The
pulled an
it
His Dominoes, write-ups in the
paper were superb, and editorials focused on the growing potential of radio
an effective advertising method. In other words, the whole industry was
winner from Freed's
efforts.
Freed was one of the few DJs Blacks liked
moted
too.
who
— that he played —and pro-
could break the color barrier
This was pardy due to the
—mosdy Black music. But there were
R&B
ning
him
fact
that
number of Black DJs
also a
is,
spin-
their respective shows. Oftentimes, though, their delivery
on
a
was
even more frenzied than Freed's, taking on the pitch of a gospel preacher (which isn't surprising,
considering that so
much
Black music came straight out of the
church). In Philadelphia there was Jocko Henderson,
with In
its
strong signal, could be heard
all
the
whose show on
way up and down
some markets where the population was overwhelmingly
tions
found that
it
was in their best interest to switch over to
would've never touched Negro music
lowing the lead of men
This quickly
set the
like
a
few years
more
if
many
sta-
Stations that
now faithfully fol-
effective
medium
for
because radio was
promoting
a record.
become
a
Played
regional
hit.
the record "broke out" and got picked up by, say, twenty-five
stations, the label
might have
a national hit.
So the whole relationship
between the disc jockeys and record companies got speak. This
Black,
R&B.
were
a tailspin,
extensively in one geographical location, a song could
However,
the East Coast.
Freed.
whole record industry into
becoming the most
earlier
WD AS,
spawned the
first
flowerings of payola, or the practice of steady
palm-greasing, which would almost bring late '50s. In a
a lot friendlier, so to
McCarthyesque campaign
Rock
'n'
that befit
mittee would later purge the industry of
all
such
Roll to
its era, a
its
knees in the
Senate subcom-
illegal practices,
but not
before a lot of loose cash had already changed hands. In the interim
haps as a result of
all
— Rock
the palm-greasing
popular phenomenon.
'n'
— per-
Roll would explode as a
CHAPTER 4: KILL THE BUSINESS
It
was easy to see why
it
was
in the record
69
companies' best interests to keep
the DJs happy. For a couple grand, or even a couple hundred, most DJs could
made recording by some
be bribed to play any record. If this was a hastily
performer on an indie label
were
—the
—which most of the
potential profits were
—maybe
bought cheap
wad of
a
immense.
On
early
Rock
'n'
local
Roll records
the local level, DJs could be
or some marijuana or a whore. These
bills,
expenditures got worked right into the budget of small labels as a necessary
inherent in the big, bad record business
—which was becoming bigger and bad-
der by the day. Because radio was chiefly responsible for making Rock a
evil
Roll
'n'
popular phenomenon, the coercion to make such expenditures was immense.
Alan Freed bought four houses before anyone caught up with him. But by the time they did, he had bigger problems.
Because Freed was the most famous of the Rock
'n'
Roll DJs,
Payola Scandal happened in 1959, he was one of the hardest
lems actually began as
one thing,
a
far
back
as 1954,
New York
famous
when he
street musician
first
left his internal
including his
liver.
For
a
heavy drinker
like
By
froze his assets, and he
no radio
1960,
Long before
station
to any given
was such
again 'n'
if
Roll
the
It
came when the IRS
blacklisted
essen-
by the radio industry.
become rampant: whenever
a record "break out," they'd
a small label lacking
send
a representative
DJ
program
lists
—the time
slot
occupied by
a
DJ was essentially
his
was not unusual to hear the same song two times, or over and over liked
time, certain cities
it
enough
—or had
as
Rock
would become more of a
busi-
a vested interest in the record.
to increase in popularity,
became key "breakout"
Philadelphia, for one; or Cincinnati,
payola a record stood
Roll.
in a life-
would touch him.
had to help
would continue
Mob
For
successfully
Then Freed was
it
This would put an end to these corrupt and haphazard
ness.
to prominence.
town to grease the palms of local DJs. These were the days before there
a thing as
or her own.
prob-
Freed, this meant, basically, that his
was subsequendy
then, payola had
in resources felt they
his
the
organs permanendy damaged,
days were numbered. But the final blow for Freed tially
But
named Moondog
sued Freed for infringing on his right to the name. threatening auto accident that
came
hit.
when
little
practices. In the
it
chance of getting
was reported by
mean-
Rock
V Roll:
Variety that
without
areas in the early days ot
where
But
airplay.
influence was another prevalent factor in the early days of Rock
'n'
Tike, for instance, the case of Morris Levy, founder of Roulette
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
70
N'
ROLL
Records, original owner of Birdland, and a pivotal figure in the birth of Rock 'n'
Levy was
Roll. Like a lot of the early moguls,
of New York. His father died
many ailments,
raised
when he was
him and
literally
born on the
streets
two, and his mother, saddled with
his brother Irving alone. Irving
ended up
join-
ing the Navy, but Morris found himself expelled from school and in reform school for assaulting a seventy-five-year-old
over whose head he poured
woman
quart of black ink.
a
—namely
From
his teacher,
that point on, he
turned his back on education. At age fourteen, he became a hat check boy at the
Greenwich Village
result was,
By doing so, he caught
Genovese crime
future head of the
End
Inn.
when
it
family. Eboli
came time
the favor of Tommy Eboli,
took the boy under his wing.
to purchase Birdland, for
juvenile delinquent and first-time business
some reason
the
owner Morris Levy had no trou-
ble securing the loan.
When Rock 'n' Roll hit, Levy wanted a piece of the action. In ed Roulette Records.
The
label's first hit
performer named Buddy Knox.
It
was
was "Party Doll" by
be attributed to one thing: he was the
less
enormous
be gained from publishing.
was
infinitely
redeemable
—
erally pilfered copyrights
that
is,
if he
owned
from composers,
He
R&B
artists
like a
good
deal.
would
a Texas rockabilly
first
to realize the
understood that
a hit
in essence selling
own
songs.
them
To
in turn resell
them again and
lit-
own
their
the struggling
from the ghetto who'd never even imagined fame,
Once Levy had gained
record
the copyright. So early on, he
contracts in exchange for exclusive rights to their
Black
start-
a big hit, but Levy's success as a label
owner can more or assets to
1956 he
it
seemed
the publishing rights to their songs, he
again.
Not
surprisingly, Roulette
became
a
leader in the repackaged oldies field.
The way Levy accomplished this was shady business dealings. set the
One
precedent for the
of his primary victims was George Goldner,
New York indies
who'd sold the back catalogs of both Goldner got lucky
in
to devour other record labels through
with his
Rama and Gee
labels to Roulette
labels,
by the end of the
1956 when he discovered Frankie
who
Lyman
&
but
'50s.
the
New York vocal group who, despite their instant popularity, worked cheap. When Goldner met Frankie Lyman he was singing "I'm Not a Juvenile Delinquent"; by the late '60s he'd died a penniless junkie in a New
Teenagers,
a
Black
York ghetto. But Goldner and Levy were
essential to the birth of
because, like Alan Freed, they saw the dollar signs.
Rock
'n'
Roll
— CHAPTER 4: KILL THE BUSINESS
71
After Freed had conquered the Midwestern radio market, that
he would end up in
New York,
at
WINS. When
he
did,
it
it
was inevitable
was
in collusion
with Morris Levy. Because Levy had such enormous influence in the nightclub scene due to his success with Birdland as well as his
Freed asked Levy to become his manager.
New York
mob connections.
Now Levy also had an interest in
the
dummy either
most successful radio personality in America. But Freed was no
was that Freed would own twenty-five percent of
part of the arrangement
Roulette Records. Although history has tended to paint Alan Freed as an innocent victim
who was
terrorized
reproach himself when a lavish estate in
New
it
by the sharks of New York, Freed was not above
came
Connecticut
the late '50s, he
owned
an apartment on Fifty-Eighth Street
as well as
Palm
York, and additional property in
Florida.
By
to business dealings.
in
Springs, California and Miami,
He also owned his share of numerous record labels and had even appro-
priated a songwriting credit or two,
most notably Chuck
Berry's "Maybellene"
(which he in turn received a royalty for every time he played
As Rock of Presley
—
'n'
it
Roll gained
momentum
— fueled by such
it
on
his show).
factors as the arrival
had plenty of detractors, not only within the mainstream music
industry but also morally offended legislators, city councilors, radio program-
mers, politicians, and civic-minded do-gooders of every stripe. Everyone's seen the famous '50s footage in
which the bullnecked Southerner breaks the record
and proclaims: "Waaah, Rock
'n'
Roll has got to go!"
That kind of
reaction
probably would've greeted any institution that resulted in the intermingling of Blacks and whites, but
Rock
'n'
Roll was particularly vulnerable because of the
shaky business practices that governed
it.
At the center of the controversy once again was Connecticut, the police, fearing license after terattack:
Freed hosted
a
riots, tried to
xAlan
Freed.
In
revoke a theater in Hartford's
three-day rockfest there. Freed went on the coun-
having no small vested interest in the Rock
'n'
Roll business, he was
rather outspoken in his support for the burgeoning industry. This did not
endear him to anti-Rock forces in the government or elsewhere. But there were a
few young moguls
who were able
to profit
endear themselves to the establishment. to
prominence
as the
rising
Rock trend and
One of them was Dick Clark, who
still
rose
popular host of TVs American Bandstand.
Clark was born in
begun
from the
Mount Vernon, New York
his career in local radio,
and, like Alan Freed, had
doing station breaks and occasional
live
com-
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
72
mercials for a small station in Syracuse before
The
station Clark
worked
for,
WFIL,
had
also
fired for public drunkenness,
management
to Philadelphia in 1952.
original host,
who
hosted
Bob Horn, was
The
his replacement.
station's
ail-American preppy looks and personable
Clark's
liked
and Clark was
ROLL
a television affiliate
The
music program called "Bandstand."
a local
moving
N'
demeanor.
However, when one looks ests,
at either Freed's
or Clark's outside business inter-
DJ who
they don't look that different. Like Freed, Clark was a small-time
—
stumbled onto national fame. Clark's break came when American Bandstand the
show was now
shill
called
—got picked up by ABC. Clark would stand there and
between lip-synched performances by current pop sensations.
hair tonic
as
formula that proved popular with the ever-expanding teen market: in
It
was
a
first
year alone, American Bandstand reached an estimated 20 million teenagers
per day. Clark's power in the industry grew even more that exposure
on Bandstand more or
Not
national charts.
less
when
when
a lot
began trying to
surprisingly, a lot of record execs
shrewder and was better
the payola scandal
That
owned labels,
didn't
mean
hit,
at
But Clark
that Clark wasn't as deep into the soup as Freed was: he
'50s (who, not coincidentally,
a popular instrumental
number of record
performer of the
appeared frequently on American Bandstand).
easily
Among Philadelphia:
The
full
all
well
recoup the profits from Bandstand alone.
the record labels
co-owned by Clark were three based
Cameo, Parkway, and Swan. These
idols, prefabricated
labels
in
helped spawn the teen
singing sensations whose sole purpose was to bleach the
Black influence out of
Rock
'n' Roll:
Paul Anka, Annette Funicello, Curtola,
late
the Payola Hearings struck, Clark divested himself of
questionable holdings and took a loss just to clear his name, knowing
he could
result,
Clark came out unscathed.
and managed Duane Eddy,
when
earlier.
strike the
covering his tracks. As a
three music publishing companies, was a partner in
difference was,
was discovered
guaranteed a record's success in the
kind of deals with Clark that they had with Freed a few years
proved to be
it
its
Fabian, Frankie Avalon,
Connie
Francis,
Johnny Crawford, Shelly Fabares,
etc.
Bandstand was where most of these acts got their
Bobby
Rydell,
Freddy Cannon, Bobby
Not
first
ironically,
American
national exposure. Clark
was more than happy to play the host for these adenoidal crooners and give
them
a
mainline right into the mainstream because he adhered to
a strictly
cap-
CHAPTER 4: KILL THE BUSINESS philosophy. As he would later
italist
the system from within."
The radio.
tell
Lester Bangs,
73
"One must learn
kind of homogeny personified by American Bandstand soon spread to
The
concept of top forty helped dilute the radio stations further, from
bastions of ribaldry to a structured format that relied solely try to feed
new product. Top
it
forty created a structure
records were played over and over again valuable
—and the national record charts
Radio became
a lot less regionalized.
in every town.
Top
as
to screw
2
all
much more
important.
away from the DJs: where-
now
spontaneity had been their original province,
own unique
forty
was the same records being played
it
forty also took a lot of influence
having to curtail their
whereby the same
making airtime much more
day,
like Billboard
Now,
on the music indus-
they found themselves
personalities for the sake of generic
com-
placency.
Thanks
Rock
to
this
all
concentration on teenybopper
screwed themselves out of a
vital
new market
Long Playing Record Album. Although its
very few Rock
Other than
Elvis,
This was
'50s.
'n'
Rock
term
'n'
talent,"
Roll artists
made
almost no Rock
partially
albums cost more to that
press,
'n'
more
fad,
Roll performers charted albums in the
making the investment
before paying
them
was
in.
that time,
As opposed
to "long-
Some
Roulette and
labels like Adantic, King, Imperial,
a
no-
and repeat the
Gee
lived In-
and Chess exercised
it
was:
"What have you done
for
me
a
lately?"
anti-Rock forces in the '50s asserted diat die music was
—
they knew
feel, at
Nobody knew what
(a
as well as analyzed
—
fifty
whole different world then
just a passing
charge Alan Freed would
kind of mileage to expect out of die form,
you'd told the founders of Rock diat their work would
reissued It
labels:
their royalties
like
mindless garbage for an immature audience
if
invading the indus-
foresight as far as nurturing long-term talent went, but in the case
always deny).
and
first
made
labels at that time preferred to score a big hit with a
of most of the indies
The
33-RPAI
the transition to the full-length format.
formula with another faceless group. Labels such practices.
Roll was
and most of them honestly didn't
Roll was worth
most
'n'
—mainly that of the
due to the attitude of the record
name group, then dump them
little
the purveyors of
the twelve-inch long player had
debut right around the time that Rock
try,
tastes,
Roll in the '50s, perhaps due to forces beyond their control, had
'n'
still
be getting
years later they would have Laughed at you.
—everything was new and unchallenged.
It
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
74
wasn't like nowadays, right away.
The
when someone
early
ROLL
takes something stillborn and sells
to develop a bit
Things were allowed
N'
more
off
it
organically
album market was dominated by schmaltzmeisters
like
Lawrence
Welk, Percy Faith, Jackie Gleason, Morton Gould, Ray Conniff, Mantovani, and Nelson Riddle. Occasionally
a
more
would come
eccentric bandleader
Denny, who'd do something
along, like Juan Esquivel or Les Baxter or Martin
slighdy off-the-wall in the same light Jazz vein. But for the most part
it
was
this
type of genteel cocktail music that dominated most Americans' record collections
between the years 1956-1964,
which time the Beades came along and
at
blew the album market wide open.
As
for the cocktail craze,
were by
easy to see where America's collective heads
album
just looking at the
ality that
it's
covers. Typical of the kind of repressed sexu-
dominated the age, much of the artwork showed buxom babes
gestive poses with come-hither looks
and accompanied by come-on
for Lovers, I'm in the Mood, Ro??iantic Moods, Music
to
Put Her
in the
in sug-
tides:
Mood, or any
variation thereof.
Another reason for the facelessness of the album market
time was that the
medium
itself
important what yoxx played on your
it
literally
philes' expectations.
Here was
dwarfed the
little
new albums were a
listen to
record.
The
specifically tailored to audio-
format that could support the indulgence of sit
down
in his easy chair
an entire symphony without having to get up and change the
average
and not surprisingly
LP
could support up to twenty minutes of music per
a lot
It
was evident that the record industry was aiming
new album market at a more "mature" audience (hence
of the album covers).
form of music and
it
side,
of the early "Living Stereo" albums manufactured by
RCA were Classical releases. the
The new
phonographs that had previ-
serious musical appreciation, so the Classical fan could
and
wasn't so
new stereo as much as the fact that you owned
one, to go along with your TV, lawnmower, and other consumer items.
ously been the norm, and the
at the
had become the message. With the invention of
stereophonic sound, the whole notion of hi-fi came into being, and
two-speaker technology
Music
The
implication was that
didn't warrant the
new
Rock
'n'
the suggestive nature
Roll was not a serious
long-play format.
Part of Rock's self-imposed anonymity in the era between Elvis and the
Beades was brought about by the
rise
of instrumental Rock. As
were presumed to be garbage anyway, groups the Hurricanes figured,
why not eschew
like the
all
Rock
lyrics
Ventures and Johnny
vocals altogether and concentrate
& on
CHAPTER 4: KILL THE BUSINESS
75
the musicianship? In other cases, the choice to eschew the vocals was probably
—
by accident
a lot
of the early instrumental
hits like Bill Doggett's
"Honky
Tonk" and Link Wray's "Rumble" were nothing but jams anyway, probably
Then
last-minute takes never aimed at a radio audience. ers like
drummer Sandy Nelson, who milked drum
case the incessant career.
there were perform-
a singular musical idea
pattern of "Teen Beat," his 1959 hit
Along with drums and twangy
during that era was the organ craze.
ity into fairly fruitful careers:
electric
who
the '50s, and there was a rash of artists
a
in his
whole
other big instrumental trend
guitar, the
The
—into
—
organ had been invented
in
parlayed the instrument's popular-
Dave "Baby" Cortez,
Jesse Crawford,
Jimmy
Smith, Jack McDuff, Shirley Scott, Big John Patton, and others. Also notable
were the organ experiments of Ray Charles and James Brown, who dabbled with the instrument in their spare time. Aside from the diluting process that was occurring in the form of the Teen
and the constriction of Top Forty radio, other problems were about to beset
Idols
the nascent musical form of Rock in
'n'
Roll.
One
of the biggest stories in the press
1959 was the rigging of a television quiz show called The $64,000 Question.
The news
media, more or
less
responsible for
making
celebrities
out of DJs
like
Alan Freed and Dick Clark, found an inevitable link between the game show scandal and the world of radio. In
its
sixtieth anniversary edition, Billboard ran
about the expanding influence of DJs
article
Billboard revealed that
many
Freed. In another
like
also received
money
jock was a quick route to the time, the the artists
most
more
its
poration had been losing
because most Rock and petitor.
sure
What
R&B
convention
in
blew the
Miami
in
lid
May
'n'
Roll had
ASCAP come
songs were published by BMI,
publishers were getting from really
safe to say that, at
was launch-
along, the cor-
stronghold on the publishing industry. This was
ASCAP's backlog of records and
BMI
as a radio
their shows.
own. Since Rock its
duties.
AM disc jockeys were probably a lot better oft than
Billboard divulged this information,
ing an investigation of
stardom
might be
lucrative ventures. It
whose records they played on
At the same time
and managerial
for public appearances. In short,
successful
article,
of the famous disc jockeys had holdings in record
store chains, songwriting, publishing, jukebox routes,
They
an
ASCAP s com-
sheet music couldn't match the expo-
all
the radio play.
off the radio industry
was
a
notorious disc jockey
1959. All through the '50s, the record business had
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
76
N'
ROLL
been currying the favor of DJs with cash or other forms of material persuasion.
Record promo tle
men initially took DJs out to lunch or dinner, or gave them a bot-
of whiskey, in an attempt to get them to play certain records. But as compe-
tition increased, the stakes
a
company to buy
record
sions, a
new
grew higher. By the
a certain target disc
late '50s, it
jockey a
article,
one record agent spoke of taking several
One
models" on the road with him to "promote a tune."
was known to
toss
$100
up
smarter,
their
Although
came
more ambitious broadcasters
own companies was de facto
this
legal,
there were
Dick Clark and Alan Freed
like
it
still
a lot of loopholes that
they arrived, the mayor had declared
DJs seemed it
hoped year's
to
in
make 1959
$450
million. It
still
DJs were
target audience.
right.
the sitting ducks they
was estimated that $90 million of that was based still
the primary
And
somewhat eroded due still
who
medium
for
Rock
'n'
solely
on
Roll (which, at
moment
progressively better for
Cuba where
the nightclubs and a private
to
newly formulated programming
the primary link between the record companies and their
for that audience,
waiting for the DJs the
onto
number of hookers hang-
make good use of all
companies were willing to pay
At the Miami convention, they did
excursion to
The week
only represented 20 percent of the overall market). Although their
influence had been restrictions,
it.
their greatest year ever, with sales exceeding the previous
the sale of 45s, at that time the time,
trying to keep
place. It was a wise investment for the record companies,
one
this
"Disc Jockey Week," claiming their
were any indication, he was
airport
record companies intended to
had assembled
Nowhere was
to be flaunting
presence would help boost the local economy. If the
Miami
needed
was impossible to keep track of all the
Miami DJs Convention. Far from
at the
their extravagant practices a secret, the
ing around the
Another producer
to $2,000.
expenditures because "promotion" was such a vague term.
more apparent than
"New York
so they could legitimately tap into the market.
explaining. In the world of promotion,
The
occa-
Texas record honcho
into a DJ's wastepaper basket.
bills
revealed that his monthly payola budget alone
set
new car or, on some
for
house. There were other methods that could be employed as well.
In the Billboard
The
was not unusual
them the
gaming
dearly.
just that. Cadillac convertibles
were
they stepped off their planes, and things got
after that. Several
new
DJs were invited to
dictator, Fidel Castro,
facilities.
The more
a side
had yet to shut down
low-rent DJs were hoarded
yacht carrying a special cargo of booze and an all-female crew.
CHAPTER 4: KILL THE BUSINESS Fifteen miles
from the mainland, everyone stripped naked. The more
were flown to Cuba
most
in a plane chartered
exclusive sex clubs in Havana.
booze
flowed
literally
faucets
77
whose
spigots
by
a record
Meanwhile, back
one record
like water:
label
at the
Unfortunately for them,
to the
had outfitted
with
a suite
to say, this
the DJs.
all this
conspicuous consumption was not going to
spooked by the memorv of the
go unnoticed for long in an America
still
McCarthy Hearings, entrenched
Cold War, getting uptight about
rights,
and
just
headline in the story:
coming
in the
major scandal concerning game show
off a
Miami Herald on
signaled the end of their glory days. in the industry7 as
had become in the
fraud.
civil
The
the Sunday following the convention told the
"Booze, Broads and Bribes." To the DJs
mere pawns
DJs
convention, the
poured Martinis and Manhattans. Needless
room was much frequented by
elite
company and taken
From
who
attended the convention,
it
on they would become
that point
opposed to the kind of major power brokers they
'50s.
A Miami News article
disparagingly referred to the DJs as
and reported that an unnamed
PR man
"little tin
gods"
had claimed he'd doled out $1 million
per year in payola to radio jocks. Concurrent articles in Time and Newsweek
mocked
"The Big Payola" and
the event, the former renaming the convention
the latter describing
pampered trades
it
as "the flipside
in the U.S.
—the
of success." Wrote Time: "One of the most
disc jockeys
—had come
to
town and Big
Daddy, in the shape of U.S. record companies, were there to take care of them." In the next few weeks, further disclosures of misconduct haunted the disc jockeys.
Amidst the testimonial, one name seemed
Freed. Although at the at
Miami Convention he was
one point even throwing
his wife into a
to
told
pool, Freed was worried.
members of the
payola in the radio business was no different than what was
most businesses,
ing" in Washington. Freed was right: in
the most: Alan
parrying as loosely as ever,
swimming
During the convention, Freed had indignantly
come up
known
press that as "lobby-
similar gratuities
were
looked upon as "perks." But the DJs were especially vulnerable because of what they represented to the public.
they inspired race mixing. cial inequities
An
One
easy
of the big charges against them was that
way
to nail
them was
and expose the corrupt practices of their
During 1959, the Federal Trade Commission
number of record
labels
on charges of
to unearth dieir finantrade.
filed
complaints against
unfair competition. In
New
a
York, the
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
78
N'
ROLL
grand jury to investigate whether bribery charges
district attorney called a
should be brought against the DJs and record execs. But what really brought the house
down was
the investigation into payola brought about by the U.S.
House Subcommittee on
Legislative Oversight, led
by Representative Oren
Miami Convention
Harris of Arkansas, specifically citing the
as evidence.
Payola had long been looked upon as a shaky practice, but there was nothing
about
illegal
because the laws had yet to be written. That
it
unless, of
is
course, an enterprising recipient of slush-money "forgot" to note taxes.
This
is
where Alan Freed went wrong. This
prominent DJs under investigation to sing
is
also
on
it
what caused
his
a lot
of
like canaries. But, in the end, if the
laws enacted to stamp out payola are any indication, the government didn't really consider
a
it
Congress passed
very serious crime. Although as a result of the hearings
a statute
making payola
a
crime punishable by
a
maximum fine
of $10,000 and one year in prison, no one has ever served time on payola charges.
The whole
scandal was, in
many ways,
Even the commercial bribery laws were not very equal
stringent.
Although
illegal
why
about
it.
So the DJs
they received
them
money
the proceedings. Unless
it
was not
gifts but, rather,
As the more imaginative DJs
a "bribe" to play a certain record, but
"thank you" for services already rendered. finally called
and
could be
was noth-
to play specific records, there
in the first place.
When the investigators
DJs folded under pressure, an
didn't dispute receiving cash
explained, the cash they received a
witch-hunt.
came about because of the scandal
a lot of local
number of them defiandy mocked
direcdy proven that DJs took ing
that
a
And
there was
Dick Clark
no law
to the stand,
against that.
he proved to
be more articulate than his older, more roguish counterparts. He'd also done his
homework. The panel was impressed
istician,
who had
to
draw an
actual
that Clark
diagram to explain the
Clark's financial holdings. In the end, Clark
outside firms to walk "a fine
away
scot-free,
young man." There was
tem from
had brought
would forsake
own
intricate
all
stat-
web of
his holdings in
and the committee would pronounce him
a lesson in there
somewhere: screwing the
sys-
within.
Alan Freed, on the other hand, didn't make out as well. longed his actual
more or
his
less
trial until
December
unemployable during
The
panel pro-
1962. Because of his notoriety, he was
this time.
Broke and
in ailing health,
pleaded guilty to two counts of commercial bribery and was given
Freed
a light
sen-
CHAPTER 4: KILL THE BUSINESS ended
tence. It should have 16,
there, but a
little
1964, he was indicted by another grand
IRS wanted him
to
more than
79
a
year
cough up about $38,000, but he never had
man
mainly because he died a broken
As for Dick Clark,
it
on March
The
to pay
one penny,
shortly thereafter.
him long
didn't take
later,
time for tax evasion.
jury, this
rebound from
to
his losses. In
1960 he took a Black chicken-plucker named Ernest Evans, rechristened him
Chubby Checker, and had him record failed would-be hit by R&B
a version
Hank
artist
Ballard
of "The Twist"
—
for Clark's
—
originally a
own Cameo
label.
The record managed the amazing
feat
of getting to number one on the charts
on two separate
thus
far,
cess of 'n'
occasions, a feat that,
"The Twist"
also
spawned
a
major
has never been duplicated.
Roll out of the malt shop as well as the
sophisticated urban nightlife. Jackie
made
it
society.
As
cow
the twist at the
become
the toast of dis-
Roll had
'n'
no longer
arteriosclerotic lawyers with
there right
now twisting with
In the early '60s,
ways than one). But the brightest
young
Rock
take jazz seriously. But rock and
pocky
Similarly, the
obscene clumsiness to rock and
'n'
.has
talents
—
bad thing
sophisticated domain.
Rock
'n'
Roll was
it
meant
One
its
shifting
from the
way
becoming an
'n'
rural outposts to
produce "authentic" Rock
to
Rock
techniques.
didn't have to have "smelt a lot of
in order to
on
more formalized
to
more
some of
that
on the musical horizon were turning
main source of the music was
roll!
roll."
Roll was an up-and-coming "racket" (in
this wasn't necessarily a
Hank Williams once said)
longer.
.
layers of fat over their ribs are out
Roll as opposed to Jazz, Classical, or other
(as
pasture and into the realm of
the darling holy beast of intellectuals in the United States, England and
Poor old
more
Rock
Tom Wolfe wrote: "The prole vitality of rock and roll.
France. Intellectuals, generally,
a
suc-
Kennedy was seen doing
Peppermint Lounge, which meant Rock cotheque
The
dance craze that helped propel
manure"
V Roll any
art form. It
was
also
becoming mass-produced.
One
of the
first
people to approach the making of Rock
venture was Phil Spector, perhaps the
an
artistic
er.
He took groups off the
street
who had no
first
'n'
Roll records as
superstar record produc-
particular finesse ami put
the studio with the best musicians he could find, almost as
it
them
in
they were merely
another component. Working them through exhaustive sessions, he'd sometimes
demand
to
do
a take thirty, fifty,
the desired level of perfection.
When
one hundred times this pissed off the
until he'd achieved
record companies
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
80
who'd hired him, he formed
amalgam of "Phil" and
Rock
brats of
were
'n'
Roll
freedom
artistic
He
"Les").
in the
name
—
was the
after his father
words from
take the
Know Him
Is
to
of the temperamental spoiled
the business
'n'
Originally from the Bronx, Spector
mother
first
moved West
his father's grave for the tide
his
A withdrawn
kid,
terms, as
he
if
boost for
a great
eight. Phil
of his
among
would
New
later
York City
the sun-worshipping
he took
as his refuge. In L.A.
guitarist
his
production: "To
first
mousy demeanor and
he took to music
from the acclaimed Jazz
guitar lessons
own
Los Angeles with
to
committed suicide when Phil was
Love Him." With
his
Roll.
complexion, the young Spector was out of place Californians.
on
This was
at least temporarily.
of Rock
ROLL
label with Lester Sill called Philles (an
who approached
mini-Mozart, and won
a
own
his
N'
Howard Roberts and
started
hanging around Gold Star studios in Hollywood, hoping he'd meet someone
who'd
came
let
him record
in contact with the massive
his trademark. its
size
The
it
Gold
relatively small
sounds weird,
this
Star in the '50s that Spector
first
echo chambers that would eventually become
and to compensate, they'd
Although
at
studio had not one but
—Gold Star was
in L.A.,
was
his songs. It
built
two echo chambers, probably due
compared
to
many
to
of the other studios
an extra echo chamber in the bathroom.
innovation would be
much
copied in the
'60s.
In the meantime, Spector was conducting recording experiments of his
own. With
"To
a pair
Know Him
of high school friends, one male, one female, he cut a
Is to
Love Him,"
a typical saccharine ballad based
on
demo
of
the kind
of "group harmony" that was popular at the time. Calling the group the Teddy Bears, he
somehow managed
Dore, and in
a fluke,
Spector's legend as a
him was
it
went
to sell the all
the
way
homemade to
recording to a local
number one on
"boy genius" was born.
the national charts.
What the whole
experience taught
that he could easily orchestrate people as well as instruments to
the sounds that were in his head. Seeking artists
label,
who had some
mimic
innate talent but
perhaps couldn't project themselves, he would write the songs and then sur-
round them with the embellishments of the modern recording intricate
studio, creating
pop melodramas.
After the
Teddy Bears
folded, Spector
worked
as a court
stenographer dur-
ing the day and heard his share of court cases dealing with finance in the movie industry and other entertainment
fields.
This wised him up to the economic
tors of the business, a learning experience that
would help him become
fac-
a mil-
CHAPTER 4: KILL THE BUSINESS by the time he was twenty-one.
lionaire
from the
and
start,
this
deck he was playing with
helped him get ahead in the budding Rock
However, by the early
try.
He knew the
60's
Sill,
teams in Rock written
Roll indus-
Through
his association
he was introduced to one of the most successful songwriting
'n' Roll,
some of the
Jerry Leiber and
biggest hits of the
"Ruby Baby" (both covered by ensconced in the Brill Building. 'n'
'n'
Spector was tired of the L.A. treadmill, which
centered on teen idols and other pubescent fantasies.
with Lester
81
Mike
Rock
'n'
Not
Stoller.
only had the duo
"Hound Dog" and
Roll era like
which meant big bucks), they were
Elvis,
Roll industry where Phil Spector longed to be.
At the time, Leiber and
Stoller
were extraordinarily successful
as the pro-
ducers of the Drifters, the most popular Black vocal group in the country. Drifters recorded for Atlantic Records,
with the
tact
Atlantic,
label.
Moving
to
which meant serving
Atlantic Records was in the
formed
which
New York, in
writing or producing. This helped
up
well
New York Rock
This was the creative hub of the
how Spector first came
is
Spector got
a job as
one of the
further
hone
1947 by
Ahmet
I didn't
The
Bop
three of
want
to work."
"I didn't
A philosophy student
Blues. It
was
and
want to go
in
a collector
of
met Herb Abramson sometime
in the late '40s dur-
was
also a Jazz devotee.
craze. Ertegun's older brother, Nesuhi,
them conceived
the idea of the label originally to record Jazz,
which Abramson already had some experience dentist friend,
&
had sprung
Ertegun, the son of the Turkish ambassador to the
Jazz and Blues 78s, Ertegun ing the Be
at the time,
original independent labels that
U.N.; his original explanation for starting the label was: the army, and
at
his chops.
postwar years to record Boogie Woogie and Rhythm
in
in con-
an "assistant"
whatever capacity was needed
him
The
in.
Ertegun moved in with Abramson
Borrowing $10,000 from in
a
Greenwich Milage while
Nesuhi headed west. Because of Abramson's Jazz background, the
first artists
they signed were Pete Johnson and Joe Turner, veterans of the raucous Kansas City Swing scene of the late '30s and Atlantic
was one of the
first
'40s.
companies not
giving mysterious credit to Alan Freed or practice for
most record
nal songwriter, paying ties.
labels
him
a
was to
to
shuck their songwriters by
whatnot At the
steal the
time, the
common
copyright away from the origi-
small retainer's fee, and then pocket
As Syd Nathan, the owner of King Records, once
said:
to soothe the feelings of starry-eyed amateur songwriters."
"We
all
die royal-
are not here
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
82
At the time, the major record
"name"
act into the studio,
had
labels
hand him an arrangement of a
Rock
in the years prior to
'n'
ROLL
a standard formula: they'd take a
and hire an orchestra to accompany him. This resulted Hit Parade
N'
Roll. Like
staff-written song,
in the bland state of the
many
of the smaller
labels,
Atlantic discovered that there was a veritable ocean of uncharted territory in
the small nightclubs where mostly Black musicians plied their trade. these
Atlantic's first hit
The
was
number by
a juke-joint
Sticks
McGhee
Blues, and
called "Drinkin'
O Dee," which was cut in the Louis Jordan vein.
Wine Spo Dee
small labels discovered that although the major labels weren't willing
to
go out and discover Rhythm
to
whip out
cel
&
combos were playing something approximating Rhythm
Most of
&
Blues talent on their own, they were willing
a prefab "cover" version
of a potential
The whole
out the "authentic" version.
R&B hit just in time to can-
recording environment in those
years was not favorable to musicians, Black ones in particular. For instance,
one got paid advances. Most of the musicians received and that was
lot of Jazz musicians
it (a
augmented
a
their
standard session fee
income through
method). Promotion was nonexistent, other than radio, which
was so prevalent
—that
forthright
And
in those days.
once they sold
is,
it,
New York.
tors like
King
they no longer "owned"
However, they soon discovered that
in Cincinnati,
is
why
this
payola
songwriters had their material bought
Until the early '50s, Adantic concentrated most of its
around
no
it.
A&R resources in and a lot
of their competi-
Chess in Chicago, and Specialty in L.A. were mak-
ing frequent pilgrimages to the South to mine the incredibly
fertile
musical
resources that region had to offer. L.A.'s Imperial Records was particularly lucky: a foray to
New Orleans in
1
build their label into a commercial entity, Fats ly gain
much from
legendary
New
artist
who would
Domino. But Adantic
didn't real-
949 led them to discover the
their inaugural trip
down
South, other than acquiring the
Orleans pianist Professor Longhair in an attempt to compete
with Fats Domino. Unfortunately, despite some fine records, Longhair never equaled Domino's success. If the trip
proved anything,
enlist outside help to
them from
crafted a
was
how
improve the quality of
other, lesser fly-by-night labels.
writers, musicians,
ny
it
more
and producers
—
like
far the label
was willing to go
their records.
to
This distinguished
Hiring outside arrangers, song-
Tom Dowd,
sophisticated product than that of
for instance its
peers.
—the compa-
They were
also
CHAPTER 4: KILL THE BUSINESS willing to let musical forms run together in a
more organic manner, such
Frank Culley's sax solo on the Clovers' "Don't You
was an innovator:
in a
Know I Love You"
as
which,
R&B record. However, Atlantic-
seemed incongruously jazzy for an
at that time,
83
few years, the honking saxophone solo would become
one of the signatures of R&B.
When Herb Abramson
got drafted in 1952, a young journalist who'd
recently been brought into the publishing
wing of
Atlantic, Jerry Wexler,
became Ahmet Ertegun's new right-hand man. His work
more
businesslike than Ertegun's,
habits proved
much
and soon he was running the day-to-day
operations of the label. In the future, Wexler would prove to be the company's true visionary, producing almost
the
company famous: Ray
Franklin.
of the
first
of the acts who, over the years, would make
Charles, the Coasters, the Drifters, and Aretha
records he produced was
"Sh-Boom" by
Although more "pop" than anything Atlantic had done
in 1954. still
One
all
contained a
fairly
tough sax solo by
Sam
Taylor.
Chords
the
yet, the
song
Although the Crewcuts'
subsequent whitewashed version outsold the Chords' original, "Sh-Boom" was Atlantic's first crossover hit.
also landed
on the Pop charts and was subsequently scooped by
the Comets.
By
the time
upstart record label
changed
& Roll" Haley &
Later that year, Joe Turner's "Shake, Rattle
Abramson returned from
the army, he found an
on the verge of success. But the chemistry
—Wexler was the New Kid
in
Bill
at the label
Town and Abramson found
had
himself
slowly being squeezed out.
At the same time Adantic was becoming Nesuhi Ertegun was heading up the
label's
a leader in the field ot
Jazz division and taking equally big
Modern
chances with such idiosyncratic talents as the
Jazz Quartet, Charles
Mingus, Ornette Coleman, and John Coltrane. By doing building
its
R&B,
so, the
company was
reputation as an alternative to the "one take out-of-key" approach
that characterized
most of the
indies at that time.
Such considerations could
only pay off in the long run.
Adantic was also smart in other ways. For example, putting Lieber/Stoller
under contract
as staff writers/producers
lucrative publishing
were
company, Hill
also contractually obligated).
&
gave the label
Range
(to
Through
Adantic also gained access to other songwriters
whom
a tie-in
with
Eh is s
the songwriting duo
the Leiber/Stoller connection, in the Brill Building, the
song-
writing factory located at 1619 Broadway that served the same function as Tin
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
84
Pan Alley had artists
der.
At
to an earlier generation.
wrote their
own
this time,
material, thus creating a
Music publisher Don Kirshner got
need
N'
ROLL
very few for
Rock
Roll
'n'
mass-produced fodpub-
rich in those years, building his era.
At one time
he had under contract the songwriting teams of Neil Sedaka
& Howard
lishing
company, Aldon, into one of the most successful of its
Greenfield, Gerry Goffin
Among them,
&
Carole King, and Barry
these three songwriting pairs wrote
Mann &
Cynthia Weil.
more than two hundred
hits
that charted during the years 1958-1963.
Leiber and Stoller never really
They were
Building.
worked
&
there,
more
into the Kirshner clique at the Brill
grizzled veterans than the
did,
brought him to Atlantic. Writers
Greenwich became Spector's partners
Ellie
like
"(Today
He
Kissed
The
I
kids
who
however, introduce Phil Spector to the other songwriters
in the building, just as they'd
and
young
and they were under contract to an independent publisher, Hill
They
Range.
older,
fit
Met) the Boy I'm Going
Me" and "Be My
in
to Marry,"
like Jeff
Barry
composing arch-teen dramas
"Da Doo Ron Ron," "Then
Baby."
marriage of these composers' acute narratives combined with
Spector's massive orchestration helped create the "girl group" genre in the early '60s.
By
that time, the basic street-corner
harmony style of vocalizing had
been overshadowed by new studio innovations,
on
"There Goes
the Drifters'
employed by Spector. But
it
My
like the
introduction of strings
Baby" or the thundering echo chamber
wasn't always that way;
many an
enterprising
record producer built his dreams on "doo wop," the music of the mostly-ethnic vocal groups.
of
Harlem and
George Goldner comes
readily to
mind
—combing the
streets
the ghettos of Brooklyn for amateur Black and Puerto Rican
harmonizers, he discovered some of the most successful vocal groups of the era: Frankie
Lyman
&
the Teenagers, Little
and the Flamingos.
many ways were
More
Anthony
&
the Imperials, the Crows,
importantly, Goldner launched the Chantels,
who in
the prototype for the girl groups like the Ronettes and
Crystals.
Consisting of five Black
women from
the Bronx, led by the powerful voice
of Arlene Smith, the Chantels epitomized the life-and-death struggle of teenage romance in the '50s. "Maybe," their
hymn and
took on apocalyptic overtones in
its
first hit,
had
all
the breadth of a
lament for unrequited
love.
automobile had changed the concept of courtship, and the World
The
War
II
CHAPTER 4: KILL THE BUSINESS Daddies were gravely concerned over the
fact their
85
daughters seemed to be
rushing into romance, "going steady" instead of dating casually. this passion
more apparent than
sound of Rock
in the
'n'
Nowhere
\\ .is
Roll during the years
1956-1962.
Goldner wasn't the only record producer
to influence Spector.
innovator was Morty Craft, originally an arranger with Glenn
on to produce
Bill
Haley
&
who went
the Comets. After Haley helped build Essex into a
respectable label, Craft branched out and started labels like
On
Miller,
Another
Melba and Lance.
the latter he recorded the Shepherd Sisters, who, despite their sororal con-
nection, weren't really a girl group but a vocal group
McGuire or Andrews enspiel, a chimelike
Sisters.
more
in the style of the
On their recording of "Alone," Craft used glock-
instrument played with two hammers. This was to have an
enormous impact on Spector, who was
just
developing his penchant for weird
studio embellishments.
By
1962, Spector was busy
whose number one
the Crystals,
with
its
name
hit "He's a
his teen
refrain,
and that seemed to sum up Spector. He'd made
for himself in the industry
a Kiss").
Soon Spector was
mate sculpted jewel er
by acting obnoxious, and now he was making
to find the
group
—the Ronettes. Originally
one of Dick Clark's
labels, the
group of two
up by Spector and turned into every male packed into tight dresses singing "Be
group wasn't stricdy commercial or singer,
like
Rebel" heralded the coming age
ultra-obnoxious records as well (one of them was called
Like
empire with groups
vindication of nonconformity: "Just because he doesn't do what even-
body else does" went the a
consummating
My
"He Hit Me and
who would become
it
Felt
his ulti-
a recording act for Colpix, anothsisters
and
a cousin
were snatched
—three
teenager's fantasy
chicks
Baby." But Spector's interest in the
artistic
—he'd become taken with the
lead
Ronnie Bennett, and eventually they were married.
The
and neither did the Ronettes, despite the
Lavish
productions that Spector had erected around them. By that time other
labels,
marriage didn't
producers,
last
and songwriters were testing the same waters. Labels
Dimension, Cameo, Swan, Scepter, and Laurie became
specialists in the kind
of heartbroken drama that characterized the releases on Spector's label.
Once
totype
girl
again utilizing the resources of the
groups
the East Coast.
— the Chiffons,
There were
Brill Building,
Shirelles, Angels,
like
most
Shangri Las
exceptions, like the Mermaids,
own
who
Phillcs
of the pro-
— resided on
epitomized the
86
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
West Coast
strain with the
Boy with
portrait of the Perfect stuff
was
just
assembly
were
if
artist,
Not
line music.
girl
Supremes
groups
a
it
weeping
made
it
guitars).
surprisingly,
(or solo female artists
a
A lot of this
great was the intense It
was
a
pack-
resulted in nothing short of a mas-
effect
on
many
of Motown's earliest successes
profound
the Marvelettes,
like
(which painted
Icicles"
the songwriter, and the producer.
the chemistry was right,
This was to have
terpiece.
exotica-like
its
teenage fantasy fodder, but what
relationship between the
age deal, and
dreamy "Popsicles and
ROLL
N'
working
Martha
all
&
subsequent commercial
the Vandellas, and the
in that vein, like
Brenda Holloway or
Mary Wells).
The Baby Boomers were
really the first generation to experience adoles-
cence as a state of mind. Unlike the World
War
II
Daddies
who were
literally
thrust into adulthood by the war, the generation of the '50s and '60s were able to experience adolescence as a period of protracted development.
they had more time to dwell on the problems of youth.
groups did
No
—magnified
group was better
all
And
this
seemed
Not
gone too
—
The
all
girl
vocal group
to their eternal
Whyte Boots
to be outdone, a group called
released the apogee of the girl group sound in the
adversary
girl
than the Shangri Las, four tough chicks from the
at this
to be suicide.
story of a catfight
what the
the aches and pains of adolescence into high drama.
Bronx who painted dramas so intense that the only solution plight
is
That meant
far in
form of "Nightmare," the
which the protagonist ends up
killing her
for the love of a boy.
groups proved that American popular music was
still
very
medium. The Instrumental Rock trend came and went,
much its
a
only
enduring legacy being the Ventures. But ever since Elvis had arisen in the mid'50s in the midst of talented instrumental stylists like
Lee Lewis, he had helped sway the focus back lot
of technology
prowess to Rock
—would
'n'
Roll.
to singers.
come along soon and
But
at least
up
Chuck Berry and
The
Beatles
during the early
'60s,
until that time,
Particularly in cities like
was prevalent. Groups the Belmonts, Jay
Coast
style.
New
&
group harmonizing was
New York
like the Rays,
—and
a
reintroduce instrumental
Rock
'n'
cians treaded in obscurity while singers ruled the record charts. ingly,
Jerry
still
Roll musi-
Not
the primary
surpris-
medium.
and Philadelphia, the street-corner sound
Danny
&
the Juniors, the Crests,
Dion
&
the Americans, and the Four Seasons epitomized the East
York and Philadelphia were
also the centers of the Twist
— CHAPTER 4: KILL THE BUSINESS craze. In
New York,
kind of discotheque sound emerged in the form of the
a
organ-laden dance bands like
like
Joey Dee
&
the Starlighters, whose hit singles
"Mashed Potatoes and Hot Pastrami" were
Rock
87
also borderline Instrumental
one considered moronic shouts of "mashed potatoes yeah" to be
(unless
actual singing).
The New York
vocal groups were mostly of Italian-American descent.
This included the majority of solo singers
as well,
derivative of the "crooner" tradition set forth
Martin ists
that
a
decade
of the
'50s,
earlier.
many
by Frank Sinatra and Dean
had already made
his decision to
in
more bluesy approach,
Belmonts and then on
own. In the form of songs
was
a
whiney Blues but
it
first
with his group the
like
"A Teenager
was Blues nevertheless. Dion had
followed the advice of his friend Paul Anka: "Write songs that feel
make
in
clearlv
the girls
sorry for you."
What was
style
Vegas where he belonged. Dion DiMucci,
a
his
vocal-
adopt the supper club
on the other hand, pursued
it
whom were more
Bobby Darin, one of the most popular young
would eventually land him
Love,"
of
separated
a little
hooked
at
more
Dion from other teen he was
real:
an early age
he was doing
all
just as
idols
was that
his street credibility
heroin addict. Like Frankie Lyman, he got
a
fame was coming upon him. That means while
those stupid shows
Ed
Sullivan
—he
and whatnot
whacked out on smack. Nevertheless, he achieved tremendous success early '60s with
"Runaround Sue" and "The Wanderer," songs
was
in the
that revealed his
slighdy streetwise persona. This resulted in a huge contract with Columbia in 1962, after which he like
"Donna
moved
into
more "mature"
terrain despite obvious schlock
the Prima Donna," which, even then, had a slightly cynical edge
that exposed Dion's darker side.
Baby" and "Drip Drop," he was
his covers of Drifters songs like
"Ruby
also a top-notch purveyor of white soul.
These
With
songs sold, too, which pleased Columbia. Dion was sort of the
experiment with Rock (Dylan was heroin began to take explore a
its toll,
more bluesy
in 1965 to
a folk singer at that time).
Dion proved uncompromising
directive with covers of
Sonny Boy Williamson's "Don't Columbia
still
Start
Even
"Two Ton
one doing
The Dylan
this in 1965.
after the
in his desire to
Howlin' Wolfs "Spoonful" and
Me Tilkin'." When Tom Wilson came to
produce Bob Dylan, Dion attempted to cash
success with songs like
label's first
Feather." act did
Of course,
little
in
on Dylan
s
he was hardly the only
to revive
Dions sagging
career.
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
88
ROLL
N'
Eventually he cleaned up his act and sold his story to Warner Brothers with the
Own
admirably nonpreachy drug-rehab song "Your In
New
changed
—
on the
York, the sounds
this
time
it
came back in
Back Yard." but the echo had
street stayed the same,
the voice of a
girl!
Mainly, from Frankie
Valli,
falsetto
was the most popular
voice in America for a brief season. Originally hailing from
New Jersey, the group
Four Seasons, whose shrieking
lead singer of the
was able to ride the novelty of Frankie's voice into
work of the
best
him
father tells
early period
machismo. In songs
like
was probably "Walk Like
away from the
to walk
"Dawn," Frankie
some other
For
Roulette records had maintained inextricable
ties to
which the
in
kid's
Although obvi-
lost.
influence as well
men
years,
Their
Seasons shared Dion's
the girl to get
tells
sidering the group's Italian-American roots.
Man,"
a
The Four
bitch.
ously R&B-influenced, there might have been
Valli
a pretty durable career.
like
con-
Morris Levy of
organized crime. Frankie
& the Four Seasons were probably not immune to this influence either.
Not to graft.
suggest that the Four Seasons' bountiful success was entirely due to
Some
the whole
of their performances in the mid-'60s were like the
Doo Wop/street-corner style,
a production so soulful that
it
was
the Spinners. And, once again,
made me
feel like a
man
it
later
like
Their songs spoke to
coming home with
young wife holding the screaming baby:
lipstick
much
stuff,
By then even they wore
the success of the
all
the
their collar to the
You know, some-
but
so that the Four Seasons enjoyed hit after
disbanding until 1970.
What
on
"Joey, you promised)."
times he might just have to take a swing. Rocky-type
worked. So
Black group,
a
used to love to make you cry/it
"I
inside," Frankie sang.
struggling working class Joes
word on
"Working My Way Back to You,"
covered note-for-note by
was macho:
last
at that
hit,
not
time
it
officially
hippie clothes.
Four Seasons and others of their
ilk
proved was,
the '60s weren't actually as hip as everyone says they were. Despite the media distortion of the '60s as a decade-long protest/drugfest, there
gotten half of young people
who grew up
in the '60s
usual, totally oblivious to the "counterculture."
Gates generation
—
astute middle class kids
was
a
whole
for-
and pursued business
Perhaps
who were
this
was the
as
first Bill
enjoying the academic
wealth that the postwar environment had provided without the radicalization.
These were the striving for the
mers
as
first
yuppies
—
successful college-educated urban professionals
American Dream
Altamont as well
as
in droves.
two Nixon
Considering such subsequent bum-
presidential victories, the so-called unity
CHAPTER 4: KILL THE BUSINESS of the
more
radical factions turned out to be a hoax.
number of Baby Boomers were out
ible
"movement," many of
their peers off
89
While
a certain,
highly vis-
in the streets calling attention to the
campus were reaping the
capitalistic-
rewards of living in the most prosperous time ever, and loving every minute of it.
(Hey, they thought that was the revolution!) If the
"popular music" of any given time
really
going on in the culture,
was
this
an accurate barometer of what
is
more
traditional faction of '60s youth
has been underreported. Take, for example, Jay
song called "Only
ly did a patriotic
daughter, parties is
who may
in America."
for the
to enjoy
I ain't
made
some of that longed-for
some of the same
bound." But
—he hadn't
Speaking of Neil Diamond, his
was
hits all the
B. J.
Thomas, Lou
Union Gap, Rock artists
Christie,
ilk
major
"Solitary
Bob Lind, Roy Orbison, Dusty Rivers, the Cyrkle,
the Happenings, the Classics
like the hip-
Man," was pertime
IV
Springfield, the
Gary Puckett
&
the
—not to mention decidedly non-
Tom Jones, Dionne Warwick, Engelbert Humperdinck, and the
a certain extent, the '60s "revolution"
might've been
a
limited, proves that, to
hoax.
the arrival of the Beatles, Dylan, and the ensuing counterculture.
Rock would
increasingly
become
a
ferent ideologies. Suddenly, groups
some producer seemed
Tommy James &
passe. It
forum
for self-expression
who were merely
think that's
"I loved
why diere's
and
feckless
a
million dif-
mouthpieces for
was the misfortune of a good-time group
the Shondells to happen at die
James himself has gushed, I
where. I'm
monogamy and celibacy at a
Walker Brothers. The success of these groups, however
.and
me
Lord
the
included Bobby Vinton, Billy Joe Royal,
Herman's Hermits, Johnny
like
"Thank
5 ain't takin'
hit,
Diamond
beginning.
same. Others of this
have
Association,
just
leisure time. Neil
"dropped out"
first
beat, a
missed the boat on the '60s "revolution" but continued to
Artists like these
.
Clock World"
officially
haps the epitome of square '60s Rock, vowing
it.
o'
frustration with the daily grind in
he knew
at least
"free love"
Franks
yet" struggles to get through the
Nighttime" only in hipper terms: "9 to
With
Sinatra,
example of '60s yuppie Rock: to the heaving hammer of the
work day in order
when
Or Nancy
actual-
have fooled around with leather but was known to leave
young yup "workin' on money
expressed
who
the Americans,
where pot smoking was going on. The Vogues' "Five
a perfect
pies.
&
so
making
same time
records!
many good
feelings
as
Rocks
like
maturity.
You could always hear surrounding our music.
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
90
We were
really
way he was
in a
— the Shondells reeled off
'60s, hits that have,
by the way,
the failed experiments of their
Now"
was
in
many ways
lived a longer,
hit after captivating hit in the
more luminous
more adventurous
meanwhile, seemed to influence the Stooges'
album
peers. "I
it
"Down on
was the prototype for
all
than a lot of
Think We're Alone
the Street"
all
and whose "Louie Louie"
The group
garage groups like the Shondells.
&
"Crimson
entirely devoid of artistic pretensions, either:
—not
was on, Fimhouse, was produced
Don Galucci, who was originally in the Kingsmen
by
life
on the Ramones. "Mony Mony,"
a primal influence
that surprising, considering that the
But
in the grooves." Golly!
having fun, and you can hear that right
ROLL
N'
wasn't
Clover" from 1968
was an opulent cornucopia of psychedelic embellishments and pseudopoetic fancy,
proving
that,
wrote most of his
own
material,
Tommy
He
shouldn't be overlooked entirely.
which means he
brought about by the Beades and Dylan
ise
as
once again,
—
it's
didn't
short of the
fall
just that his experience
prom-
was not
troublesome. There was a lesson in there somewhere for future purveyors of
mirth in the
name of Rock
'n'
Roll.
No group took the fall for Rock's sudden "maturity" harder than the Beach Boys.
More
than any other of their
era, the
group epitomized not only the
sunny Utopia of the West Coast, but the promise of Rock for educated, affluent, perhaps slighdy alienated
of dollars and achieve "respectability."
Rock
'n'
'n'
young whites
The Beach Boys were
way
Roll itself as a to
the
make
millions
American
first
Roll band to have any artistic control whatsoever: there's very
little
question that Brian Wilson was by far the most innovative producer-composer of his day, eclipsing even Phil Spector.
But
alas,
the aura that surrounded
— that of the talented hometown ham that everybody knew was always deson the during the tined for greatness —ultimately ensured that he'd
him
sidelines
sit
subsequent age of anarchy. Because Brian and the Beach Boys were so mately
a
product of '50s values that they could never truly break free in
and age when "freedom" was everything. Right up himself into his
first
there ever was one
loony bin, his
father,
until the
Murray
—
a
day
a
time Brian checked
World War
—managed the group's career and was often
eccentric son. Phil Spector's father had died. Lennon's left
ulti-
at
II
Daddy
odds with
home. Guys
like
if
his
Bob
Dylan, Keith Richards, and Brian Jones broke free of the old man. Brian couldn't
do
that,
because
track, burgers
all
of the things he held dear
cooking on the open
grill,
the
—hot rods racing around
prom queen and
a
the ideal of love
— CHAPTER 4: KILL THE BUSINESS and marriage
—were
suburban middle
born out of
totally
class.
These were
91
his father's world: mainly, the white
just the ideals that, in the '60s,
were being
questioned, and Brian, not the happiest guy in the world, began to question
Exacerbated by the copious amount of acid he took during the psyche-
hi?nself.
delic era, these feelings
of insecurity eventually drove him crazy.
In short, you couldn't be a "hippie" and
still
be bossed around by Dad. But
Brian couldn't betray his family roots because, after family
affair:
all,
the Beach Boys were a
Wilson, his two younger brothers, Dennis and Carl,
Mike Love, and
a
Marks (soon
neighbor, David
to be replaced
a cousin,
by Al Jardine,
another high school friend). At the time, Instrumental Rock was the big trend
on the West Coast
— Dick Dale & the Deltones were the perfect example of What
"surf instrumental combo.
was the bleached-white
ture
rowed from groups what was
the Beach Boys introduced to the surf cul-
collegiate matching-sweater vocal
harmony, bor-
Four Freshmen. In other words, they yuppified
like the
essentially a
"punk" genre to begin with.
Hawthorne, the section of Los Angeles where the Wilson brothers was
a fairly
well-to-do suburb.
was
It
in during the postwar years, with
close proximity to
its
in progress: burgers, girls,
was only
later that he'd
the joke was
community
a great
for a
grew; up,
youth to grow up
endless strip just right for cruising and
Manhattan, Hermosa, and Redondo Beach. Because of
background, Brian Wilson really saw
Dream
a
life
his
from the myopic view of the American
and the endless pursuit of mindless
become aware of the
on him. But,
its
and by then
irony,
it
leisure. It
was too
late
Beach Boys epitomized the
in the early '60s, the
American West Coast teenage experience.
With Murray
taking the managerial hand, the band inked a one-off deal
with a local indie called Candix and released "Surfin'," their
song was about act
it
a typical
Rock
'n'
Roll
romp
'50s;
its
—the only thing
day
The
distinctive
was the weird use of falsetto, possibly influenced by another California
from around the same time, Jan
would
for
first single.
cross).
Murray Wilson
however,
&
actually
a small business
Dean had
importing
what kept the Wilson household
afloat. It
(soon the paths of the two groups
a brief drills
career as a songwriter in the
and lathes from England was
was inevitable he would project some
of his musical frustrations onto his very talented oldest son, Brian. By reports,
he was
in fact, friends
a
grinding taskmaster and he delighted
who knew
in
all
humiliating Brian—
the family claim that Brians partial hearing loss was
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
92
caused by a smack Murray gave him to the head years old. Nevertheless, er for years to
he was in
ROLL
— Brian—was only
the Beach Boys' official
six
manag-
come.
Despite Murray's as
Murray would remain
when he
'N'
faults,
he was
as relentless in his
promotion of the boys
—Murray
browbeating of Brian. His persistence paid off
his brutal
got the group a deal with Capitol, who'd just hired a hot young producer
named Nick Venet
to help
them penetrate the "youth market." Only twenty-
one, Venet had already produced the Lettermen, another white vocal group,
and the Beach Boys seemed to
fit
into his musical frame of reference. Sticking
with the surfing theme, the group had recorded a follow-up to "Surfin"' called "Surfin' Safari," and
time he heard
first
it
it,
became
their first national hit.
According to Venet, the
the thought occurred to him: "this song
going to
is
change West Coast music." All
up and down the West Coast, the surfing
whole new teenage way of
subcultures that would sprout
moments anyway, eliminated, and
the waves.
all
life
up
many ways
was giving credence to
a
predated a lot of the other
later in the decade. In surf culture, for a
few
the rules and restrictions of the "straight" world were
came down
There were no
tions, surfers created their
their case,
that in
life
fad
to a beautiful unity of
rules.
own
man and
nature
—riding
Like other later countercultural manifesta-
language, dress code, and
was the ultimate California sun-worshipping
way of life. Which, reality:
surfing
all
in
day
and then having enormous beach parties deep into the night before drunkenly grabbing the boards once more and hitting the midnight
on the beach,
ate
surf.
True
surfers slept
on the beach, danced on the beach, fucked on the beach. As
the Beach Boys, the penultimate surf group, proclaimed: "We're
on
safari to
stay."
As
a result of the
Beach Boys' success on Capitol, Brian earned himself
considerable clout in the ence,
it
was evident
who
West Coast music
scene. Despite Murray's interfer-
the real brains of the Beach Boys was.
The
fact that
Brian soon took control of production duties only enhanced his stature
time
when most Rock production was handled by an in-house
was
truly unusual for a
was
a
tic
group member to assume the
staff
—
at a
producer,
task, especially
it
when he
twenty-one-year-old novice. But, from the beginning, the level of "artis-
control" that the Beach Boys
—and Brian
specifically
unique. Brian's production methods, while in
—maintained was
many ways
primitive,
truly
were
still
CHAPTER 4: KILL THE BUSINESS
93
innovative: for instance, his use of double-tracking and multiple overdubs was
matched only by Phil Spector. Like Spector, perhaps the
first
West Coast-bred super
producer, Wilson
surrounded himself with an array of talented collaborators. Chief among them
was Gary Usher, another Hawthorne neighbor, who was soon important producer in his
Beach Boys'
first
own
right. It
to
become an
was Usher who collaborated on the
hot rod song, "409," thus anticipating another trend. In
fact,
thanks to the Beach Boys, Capitol was able to fully exploit both the surf and hot
rod trends. the same
Wilson
The
on most of these records were, many
actual personnel
—mainly the
in the L.A.
hip coterie that had begun to revolve around Brian
music scene of the
'60s.
Another Wilson collaborator was Roger Christian, fire
under Murray Wilson's
air.
Apparently with
Murray Wilson
a
ass
when he dumped on
called the radio station
put-down had been that the 409 it
was, and with that in
itself
lished
—
after
all,
set a
the lyrics to "409" on the in his voice,
and within minutes had coerced
The whole
gist
of Christian
s
was not the hot rod the Beach Bovs had
mind he and Brian proceeded
hot rod tune that was an even bigger that with "Little
former DJ who
a
"you think you could do better?" tone
Christian into a meeting with his famous son.
claimed
times,
hit, called
to write another
"Shutdown." Thev followed
Deuce Coupe." By then
the hot rod trend was firmly estab-
the automobile was even
more of a mainstay of teenage
cul-
ture than the surfboard.
Before long there were a host of makeshift "hot rod" groups
been
a plethora
friends.
of "surf groups
Gary Usher,
—and most of these were was the
in particular,
just
just as there'd
Brian and his
catalyst for a wealth of surf-
and hot
rod-related schlock. For Capitol alone he masterminded the
Knights, the
Ghouls, the Super Stocks, and, for Mercury, the Weird-Ohs,
Silly Surfers,
Hondells, and others. Monster and "weirdo" records were in vogue for a season,
and
at
one point the strange fusion of monster and hot rod records
ed in the form of Mr. Gasser a
actually exist-
& the Weirdos—who were actually Gary Usher and
bunch of studio musicians.
And where was the
Brian during
all
most enduring American Pop
this?
Only writing and producing sonic
classics ever: "Surfin'
USA," "Don't Worn
Baby," "Fun, Fun, Fun," "Dance, Dance, Dance," "I Get Around,"
Rhonda"
—
all
oi
"1 [elp
million-sellers that inspired .m almost devout following
Me
amongst
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
94
the denizens of the L.A. musical establishment.
were Jan as the
&
Dean
— the aforementioned
Beach Boys, only with
With
it
was
a
its
ROLL
Brian's biggest disciples
duo who were doing
"surf'
came along
lesser success until Brian
greatest triumph, "Surf City."
boy"
Among
N'
Utopian vision of "two
it
as early
to write their
every
girls for
message even the landlocked masses of the Midwest or the cynical
denizens of the East Coast could understand.
The
result
was
num-
Brian's first
ber one hit before even the Beach Boys themselves had topped the charts, a fact that so enraged
Barry heard
Murray Wilson
this,
he showed up
that he labeled Jan
at a
Beach Boys recording session wearing an eye
This type of wise-ass humor was
patch.
the can, like their version of a
School," in which they
used to describe
The
made
& Dean "pirates." When Jan duo
typical of the
new song
that left piss-takes in
"New
Brian had written called
creative use of the
—
word woody
a
Girl in
term theretofore
a favorite surfer ride.
success of the Beach Boys revolutionized
West Coast Rock. Many
groups that were primarily instrumental revamped their sound to include more
echo and their image to include surfboards (whether they rode the waves or not
—of the
was
irrelevant
Beach Boys, only Dennis was
prevalence of Beach Boys knockoffs
a surfer). Despite the
—surf
—whether Wilson-related
or not
music remained for the most part an instrumental sound. Dick Dale
Fender-heavy
as '59.
During the
hits like "Let's
Dale was performing something akin to
Go
Trippin'" and "Mr. Eliminator" as early
early '60s, bands with
names
like the
Chantays, Surfaris,
Marketts, Pyramids, and Rumblers helped reinvigorate American at a
time
when crooners and
The
Pacific
The
evening after work.
who
They happened
mental hit called "Walk-Don 't Run" career.
first
Roll
own
its
local legends in the
"horsed around" with instruments to
make
—and turned
it it
big with a fluke instruinto a decade-spanning
Along with Dick Dale, the Ventures helped make the Fender guitar the
brand of choice among American Rock bands well as the
at the time. In
Washington,
whole Northwest, the Ventures' influence was dominant, even
more raucous same
'n'
regions to help popularize the
area already had
Ventures, five bricklayers from Seattle in the
Rock
vocal groups ruled the hit parade.
Northwest was one of the
notion of the "garage band."
the
as
Deltones are the obvious prototype, later
&
variation of the
same idiom was being worked on
at
as
as a
roughly the
time.
In nearby Tacoma, a group called the Wailers had begun around 1958, per-
'
CHAPTER 4: KILL THE BUSINESS forming 'n'
Roll.
a
and good old Chuck Berry Rock
As group member Buck Ormsby explained: "There were no precedent
'bands' to
form
R&B
hybrid of saxophone-driven
a
95
work from,
there were none. But
band and perform.
We
we wanted
to play music, create
it,
started practicing in bedrooms, garages, living
rooms, or wherever there was space." This was the original "punk'Vunder-
ground scene, evidenced by the Wailers started their
made
their debut
and singer Gerry
own
fact that, like latter-day indie rockers, the
label, Etiquette.
on Etiquette
as well
Soon an equally
—the
Sonics.
feisty Seattle outfit
With
wailing saxophone
Roslie's pre-Iggy vocals, they challenged the very notion of
the Beach Boys' existence.
The "punk" that the region originated.
credence of the Northwest can be further attested to by the
was where "Louie Louie," perhaps the prototype Punk anthem,
The song had
originally
been an
R&B
Wailers recorded
it
as a
by
a
Pordand band
The Kingsmen were
even further.
was only when the
feel. It
backing band for singer Rockin' Roberts that
the characteristics of its trademark 1-2-3, 1-2, 1-2-3 later
Richard Berry, whose
hit for
1956 original was slower and had more of a Latin
few months
called the
riff.
When it was
Kingsmen,
it
took on
covered
had
little
going for
garbled, distorted
it
demo
an even more rudimentary group than the
as far as technical features went.
that
a
was downscaled
it
Wailers or Sonics, and they could only afford to book time in a local studio that
fact
The end
—one
result
was
a
was barely audible. Miraculously, the record was
picked up by radio stations in Boston, of all places, and became a Billboard break-
out
hit.
The
reason for
its
sudden ascendance seemed to be that
it
had somehow
mistakenly been declared "obscene." Typical of the leftover witch-hunt mentality of the payola years, the fact that the lyrics couldn't be fully understood led investigators to believe they
were
"dirty."
and FBI in which both Richard Berry
were dragged
Ely,
"We
in to testify,
summed up
The
investigation
as well as the singer
came up
found the record unintelligible
A full-bore
at
the record's whole ragged appeal
—
as well as
FCC
of the Kingsmen, Jack
short. In the end, the
any speed." In
by the
a its
FCC
concluded:
way, this statement
"punk"
aesthetic.
garage-band scene that surf music had helped spawn didn't end on the
West Coast
either.
There were even
Astronauts from Denver,
who
several landlocked "surf" bands, like the
released a succession of LPs for
RCA with "surf
themes even though they'd probably never seen the ocean before they toured California. Perhaps the
most notorious of the
ersatz surf bands
were the
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
96
Trashmen from Minneapolis, whose
Oom Mow Mow"
Rivingtons' "Papa
Punk classic,
it
"Surfin'
N'
sounded
Bird"
minced through
ROLL the
like
a trash compactor.
Ramones
A
to the
Cramps
was an obvious Latino element to bands
like the
has been covered by everyone from the
to AntiSeen.
Back
in California, there
&
Premieres, Cannibal
the Headhunters, and
bands, Ritchie Valens was the obvious influence
same plane crash cians.
as
Buddy
The
—dead
Midnighters.
To
these
at nineteen, killed in the
Holly, he remained a martyr figure to Latino musi-
Whatever nuances bands
like this
were adding to the
overall figuration
of Rock in the early '60s was soon obscured by the arrival of the British,
who
may have shared their devotion to Valens but were oblivious to the more organic connotations of the music. We'll never really know what direction West Coast Rock would've taken had the Beades and their East Coast a
more
is
never invaded. (The
easier to figure out because of its denizens' affinity for
intellectual
ations as
ilk
Folk music,
reckoning that probably would have allowed for such devi-
Bob Dylan,
the Fugs, and the Velvet
Underground
—
albeit in slightly
muted form.) Whatever the ly musical
case
may be,
there was evidence that
form had weathered the
late '50s/early '60s
Rock
'n'
Roll as a pure-
drought signified by the
payola probe and other factors and was about to undergo a massive renaissance.
Nobody arrival
could have predicted at that time
of the Beades,
remained
a
Rock
'n'
Roll
how
massive.
would have survived
Even without the
—but
it
might have
very small speck on the whole landscape of popular music. As
the arrival of the Beades created just the opposite
—namely,
it
was,
a guarantee that
songs as relatively insignificant as "Louie, Louie" and "Surfin' Bird" would forever.
live
Chapter
5
THE BE-zvrtK The greatest musical success story of the twentieth century began ON October 9, 1940. While the Battle of Britain raged and Hitler's bombs made
dust out of
some of England's more formidable
structures, a
baby was
born to a mother in Liverpool. Daddy wasn't present because he was away sea.
Soon he would be away
John Winston Lennon
The too
abandoning the boy, whose name was
altogether,
(after Churchill).
baby's mother, Julia, found the burden of raising the
much and
sent the child to live with her sister
Mimi.
fact,
together they
made fun of Mimi's
When John Lennon reached adolescence in
boy alone
Julia
occasion, but the relationship she established with her son was
older "friend." In
at
to be
visited
still
more
on
that of an
stricter ways.
the mid-'50s, he presented an
ever-growing problem for his aunt. Although he showed bursts of creativity
were channeled into mischief and aggressive
and even
brilliance, his energies
behavior.
Lennon
initiated
the small-time thievery and pranks
Liverpool's cators,
who
established early
on
that he
was
Quarry Bank High School. This did predicted that he'd
Somewhere along
the line,
come
Lennon
Band
era.
shuffling brand of
little
discovered
of a pre-Rock music scene in England original
among
and
it
was he who
the other boys at
to endear
him
to his edu-
to a rotten end.
much
The most
a leader,
—
Rock
'n' Roll.
just the spinal
There wasn't
remains of the Big
sound to emerge during those years was
skiffle, a
weak-kneed vaudeville shriek best personified by Lonnie
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
98
Donegan's "Rock Island Line."
and
His
a
ROLL
washboard, string
bass,
with a guitar providing the primary rhythm. Lennon chose to
tea chest,
become
was played on
Skiffle
N'
a guitar player.
band, the Quarrymen, was a typical
first
skiffle
organization, perform-
ing giddy "traditional" tunes and goofy novelties and playing school and social functions. It
was
at
one such outing that John Lennon met the man who, with
him, would forge the music partnership of the century: Paul McCartney.
McCartney who encouraged Lennon McCartney, born on June
had been
guitar
18, 1942,
when he was
was
musical prodigy: his father Jim
a
fourteen.
World War
At that time, the
and Paul had
I,
first strains
Rock boom were coming over from America, and McCartney was fect age to until his
be usurped by
He
it.
was
to begin writing songs.
a Jazz bandleader in the years following
begun playing
It
of the
at the per-
didn't really apply himself to music, however,
mother Mary died prematurely of cancer
in 1954.
From
that point on,
he never stopped. By the time he met Lennon in 1956, he was already composing his
own
material.
As McCartney recalls: a
know all the words to
used to
"I
few others. John didn't know the words to
wrote a few words and showed him
He
one.
played
all this
and
stuff
Quite a nice chap, but he was duction, and
I
sang
a
I
still
—
even
songs, so I was valuable.
I
and another
remember thinking he smelled
a bit drunk.
couple of old things."
Paul's sensibilities,
and
to play '20 Flight Rock'
Anyway, that was
a bit drunk.
When McCartney speaks here kidding
how
many
'20 Flight Rock'
my first intro-
'
of singing "a couple of old things," he's not
ranged from the toodle-doo Jazz
at that time,
of his father's generation to the "Pennies from Heaven" style of Fred Astaire.
He
always had conventional
Quarrymen. ed,
tastes,
and he brought them to the
Who knows what direction Lennon, who was more
would've taken had he never met McCartney? But
gave It
Pop
Lennon
the conviction to pursue his
would become
underestimating cisely the
ship:
its
was
significance.
a force to
a tragic event
on July
was McCartney who
musical ideas in the
first place.
unique and eventually strained partnership, but
same way without the
their talents
Soon
a
own
it
Rock-orient-
there's
Neither of them could have made other.
On the
it
no
in pre-
other hand, the combination of
be reckoned with.
would occur
15, 1958, John's
that
would further cement
mother stopped by Mimi's
their relation-
for her usual
visit,
and
CHAPTER 5: THE BEATLES on her way
out, she
was struck
fatally
by
a car.
99
This tragedy would have much
bearing on Lennon's psyche. Initially he reacted with bitterness, becoming even
more withdrawn,
abusive,
and mean-spirited. But
McCartney, whose own mother had earlier.
Now
it
brought him closer to
also prematurely passed
away four vears
they really were "brothers," psychically linked through circum-
stance and misfortune.
From the
that point on, they attacked their music with a vengeance. Although
Quarrymen
quickly rose to
music scene, the scene
some degree of prominence on
itself didn't really offer
much
the Liverpool
of a future for the two
musical aspirants. Nevertheless, they had a very professional attitude about their music.
No doubt when Lennon later said "nothing affected me
what he meant was
that Presley's celebrity affected him, and he
'til
Elvis,"
would use
it
as a
blueprint for his own.
Both Lennon and McCartney were devoted
One way
as well.
to
ranks. Paul's friend,
do
this
was to add another
George Harrison, was three
honing
to
their musical chops
guitarist to the
Quarrymen's
years Lennon's junior, which
put him in the unenviable position of being Lennon's proverbial "whipping boy."
Even Lennon had
to admit that the youngster
was
a
much more accom-
plished guitarist than either himself or McCartney. Harrison had been plaving
was
since he
six
and possessed
twangy Country
&
Western
a
mastery of the basic Rock influences.
The
licks as well as
manv
prevailing influence of Carl
Perkins on the Beatles' early recordings no doubt stemmed from Harrison's entrance into the group.
In 1958, the disillusioned of Art.
A
lot
Lennon began
attending the Liverpool College
of wayward British youths in the
late '50s
found themselves
enrolled in art school, probably because the curriculum was easy and they could just slide.
This included Lennon, Pete Townshend, Keith Richards, Eric
Clapton, and the various Kinks. Considering the arty pretense of a great deal
of subsequent British Rock, has
left its
it's
not hard to see
how the art school
"occupation"
mark. In Lennon's case, the most significant thing to happen to him
while at art school was that he came to admire another student, Stuart Sutcliffe,
who became Sutcliffe
apparendy had some musical
One of the lious
the next big influence
first
on
his life after
ability, it
was
of the real "teddy boys," Sutcliffe
McCartney. Although
his style that
flirted
Lennon
liked.
with the kind of rebel-
imagery that Lennon found instantly beguiling. So when the Quarrymen
— SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
100
needed an
band and with
electric bass player in their effort to
less
many
of a
skiffle
Rock legend
a
how
matter whether he actually knew
For
—most
ever since
Sutcliffe.
to play his instrument yet.
it
The
next task at hand was to find a drummer.
was more important that he looked the
Scodand. This gave them their
Shordy
infinitely familiar
didn't
work
and dumpy, he did own
mom
importandy, his It
Buddy
owned
—
drum
did he also
was an experience
kit,
a replacement.
Although he was plain
at least for a while.
a big consideration at that time.
the Casbah Club, the
most well-known club
Quarrymen anymore:
many
Holly's Crickets (although there are just as
name was
this
a reference to "the Beats"
own two
—which
clubs in Liverpool
first
in
they'd
honor of
who would
doubtful, considering readers).
manager, Allan Williams.
Not
only
—the Blue Angel and the Jacaranda—but he
had connections in Hamburg, Germany, where
thrived since the '30s. In the early '60s, the strip in
Rock bands
is
historians
form were more rockers than
point the band gained their
to feature live
More
was inevitable that the Quarrymen became the "house band"
that the Beades in their original
At
It
and soon they were looking for
out,
a full
two-week tour of
a
the Silver Beatles and then simply the Beades, apparendy in
claim the
a well-
permanent drummer, Thomas
except by then they weren't calling themselves the
become
learn.
with in the years to follow.
Pete Best would prove to be perfect
Liverpool.
He'd
Johnny Hutchinson,
of the road.
first taste
thereafter they hired their first
Moore. But he
didn't
part.
named Johnny Gende on
hackoid singer
a
become
it
At the urging of Liverpool impresario Larry Parnes, they
their first tour.
they'd
—
provided the support needed for the band to embark on
local stand-in,
accompanied
Roll
'n'
As has been the case
particularly Sid Vicious
now
known
ROLL
become more of a Rock
Lennon nominated
one,
N'
a nighttime sleaze scene
had
Hamburg was just beginning
as part of the debauchery.
As the Beades were,
time, playing at least a close approximation of standard
American Rock
at that
'n' Roll,
they were hired.
As Lennon remembered:
jumped around
on the
floor.
until
come
we'd have to drink Say".'
it
in... They'd just
even though
So we'd have
to
it
do
much
hated the club owners so the stage.
Paul would be doing 'What
gangsters would
"What I
"We
we broke through
I
Say' for an
send
a crate
killed us.
this
We'd
show
all
that
we
end jumpin' 'round
hour and
a half. All these
of champagne onstage and
They'd say 'Drink for them,
it
and then do
whatever time of night.
CHAPTER If they
came
in at five in the
5:
THE BEATLES
morning, and we'd been playing for seven hours,
they gave us a crate of champagne and
we were supposed
This nightmarish experience helped them hone
just getting
Taylor
&
underway, with Cliff Richard ("Move
the Playboys ("Brand
("Shakin' All Over," "Restless"),
New
Cadillac"),
Tony Dangerfield
the Tornadoes ("Telstar"). Although these and
to carry on."
their chops,
returned to Liverpool with renewed self-confidence.
was
101
The It,"
tuted
wimpy
from Hamburg
as
Rock scene
"Living Doll"), Vince
&
Johnny Kidd
the Pirates
Too Way
("She's
many other
fine
Out"), and
examples repre-
Rock scene of
their
Roll attempts until that time had consti-
regurgitations of already-outdated
realized immediately
The
'n'
and they soon
British
sented an attempt on the part of the British to establish a
own, the majority of British Rock
:
American
styles.
The
Beatles
how superior they were to the competition. They returned
conquering heroes.
nexus for the Liverpool explosion was
the Cavern Club, which
a
former Jazz venue known
became the stomping ground
Liverpool "beat" groups: Kingsize Taylor
new wave of
for the
& the Dominoes, Rory Storm & the
Hurricanes (featuring soon-to-be-crowned Beatle drummer Ringo and, of course, the Beatles themselves. According to Peter
Robert Sconfeld: "The attraction to
soon brought
'beat'
of Liverpool's children flocking to the
as
new
clubs.
a
Starr),
McCabe and
wide cross-section
They ranged from young
school kids to art students and poets... Slowly they acquired a group consciousness that
went beyond the
The musicians were
close to each other, but
Much
the musicians were friends. tained because
many
onlookers... for the friends
of the band
most
had matched, and
in
part,
some
Presley and Little Richard."
By
fact that they appreciated the
basement club
—
members were
no
cases even surpassed, their
American heroes,
'
a sophisticated
much
like the
Punk or
indie scenes of
and supportive pack of peers jammed into
to witness the pinnacles
illusions
old school friends of the
the audiences were... impressed that their
and
Meltzer has observed, the Beatles and dieir teens with
the audience and
of the inevitable hero worship was con-
description this scene sounds very
subsequent years
more important,
same music.
pratfalls
ilk
of their peers. As Richard
were: "a pack of basic limey post-
of takin' over die world... yet there's already sometbm* to
ENGLAND IS SOMEHOW FINALLY ABOUT TO ENTER CENTURY AND EMERGE FROM THE DUST OF SI VKF-
indicate that
THE 20
1U
a
1
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
102
N'
ROLL
SPEARE/CHURCHILL/QUEEN VICTORIA/LESLEY HOWARD. And where 's
this
emergence
Mick Jagger of
takin' place: the
remember
"Liverpool Sound" this way: "I can to Liverpool the
what
it
was, but
of its time."
the
While the bands
in the
south played
—
in
London who
I
can't
remember
a
more choppy
were mining
Blues, they turned to
a
American
pattern.
&
& His All
Blues, the Beades
wasn't that fit
much
"girl
their
groups," white-bread harmonizers like the
The bottom
having to maintain nine-hour
sets
like
line was, the
and
all.
Carl
Beades
There simply
Blues to go around, and the Beades were never a "purist" out-
—they were perfecdy
to begin with
favor of pure
and
myriad of Colonial resources. Along with the
Perkins and Chet Atkins for their inspiration. versatile,
They
those harmonies."
Everly Brothers and Four Freshman, and countrified rockabillies
had to be
as
'
all
coalesced around Alexis Korner
were preoccupied with American Rhythm ilk
time the Stones ever
do know that they played four to the bar on the bass drum
I
did have a different sound, and the other thing was
Mersey-side
first
drummers played completely different.
opposed to what drummers
Stars
4
Rolling Stones described the uniqueness of the
the
went
CBGBs
Pop
if it
paid
willing to supplant such tendencies in
off.
At that time, the connotations of "pop" weren't that ominous. Although
some musicians Rock
purity. It
strove for Blues purity, hardly anyone at that time strove for
was expected of every musician playing the form to eventually
Hit Parade. This was the precedent
join the
the world the Beades were
group had done, however
would argue that they
coming
—they
killed
into.
set
The Beades
elevated the
"Rock"
by Elvis
form
in the process
Presley,
did something
at the
by
and that was
no other
same time. Some
foisting
upon
who knows what would
it
a
bunch
of high-minded
ideals,
pened? Rock
Roll could've been relegated to the same terminally retro sta-
tus as
'n'
lounge music. As
but
it
ultimate "popular music"
if
they hadn't,
have hap-
was, the Beades forever solidified Rock's status as the
—even
if
they emasculated
it
in the process (which
is
debatable anyway).
The Beades were type of
mane
also catching long stares for their hairstyles
that resembled the
pudding-bowl
clips
—
a
shaggy
of mentally retarded kids
locked up in the notorious "snake pits" before the days of enlightenment. Sutcliffe
had introduced the haircut to the group, influenced by Astrid
Kirchherr, a beautiful blonde pre-Nico
German
artist/bohemian who'd
become
.
CHAPTER
5:
THE BEATLES
103
acquainted with Sutcliffe a few months before he joined the Beatles. say
what other influences
Sutcliffe
quit and decided to stay in
By this British
time, the
Rock
like
Gene
like
Johnny
Hamburg
1
0,
1
Hamburg scene had become
962
a thriving circuit for not only
musicians, but the American originals as well. After
&
welcome anymore
the Hurricanes weren't exactly
Many of them moved
Cochran loomed
particularly large
England before dying
on the
British
the Beades
cultivating a leatherboy
was during one of their many first
met
Hamburg,
a
expatriates' juvenile
young vocalist named
image close to that of Vincent and
trips to the
legendary Star Club that
make
the singer. Sheridan was getting ready to
and asked the group to accompany him. By to bass, replacing Sutcliffe.
this
the B-side, "Ain't She Sweet,"
The song was
marked the
first
"My
called
Bonnie," and
recorded appearance of
a
vocal.
seems while the Beades had been away in
Hamburg they'd
lowing back home. In a few months, the group would top Mersey Beat year-end
who
record
time McCartney had switched
"My Bonnie" led to a strange request for a record store owner in It
a
Lennon, Harrison, and Sheridan played guitar on
the session, and Best added the beat.
Lennon
cult adulation.
in a car crash in 1960.
delinquent mannerisms and style of dress. In
It
Pop-
in the early
music scene, having moved to
European musicians everywhere began aping these
Tony Sheridan was
in the
Europe
to
where they found themselves the objects of widespread
Cochran.
bad boys
all,
Vincent, Carl Perkins, Eddie Cochran, and even instrumental acts
oriented music scene back home. '60s,
hard to
with Kirchherr. Shortly thereafter,
of a brain hemorrhage on April
Sutcliffe died
It's
would've brought to the group had he not
started the
poll.
magazine
famous
up
a cult fol-
categories in the
all
Mersey Beat was the brainstorm of one
Bill
I
Iain,
in reaction to the Liverpool Echo's failure to recognize
the "beat" scene. This was early fanzine pioneering at referred to the
built
Liverpool.
river,
which reached
a
its
best.
vortex in Liverpool.
"Mersey"
From
its
banks came the sound that would rock die world.
During the 1960s,
British culture
became highly exportable,
particularly in
America, where Anglophilia was at an all-time high. As Meltzer noted, the Brits
were
finally
shaking off the cobwebs of Elizabedvan formalin-. In 1963 the
Profumo Scandal, around on
in
leashes,
which top-ranking government rocked Britain. Soon
after,
officials
were leading
Swingin'
girls
London would
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
104
N'
ROLL
implode. Thanks to the English, fashion and Rock would become inextricably linked.
However, the day that young Raymond Jones
"My
Record Store requesting
Nems
strolled into the
Bonnie," the Beades and their
ilk
had yet to
achieve anything beyond local notoriety, and British working class fashion was still
more
in the league of
docker boots and
Navy
trousers.
The
store's propri-
Brian Epstein, had never even heard of the group, despite the fact that they
etor,
were from Liverpool. Intrigued by the notion of a
Cavern one night
into the
to hear the
Beades
local scene, Epstein
play. It
was
likely that,
time, Epstein was thinking in entrepreneurial terms. His interest in
was
limited, but as a
manger of a
successful music outlet,
smelly,
and
regretted
I
was black
my decision
to
even
at least curious
Cavern,
deep grave, dark and damp and
as a
6
come."
—and
Epstein introduced himself to the band, and while they
Lennon It
was
—were
them
agreed to meet him
at
Nems
really
had
a responsible
potential in a
much
and
were being
Hamburg
filled.
Epstein realized the group's
larger sense.
homosexual, and almost
most was
his adult
Beatles
but had no eye on the
Brian was not a likely party to get involved with a
most of
The
manager. Allen Williams was able to help
establish themselves in Liverpool
future as long as his pockets
chiefly
the following day.
time that he offered to take over managerial duties.
at this
had never
skeptical, they
at that
Rock music
Upon his first visit to the
about the sudden popularity of these upstarts. Epstein's impression was: "It
he was
jammed
life.
thirty,
Rock group: Jewish,
he'd been working in the family business for
Although the store was prospering, having become the
successful record store in Liverpool, Brian's relationship with his father
still testy.
That probably stemmed from an incident
Brian was a teenager. As he recalled: "I wrote
from school so that Brian and his
of the
'60s:
I
ilk
home and
could become a dress designer."
that
asked to be taken away
7
were emblematic of the whole "Swingin' London" phase
young, elegant, and slighdy pouffy, these nonconformists were
rebelling against the stifling repression of the '50s
Soon they would become
by flouncing the
field
of Rock, Brian obviously
winner when he saw and heard one. Having the group record it
fashion.
millionaires.
Despite his lack of experience in the
shopping
happened when
around to the various record
labels in
England
a
knew
a
demo, he began
whom he knew from
CHAPTER 5: THE BEATLES his connections in the retail business.
105
At that time, the "beat" explosion was
still
mostly a provincial phenomenon, and the London-based British record industry wasn't entirely interested. Finally,
on the
audition with Decca, at that time Britain's later sign the Rolling Stones).
But the
first
most
day of 1962, he got them an
successful record label (who'd
label rejected the Beades,
A&R man Dick Rowe's immortal comment on the occasion
and Decca
stands
still
the greatest blunders of history: "Groups of guitars are on their
way
among
out,
Mr.
Epstein."
Groups of guitars and their
become
ilk,
weren't
on
their
way
out, however.
Thanks
to the Beatles
the guitar-based four- or five-man performing unit was about to
the wave of the future.
After subsequent rejections by several other major labels, the Beatles went
back to toiling
at the Star
Club
in
Hamburg.
It
was not an encouraging He, on
prospect, and the group began to have second thoughts about Epstein.
the other hand, never lost faith in his charges and was always confident that the Beatles were going to take the British music industiy
of 1962, Epstein decided to have the Beatles' plastic record.
Coleman for
As luck would have
it,
demo
pressed onto a one-sided
the person he enlisted to do
—an old record biz contact—happened
EMI. Coleman was blown away by
with a friend
by storm. In the summer
to also be
this,
Syd
doing similar work
the Beatles and arranged an audition
who at that time was a staff producer for Parlophone,
an
EMI sub-
sidiary.
George Martin was the
right person at the right place at the right time to
hear the Beatles. Parlophone was kind of EMI's "offbeat" branch then, had specialized in
comedy
which meant Martin had
records,
the absurd. For this reason, he wasn't quite as opposed to
of his peers.
The
that,
Beatles didn't lay a heavy
Rock
'n'
Rock trip on him from
way, auditioning with lightweight fare like "Til There
Was
up
until
a taste for
Roll as
some
the start any-
You." Martin was
impressed enough to grant them a recording session. Almost immediately, the
band began rehearsing new material.
There was one
stipulation: Pete Best
ly displease the Beatles, as
already had their eye
become
would have
he'd never really
fit
to go.
in anyway.
This didn't entire-
By
that time they
on another Liverpool drummer, Ringo
friendly with the
group when
his
own
Starr,
band, Rory Storm
who'd *Sc
the
Hurricanes, had backed them up in Hamburg. Starr was told he could join the
— SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
106
group on the eve of their
EMI
Not yet
Beades," said Brian.
if
ten back in the '50s, "Love
any means,
it
Alley
still
Me
from
this
By
it
complex construction by
On the basis of this, Martin had hadn't lost his mind. EMI needn't
point on the Beades would repay
a
all
modest
on the
hit
none of
insisting
it,
"Please Please
The
British charts,
dividends.
the time of the Beades' second release, however, the result,
in those days
charts.
—although the record was only
company was
still
they tried to convince the young upstarts to
record a cover song, but the ambitious
all
a
was self-penned, an anomaly
dominated the
not entirely convinced. As a
most
song John and Paul had writ-
Do." Although not
hard time convincing his uppers that he
have worried
beards in the
anyway.
was unique because
when Tin Pan
"No
he shaved his beard.
their first recording, the Beatles chose a
For
a
debut
ROLL
N'
Lennon and McCartney were having
on recording another new self-composed tune
Me." This was the turning point of the group's
Beatles' forthrightness in this area
called
career.
was unique and trendsetting
would've succumbed and gone for the gold. For instance, look at
artists
the crap that Presley cut.
The
Beatles, however,
had
total faith in their
capabilities
and knew they were destined to turn the record industry inside
out. That's
why
restrict
every subsequent Beatles hit would be an original and they'd
cover material to their album
— and even then they'd discontinue
filler
that after 1965.
Part of this had to do with a deal Brian cut with publisher Dick James. Until
then a not-very-successful entrepreneur, James was looking for a passport out of
Tin Pan
Alley.
He
was convinced
that,
within five years,
would be the most successful composing team Epstein, he created realized that a fact
Northern Songs
in
England. In cahoots with
to exclusively publish
Rock music publishing was another whole
already proven by Hill
to stress that
"Please Please dards.
of a
The
lot
first
the taking
& Range, Elvis's publishers. After the Beades, it was
Rock was an
morons or lovelorn
Beades songs. James
field ripe for
considered very passe for bands to do nothing but covers. first
Lennon/McCartney
art form,
not merely
a
way
The
Beatles were the
to entertain sock
hop
teenagers.
Me" was
indicative of the band's high musical
and
lyrical stan-
thing one noticed about a Beatles song was that there was a hell
going on,
as
opposed to most records of the day (save for those produced
by Phil Spector or Brian Wilson). "Please Please Me,"
for instance,
moved
rap-
CHAPTER 5: THE BEATLES idly
107
The "c'mon c'mon"
through several vexing variations.
call-and-response
buildup set the tone for the next several years of record making,
songs themselves would build to explosive climaxes (almost
The Beades were
which the
in
a lost art
now).
about excitement, no question. Sure, thev threw
all
in
schmaltzy stuff for a quick sellout. But they weren't becoming famous for "This
Boy" and "Til There Was You"
—they were becoming famous "From
of walloping hit singles like "Please Please Me,"
Me
for their string
to You,"
and "She
Loves You." George Martin's excellent production helped render everything else anachronistic, primitive, and,
The faint.
worse
Bye-bye, Four Seasons.
yet, square.
excitement was infectious. Crowds started to scream. Girls started to
And
a
few music biz people began to draw comparisons to names
like
"Sinatra" and "Presley."
Under
their breath, that
sidered very freaky.
is,
because at that time the Beades were
One way the Beades would change
on the album market, which
heavily
for Presley
—who
Rock had been
more
fell
able to
where
is
all
into the "entertainer" category
make
dent in
a
this area.
it's
The hour
Beades'
first
quickly.
The
result
—no one
was
a
in
who
KO'ing the competition on
so.
The Beades were
marathons, thanks to their experience in Hamburg.
not go over budget on such
was. Save
anyway
album, Please Please Me, was recorded during
all-night session in early 1963.
in
fight for respect every inch of
to their credit that they succeeded,
almost every front until at least 1966 or
money
Like a heavyweight boxer
had to come up the hard way, the Beades had to the way, and
the royalty
con-
was to weigh
this
all
still
a sixteen-
used to doing such
EMI
was determined to
dubious venture and urged the boys to work
as "live"-sounding a
recording as could be hoped
for,
considering the circumstances.
That
didn't help
it
in America,
sell
Seasons' label, had leased
it.
Vee Jay
didn't
where Vee Jay records, the Four
seem
group, and the record languished in obscurity. erwise
it
Meanwhile
in
England,
During the spring of
'63,
to wait eight
Epstein had predicted,
Roy Orbison
to the top of the Melody
Maker
to
promote the it,
but oth-
more months
to
becoming known back home).
the Beatles headlined
with American pop legend
Me
as
know how
A few weirdos heard
went unnoticed. Americans would have
discover the Fab Four (as they were
to
a
in tow.
charts,
where
tilings
were happening
national tour for the
first
fast.
time
This helped propel Please Please it
stayed for an unprecedented
108
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
thirty weeks!
When
it
was
finally
knocked off the top
London Palladium"
arrival
more than
was by the
slot, it
second album. That kind of popularity was simply unheard
Nothing signaled the Beades'
ROLL
N'
even for Presley.
of,
the "Sunday Night at the
broadcast on October 13, 1963.
By now
—venues. The Palladium was the
drew so many
biggest,
their
The next day the
fans that they blocked the streets.
pictures of girls fainting and bobbies carrying
and
the Beades had
—and soon
long since surpassed the Cavern and were playing national international
Beatles'
them away.
It
was
to be
performance
papers carried
definitely a sign
of things to come.
The
Beatles kept recording at a frenetic pace. Their second album, With
showed
the Beatles,
by now prepared (as
a
marked
technical
improvement over
to spend the big bucks to both
they affectionately became known).
moptops shrouded concepts of the
in the shadows,
'60s.
As
for the
— the new compositions Got
Do" and George
to
The
EMI
first.
promote and record the
cover, with
its
was
"lads"
four ear-cropped
was one of the most mimicked album cover
music contained in the grooves,
Won't Be Long," "Not
"It
their
Harrison's "Don't Bother
a
at least half
Second Time,"
Me"
of
"All I've
—were shimmering
in
their brilliance.
At
this
EMI knew
they had a winner on their hands and was willing
aim
American market
point
to take another
at the
—unfortunately,
about the time Lee Harvey Oswald was taking his aim
that
was right
at President
Kennedy,
and suddenly the country was beset by tragedy. For the next month, the nation
hung over
mised, perhaps
seemed
it
the nation like a black cloud. As
some
assassi-
sociologists have sur-
was the void caused by the death of
a president
who had
to possess such youthful vigor that enabled the Beades to so totally cap-
ture the imagination of America's youth.
EMI was relendess in its hype — the United States on February
7,
Beades were scheduled to arrive
1964. As early as
December
EMI's North American wing, was pressing copies of the
Hand"
single
and Meet
British albums).
They
the Beatles
album
'63,
"I
Capitol Records,
Want
to
Hold Your
(an amalgamation of their
also distributed stickers, press releases,
in the
first
two
and other hype,
including one million Beades wigs, which became a popular novelty before the countercultural hordes got brash and grew their own.
Even selves, for
all
the hype couldn't have prepared the public, or the Beades them-
what happened
next.
When
the Beades finally arrived at
Kennedy
CHAPTER
—so named
Airport
5:
THE BEATLES
—
after the slain president
109
thousands of screaming
literally
youths were there to greet them, and the media were there to cover port
official told
for presidents
One
air-
Not even
and kings."
But the times they were a-changin'.
made
it.
the press: "We've never seen anything like this before.
their successful
the Beades
debut on The Ed Sullivan Show, which was the American
equivalent of the televised Palladium
egy on Epstein's
Two days after their arrival,
part: Sullivan's
show back home. This was
show was,
at that time, the
brilliant strat-
most watched
in
America, and he was one of the most powerful moguls in the industry.
Although he'd
later
have run-ins with other groups (the Rolling Stones, the
Doors), he'd continue to host the Beatles whenever they appeared on these shores
—and pay Epstein
a sizable
portion for the right.
Despite the Beatles' phenomenal success, acceptance from the "straight"
world was slow in coming. Take, for instance, the opening paragraph of the
Newsweek cover story dated February 24, 1964: "Visually they are tight dandified
Edwardian beatnik
a
nightmare:
and great pudding-bowls of
suits
Musically they are a near-disaster: guitars and drums slamming out beat that does away with secondary rhythms,
a
merciless
harmony and melody. Their
(punctuated by nutty shouts of yeah, yeah, yeah!) are
hair.
a catastrophe, a
lyrics
prepos-
terous farrago of valentine-card romantic sentiments."
In light of this kind of condescension, the Beades had their
America. As Lennon
The
British
press
anything. .And .
bermuda looked
said:
are
"When we the
arrived
toughest in
all
walking around
on your
we thought how
McCartney concurred: "There they were
hip
we
were."
in America,
trained for adulthood with their indisputable principle of
men, long hair equals women. Well we got them.
And
a
few others too."
All this talk about hair
that the
mainly,
rid
the Billboard
Top
jazz.
We just
'
getting house-
short hair equals
of that small convention for
"
would have been
charts.
all
life:
irrelevant if
it
Beades kept outdistancing die competition where
on the record
in fuckin'
teeth... The chicks
There was no conception of dress or any of that .
the press.
we could handle
world;
the
shorts with Boston crewcuts and stuff
thought what an ugly race. .and
ideas about
we knew how to handle
when we got here you were
like 1940s.
own
On April
4,
1
wasn't for the it
really
fact
counted—
964, they held the top five slots on
100, with seven in the top ten as well as a smattering of hits
1
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
10
lower depths. Even Elvis had never achieved
in the
number one
weren't at
penned number
Without Love"
The because
that year, there
group or
for another
was
artist
—was dominating the top
—
it
meant
hit parade in
these groups relied
on
the navigating force of
if
work this
&
Gordon's "A World
named
clever,
and the
the
Manfred Mann, the Searchers, the all
place records in the top ten.
heavily amplified guitars or organs, electricity 'n'
level
As
became
Roll.
Beatles were at the forefront of
not
upon
alarming quantities. In 1964 alone, such significant
Rock
all this
They were
joyful noise.
noth-
of enthusiasm with which they approached their
—and that they subsequently injected into —was palpable. Nowhere was it
more apparent than
in their first film,
A
Hard
Day's Night, and
panying soundtrack. Lennon and McCartney were composing sophistication with songs like Instead," and "Things
and there was
a
was the
We
"I'll
Be Back," "When
Said Today."
I
Get Home,"
The harmonies were
Rock
'n'
Roll. Part of the reason for this
few months would become simply airborne: songs
film,
Cry
"I'll
getting stronger,
ecstatic
until then a
sudden maturity
fame demanded, which would make anyone age
overnight. As a result of their increasing sophistication, their
The
accom-
—
frantic pace that
were downright
its
new level of
at a
complexity to the work that bespoke maturity
foreign concept in
—the notes and harmonies
like
work
in the next
"Eight Days a
literally
hung
in the
Week" air.
meanwhile, showed that the Beatles, unlike Presley, had depth
"personalities" as well. It
came
Beades
that a John-and-Paul-
that other British groups could start descending
Animals, the Kinks, and the Zombies would
ing
Peter
When the
slot.
British musical acts as the Rolling Stones,
The
like
ROLL
Beades' arrival signaled the start of the British Invasion, so
American
all
this feat.
good chance
a
N'
to the fore: John
was
in
as
A Hard Days Night that their four distinct personas
was "the smart one," Paul, "the cute one," George, "the quiet
one," and Ringo, the normal average Joe with a heart of gold. At this point, the
Beades began to be taken seriously by cultural spokespeople
Norman assault
Mailer, and Arthur Schlesinger,
on the public consciousness
Musically, the Beatles '65
was
as
band continued
were pivotal
much
via
in that they
a part of their
sound
Jr.
Dr. Joyce Brothers,
The Beades had now completed
two mediums: music and
to evolve.
Albums
confirmed the as
like
like
fact that
Pop or Rhythm
&
their
"celebrity."
Something
Country
New and
& Western
Blues. This
would be
an important influx on the American music scene, helping young musicians
dis-
1
CHAPTER
5:
THE BEATLES
1 1
cover redneck roots that might've otherwise evaded them. tion the Byrds, the International
Springfield,
with
field,
and the English did
American record
Coincidentally, the Beatles'
Country
Submarine Band, Lovin' Spoonful, Buffalo
country bumpkinism,
etc.:
One need only men-
label, Capitol,
down-home music makers
was
first!
it
a leader in the
Merle Haggard and Roy
like
Clark being their main money-pullers until the Fabs.
Another thing these albums established was
"And
ladeer in the group. Songs like
became
I
Paul's role as the chief bal-
Love Her" and
readily adaptable "standards" easily covered
could work in the positive (Herbie In any case,
it
worked
Mann)
Follow the Sun"
by non-Rock artists, which
or negative
in favor of the Beatles'
"I'll
(New Christy Minstrels).
pocketbooks
as far as publishing
went. Because of this romantic manifestation in the Beatles' music, rockers
were inspired to display
their
more
"sensitive" leanings,
Rolling Stones added sop to their repertoire like "As Tears
which
is
why
the
Go By." This would
romanticism of the singer/songwriters in the next
in turn influence the wistful
decade (Neil Young, Jackson Browne, James Taylor, Elton John, and other guys
who wore The 'n'
Roll.
their hearts
on
their sleeves).
Beatles' innovations sparked a creative revolution in the
For instance, the mere spurt of feedback
at the
world of Rock
beginning of
Fine" foreshadowed the electrified eruptions of the Yardbirds and
"I Feel
Who. The
chiming twelve-string guitar played by George Harrison in A Hard Days Sight provided the impetus for the Byrds and
Bob Dylan,
a
thousand other "folk-rockers." Even
the only one besides perhaps the Rolling Stones to actually chal-
lenge the Beatles' mantle in the '60s, had gone electric.
Dylan became
a colossal
phenomenon
were paying enormous attention to
lyrics.
ground, and his "protest" songs were
This put him in lyric
a decisive
in 1965 and,
all
of a sudden,
Dylan had come from
rife
a folkie
critics
back-
with peculiar allegorical imager)-.
advantage over either Lennon or McCartney in the
writing category because, up until that time, most of dieir songs had been
of the contrived boy/girl quality.
John Lennon was the
first
"I'm a Loser" on Beatles '65 face
"You've
Got
to
to explore
{Beatles for Sale in
Beade facade might not be
vein of self-doubt even
Beade
entirely
more on
on the
more
topical lyrical terrain.
England) hinted that the smileylevel.
Lennon would pursue
this
the next album with songs like "Help!" and
Hide Your Love Away."
1
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK N' ROLL
12
of the things that might have inspired the Beatles to delve further
One
"into their heads" to legend,
began smoking marijuana. According
fact that they'd
was Dylan who introduced them to pot during
it
tour in 1964.
The
Hamburg/Cavern ance
was the
Beades, however, were no strangers to drugs:
all
during the
years they used uppers to maintain their vigorous perform-
In the '60s, psychedelic drugs like marijuana and
level.
American
their first
preference of the young, rich, hip, and famous. Soon
would
became the
down
trickle
the real revolution would begin
when
the sandlot leagues. That's
it
LSD
(e.g.,
to
the
Stooges).
The
"artists"
of the '60s viewed chemical consumption as an integral part
of the creative process. in an interview
much
The Beades were no
later,
the whole time the band was
Although the Beades' personal fringe, their public
their second
been awarded the royal
clean.
May
Not only
1965
it
did they gleefully frolic
was announced that they'd
MBE (Medal of the Order of the British Empire). This
was Mother England repaying them for the British economy.
towards the bohemian
interests drifted
image was squeaky
through the uninspired Help!, but in
a
making
Lennon
they were baked.
film, Help!,
On
exception. According to
They were,
performance
level,
all
the
money they'd helped pump into
at that time, Britain's
the Beades were
most exportable item.
by now going through the
motions. Such was the volume of the screaming fans that they couldn't even hear
themselves play (sound systems in those days were
would soon convince them couldn't just
jump
to give
up touring
Beades were
at their absolute zenith
less efficient).
For one
thing, Brian Epstein
of the year. There's no doubt that the
rest
when
Sid Bernstein
booked them
for the leg-
endary Shea Stadium concert on August 15 before 55,000 screaming event,
more than any
other, helped
This
altogether. In 1965, however, they
off the whirlwind they'd created.
had sealed up engagements for the
much
awaken promoters to the
fans.
This
lucrative potential
of live Rock. Within a few years, "stadium" concerts would be the norm.
The
Beatles' dissatisfaction over
become more ensconced
The
result
was Rubber
performance conditions led them to
womb-like security of the recording
in the
Soul, released in
group's ambitions were clear
album (gone were the Rock album's cohesive singularity,
December
1965.
By
studio.
this time, the
—not only did they compose every song on the
'n'
Roll oldies) but also, almost as
no
singles
were released from
it.
if
to stress the
So confident
3
CHAPTER were the Fabs by
now in
THE BEATLES
5:
1 1
the ability of their images alone to
nowhere on the front cover did the name "Beatles"
sell
an album that
The
appear.
cover was
innovative in another way: the strange, distorted image of the Beatles' stretched faces
—rendered with
inspire further visual trickery in the
work was soon
demand
to
album packaging
become an industry
in
rise
&
the Holding
in
Rock album
art-
which the groups would
Company with
R.
Dead with
Stanley
Crumb. This
all
Mouse and Big
had to do with the
of drugs.
Rubber Soul was the ent
itself,
field.
—would
to have their favorite artists design their record sleeves, such as the
Stones with Michael Cooper, the Grateful
Brother
photo technique
typical '60s "fisheye"
—not
just
on the
first
Beades album in which drug use was readily appar-
cover, but in the hypnotic
lilts
in the songs that could only
have been conceived in the seclusion of the studio (and dreamed of in an altered state). Lyrically,
the songs proved
no
less perplexing.
album on which George Harrison came
first
"Think For Yourself was
John or Paul had
into his
of weird harmonic
full
Rubber Soul was also the
shifts
own
on
as a songwriter:
a par
with anything
written.
Harrison was soon to exert an even bigger influence on the group due to Eastern music and philosophy. Already a big buzz
his interest in
and
intellectuals,
among
poets
Eastern religion was another by-product of the drug culture
and consciousness-raising in general. Fortunately, Harrison's mystical inclinations
were
haps the
at this
first
time
still
mosdy
musical.
appearance of the Indian
was
time, however, there
recording was even
Rock
a question as to 'n'
Rock
a
'n'
Roll record.
By
this
whether what the Beades were
Many times
this
meant outright non-Rock
piano solo George Martin played on "In
moves
like the semi-Classical
Life,"
which once again confirmed it
on
Roll anymore. In any case, they were definitely
pushing the boundaries of the form.
Beades were having
sitar
"Norwegian Wood" marked per-
both ways
My The
their reputation with highbrows.
—inducing the hippie hordes on the one hand
but charming the knickers off the bowtie and cufflink set on the other. All those
comparisons to Schubert were starting to add up. In December 1965 reported that there had already been "Yesterday."
The ing.
The song had
more than
styles,
was
three hundred versions of
only been out for three months.
thing about the Beades in those days was that they were always
Changing
it
mov-
instrumentation, even their appearance with every album.
1
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
14
they were able to create a later
admitted
instance, in
that,
momentum
that has
N'
seldom been matched. Lennon
during those years, he saw himself "sending messages." For
"The Word," Lennon
states:
"the
word
is
Only Love," he
meaning and Ah,
yes:
that's precisely
the hippies.
uses the phrase "I get high" in typical
Tin Pan
knew
the dou-
Alley fashion to describe the elation of love, but the fact was, he ble
enough,
love." Sure
among
within the next few years "love" would be the word Similarly, in "It's
ROLL
way he meant
the
it.
double entendres, hidden meanings, and the
LSD. The implosion of acid
made
sense under
effect
on the whole mindset of Rock
Roll.
'n'
in
like. It
could only have
1966 was to have
The Rock scene
in
a
profound
San Francisco,
haven of the hippies, was based entirely around the experience of tripping.
whole record industry went mad
for a while with psychedelic imagery, so
on her album
so that Petula Clark had multicolored florals exploding
The
shape, sound, and visual image of
pop
becoming
culture were
The
much
covers.
lysergically
distorted.
LSD chosis.
was originally conceived
This naturally resulted in
Sometimes
overhaul.
a
an agent to help people overcome psy-
a lot
of deep inner reflection and emotional
person would relive his or her whole
The whole
of one "trip."
as
it
was thanks to
in the course
soul-searching notion of "self-help" that became so
popular in the next decade began with the acid. acid
life
a dentist friend
The
first
time the Beatles tried
mad
of George's, and they went
their limos like submarines, etc. In other words, their shenanigans
were akin to their winky-blink dope-smoking case, the
antics:
driving
on the drug
pure fun. In Lennon's
drugs would eventually produce full-blown paranoia
(as reflected
by
his later work).
To produce
the accompanying psychedelic sounds, the Beatles
became
on the properties of the modern recording studio
(in large
increasingly reliant
part assisted
by George Martin). Like the Beach Boys
who were
also
becoming
less
embarking on
their
own
at
around the same time,
psychedelic voyage, the Beades were
of a performance unit and more of a studio tool
become
—
albeit a
mul-
The Beades
tifaceted one.
To
were seeking
isolation so they could continue their "experiments" unfettered.
the band, touring had
This included drugs
as well as music.
By now
all
but irrelevant.
the acid had magnified their
musical vision to an almost Utopian sense of mission. Such were the trappings
of guru-dom.
1
CHAPTER
THE BEATLES
5:
This was the age when acid freaks
1
5
sat next to roto-styluses trying to deci-
pher the "message" of each Beatles record. In 1966 they got plenty of 'em:
"Nowhere Man" seemed another autobiographical toward
was
total alienation. "Rain," the flip side
a reverberating piece
step in
John Lennon's road
of the "Paperback Writer" single,
of proto-psych that foretold doomsday woe and had
Lennon chanting backwards through an
oscillator.
This was
technique
a
George Martin would help him perfect on the next two albums.
Lennon was
quickly becoming the most adventurous Beatle, not just in
terms of his drug taking but also in the tunes he was composing
at that time.
"I'm Only Sleeping" was a creative collage of tape loops and interzoidal head sounds. Lennon, as dopefied
jester,
cherishes his precious sleep, a
and
a very regal attitude,
it
how much
sneers and literally coos about
theme he'd repeat again
in the near future. It
reflected a lot of the arrogant trappings that
he
was
Rock
was about to take on.
Lennon was issues.
also
becoming the most publicly outspoken Beatle on other
In 1966 the group found themselves in the midst of controversy over a
comment
he'd
made
earlier that year to a reporter
from the London Evening We're more popular
Standard: "Christianity will go. It will vanish and shrink.
than Jesus now."
When
these
comments were taken out of context
in
August
1966, essentially being interpreted in the media as "Beatles Proclaim They're
Bigger
Than
and unwanted controversy just
as
they were about to embark on what was to be
American tour (although no one knew
their final
it
at the time). Brian Epstein
made Lennon hold
a press conference to apologize,
some of the venues
in the
Belt,
awkward
Christ," the group found themselves in the midst of an
had threatened to
upcoming
mosdy
for
tour, particularly in the
pull out at the last
minute
if
Lennon
PR
reasons:
southern Bible
didn't retract his
"blasphemous" statements.
When the
Beatles quit touring, Brian Epstein's role
became minimal. For
three years he had vigorously sold his boys to the world
each time.
had
little
He
took care of their tours, film
influence
on
their music. It
they were entering their most musically ing
them up were
over, in other words.
to pursue the nightlife of
despondent.
It
deals,
was during
—
higher price
at a
and public image this period,
however, that
fruitful period. Epstein's
And although
London's "underground,"
this it
— but he
days of dress-
gave him more time
left
him
was only when he died unexpectedly of a sleeping
increasingly pill
overdose
— 1
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
16
the following year that
N'
ROLL
became apparent how important he'd
it
actually
been
phenomenon. One of the
great
to the group.
In 1967
Rock had reached its apex as a Rock was
factors of '60s
period of time.
that such incredible refinement took place in such a short
The Beades
always seemed to be at the forefront of it
the
Rock scene grew larger,
or
Bob Dylan (who'd warned
"movement"
itself
cultural
reliance
on
all. Still,
as
superficial "leaders" like the Beades, Elvis,
against
them anyway) became
had become more important than any single
Before the Beades ceased to be relevant they had one
irrelevant.
The
entity.
and
last fling,
it
was the
—and of the counterculture. Conscious of
most momentous event of their career their musical
ed myth
on
seal
development
—the Beades the whole
set
—and of
out in
their highly inflated but not totally
late '66 to create
movement, an
create such a
album could that's
There was more
to
it
that,
offering because so
throughout
like
with songs that
The Beach Boys had it
took one hundred takes
all
ran together.
The
Beatles
And Captain
Beefheart
& His Magic Band were
were conscious of all these developments, which
Sgt. Pepper's Lo?iely Sgt.
The sound less.
The
Hearts Club Band came about.
marching through the purple haze
forms pledging to save the world "with our love" soaked Harri).
They
really could see its
is
it
how
really a
had reached
exacdy how
it's
in their bright
(this last
level, I
hasn't aged well.
technically proficient, playful, even fascinating, but
Beatles
filter.
On a purely technical
Pepper was purty big cheez. But like The Doors,
is
shows
light
Velvet Underground was playing
distorting the Delta Blues through a weirdo-dadaist dope-soaked
suppose
just released
"Arnold Layne." Frank Zappa was cutting two-record
screeching songs about whips.
The
history.
of their peers were chal-
Pink Floyd was out-hallucinating the Beatles with their
and with material sets
many
Vibrations," a construction so intricate that
to perfect.
the collective
though: the Beades, at that time, had to
lenging the parameters they'd established.
"Good
rival
hard to believe a Rock n' Roll
place, right time... happens all
than
come up with an ambitious
itself. It's
would
but in the primitive frenzy of the Rock Boom,
stir,
what happened. Right
an album that would put the
actual event that
achievements of Western civilization
unfound-
not time-
band uni-
courtesy of the acid-
their stride, perfected their craft.
You
whole generation of dopeheads could be gobbled up by
euphoric good vibes. But the big hoopla surrounding the album was hype
all it
ultimately
wrought was
circus carousel sounds (the Hollies' "Carrie
Ann,"
7
CHAPTER 5: THE BEATLES Spanky
1 1
& Our Gang's "Sunday Will Never Be the Same," and a host of others)
and psychedelic poesy lemon-drop
lyrics
invented the Strawberry Alarm Clock (Did
—next I
hear
thing you
Lemon
know someone
Pipers?).
"Getting Better" was a slap on the back from McCartney to the hippie hordes... we're winning, we're winning. But there was a darker side to
people stand there and disagree/And wonder
"Silly
door." I
The
why they
it all:
don't get past
my
paranoia had begun, in other words. (Or "I Choose the Sycophants
Want"—Paul.) "She's Leaving
Home"
incorporated strings, which raised highbrows even
was quintessential mid-'60s generation-gap
higher. It
runaway who
leaves the nest because "fun
is
Runaways were another whole aspect of the '60s (along
fare dealing with a teenage
the one thing that
money can't buy."
culture that grimly blossomed in the
VD and serial killers). There was a grim malevolence that was
with
beginning to pervade every aspect of the "underground." In Pepper was like the alism
last blast
many
of uncorrupted '60s "fun." Soon such exuberant ide-
would be replaced by cynicism, and the Beades would pipe
too, but in
women,
ways, Sgt.
1967 they had other
priorities
—
in
on
that
one
money, and
like drugs, gurus,
in that order.
After
all
the accolades afforded Sgt. Pepper by everyone from Leonard
Bernstein to the Opera Ti?nes, there seemed to be
Four and the average kid on the
streets.
some
The myth
is
distance between the that
all
Rock
at that
was undergoing similar highbrow pretensions, but that simply wasn't
Fab
time true.
There was potent Rock being made everywhere, from the Pretty Things and
Them in England to the MC5 in
1967
ited
it
from
was
all
and Shadows of Knight
overshadowed by McCartney's music-hall
his father for chrissakes
—on pap
like
"When
helped turn a few hip rockers into Beade-haters
been
full
United
States.
sensibilities
But
—inher-
I'm 64." This must have
at that time.
And
the world has
of Beade-haters ever since (generally, anyone wishing to downplay the
wuss quotient in Rock niques
in the
'n' Roll).
—which sounded great
into lightweights in the
The
to
Fabs' whole dalliance with cutesy-pie tech-
them because they were stoned
minds of rockers (and Rock
So while the Beatles "refined" the supposedly for
art's
nowadays have
a
sake, they turned
it
historians) everywhere.
sounds/sensibilities of
into
hard time understanding
is
Pop
—turned them
as well.
Rock
One
Chuck Berry
or
Roll,
thing people
that diey weren't always
the same. Little Richard was not Pop, nor was
'n'
one and
Gene Vincent
1
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
18
They were Rock their basic
artists
who had
ROLL
N'
They never compromised
crossover success.
sound/premise to achieve success. Starting with the advent of Elvis
and then Buddy Holly and Phil Spector, Rock began to aspire to standards. But Rock, as a purely brutalizing musical form, less.
Occasionally in the '60s
Rock and Pop were on
Rolling Stones hits like "Get off
My Cloud"
which were enormously popular while Roll).
But
this
was purely by accident.
still
"hit parade"
went on neverthe-
the same par
and "19th Nervous Breakdown," being uncompromising Rock
If the record
made
ier for
their
move toward housewife muzak, they made
companies to ignore the more eccentric
their rosters with people-pleasing tunesmiths.
which
why
is
The sion
on
—
nay, genuine
The
—
the
much
eas-
artists
and pad
the remainder of their hits were astoundingly lightweight.
their psyches, particularly Lennon's.
Lennon came
artist
his
Earth
a
Japanese conceptual and per-
Momma. Yoko
had been staging "hap-
penings" on the
Lower East Side of New York for years,
London
owner John Dunbar introduced Lennon
gallery
a lasting impres-
by what the Beatles had become. His
to feel stifled
who became
it left
Always the group's most complex
reawakening came when he met Yoko Ono,
formance
that
it
when
Beatles were aware of this,
Beatles ultimately left psychedelia behind, but
personality,
'n'
companies had their way,
they'd never have to deal with anything that creates friction, and Beatles
the
(e.g.,
to
little
acclaim.
When John
to her in 1968,
apparently became smitten. Lennon's infatuation led to an open affair with the "artist,"
which brought about the demise of his marriage
Powell.
It also
The
erhood so righteous that
The wives waited
various
on
tour.
at
had been forged
women were
home while
But
in
blood back in the day, a broth-
not permitted to come between them.
the band toiled endless hard day's nights in the
as the partnership
began to splinter in the
members of the group found themselves more
personal endeavors than those of the group girlfriends. In
exposed him
Cynthia
helped bring about the demise of the Beatles.
Beatles' partnership
studio or
(since '63) to
Lennon's case
to,
which was
it
was the panorama of
just the excuse
from the "pop" confines of the In perfect hippie fashion,
—very
late '60s, the
interested in their
own
often, this included their radical notions that
he was looking for to
Yoko
free himself
Beatles.
Lennon
refused to be apart
—even
from Yoko
while he was in the recording studio with the other chaps. This has proven time
and again to be
a detrimental factor to
any band's existence. In Lennon's
case,
CHAPTER the other boys had to indulge
5:
THE BEATLES
him because he
1
was, after
—he
n't just bring Yoko into the studio, however
also
all,
the leader.
He
19
did-
brought her influence into
the group: "Revolution #9," for instance, was a weird avant-garde melange that
sounded more
Almost
like
John Cage than the
Beatles.
of the group's collective
as if to stress the dissolution
identity, the
next album was simply entitled The Beatles and came in a plain white sleeve.
There were four separate giveaway photos of the Beades, but none of them together.
As Lennon would
other's session Stills,
dio
Nash,
&
they were, at
later claim,
Young
"white album" was in it's
each
men." This would, of course, become the domain of Crosby, as well as the patent for
Rock of the 70s (Fleetwood Mac even
dard,
this point, "acting as
many ways
much
did their
of the
own
the Beades' last stand
showed
a pretty hip sonic barrage. It also
sterile
El
Lay
"white album").
— even by
that, for the
stu-
The
today's stan-
most
part, the
Beatles had left the psychedelic circus-sounds of Sgt. Pepper behind and were
getting ready to rock again.
Besides the slow disintegration of the group
itself,
there were other prob-
lems on the Beades' horizon. In March 1969, both Lennon and McCartney
were married: John to Yoko, Paul to American Rock photographer/groupie
New
Linda Eastman. Linda's family were well-to-do found himself assimilating to their middle
wanted
his brother-in-law,
Lee Eastman,
his shares
affairs.
New
also decided
many problems
before, the Beades
was the key word here
Meanwhile,
Dick James had sold
rebirth (pardy due to Yoko).
sugar daddies to any crazies
As
indeed!). After the
their
new and
who walked
own
record label, Apple, not
"unusual" talent as well. Unusual
in particular
a result, the
of the duds they sponsored never
Lew
to sort out.
had started
—Lennon
he
York strong-arm lawyer Allen
further complicate matters,
only to represent them but to nurture
The
He
of Northern Songs, the Beades' publishing company, to Sir
Grade, and there were
A year
To
class values.
to represent his fortunes.
Lennon, Harrison, and Starr had chosen Klein to run their
Yorkers, and Paul soon
was
in the midst of a radical
Beades found themselves playing
in off the streets. Unfortunately,
made
it
off the starting
most
ramp (Magic Alex
Beades paid them large sums of money, of course.
Beades' lack of business acumen was probably their undoing
goes back to the death of Brian Epstein. to represent themselves. In retrospect,
The
it
—which
Beatles were basically unprepared
probably wasn't
a
good
idea for
them
— SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
120
to launch their
own
label.
The jet set whirlwind
not to mention the drug indulgence business.
As
a result, hippie
—
Beatles:
number one most noteworthy group, by 1970, when they
revolution they'd created.
anymore.
their
officially split,
No
grown accustomed
much
when
moment
to
time for running a right.
they had ceased to be the died. It
had lasted
a
long
they were merely spectators in the
one was looking to the Beatles for "the word"
The only thing people
make money. Ultimately
didn't leave
ROLL
hangers-on ripped them off left and
That was the problem with the
time, but
they'd
N'
in
Rock
'n'
way to
Roll were looking for was a
the Beatles failed in this regard, as they ended
up
giv-
ing away the store (Apple failed miserably). In this sense they had joined the
Judy Garland, and Erroll Flynn:
fossilized
realm of people
like Elvis,
whose
would always be preserved within the times they
identities
was the groups who'd followed
far as
Rock
steps
who'd ultimately go on
'n'
Roll went,
forever encapsulated in ers
—
forever.
it
television
lived in.
As
in the Beatles' foot-
to shape the future while the
—and the minds of
wax
myths
Beades remained
documentary mak-
Chapter
6
6S.
Big Brother, which turned out to be her downhill.
No matter how sloppy they were, Big Brother understood their star better than any slick cats ever could. When she made some more "professional'' records in the late '60s, her music suffered from loss of character
had bigger problems by then
—
(i.e.,
like heroin, tor instance,
blandness). But she
which eventually
killed
her in 1970.
A lot of the lution.
The
early Frisco bands
were
folkies prior to the psychedelic revo-
Quicksilver Messenger Service
combined very
basic Blues
is
a
perfect example of a
band
and Folk elements transformed by acid and
that elec-
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
184
tricity into
something
The word
totally original.
describe the heavy vibrato of guitarist
be some kind of chemical
lowed by hypnotic instrumentals guitar duels
Tom
John Cipollina
good-time songs like
ROLL
"mercurial"
is
always used to
—indeed there seems
compound coursing through
pie bands, Quicksilver did
N'
it.
to
Like most of the hip-
the classic "Dino's Song" fol-
like
"Gold and
Silver,"
between Cipollina and Gary Duncan
which showcased the premonition of
in a direct
Verlaine and Richard Lloyd in Television. Verlaine, as well as the Patti
Smith Group's Lenny Kaye, has cited Cipollina
&
Country Joe
Country Joe brought Marxist parents
—
the Fish, like the Dead, had jug-band roots, but what to the scene
no
in Berkeley,
"movement" instandy and with pressed an indie.
The
was
less
his
New Left politics.
—he embraced the
Raised a liberal by
radical notions of the
reckless abandon. Flaunting his
EP on his own Rag Baby label,
once again in
a direct
drug
use,
its
time." Later Joe
immortal
became
a
one more trip/And
refrain: "Just
premonition of
I'll
stay high
bigwig in the "protest" category, playing
smoke-ins, love-ins, be-ins,
Woodstock). Recording for a
(including a
etc.
folkie label,
classic
all
San Francisco was changing the whole like this
the
all
the ben-
appearance at
Vanguard, the Fish were
a Frisco insti-
tution that reveled in their "underground" status. It was a testament to the
group
he
record contained the classic fogged-out San Francisco anthem "Bass
Strings," with
efits,
as a direct influence.
way
of the record industry that a
politics
could actually thrive in the climate of the
late '60s
without hav-
ing any mainstream "hit" potential whatsoever.
The same cannot be Columbia
said of
Grape,
in the feeding frenzy following the
the other Frisco bands, the first
Moby
a
band that was signed
Monterey Pop
Grape weren't prone
Festival.
to long excursions,
to
Unlike
and their
album consisted of tighdy constructed, heavily harmonized Rock of the
Beatles/Byrds variety. But Columbia botched the job by releasing five singles at
once from the album, an exercise
in overkill that
confused radio programmers
and blew the band's chances of being the only other Frisco band that could
low the Jefferson Airplane into the Top Forty. total narcissism,
making
their next
album
The group seemed
a
included brass and other incongruous elements.
fol-
to react with
jam-based excursion that also It
was becoming evident to the
record companies that, despite the hype, the chances of getting these stoners to
commit anything memorable
to vinyl
put his pants on. You had to be there,
was I
like trying to get
guess.
Allen Ginsberg to
CHAPTER 8: THE REVOLUTION
—
185
—signed
to Capitol for
an unprecedented sum in 1967, but once again the experience didn't
really translate
The
Band
Steve Miller
Chicago transplant
actually a
to vinyl. Miller found himself jetting back
and forth between Frisco and England,
enlisting the aid of Brit session heavies like
Michaels in order to get his sound ductions like "Baby's House,"
and Elton John.
It
The San
When
right.
sounded
It's
late arrivals as
a Beautiful
Day,
he
like the
had nothing to do with the
words, nor did such other
Rock hybrid, or
it
Glyn Johns, Nicky Hopkins, and Lee
who were
such as on
mammoth
"San Francisco Sound,"
who perfected a kind
other
in
of Latin Ja/.y-
just tired folkies in hippie drag.
Francisco groups brought national attention to the
eyes of the world, San Francisco
pro-
missing link between the Beades
classic
Santana,
did,
became the
capital of the hippies.
promise of Scott McKenzie's "San Francisco (Wear
In the
city.
Some Flowers
On
the
Your
in
Hair)," thousands of teen runaways flooded the streets of San Francisco during
the
summer of 1967
(the
"Summer of Love"). The dupes fresh off the
thought about such considerations them, there were
as
money, food, or hygiene. Fortunatelv
altruistic forces like the
Free Clinic in place. That didn't stop disease of the '60s.
roads for a whole
WTiat was
is
They were
when Jefferson Airplane named felt
as the
the need to
dresses like Tarzan, has hair like Jane, and
the Great Unwashed, no question! In
their third
album After Bathing at
document the occasion because
happened so infrequently. But hippies relished because
it
grossly offended
that cleanliness
Haight became the cross-
anyway? According to California governor Ronald
someone who
smells like Cheetah."
probably
from becoming the new childhood
kind of depravity.
a "hippie"
Reagan: "A hippie
VD
for
Diggers and the Haight-Ashbury
The neighborhood known
new
bus never
Mom
it
fact,
Baxters, they
was something that
their reputation as dirtballs
and Pop America (who'd always preached
was next to you-know-what). "Hippie" came
to
connote
a vast
array of political and social implications, but as a generic term in the '60s,
meant
a
general),
person had long
hair,
took drugs, scorned work (and "materialism"
in
and listened to Rock music.
The San
Francisco groups
— the
Grateful Dead, the Great Society, the
Jefferson Airplane, the Charlatans, Big Brother
Moby
it
&
the Holding
Company,
Grape, 50 Foot Hose, the Loading Zone, Mother Earth, the Steve
Miller Band, Quicksilver, Sopwith Camel, the Serpent Power, Country Joe the Fish, Santana,
Dan Hicks
&
His Hot Licks, Kak, Aum, Cold Blood,
X
Mad
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
186
River, Sly lot
&
the Family Stone, the Harbinger
Complex
of the tendencies that made Rock "mature." These
N'
ROLL
—helped introduce
a
included the Jazz-like
notion of the extended jam, amplification, better equipment, higher production
horn sections and other
values,
munalism, light shows,
acid,
eclectic instrumentation, real long hair,
album-oriented Rock, big contracts,
artistic
cominde-
pendence, underground radio, and the underground press. In a weird premonition of the ensuing hippie culture, the Beatles played
performance
their last live
as a
touring had
this point, the
group
in
San Francisco on August 29, 1966. At
become drudgery, and
the recording studio held the greatest allure.
they found a whole
England that
fall,
clubs like the
UFO
new
and Speakeasy. They
the reclusive tendencies of
When
the Beatles returned to
"psychedelic" scene emerging at
also
found
a
new
standard of musi-
cianship to be reckoned with and an environment of elevated intent, primarily in the
form of two upstart
acts that also
both happened to be
trios:
Cream and
the Jimi Hendrix Experience. In the form of these "power trios" lay the proto-
type for "heavy metal."
Cream
perfected the notion of
Rock one-upmanship by
their
name
alone
(they considered themselves the "cream" of British musicians). Surely their
lumbering versions of "Spoonful" and a
"Sittin'
on Top of the World" exhibited
kind of arrogance bordering on contempt. This wasn't Herman's Hermits, in
other words.
Cream
considered themselves accomplished enough musicians to
subject their audience to their every artistic fancy. This resulted in bloated
eighteen-minute versions of "Spoonful," but it also resulted in some of the most well-crafted
Rock of
the period: "Tales of Brave Ulysses," "I'm So Free,"
"Sweet Wine," "White Room," "Swlabr," "Badge," Squirrel" they
etc.
In songs like "Cat's
were already putting Zeppelin-oid fluctuations to
use.
Cream's
ambitions often overshadowed the resulting music, but they were self-consciously trying to elevate the art
form of Rock (even
if
they were
still
mistaken impression that Rock was merely an extension of the Blues
under the
—
guitarist
Eric Clapton had earned his rep being "Blues or nothing," remember?). Ginger Baker's wild, cyclical
(Beatles/Stones) a
drumming wouldn't have made
nonimprov format
gentlemanly detachment:
Cream and the
"Who
sense in the conventional the high-art notions
came
needs the hurry, the worry of city
life?"
(i.e.,
Pop).
With
presaged the whole wave of English Rock Aristocracy, buying casdes like.
CHAPTER 8: THE REVOLUTION The Jimi Hendrix despite
its
leader's
1
Experience came about no more organically than Cream,
dues-paying as
backup musician to such
a
R&B artists as
Richard, Wilson Pickett, and the Isley Brothers on the chitlin circuit psychedelic incarnation. His being a Black
man from
Seattle,
Hendrix had already fronted
distortion
tion of
was
still
special effects. It
dreamed
—and
kick
of.
in
in his
pre-
in a
freak era.
New York called Jimmy James &
the Blue-
R&B-based, he was already experimenting with
Chas Chandler, the former
new
for a
and odd
it
band
a
Little
Washington, fimi
Hendrix's arrival in England was the epitome of "freak" acts
Flames, and although
87
was during this time that he caught the bass player of the Animals,
who was
atten-
Looking
managing Hendrix was more than he could have ever
Taking him back to England, Chandler bedecked Hendrix
him
chedelic garb and introduced
(drums) and Noel Redding
(bass).
Mitch Mitchell
to a pair of Brit musicians:
The
in psy-
appearance of these two white kids with
the Big Black Stud completed the freak picture, but Hendrix lucked out
could actually play. Hendrix, a
man who wore
his guitar
around
his
—they
neck seven-
teen hours per day, was carving out such a distinct path as an instrumentalist that it's
likely
he elevated
his accompanists just
by sheer force of will. Credit Mitchell
and Redding for being able to make the cosmic jump. Along with Ginger Baker and Keith Moon, Mitchell was the best of the British drummers,
powerhouse who made every rimshot
a force to be
Hendrix was
Redding had
a lead-based guitar player,
rhythmically, and he was
more than capable
As evidenced by the band's
first
the whole genre
became
L. Burnside excepted). into outer space, but
less
than the
a vaudeville act (a
The
sometimes compensate
like
"Hey
Joe,"
Hendrix invented
his
"Remember,"
"May This Be Love," and
final
word
in the Blues, before
few modern-day purveyors
no matter what vibe he was pursuing, be
like R.
it
Blues or psy-
was absolute. Like Charlie Parker, Miles Davis,
John Coltrane, Ornette Coleman, Cecil
field
to
drugs undoubtedly helped him propel the Blues
chedelic, his basic language
neers,
reckoned with. Because
album, Are You Experienced?^ Hendrix
"51st Anniversary,"
"Highway Chile" were nothing
polyrhythmic
in this category.
never abandoned the Blues impulse. Songs
"The Wind Cries Mary,"
a
own
Taylor, or any of the other Jazz pio-
musical language. As
tar as
Rock
goes, in the
of "heavy metal," he was essential with crunching ritt-rockers
like
"Purple Haze," "Foxy Lady," "Manic Depression," "Voodoo Chile," ami the rest.
And when he mastered
the recording studio with alliums like
.
Ixis:
/>/ Crosby,
Stills.
Nash
&
Young,
119, 222,223, 231, 285, 121,
324 Crossover, 44. 56 57
3
1
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
570
ROLL
N'
Crover, Dave, 467, 468
Davies, Ray, 165,494
Destroy
Crowe, Cameron, 476
Davis, Betty,
Destructo
3
1
Monsters, 391
All
485, 486
label,
Davis, Clive, 203, 204, 218, 326
Detroit Cobras, 540
Crows, 84
Davis, Michael, 224, 389
Deviants, 228, 491
Crudup, Arthur, 25, 40
Davis, Miles, 25, 145,187, 188,
Devo, 200, 288, 342, 343, 359, 371,410,413
Crowley,
Aleister,
268
244, 245, 246, 248, 252, 286,
Cruise, Pablo, 304
Ruben
Cruisiii with
& the Jets,
199,214
Crumb,
R.
Crusaders, 252
Crypt
289, 290
label,
Crystallized
Devoto, Howard, 359
Sammy Jr.,
Davis,
Dayne, Taylor, 454
Diaz, Denny, 297
Passed, 193
Days of Future
Movements
506,
Dead
Boys, 274, 332, 342, 391,
492
Crystals, 84, 85
Cueball, 536
Dead Kennedys,
374, 378, 379,
Dead Milkmen,
486
392,
428
413,414,416,427,428,429,
Dean, James, 18,52,53,229
443, 449, 523, 524, 525
Dean, Tommy, 430
Cure, 387
386
Curtis, Ian,
&
Dick Dale 94
the Deltones, 91,
371,392,487
Dictators, 274, 301,324, 331,
332,333,369,380,383,391, 392, 436, 549 Diddley, Bo, 44, 45, 46, 51, 64, 121, 176
DeCarlo, Mark, 448, 449, 523
Didion, Joan, 295
Decca Records,
Die Kreuzen, 383,424
2
1,
24, 26, 44,
63,64, 105, 127,136,260
Curtola, Bobby, 72
Dibango, Manu, 308
Dickies,
384, 393, 483,
dumbing down, 412,
Neil, 89, 234, 265
Dickey, Whit, 553
Cudahy, Mike, 526
Dead C, 495
Culley, Frank, 83
Dogs, 274-75
Diamond,
Days of Rage, 208
,
Diamond
Day, Doris, 524
489, 490
507, 522
Cultural
529
DiFranco, Ani, 510
Curve, 493
Deconstruction, 52
Dig Me Out, 546
Cynecide, 391
Deep
Diggers, 185
Cyril Davies' All Stars, 161
Cyrkle, 89
C/Z
Purple, 265, 266, 279,
331,381
Cynics, 490
Records, 459
Deep
Digital
459
Six,
DiMeola,
Def Jam Records,
DiMucci, Dion, 87-88, 168
407, 408,
Da
Def Leppard, 381,421,455, 538
466
Capo, 195
DeFries, Tony, 273
Daddy Cool, 214
Dekker, Desmond, 216
Dahl, Jeff, 487
DelVetts, 168
Dale, Dick, 161
Damned,
Dan Hicks
&
His
Hot
Delmore
Dio, 426
Dion
&
the Belmonts, 86, 87
Dionysus
label,
Straits,
489
419
Dirtv Rotten Imbeciles (DRI),
Delmonas, 490
358, 364, 367, 369
290
Dinosaur Jr., 393, 460, 470, 484,496,497,499,500,511
Dire
Dells, 241
Damaged, 374
Al,
Dinosaurs, The, 496
Deface the Music, 287
Dadamah, 495
85
label,
Deep Wound, 496 439, 446
D Generation,
Underground, 537
Dimension
383
Brothers, 25, 26
Disc jockeys (DJs), 65-69, 75, '
Licks,
Delrons, 169
76,77
185,212
DeLuxe
label,
Discharge, 364, 382
65
Dangerfield, Tony, 101, 160
Dangerhouse
label,
&
Dischord
DeNiro, Robert, 229
Disco Casablanca Records and, 311-12
Denny, Martin, 74 the Juniors, 86
Denny, Sandy, 361 Danzig, 383
485, 486
cocaine and, 295
Danzig, Glenn, 383, 434
Densmore, John,
DePalma, Side of the
196, 197
Brian,
446
Moon, 282 Descendants, 393, 483
Dave Clark
Five, 162
Davenport,
Cow Cow,
commercialism and, 253-54,
Denver, John, 232
Darin, Bobby, 87
Dark
label,
370
Danko, Richard, 210
Danny
Demolition Doll Rods, 540
Desperado, 300
62
310,311,313,317,318 dancing and, 308
DJ
culture and
fetishism and,
312-13
homosexuality and, 309, 312
5
1
3
INDEX FOR SONIC COOL Tommy,
origins of, 253, 305
Dorsey,
post-Punk and, 320 Punk and, 369, 386 Rap and, 253-54, 403
Double Nickels on the Dime, 390
Dowd, Tom, 82
Down-home
Techno and, 308 upward mobility and, 310 wane of, 403
Downliners
Hook, 263
Dr.
Disney, 532
Harmonica
Boss,
40 Drake, Hamid, 553 Drake, Nick, 216, 499
Dixon, Willie, 47
Dream
486, 501
Syndicate, 387, 389,
393, 414,
DJ culture, 308-9 D-Mob, 536
153,203,209 Smith and. 325 Punk and, 341,384 Sonnv Bov Williamson and, Patti
Drake, Pete, 210
Movement, 483, 485,
47'
479
Dan
Steely Dress}' Bessy, 52
Drew, Nancy, 511
239
Woody
263-64, 273, 282, 290, 295,
Guthrie and, 158,
DYS,
381
299,300,308,311,367,371,
Dogbowl. See Stephen Tunney
372, 385, 387, 388, 389, 390,
401,402,408,424,430, 435-36,449-50,461,465, 477,483,492,497,523,553
51,75
Dokken, 424 Dolby, Thomas, 413
Drugs Are
Dominatrix, 423, 518
Drum
Fats, 48, 49, 50, 82,
Dry Dominoes, 39
550
Nice,
as
Dub
Eiist
Bone, 461
music, 386
I
Wage
Other,
John
If'
Eater,
.
364
560
EazyE.428,440,443 Duncan, Gary,
1
84 Fboli.
Duncan, Tommy, 28
214
Echo
Dunn, Bob, 22
Doors, 195, 196, 197,203,226,
228,258,298,361,369,417, 492 Doors of Perception, 178, 197 Doors, The, 116
and Fucking 463
Dope, Guns,
Dust, 218, 323
Ecstasy,
Dutch Hercules, 384
70
Bunnymen,
^s" 43,
493
l-JSulln-anShr.:-.*-. [09
Dwarves, 469, 485.4^2
Ed, led, and Fred, 467
Bob Alice Cooper and, 267 Baby Boomers and, 59
Dylan,
Eddy, Duane, 72
Edgar Winter
(
iroup, 269
1
in
tin-
The
Byrds and.
drugs and. 141
the
53-54, 56, SO
1
David Bowie and, 80
Tommy,
&
Echo chamber technology,
Duran Duran, 413
488
Dorsey Brothers,
1
Dunbar, John, 118
Doobie Brothers, 204, 263, 301
label,
"
Foster, 172
190, 191, 192,
Don't Look Back, 148, 151,316
Streets,
1
19
1
-
Easybeats, Dulles,
Dore
7
Easton, Sheena, 421,423
Dukakis, Michael, 512
Dookie,
1
McCartney
60
Donnas, 489, 529, 546, 548
84, 88,
Fire. 3
266
Eastman, Linda. See Linda
Duff, Bruce, 487 1
Wind &
Eastman, Lee,
Ducks Deluxe, 344
Donegan, Lonnie, 97-98,
264
F.arwigs,
the Goodtimes, 161
Donahue, Tom, 249
302.303,358.369,454.455 Earth.
Earth,
machine, 407
A
Eagles, 202, 223. 299, 300, 301,
Earth AD, 383
Dry, 514
213
Doowop,
209-10
159
Drugs, 218, 224, 243-44,
Doe, John, 370
of,
vocal inflection and, 170
Drifters, 81,83, 84, 87,
Donovan, 171, 221,528
and, 297
transformation
339
Bill,
Johnny Cash and, 2 1 Johnny Winter and, 218 later work and, 153 legacy of, 153.419,529 Lou Reed and, 324 motorcycle accident and,
Disposable income, 4 Dixieland, 160
Don &
Jefferson Airplane and. 1K2.
183
Dr. Ross the
Domino,
54V
Sect, 163
Downsizing, 409, 41
Dr. Feelgood, 345
288
Discreet Music,
Doggett,
169, 170, 171
14
Disco Three, 404
1
influence of. 171, 229,416,
music, 13
Dr. Dre, 445, 537 3
Factory and, 74-75 music and, 51, 87
folk to rock conversion of.
Downbeats, 166
413
Disco bonfire,
Elvis Costello and, 365
The folk
synthesizers and, 309-10,
DMZ, 388 DNA, 338, DOC, 443
Faglesand, 301
Double-tracking, 93
sexual revolution and, 308
D.I.Y.
62
571
~4 1
Edison Speaking Phonographic
70 2
_;;
Company
59
Edison, rhomas, 59
5
1
1
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
572
Edwards, Bernard, 405, 440 Effigies,
Erdelyi,
Tom.
See
Tommy
Ramone
462
Eisenhower, Dwight,
ROLL 206
Family, The,
Famous Door, 62
Erickson, Roky, 224
72
1
N'
Fankhauser, Merrill, 200
Erlandson, Eric, 516
Fantastic Baggys,
Ertegun, Ahmet, 44, 81, 83, 222
Fardon, Don, 212
El Dorados, 39
Ertegun, Nesuhi, 81, 83
Farlowe, Chris, 132
Elastica, 5
ESP-Disk
Farrakhan, Louis, 402, 439, 440
Mark, 380
Eitzel,
El
Ay
Studio Rock, 119
1
label, 173,
339, 374, 462, 505, 550
Eldorados, 43
Esquivel, Juan, 74
Electric bass, 33, 56
Electric Frankenstein,
Electric guitar, 21, 22, 34, 54,
448
Estes, Sleepy John, 17
Etiquette label, 95
Electric Light Orchestra
Euripedes, 516
(ELO), 285, 286, 315, 319
Electric Prunes, 168, 202,
464
270
Electric Warrior,
Everclear,
554
Marc, 318
Feederz, 433
Feldman, Andrea, 258
Evol,
479
Feminism,
1
Exile on Alain Street, 137,
Exploding
261
Plastic Inevitable,
177, 188
Ely, Jack, 95
Emerson, Lake
&
338,344
Ezrin, Bob, 267, 272
Fab Five Freddy, 405
Emery, Jill, 516 Fabian, 72, 160,455
Records, 105, 106, 107,
161,351,353,354,356
Faces,
138,263,278
434
Eminem, 524
Faces of Death,
En Vogue, 537
Factory, 174, 176, 271, 272
Endino, Jack, 461,468 England's Nrwest Hitmakers, 128
Enigma
label,
427
Eno, Brian, 275, 282,283,287, 288,319,336,387,413,504,
94
Ferguson, Jay, 304
Fagen, Donald, 297 Fahey, John, 513 Fair,
Ferry, Bryan, 319, 336,
504
Fetishism, 312-13 Fields,
Danny, 321,332
Fields, Lee,
551,552
50 Foot Hose, 185,281 Figgs, 553, 555
Fillmore East, 221
Fillmore West, 181, 182
David, 501
Finley, Karen,
Fairjad, 492, 497, 501,502,
433
Finn, Mickey, 270
527 Firefall,
304
Fairport Convention, 216, 217,
543
Entwhisde,John, 221
Enuff Z'Enuff, 424 Epic Records, 356
Faith
label,
486, 487
EPMD, 408 Epstein, Brian, 104-5, 106, 107, 109, 112, 115-16, 119, 128, 162, 203
Equals, 217
First National
513 Faith,
Epitaph
guitars, 33, 34, 56,
Ferrante, Arthur, 527
Fenrwood Tonight, 410 Fabares, Shelly, 72
108,
506,507,508,509,510,511, 512,513,514,515,518, 545-46
Palmer
(ELP), 193,281,284,285,
EMI
480, 481, 482, 483, 491-92,
Fender
Exploited, 364, 379
Emerson, Keith, 285
10, 229, 232, 233,
336,361,362,421,422,423, 430-31,433,476,478,479,
Exiles, 163
28
399
Everman, Jason, 468
Exile in Guyuille, 5
Ellington, Duke, 18, 19,20,21,
Trail,
Federal label, 25, 39
197,223,224,273,322,326
Eliot,
Campaign
Everly Brothers, 56—57
Exclusive label, 65
Day, 507
376
Fecal Matter, 468
Elektra Records, 159, 195, 196,
Dream
Fear,
Fear and Loathing on the
Electric Ladyland, 188
Electric organ, 75
281,527
Faust,
Estrus label, 489
62, 248, 395
Farren, Mick, 228
Fatboy Slim, 529
Estefan, Gloria,
538
70
Fat Boys, 404
Essex, 85
Electric Eels, 200, 340
11th
176,326,
1
Adam, 160
No More, 453
Faith, Percy, Faithful,
74
Matthew, 188
Flamin' Groovies, 214, 323, 347
287
360, 376, 513
Falwell, Jerry,
Fisher,
Band, 2 1
Wildman, 231
Five Royales, 25
Faithmll, Marianne, 131, 367 Fall,
Fischer,
421,428
Fame, George,
1
88
Family Argent, 216
Flamingos, 84 Flash
&
the Pan, 376
Flavor Flav, 438, 441, 442
Fleetwood Mac, 48,
1
19, 163,
202,216,300,302,303,316, 335,484,516
6
1
1
INDEX FOR SONIC COOL
573
Fleetwood Mac, 302, 303
Frampton Comes Alive, 316
Gainslwmrg, Serge. 554
Fleetwood, Mick, 303
Galas, Diamanda,
Fleming, Don, 502, 505
Frampton, 335
Flesheaters, 371
Francis, Connie, 56, 72
Galucci, Don, 90
Fleshtones, 165, 339, 376, 388,
Frank, Robert, 137,263
Gamble, Kenny, 254
490
Frankie
Flipper, 379, 385, 393, 483
Flying Burrito Brothers, 211
Nun Records,
389, 495
Focus, 288, 329
Fog, 499
212,419
Rock and, 509
Cang Green, 383 Gang of Four. 386,491
Freak Out, 198
Gant, Cecil, 64, 66
&
the Dreamers, 162
458, 487, 490, 493 Garcia, Jerry/71, 180, 181, 182
Garner, Sue, 518
Freed, Alan, 67-68, 69, 70-71,
Freedom
Fighters,
235
Garthwaite, Terry. 232
&
Garv Puckett Gap, 89 Gates,
Freisen, Gil, 318
Gates, David, 234
riots,
Frey,
Glenn
Bill,
395, 397. 529
251,255,407,445
Fripp, Robert, 283, 288
Gayle, Charles, 553
Frischmann, Justine, 511, 512
Gee
For Your Pleasure, 275
Froom, Mitchell, 376
Geflfen, David,
Forced Exposure, 172, 391, 428,
Frost, Edith,
For the
Roses,
231
462, 496, 505, 522, 526, 527
Forced Exposure
label,
505
Fuck You:
A
Magazine
of the Aits,
Ford, Tennessee Ernie, 25 Foreigner, 314, 315, 317, 320,
228,231,374,378,390 Fugs, The, 173
Funhouse, 90, 591
Formanek, Michael, 553
Funicello, Annette, 72,
RPM, 26
4 Aces of Western Swing, 44 Four Freshmen, 92
Four Seasons,
86, 88, 107, 145
Fowlev, Kim,
284
Genesis, 2S4
Genovese Family, 70
Funkmusic,243,248,251,252, 280,406,407,453,551
Gende, Johnny, 100
Funkadelic.251,252,267,268, 311,403,453
Germs,
Germ
Free * Mokuents, 162
Gerry I'.L'.s,
$71,
>S;
;
~". 385, 464,
4s:
the Pacemakers, 128,
1
381
Gershwin, George, 60
Fuzzy, 507, 510, 529
Geto Boys, 408, 429, 446, 447, 44«>.
Geto
Fox, Samantha, 427
Foxtrot,
521
523
414
Fusion music, 246. 2S"
546 Fox, James, 136
Foxscore movement,
equality, 435. 478, 4"''.
480,491-92, 506-7, 508-9, 510,511,512,513-14, 518,
162
>8,202,2S0,
( 1
Gender
Funicello, Ross "die Boss." 331
Furay, Richie, 2
Fourmost, 128, 162
Geflfen Records. 455. 456, 457,
Generation X. 519, 520, 522,
Forever Changes, 196
Foundations, 217
222-23, 231,
Generation Gap, 157, 41"
Funhouse, 273-74
375,377
73
470,471,475,488,493,517
172
Fugs, 96, 171, 172-3, 195, 198,
Ford, Mary, 34
label, 70,
299, 446, 454
518
Fugazi, 456, 485, 486, 502, 548
Ford, Gerald R., 400
Union
Gave, Marvin. 240, 243. 250,
Friday the 13th, 434
262-63
For EP Fans Only, 554
45
the
FreewheeUn', 147
Football
.
Garage Rock, 94. 168, 183, 202, 219,323,378,388-89. 389,
Rock
Fontana, D.J., 30, 41
-
Gants, 168
purism and, 168 and, 169, 170, 171
J59,
543
Gangsta Rap, 406, 408-9. -H 440, 444, 446, 450
73, 75, 76, 77, 78-79, 81
Rock and, 512-13, 515
550
Franzman, Erin, 53
146
13, 158, 159, 168,
x.
Gangsta XIP, 429. 449-50
Frantz, Chris, 336
159
233,377,378,435 Girl
217,243,255,403
Free Wheelm' Bob Dylan, The,
Folk Implosion, 499
1
GameTheoi-Y. 337-38,
Free Speech Movement, 158,
Foley, Red, 30
Indie
the
Free, 216, 217
Foghat,269, 314, 317
Folk music,
&
Teenagers, 71,84, 239,405
Freddie
Fogelberg, Dan, 304 Fogerty, John,
Lyman
Frantics, 161
Flying Lizards, 343
5
Galaxie 500, 492. 503, 507
Franklin, Aretha, 83, 145, 183,
Flock of Seagulls, A, 387
Flying
Peter, 316, 317, 318,
5
Gabriel, Peter, 284, 419 1
Gaffiiey, Eric, 499,
500
450, 4
Holly, Buddy, 45, 49, 56, 57,96,
llol/man.Jac. 195, 197, 22
163, 186
Heroes, 288,
162.222
Holloway, Brenda,
Herman, Woody, 64
Haslam, Annie, 361
62
Hollywood Punk Palace, 369
288
Harvey, PJ., 514
Billie,
Hollies, 116-17.
Hendrix,Jimi,46, 164, 170, 171, 186, 187, 188,221,
Henley, Don, 455
Hartman, Dan, 304
22
414
Holden, Randy, 220
Helmet, 463
1
Hoffman, Abbie, 259 Hoffman, Dusrin.
Helm, Chet, 183 1 1
"the Bear," 218
Hitmen, 389
207, 208
126, 191, 234, 503
Bob
Hider, Adolf, 331
Hell's Angels, 31, 135, 180, 206,
Harris,
Hite,
7
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
576
Huxley, Aldous, 178,196
Honky, 546 I
Ionky-tonk music, 22, 23, 28, 29, 33, 372 17, 18, 46,
Hooters, 409
I
Iopkins, Lighmin', 48
Hopkins, Nicky, 185
Hopper, Dennis, 529
Horn, Bob
326
Hot Buttered Soul, 253, 308 199,283,290
Hot
Rats,
Hot
Rock, The,
A
Capel/a,
IRA
IBM, 396 Cube, 444, 445, 448, 449
Ice-T, 408, 437, 440, 443 Idle Race,
285
Idol, Billy,
393
Happen
Burnett, 17, 18, 36, 38, 39,
44,87,213,239 Hubley, Georgia, 500, 501, 507
Hudson, Garth, 210 Huebner, Louise, 268 Huff, Leon, 254 508, 521
Hub, 528 Hull,
Robot
Immediate
226
540
Bud, 33
label,
Island Records, 217, 465
It
Takes a Nation of Millions
J
132
Imperial Records, 73, 82
'n
'Roll,
137, 138
& M Studio, 49
J Geils Band, 419
Jackson
5,
254
Jackson Five, 410
My Head, 383
In the Co/tit of the Crimson King,
Jackson, Janet, 421, 422, 423,
454
283 In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida, 220
Jackson, Jesse, 402
Incredible String Band, 216
Jackson, Joe, 376
Independent
526
labels, 24, 25, 35,
Jackson, Michael, 371, 384, 393,
411,413,415,416,420,443, 464, 529
Hullabaloo, 169
61,64,65,66,70,318,325,
Human Human
358, 374-75, 377, 408,
Jackson, Millie,
486-87, 488-89, 496, 502,
Jacoby, Bernie "Jowls," 441
503, 504, 544
Jagger, Bianca, 137, 263
Humble
League, 387, 413 Switchboard, 387, 539 Pie, 45,
165,216
Jagger, Mick, 260, 263, 333, 397
acting and, 136, 139,260
Hunk) Doiy, 271 Hunted Down, 461
495-96, 497, 500, 503, 504,
Hunter, Ian, 341
509,516,522,550,552,554, 556
Hunter, Meredith, 260 Hunter, Robert, 496
Hurdy Curdy Man, 22 Husik, Lida, 515
Husker Du, 374, 381, 382, 383, 388,389,393,423,436,455, 457, 470, 484, 497, 544 Hustler,
300
1
Indie Rock, 95, 338,431,433,
457,459,461,463,468,470, 478,483,485,491,493,494,
1
3
Indian-Rock, 212
Humperdinck, Engelbert, 89
Humphrey, Hubert, 247, 399
to
Hold Us Back, 408, 440, 441 Its Only Rock
74
Incredibly Strange Music, A.,
It,
Isuzu,Joe,443,448, 523
Imperial Teen, 544 In
376
label,
This
Isley Brothers, 187
549
Turner and His Kings of Rhythm, 36, 37, 50
Howlin' Wolf aka Chester
Is
Islam, 244, 247,439,445, 533
to Fall,
Ym in the Mood, Ym In You, 316
IRS
Isaacs,
If One of These Bottles Should
House, Son, 37
HuggyBear,
Iron Maiden, 381
Irons,Jack,475,476
Ike
284-85
345, 362
Ian, Janis, 193
Ibarra, Susie, 553
Hourglass, 2
Steve,
319
Iron Butterfly, 220
Iguanas, 224, 225
Howe,
Internet, 484, 497, 529, 530,
Iommi, Ibny, 424
215
Hotel California, 302, 369
Houston, Whitney, 443, 525
Submarine Band,
111
531,532,538
£ Una, 423
546
1
ROLL
Interview, 293,
Ice
Hornsby, Bruce, 230
Chrissie, 362,423, 511
N'
International
of the Seventh Galaxy, 290
Iypnotics, 493
7 Dig
Hoover, J. Edgar, 173
Horses,
Hymn
Hynde,
Hooker, John Lee, 125, 142,239
I
3
1
Indiscreet,
276
Industrial Rock, 373, 387, 555 Industrialization, 14
Ink Spots, 27, 40, 44, 65 Innervisions,
250
Instrumental Rock, 74, 86, 87, 91, 161
Lux, 391
Hutchinson, Johnny, 100
Interior,
HuttoJJB., 241
International Artists, 462, 505
decadence and, 260 genesis of Rolling Stones and,
124 Liverpool Sound and,
1
02
between Brian Jones and, 127, 129, 130,543'
rivalry
T Rex and, 271 Jam, 355, 358 Jamaican Blue Beat, 216 James, Dick, 106, 119
James, Elmore,
17, 18,
123,239,450
James Gang, 301 James,
Tommy, 89-90
47-18,
1
1
1
1
1
INDEX FOR SONIC COOL Jan
&
Dean, 91,94
Jandek, 506 Jane's Addiction, 453, 471, 485,
505
Johnson, Jimmy, 428, 522, 526 527
Jump
Johnson, J J., 25
Jupp, Mickey, 365
Jansch, Bert, 216
Johnson, Lyndon
Johnson, Pete, 61,62, 81
Jardine, Al, 91
&
the Americans, 86, 89
243^7
Jazz, 19,
B., 172,
397
408
Kalaparusha, 244, 247
Kaleidoscope,
17, 18, 32, 36,
Jon
&
1
5
Kansas City Swing, 81
the Nightriders, 390
&
background
Kaplan, Ian, 501 of, 90, 123, 126,
Band, 551
Elmore James and,
48, 123
82
with, 127, 129, 130, 132, 133,
Peter, 148
297
John Lennon and,
purism and, 122, 129, 132
background
violence and, 125-26, 128, 132,
54-55
131, 133
Jones, George, 29, 213
Phillips and, 54, 55
Kaye, Lenny, 184, 215, 326, 329,513' Keep the Faith, 268 Keisker, Marion, 40
259
and, 55
Kaukonen, Jorma, 182 Kay, John, 219
134,543
419
Jennings, Waylon, 305
Sam
500
Jagger and Richards' rivalry 1
Jerry Lee Lewis
Roy Hall
Karman, forty Lied,
Jefferson Airplane Takes Off,
of,
Ira,
innovations and, 123, 131, 133
185,203,216
Jefferson Starship,
Kaplan,
Kapp, Dave, 2
Jefferson Airplane, 135, 182, 184,
KAOS, 458
131
Dynamite
the Evil's
]X'>
Kansas, 314, 320
Jones, Brian
JBs, 403, 406
Records, 478, 501
Kak, 185
Johnson, Rick, 226
Johnston, Bob,
Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince,
K
Johnson, Robert,
41,47,48, 123
Jayhawks, 453
J.D.
blues, 25, 27, 36, 63, 64.
65
Johnson, Johnny and Ann, 50
Jaquet, Illinois, 43, 63
Jay
577
Kellgren, Gary, 199
Jones, Grace, 313, 423
Kendricks, Eddie, 254
Jones, Grandpa, 25
Kenne Highland
Jesus Lizard, 463
Jones, Jenny, 27
KennedvJohnE,
Jethro Tull, 216, 281, 286, 287
Jones,
Jerry Springer, 427, 484, 524 Jesus Christ Superstar,
Jett,
234
Joan, 371, 478, 479, 480,
Jones,
Jimi Hendrix Experience,
1
86,
the Blue
Flames, 187
&
Jo Jo Zep Joel, Billy,
the Falcons, 406
304
&
366, 367, 436, 455
Tom,
89,
554
Joplinjanis, 183,203,259
Jordan, Louis, 26, 36, 66
& the Pussycats, 410
John, Elton,
Jourdan, Louis, 236-37
230, 233, 250,
275,293,294,319,344 John Wesley Harding, 152-53, 210
&
1
"4.
Ketamine, 493 Kick
Out
Joy Division, 386, 387, 52S, 554
224
Kidd, Johnny. [60
kill
&
Rock
the
I
Ggfa
Ro.uk
145
Stars label. 376,478,
482 267
killer.
Journey, 320, 366, 377
the Jams,
Kid Creole. 404
kilburn Josie
Johnny
4, 28, 14S.
Kesey, Ken. 179, 180, 181,530
Jordan, Michael, 443
Johansen, David, 276, 277 1,
208
State, 205,
Kerplunk, 488
Joplin, Scott, 14-15
the Starlighters, 87
1 1
Kent
Kerouac, Jack,
Jones, Spike, 198
Jones, Steve, 348, 351, 352, 353,
Jones,
Joerg, Steven, 552
Joey Dee
Kennedy, Ted, 259 Kent, Nick, 354
178
188,215,218,220
Jimmy James &
Raymond, 104
Jones, Ricky Lee, 233
GeilsBand, 218, 269
187,
Jones, Leroi, 245
108, 14".
157-58,172, 174,397,484
Paul, 22
Jones, Mick, 357, 405
482 Jewel, 515 J.
John
Klan, 490
killingjoke, 320 kilinister. l.einmy. 2S2. }61
Joy of Cooking, 232 the Hurricanes, 74,
103
Johnny Kidd
&
Johns, Glyn,
1
die Pirates, 101
85
Johnson, Calvin, 501
Kilslug,
Jubilee label, 65
Judas
Prist,
381
Kimino
379-80,435,450, 527
M\
House, 2~>
kind of Blue. 246
Judge, Mike, 523 King,
B.I?..
$5,
16,
39,44, 21
Jukeboxes, 22, 24 King, Carole, 84, 170, 229,230, 23
1
1
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
578
King Crimson,
193, 198,283,
284, 285, 288, 289, 297, 390
ROLL
N'
Kubrick, Stanley, 263
Leisure time,
Kunkel, Russ, 170
Leitch,
3
Donovan. See Donovan
King, Joe, 488
Kursaal Flyers, 345
Lemonheads, 429
King, Martin Luther, 235, 243,
Kurt ami Courtney, 474
Lennon, Cynthia Powell,
247,402,407
Lennon, John,
King Missile, 503, 504 kins? Records, 25, 35, 42, 61,
Peste,
art school and,
388
background
65,67,73,81,82,454 LaBostrie, Dorothy, 50
King, Rodney, 447, 450
Lad Kingsmen, 90,
rock, 263, 348
95, 161
Laibach, 387
98 drug-themed song first
Lake, Oliver, 247 Lalas, Alexi,
Lamb
Lies
The,
Kirschner,
Don,
first
on Broadway,
284 label,
Plastic
85
Kiss, 228, 230, 267, 279, 294,
295,297,309,311,315,319,
Landau, Jon, 215,225, 227
324, 328, 343, 349, 366, 381,
Lane, Frankie, 62
424,426,427,434,435,441, 463,474,516
Larsen, Nicolette, 303
Kiss
Meets the Phantom of the
Last Poets, 247
Klein, Robert, 296, 364
Laughner, Peter, 226, 340, 342,
Lauper, Cyndi, 414
Laurie
label,
It Bleed,
Let
Be, 214,
505
135
Roclc, 346,
it
347
Dance, 413
Letters to Cleo,
521,529
Lay, Sam, 225
Letwin, Gordon, 530
Lazy Cowgirls, 484, 485
Knights, 93
Lazy Susan, 508
Levene, Keith, 386 Levy, Alison Faith, 518
Knopfler, Mark, 420
Leader, 165 Levy, Morris, 69-70, 71, 88,
Knox, Buddy, 70
Lear,
Knox, Chris, 494
Amanda, 275, 313,423
Leary, Timothy, 178, 179-80,
the Gang, 407
259 Leave Home, 334 Lewis, Jerry Lee, 49, 51, 86,
Kooper.Al, 150
Leaves, 168
Korn, 456, 524, 525, 554, 556
Leaving Trains, 484, 516
Korner, Alexis, 122, 123, 124-25, 163 Kraftwerk, 282,413
552
KramerAlark, 503 Kravitz, Lenny, 453,
529
Krieger, Robbie, 196, 197 Kristal, Hilly, 324,
325
Led
165,322,439
Zeppelin, 165, 186, 190,
204,216,220,221,222,223 224,225,227,230,232,262 263, 264, 266, 268, 277, 279 303,304,305,308,314,319 321,322,337,338,344,360 365,370,374,381,382,416 417,423,424,425,426,438 459, 460, 474, 496
Kristofferson, Kris, 213
Led Zeppelin IV, 265
KRS-One/Boogie Down
Lee, Arthur, 195, 196
Productions, 440
Krugman, Murray, 268 Krupps, Gene, 141
405,531 Lewis, Heather, 183
Lewis, Huey, 401, 419
D, 404
Krall, Diana,
it
Let
85
Knight, Gladys, 253
&
Let
Lettermen, 92
Knickerbockers, 168
Moe
Lenoir, J.B., 48
Let's
Knaves, 168
Kool
Lennox, Annie, 42 1 423
369
Knack, 376, 539
Kool
Stuart Sutcliffe and, 99
Les Lutins, 166
244
Lately I Keep Scissors, 513
Klein, Allen, 119, 136
and, 214
and, 97-98, 99
,
Lateef, Yusef,
424
Ono Band
Quarrymen
1 1
115
of,
YokoOnoand, 118-19
Last Exit to Brooklyn, 326
Park, 425 Kix,
recorded vocal and, 103
influence of Dylan and,
outspokenness
84, 202
Lance
impressions of the U.S.
and, 109
476
Down
lyrics and,
114
Kinks, 99, 110, 162, 163, 164,
Kirchherr, Astrid, 102-3
97-98
celebrity and,
Lake, Greg, 285
Kinsey Report, 6-7, 10
99
of, 90,
Brian Jones and, 131, 133
Kingston Trio, 143, 159
165,166, 190,221,319
18
296, 474, 475, 494, 520
L7, 480
La
1
53, 230, 269-70,
Lewis,
Meade Lux,
245 License to
Lick Life,
III,
Lee, Spike, 439
&
Stoller,
Leiber, Jerry, 8
408
My Deals Off Baby,
Lifestyles
of the Rich
& Famous,
293 Lightcap, Chris, 553
Gordon, 233
Lightin' Hopkins, 142
Limbomaniacs, 453 83-84, 239
200
221
Lightfoot,
Leiber
62
Liberation Music Ensemble,
Lime
Spiders, 389
5
1
INDEX FOR SONIC COOL Limp
554
Bizkit, 456,
Lind, Bob, 89
Louis Jordan
Little
Lounge
168,219
Litter,
Anthony
&
the Imperials,
Bov Blue and
the Blues
Boys, 124, 224
Little
His Tvmpani
revival,
526
Louvin Brothers, 25, 56 Lovano, Joe, 552
84 Litde
Little
and, 82
Louisiana Hayride, 29, 30
277
Lipstick Killers,
&
Five, 26-27, 63, 64'
216
Lindisfarne,
McGhee
Sticks
Love, 195, 196,212,389
Hippodrome, 347
Love Child, 494, 507, 508, 509,
Litde Milton, 241 48, 49-51, 54,
213,218,224,237,238 Band, 304, 529
Litde Walter, 40
189
IMiighs,
Madder
Rose, 507, 52
Madonna, 294, 312, 393, 408, 412,413,415.416,420,421, 422,423,425,42". 42*. 42. 433,436,454,464,479,512, 514,540
529 Mael, Ron, 275
Mael, Russ, 275, 276
Magazine, 359, 360
Love Connection, 448 Love, Courtney, 303, 474, 483,
484,515-16,517,520,523 Love
it to
Magic
Alex, 119
Magic Band, 200
Magic Sam, 239, 241
Death, 267
Magic Tramps, 278, 324
Love, Mike, 91
214
Live at Leeds,
Battery, 460,
521
55,66, 117, 141, 143, 187,
Little River
Madcap
328, 330
Mae, Jenny, 518
Love
8,
Mad Magazine, 142, Mad River, 185-86
Love, 547
Games, 190
Litde Richard,
579
Love Sculpture, 216
Magicians, 171
Live at the Apollo, 242
Love Unlimited Orchestra, 254
Magma, 288
Live Through This, 516
Lovell,Vic, 179
Magnuson, Ann, 503-4
Liverpool scene, 101, 160, 161,
Loverboy, 315, 320
Mahavishnu Orchestra, 289, 290
457
Lovich, Lene, 365
Living Colour, 453, 471, 485
LLCoolJ,408,439,443 Lloyd, Richard, 184
Lovin' Spoonful, 111, 171
Law, 288, 413
Lowenstein, Jason, 500
Loaded, 500
Lowndes, Sarah, 151
Loading Zone, 185
LSD,
Norman,
Maimudes,
Lowe, Nick, 338, 358, 364, 365
Lloyd, rRchard, 324
Mailer,
114, 115, 177-78, 179,
Loder, Kurt, 412
180, 181, 183, 184, 188, 189,
Lodga; 288
190,
197,229,251,282,397
172. 295.
MainMan,273,274 Mainstream Majora
culture, 4, 6
505, 506
label,
Makers, 545
Malanga, Gerard, 175
Malcolm X, 243.402.407 Malfunkshun. 459, 460. 469
Lofgren, Nils, 453
Ludlam, Charles, 276-77
Lollipop Shoppe, 168, 202, 219
Luna, 509
Malmsteen, Yngwie. 424
Lomax, Alan, 35
Lunch, Lvdia, 429, 478-79, 479,481
Malone,
Lomax, John,
London
15,
20
blues scene, 163, 164
Man,
London Calling, 111
London Records, 329
Lydon,John. See Johnny Rotten
Lookout 489
label,
486, 487, 488,
Loose Nut, 383
Lord,
Mary Lou,
Los Angeles
5
1
scene, 170, 193,
Manchester, Melissa. 304
Lynnejeff, 285
Maneri, Mat, 553
Lynyrd Skynyrd, 269, 305. 320, 366
Manifesto,
314,368,369,370,371,483
Lyrics, 168
the
Hand
4W
Loud
Family, 507, 543, 544,
549 Louis Jordan
Manic
Panic. 351
319
Manilow, Barn. 326 Manitoba, 387,
People,
the World. I he.
271
Mandrill. 252
Los Bravos, 166
&
216, 263
Mm Who Sold
Lyman, Mel, 233
Lyres, 363, 388,
171,280,527
20, 22. 33
the Papas, 170, 182.
Lyman, Frankie, 87
194, 201, 202, 298, 299, 302,
Lorhar
Bill,
Mamas & 299
Lush, 493 Lutcher, Joe, 27
Long Run, The, 302
1
[andsome Dick.
436
M, 376
Ma
Machine Head, 265
Mann. Barn. S4
Ian, 380,
it
made
Cirl.
550
Mann, Herbie, 111,263,283
Mack, Lonnie, 46
MacKaye,
429
Victor, 148
485
Mann, Manfred. 171
110. 162, 164,
1
1
1
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
580
N'
ROLL
Manning, Barbara, 183,495, 513,514,522,529
Matthews, Donna, 51 1-12
McGuire
Maupin, Bernie, 290
Mclntyre, Maurice, 247
Man's Ruin
Maximum
label
Manson, Charles, 206, 207, 208, 233,362,429,430,434,477, 485, 528, 529
Manson
V
Rod-
Roll,
278, 324, 336,430
Manson, Marilyn, 294, 524, 556
Mayalljohn, 216
Scott,
1
85
McLaren, Malcolm, 312, 346, 500
347, 348, 349, 350, 352, 353, 354, 356, 366, 367
133, 163, 164,
McLaughlin, John, 289
Mantovani, 74
Mayfield, Curtis, 241,249,250
McLean,
Manuel, Richard, 210
Mazzy
McLean, Don, 233
Manzarek, Ray, 196, 197
MC Hammer, 445, 454, 466
McLean, Jackie, 244
Mapplethorpe, Robert, 312, 433
MC5,
McLuhan,
Marbles, 324
Marcus, Greil, 227, 370, 450
Star,
509
195,214,220,
117, 168,
267, 328, 339, 355, 363, 389,
McManus, Declan. See
McCabe,
Marquee, 351
McCall,
Mart] uce Moon, 326
Married
..with Children,
Marriot, Steve, 165
Marsalis,
McVie, John, 303
550 1,
Me Decade, 293, 298 2-3,
3,
68, 157
119
Wynton, 552
Meat
Puppets, 374, 393, 496,
544
McCartney, Linda Eastman,
Mars, 338
Meatmen,
331, 383, 384, 392,
423
McCartney, Paul, 203, 230, 234,
Meddle, 282
Marsh, Dave, 228, 323, 331, 412
254, 298, 352, 419, 505
Marshall Tucker Band, 305, 320
the bass and, 103
Medium
is
Beades'chief balladeer and,
Meet the
Beatles,
Martha & the Vandellas, 240,255
86,
Martin, Dean, 87, 235, 436
Martin, George, 105, 106, 107, 113, 114, 115,151, 191
Martin, Ricky, 448
background
of,
111
impressions of the U.S.
Charlie,
Melle Mel, 404
McCrae, Gwen, 310
Marvelettes, 86
McDaniels, Darryl aka
410 Mascis, J., 496, 497, 498, 499,
500
Mason, Dave, 188 Mason, Ray, 547, 548 Master of Reality, 265
Matador Records, 495, 496, 505,514,554 Matassa, Cosimo, 49
3
1
DMC,
407
McDonald, Country Joe, 171
Al,
Mathis, Johnny, 145
Madock, Glen, 348-49, 353,
Melody Maker, 107,464
McDowell, Jack, 476
Melvins, 459, 460, 467, 468
McDuffJack, 75
Memphis
McGhee,
Memphis sound, 309
Sticks, 82
McGonigal, Mike, 527
McGovern, George
S.,
McGuinn, Roger
Mendelsohn, John, 222, 227, 261
194, 195,210-11
McGuinness-Flint, 212
McGuire,
Slim, 27
Men at Work, 409, 41 398,
(nee Jim
354 Matrix, 182
Mellon Family, 178
103,226,227,268,331,369, 370,391,392,502,532
350
400, 520
Matchmaker, The, 448
Mellencamp, John Cougar, 393, 419,456
Meltzer, Richard, 51, 101-2,
McDonnell, Evelyn, 545
McDowell,
85
207
210
McCoy, Van,
Mary Hartman,
label,
Melcher, Terry, 170, 193, 206,
McCaughan, Mac, 502
Martinez, Christina, 43
Hart/nan,
177
108
Melanie, 529
Melba
and, 109
McCoy,
the Massage, The,
Mekons, 491
Martin, Steve, 296, 300
Mary
Medea, 516
98
criticism of, 117 first
501
McVie, Christine, 300, 302
Peter, 101
Tris, 549,
McCarthy Hearings, 449
McNeil, Legs, 328, 367
McNew, James,
McAuliffe, Leon, 21,22
Marley, Bob, 216, 291
Elvis
Costello
455 Marks, David, 91
Marshall, 177, 397,
445, 450, 534, 554
MCA Records, 317, 318, 374,
Marketts, 94
Brian, 195
223,224,225,226,228,251, 423, 438, 473, 482, 485
Mardones, Benny, 304
238
Mcjohn, Goldy, 219 McKenzie,
Max's Kansas City, 257, 277,
May I Sing with Me?,
Family, 195
378, 391
Sisters, 85,
Barry, 170
),
Mentors, 427, 435
Mer label,
325
Mercer Arts Center, 277, 324 Mercer, Johnny, 24, 60
1
6
3
1
INDEX FOR SONIC COOL
581
Mercury, Freddie, 295, 352
Miracles, 240
Mooncv
Mercury Records,
Miro, Jennifer, 379,423
Moonglows.
Miscegenation, 35, 533
Moonlighting, 529
Misfits, 267, 380, 383, 392, 423,
Moore,
93, 252, 278,
325, 341, 347
Mercury Rev, 529
Merge
label,
434,435
502
Suzuki, 538 44, 68, 238
54
Merrill,
Moore, Scorn,
34. 41, 54, 161
Mermaids, 85
Miss Christine, 261
Moore, Thomas, 100
Merry
Mss
Moore, Thurston, 552
Pranksters, 180
Pamela, 261
Mersey Beat, 102, 103
Mission of Burma, 388, 393
Moore, Wild
Mersey beat sound, 457
Missy, 537
Moose, 493
161, 372,
27
Bill,
Mistaken, 509
Mops, 166
Merseybeats, 162
Mistress Ruby, 518, 519
Moreland, James, 484,
"Message, The," 406
Mitch Rvder & the Detroit Wheels, 224
Morgan, Jeffrey,
Messina, Jim, 2
Met
1
Puppets, 497
232,299,300,301,454,513, 529
Metallica, 364, 374, 382, 383
Morris, Keith, 373
Mob influence,
Morrisey, Paul, 259
69-70
Morrison, Jim,
Moby Grape,
Miami Sound Machine, 448
182, 184, 185,
434
Mod groups, 64, Mod Squad, 203 1
Miasma, 491 Michael, George, 454, 464
Moddy Blues, Modem Dance,
Michaels, Lee, 185 Sylvia,
405
Modern Jazz
Microsoft, 395
Modern
Middle of the Road sound
(MOR), 301,303,
304, 310
193
Morrissey, 442, 464, 554
Quartet, 83
xMorton, Jelly Roll, 15
Moss, Jerry, 318 Most. Mickey, 190
Records, 35, 36, 38, 46,
Mother
Earth, 185
Mothers
Motor City
Monk, Thelonious, 243 Monkees, 191,202,211,309,
Glenn, 85
376, 505
Miller, Jerry, 182
Monroe,
145,204
Bill,
550
453
The, 526
32, 41
Moit die
loople, 151, 21".
Mountain. 218.
Mouse. 171
Monti' Pythons Ffymg
Moog,
Robert,
374, 380, 383, 384, 393, 423,
Moon,
Keith, IS". 221
485, 486, 496
Moondog, 69
Minutemen, 374, 381, 386, 390,
1
263,272,273, 324
Montrose, 269
Minor Threat,
Mintz, Leo, 67
Records. 86, 240, 242.
Monterey Pop Festival, 170. 184, 191,202,203,204.231
Mingus, Charles, 83, 244, 252 202, 331,372,
scene, 540
249.250. 253. 254. 255, 311, 318
Monroe, Marilyn, 33
Miller, Scott, 543, 544, 549,
"Moondog
(.'inns,
296
Mouse. Stanley,
1
13
MP3, 530,531 Mr.
68 Party,
4M
Move, 189,285
2 SO
Coronation
Moondog House
; ''''.
Motorhead, 274, 360, 361, 364, 381,383,423,430,473,544
Motown
Monkees, The, -W0
Jimmy, 137
198,
Motley Que, 392, 424, 466
Money, Eddie, 305
Milkshakes, 490
252
Mothers of Invention. 504
Molly Hatchett, 320
Miles, Trevor, 346
Finest,
Essra, 231, 378
Moles, 505
Milburn, Amos, 36
392, 393
76
230, 234
The, 341
Lovers, 326, 336, 337,
Mohawk,
Miles, Buddy, 248
Millionaire,
1
Morrison, Van, 164,215,227,
Mods, 217, 262
Mighty Caesars, 490
Miller, Steve, 212, 305,
Morrison, Sterling.
Mother Love Bone, 469. 475
Midnighters, 25, 96
Miller, Mitch,
Modern
IT.
48
Mdnight Oil, 409
Miller,
65
347, 502
Midnight Cowboy, 258-59
Miller,
1
18, 196.
259,298,325,349,350.381. 418,419
203
&
311
Mitchell, Mitch, 187
MGM Records, 28, 204
Mickey
Moroder, Giorgio, 309, 310,
Mitchell, Willie, 253
Meyer, Russ, 367, 464
Vice,
1
Morris, Joe, 553
Meters, 241,406
Miami
5
1
Morissette, Alanis, 515, 529
Mitchell, Joni, 167, 223, 231,
Metal Machine Music, 272
3
67
Ball,"
Gasser&
the
Mr. Rogers, ^20
Wardos.93
7
1
5
3
1
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
582
MTV,64,285,
314, 317, 360,
381,385,393,409-10,411, 412,413,414,419,420,421, 424,425,426,427,454,455, 456, 458, 466, 472, 475, 477,
479,490,505,511,513,517, 524-25, 528, 533, 539, 541
Nashville Skyline, 2
"New
1
Mudhoney,
New York Dolls,
Freedom (NAF) National Association of
391, 460, 461, 463,
Bam Dame,
490,494,516
National Front, 345, 385
Moon,
National
23, 25,
54
Mulligan, Gerry, 244
label,
Nationalism,
3
Newport Folk Newport Jazz
Ned Kelly, 260
42
Newport
Negative FX, 429
341
Nelson,
Murphy's Law, 392
Nelson, Paul, 278
Muscle Shoals Studios,
2
1
for Airports, 288, 387
Randy, 227, 229, 230,
231
Neats, 388
Murphy, Patrick "Murph", 496, 498
Music
Newman,
Nazz, 266
Devils, 545
Murder City USA, 402
Newborn, Phineas, 36 Newley, Anthony, 275
Navarro, Fats, 244
277, 278
Festival,
Olivia,
Bill,
289
Nicks, Stevie, 300, 302, 303
Nico, 176,321,326,378,379,
Nelson, Ricky, 48, 57
414, 509, 550
Nelson, Sandy, 75
Night Fever Disco, 403^4 Night Flight, 410
Nelson, Willie, 305
Nems
Record Store, 104
Night Owl, 171
Music Machine, 168
Neon
Boys, 278
Nightblooms, 507
to
Put Her
in the
Mood, 74
Neo-retro, 388-89, 389
Neuwirth, Bob, 149
Mutants, 391
Never Mind
Sound, 200, 343
My Ami is True, 494, 495
Sky
Were Fair and Had
in Their
Hair But Now
They're Content to
Wear Stars
on Their Brows, 270
My
War, 383
Myers, Richard. See Richard Hell
Myra
Breckinridge,
259
Naked and the Dead,
Naked Raygun,
Nilsson, Harry
Nine Inch 366
Nevermind, 471, 472, 473, 474,
Nails, 525
Nine, Ron, 460
Nine
to the
Universe, 188,
249
497
365
My Bloody Valentine, 492, 493, My People
the Bollocks,
443
Nightline,
Nesmith, Mike, 2 1
Mussorgsky, Petrovich, 285
MX-80
304
Nice, 284, 285
Music for Lovers, 74
Musical Brownies, 22
50
245
Rebels,
Newton-John,
Nektar, 288
1
244-45
Festival,
Music fi-om Big Pink, 210
Music
171, 324, 325,
339
296
Mummies, 489
Elliot,
Roll
York Rocker, 319
New York scene,
National Lampoon, 296
Murcia,
Murphy Brown,
New
65
National Lampoon Radio Hour,
Multiple overdubs, 93
Murder City
York Press, 518
New York Rock & Ensemble, 193
Mull, Martin, 296
Murphy,
362, 367, 425, 484, 538
New 1
National Broadcasting, 61
Billy,
168, 276, 277,
278, 279, 294, 324, 325, 328, 339, 340, 342, 347, 348, 350,
464, 465, 466, 468, 469, 470,
Mullican,
Wave, 288, 314, 335, 336, 337,338,343,358,365
Nathan, Syd, 25, 39, 81,242 National Association for
National
Thing," 246
New
Nashville Teens, 164
Broadcaster (NAB), 24
Mud, 262
ROLL
N'
1984, 349 Neville Brothers, 241
New Birth, 252 New Christs, 389 New Christy Minstrels,
1910 Fruitgum Company, 202, 212
111,
170
New comedy, New Geocenmc
470,471,472,473,475,477, 480, 484, 486, 487, 488, 489,
296
457, 462
Napster, 531,540
Nash, Graham, 221,222 Nashville Pussy, 546, 547
493,496,497,505,511,516, 522, 539, 544, 554, 556
World, 553
New Jacks, 443 New journalism, 295, 296 New Kids on the Block, 445, 466
The, 172
Nirvana, 28, 374, 393, 455, 461, 462, 463, 464, 465, 466, 469,
New Model band, 332 New Order, 386, 387, 392 New Race, 389 New Radiant Storm King, New Route, 460
Nixon, Richard, 213, 247, 249, 259, 293, 304, 307, 327, 379, 398, 399, 400
No No
Control,
486
Depression,
547
No Doubt, 525, No Nukes, 305 499
No One Can Do
No wave,
529, 556
It Better,
338, 340, 391
443
5
7
1
1
1
INDEX FOR SONIC COOL Nobles, Gene, 66
100 Club, 351
Noel, Hattie, 11
Rainbow, 460
Noise
New York,
503
Noise, The, 521
Parents'
Only Ones, 539
Paris,
Ono, Yoko, 118-19,433,482
Parker, Charlie, 18,41, 187,
NOIZE, 438
Opera Times,
Oprah, 295, 464, 525
Nolen, Jimmy, 248
Option,
Northwest Frat Rock scene, 161, 167
Notorious Byrd Brothers, 210, 211 Notorious Byrd Brothers,
The,
5
1
Novoselic, Chris/Krist, 466, 467, 472, 468, 473
Now, 129 Nowottny, Marianne, 529, 550
Nugent, Ted, 228, 230, 315, 317,349,381,467 Nuggets, 215, 329
Numan,
Gary, 413
Number One Record, 337
Parker, Colonel Tom, 52, 53,
58,471
462
333, 408, 409, 423, 428,
429,437,441,442,443,444, 445, 446, 456, 529
Parker, William, 553
Orbison, Rov, 34-35, 55-56, 89, 107
Parks,
Organ, 87
Parkway Records, 72
Orioles, 39, 68
Parliaments, 251, 31
Ork
Parlophone, 105
label,
326
Van Dyke, 194
1,
453
Ork, Terry, 325
Parnes, Larry, 100
Orleans, 263, 304
Parsons,
Ormsby, Buck, 95
Parton, Dolly, 213, 305
Gram,
2
1
491
,
1
Orpheus, 204
Partridge Family, 48
Osborne, Buzz, 459
Partridge Family, The,
Osboume, Ozzy,
Passion Piny, A,
261, 265, 381,
492
Pastels, 491,
382
410
286
O'Shea, Bonnie, 520
Patton, Bigjohn, 75
Osibasa, 252
Patton, Charley, 17, 36
Osmond, Donny, 271,301
Paul, Les, 34
Osmond, Marie, 301
Paul Revere
Osmonds, 204, 364, 365
Nuns, 379
NWA,
302
243,244,333
1 1
195
Nova, Heather,
Music Resource Center
(PMRQ,423,425,426
Nolan, Jerry, 278, 327, 348
Northern Songs, 106, 119
583
Osterberg, James, 225 O'Sullivan, Gilbert, 234
&
the Raiders, 161,
167, 169, 323
Pauls Boutique, 453
Pavement, 499 Pavitt, Bruce, 458, 460, 461,
Other Half, 168,219
463,464,465.469,471 Nyro, Laura, 203, 223, 227, 228,230,231
Otis,
Oui,
Johnny, 27, 45 Payola, 42, 68-69, 68-69. 72,
430
75-77, 77-78
Outlaw Josie Wales, The, 260 Oakley, Berry, 217
Outlaws, 305, 306, 320
Oasis, 493, 525, 537
Outlets, 388
Peace Corps, 158
Odes, Rebecca, 183,518
Overkill L.A., 374, 383
Odetta, 159
Owens, Buck, 25
Pearl,
O'Donoghue, Michael, 296
Oy!, 378
Pearls Before Swine,
Ohio
Express, 202
Ohio
Players, 252, 312, 403
O'Jays,
Okeh
Olatunji,
label, 15, 16,
21
176,244 288
126-27, 128, 129, 131-32,
203 the Beach, 232, 303 1
74
One Flrw 179
A Time,
3
"4
222, 268,
1
Oi
Parallel Lines ,319
Paramount record
Penguins, 39, 198
Pentangle, 216
Paisley underground,
Palmer, Earl, 49
3
Peer, Ralph, 16
Pennebaker, D..V, 203
Page, Patti, 42
Pansy Division, 48
493-94 l
Pagans, 274, 342. 359, 391
Palmer, Carl, 285
Onassis, Blackie, 463
Once Upon
Minne. 32
Peel sessions. 4 >3- l >4
Pallenberg, Anita, 132, 136,260
the Road,
505, 520, 529
Peel, John.
1
Pagejimmv, 220-21, 424
Oldham, Andrew Loog,
On On
Pacific Arts label, 2
Pacino, Al, 446
Oldfield, Mike,
1
Peeble, Ann, 253
254
record
"2
Peace Eye Bookshop,
Pearl Jam. 475, 476, 477, 4S4.
label, 15
Pere Ubu, 200, 340, 341, 342, 344 Peregrine-look, Steve. 270
Petja nutut
,
1
36,
260
3
1
1
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
584
Performance
art,
432-33, 503-4
Perkins, Carl, 35, 53, 54, 99,
103
Me,
214
Pet Sounds; 194, 195
&
Gordon,
Peter, Paul
107, 126
Creedence Clearwater Revival and, 211,212 departure from Sam Phillips and, 52
255
Persuasions,
Peter
Player Von Get, The, 302 Please Please
Perry, Lee,
156,421,430
Playboy, 9-10, 10,
ROLL
N'
Elvis Costello and, 365
Poco, 2
Grand Ole Op/y and,
1
32, 42,
52
Poetry slam, 504
110, 162
& Mary,
Pleazers, 167
Hank
Pogo, 372
Williams' influence on,
35
159
Pogues, 363
image and, 160, 239
Peterson, Charles, 465
Poison, 392, 421, 424, 455, 473
Ink Spots and, 40
Peterson, Dickie, 548
Poison Idea, 383,429,435
innovations and, 42, 86, 159,
Petrillo,
James C, 24
Petty,
Norman, 56
Petty,
Tom,
Poison
Polanski,
418, 419
Pfister,
Leiber/Stoller and, 81
535
Litde Richard and, 49, 5 Louisiana Hayrick and, 30
PolyStyrene, 362,479
Snoopy, 195
Polydor Records, 308
P-Funk,46
Polygram Records, 329, 469
Phair, Liz, 303, 514-15,
529
Ph.D., 387,413 Philles label, 80, 85 Phillips,
419
Politically Incoirect,
483
Pfaff, Kristen,
Roman, 207
Police, 376,418,
Peyton Place, 10
221,333,472,556 Jim Morrison and, 197 Johnny Rotten and, 356
479
Ivy,
Dewey, 42
Phillips, Flip,
Pomus, Doc, 239
Poneman, Jonathan, 460, 461, 465,468,469,471,490 Pop, 102, 118 Pop Goes
43
Electric
Star, 191
mama's boy and, 28, 40 and, 228 musical demise of, 56, 116 Punk music and, 331 RCA Records and, 52 redemption and, 55 Ricky Nelson and, 57
Mick Farren
Roy
Hall and, 55
Sun Records audition and, 40 Phillips,
John, 171,203
Phillips,
Sam,
25, 30, 35, 36, 37,
38,39,40,41,43,49,52,53, 54,55,471 Philo
label,
Pop,Iggy,95, 197,225,226,
262,272,274,321,340,341, 342,350,371,373,391,460,
Porno For Pyros, 505 an Exhibition, 285
492
Fairies, 228,
Porter, Cole, 60
Post, Louise, 511
29, 33
289
162, 163,
189,200,216,276
Pretty Things,
329
Price, Lloyd,
67
Primus, 284, 453 Prince, 384, 393,414,415,416,
Powers, Ann, 545
464,498
Pink Flag, 359
Powertrip, 383
Prince Buster, 216
Pink Floyd, 116, 188-89,281,
Premieres, 96
Prine, John, 233
282,283,303,324,338,365, 370,416
Prendergrass, Teddy, 439 Presence,
Pinkus,
Jeff,
Prior,
344
Presley, Elvis
Pipkins, 403
Plan
9,
B.B. King's influence on, 35
black music and, 235 388, 490
Plant, Robert, 221,222, 548
Plaster Casters, 261 Plastic
Ono
Plastic
People of the Universe,
509
Band, 214
Process Church aka Church of the Final Judgement, 251,
268
burnout and, 18 cars and,
Colonel Plasmatics, 379
446
Private Dancer, 42 3
Arthur Crudup and, 25, 40
508
Maddy, 361
Priority label,
546
Pixies, 336, 392, 429, 479, 507,
516
Pretty Things, 117, 128, 161,
Primitives, 163
Powell, Cynthia, 118
Power Puff Girls, 550
Pigpen, 181,259
Pink
Mama"
166
Presley, Reg,
Porn Rock, 430, 431, 432, 433
255
Webb,
"Big
Pretty on the Inside,
Pickett, Wilson, 187, 217, 236,
Pierce, Jason,
Mae
Thornton and, 42
464, 525
Popwatch, 522
Pierce,
Willie
Popular culture, 4
48
Phluph, 204
Pictures at
vocal quality and, 40, 41
ProcolHarum,
4
Tom
Parker and, 52,
Professor Longhair, 82
53,58,471 comeback of, 2 1 commercialization
151, 188, 191,
289, 320
Profile label, of,
52-3,
Profumo
407
Scandal, 103-4
58, 102, 118
controversy and, 166 creative
freedom and, 41
Progressive Rock, 163, 210,
281,284,285,286,288,309
1
INDEX FOR SONIC COOL Pryor, Richard, 296
Psychedelic Furs, 386, 387
Psychedelic Rock, 180, 181, 184, 185
Psychedelic scene, 186, 187, 188, 189, 194,
199,204,219,
220,247,251,492-93 Psychedelic Soul, 249 Psychoanalysis, 156
Public Enemy, 404, 408, 437,
438,439,440,441,443,456 Public Image Ltd. (PiL), 386
Puff Daddy, 525, 537
Punch the Cbck, 366
New Wave and,
Rage
288, 314,
554
358, 365, 369, 376, 378,
Ragtime,
381,385,387,405,4(38,
413,419,430,431,511, 539, 543, 544 noncommercialism of, 322, 325,327,329,331,332, 334-35, 338, 339, 362-63,
373,377,417,556 214,217,224,225,226, 228,262,263,267,273, 274,282,289,310,321, 288
antidrug and, 372, 380,
449-50
Rap and, 403 Rock and, 362-63, 367-68, 373,385,393,482 1
39
surf music and, 91, 96
Pure Pop for
Now
People,
364
Pursey, Jimmy, 364
Pussy Whipped, 482
fashion and, 345, 346, 347,
P)Tamids, 94
Grunge
and, 472, 473, 474,
372, 373, 374, 379, 380,
Maw,
Quarrymen,
126
QUBE,410 Queers, 487, 488, 489
Tommy,
humor
and, 330-31,
340
London
beat scene ami,
101-2
machismo and, 380-81, 392 Metal and, 381-82, 383, 384 Mod revival ami, 354-55,
358
363,364,369,370,371,373, 374,379,381,382,392,401, 412,429,430,434,442,457, 472, 484, 487, 4ss. 489, 546
182, 183, 184,
t.
408
405,44041
185,212
drugs and, 449-50 early lyrics and, 5
fashion and. 441
Quiet Riot, 424, 467
future and, 533, 555
legacy
Race music,
16. 20. 27.
t,
542
origins of, 247, 248, 250-51,
33
Radiators from Space, 360 Radio, 15,21,24.73
legacy of, 393
350,357,359,360,361. 362.
disco and. 403
160
Raburn, Yern, 530
jazzand, 338-39, 552
334, 335, 340, 342. 345, 349,
copyright controversj and,
industrialization and, 342,
Jewish
Ramones,28, 57,90,96, 138, 165,223,225,273,278,324, 326,329,330,331,332, $33,
commercialization
Queen, 276, 314, 352
and, 522
343
>
404,437-38,440,442, 444 breakdancing and, 404
Quicksilver Messenger Service,
Rock
(
Ramone, Dee Dee, 436
black identitv and. 251, 402,
98, 99, 100
408, 426, 434, 435-36,
Indie
70
antidrug and, 437
Quant,
Quickly,
487, 496, 497, 503
label,
Rap/Hip Hop, 45
381,382,388,391,392, 439, 475, 483, 484, 486,
Rama
379
1
Raparata, 169
Quatro, Suzi, 478
475 Hardcore and, 359, 364, 371,
3 3
Rap-a-Lot, 446
348, 350-51, 352, 354
458-59
Boys,
Rancid, 487
Pussy Galore, 227,431
449-50, 483, 492, 503 England and, 344, 345, 346
grassroots and, 343, 344, 377,
label, 377,
Rama
Romanes, 332, 334
388, 389, 390, 435-36,
feminism and, 361, 362 Glam Rock and, 324
Ralph
Ramone, Tommy, 334
racism and, 384, 385
Rolling Stones and, 138,
479
Rainy Daze. 192,202
Ramone,Joey. 4s 8
Purple Ivy Shadows, 499
drugs and, 367, 385, 387,
Raincoats, 361, 386,
Ramirez, Richard, 42
politicalization and, 344, 345,
purism and, 122, 129
disco and, 386
Railroads, 14
Rambo, 434
355,378,379,484, 486-87
372-73,373,375,378, 385,386,392,431-32 amorality and, 327, 328
160
Rain Parade, 387,414
origins of, 165, 173, 200,
346, 347, 348, 350, 352,
363, 368, 370, 371,
14, 15,
Raiders, 212
Punk music, 95, 96, 168, 170 333,340,341,350,352, 353,354,357,361-62,
Machine, 456,
.Against the
335,336,337,338,343,
Punk, 319, 328, 329, 367
alienation and, 328, 330, 331,
585
254,403,408 Punk mu\. 403 Rock ,\nd. 456 sampling and. 2^2. ^S~.
4.
'
Radio Birdman, 363, 389 Radio City,
sexism and. 442,445, 446
337
technolog} and. 53
Radiohead, 520 Rafferty, Gerry,
407
304
Rag Baby label, 184
54,403,
404,405,406,408 toasting and, 403, 405 [reniers and,
;
2
1
1
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
586
violence and, 438, 439, 440,
441,442,444,446,447 Rapp, Tom, 171
R.E.M., 335, 338, 359, 387,
388,392,454,457,470,472, 525, 547, 554
Rascals, 171
Remains, 168
Raspberries, 324, 337
Renaissance, 329
Rat, The,
Rationals, Ratskellar,
Ratt,
REO
505
174
Rivingtons, 96
Roberts, John, 204
Robertson, Pat, 42
Robinson, David, 337
Robinson, Joe, 405
488, 498
166
Riittus Norvegicus,
361
Robinson, Smokey, 240
Rock
Residents, 200, 379
Baby Boomers and, 322
Rave, 493
Retro scene, 489, 490, 497, 542, Power, 274, 331,363
Rays, 86
545,551,553 Return to Forever, 338
RCA Records, 95,
89
Roberts, Howard, 80
Speedwagon, 320
Research, 526
Raw
Rivers, Johnny,
Reprise Records, 230, 378, 480,
424
Rattles,
489
Riverdales, 488,
Roach, Max, 244
Replacements (the Mats), 338, 388, 393, 436, 457, 554
224
ROLL
N'
16, 50, 52, 53,
Retu ni
Forever,
to
182,318,471,539 Revelations front
Reagan, Ronald, 185, 306, 307,
Rezillos,
419, 420, 424, 454, 456,
471,473,490
506
336, 345, 379, 392, 395, 397,
400-401,402,415,421,428,
290
Pandemonium,
commercialism and, 169, 181, 199,204,222,284, 291,314,315-16,317, 375,411,412,414,417,
creative control and, 181,
360
192, 193, 198,
204
435, 437, 442, 449, 461, 464,
Reznor, Trent, 524
465,471,513,514
Rhoads, Randy, 382
181, 186, 187, 188,204,
Rhodes, Bernie, 354
205,218,224,263-64,
Rhodes, Todd, 67
273, 282, 290, 299, 300,
Real Kids, 388, 554 Realistics,
538
Record collector syndrome,
213,338,356,527
Rhythm
&
drugs and, 173, 174-75, 180,
Blues, 27, 36, 37, 44,
63,64,68,69,81,372
Record industry growth, 24, 60, 61,64,69,73,76,82
Rich, Charlie, 31
Record Rendezvous Shop, 67
Richards, Keith, 38, 46, 90, 99,
Recording, 59 -60 Recycle);
283-84
Red,
Hot and
Cliff, 101,
electric guitar and,
124, 126, 128, 129, 130, 138,
42
540, 541, 543, 544, 545,
Richman, Jonathan, 336, 337, 359,365,467,501,539
improvisation-based develop-
Richmond
legacy
Sluts, 541,
Rick, Dave, 504
Red
Rickenbacker
Transistor, 338
383, 475, 483, 528
543
Reddy, Helen, 234
Rimbaud, Arthur, 325
Reed, Jerry, 213
Riot Grrl Movement, 373, 478,
of,
44
& Fall of'Ziggy Stardust &
the Spidei?
from Mars, The,
273,287 Risky Business,
American, 482
185-86 guv" and,
454
Ritchie, John. See Sid Vicious Ritchie, Lionel, 41 Ritter, Tex,
nostalgia and, 542 politicalization and,
Pop
25
Rock and,
186, 191, 192, 193, 197,
202
Punk
and, 362-63, 367-68,
373, 385, 393, 482
and, 456
return to roots and, 213, 214,
322
Rock
'n'
Rolls transition
from, 169 satire and, 198,
Rivera, Jake, 338
507
and, 234, 273, 303-4
Progressive/ Art
Rap
224
Reggae, 216, 217, 255,262, 378, 384, 405
of,
"sensitive
229,232,422,423
479,480,481,482,483,486, 512,516,521,546 Rise
new
the
development
Reed, Lou, 171, 175-76,271,
290, 326, 355, 357, 367, 377,
229
maturation Riff
195
533-34, 538
and, 177-78, 180, 181,
196,
Riddle, Nelson, 74
Redding, Otis, 122, 236, 240, 243, 255
272,274,275,279,285,324, 325, 326, 500, 504, 520, 539
of, 190,
of,
183, 184, 188, 189, 190,
339
Ride, 493
Reed, Jimmy, 46, 47, 128, 492
ment
LSD
guitar, 34,
Redding, Noel, 187
Reject All
the future and, 531, 534, 538,
553, 554, 555 Blue,
Red Krayola, 553
Reflections,
248
Folk music and, 435
546,548-49,550,551,
Richbourg, John R., 66
Red Hot Chili Peppers, 453, 457,471,475
Redd Kross,
553 160
260, 436, 543
The, 516
Red,
Richard,
308,311,367,371,424, 435-36,449-50,461,465, 477,483,497,503,523,
199
8
83
5
1
INDEX FOR SONIC COOL second album syndrome and, 316 upheaval and, 156, 157,
social
158,203 technology and, 218-19, 280,
281,282,424
the
Pop Nation,
2
1
of,
Wayne "Duane," 506
label,
277
commercialism and,
8,
222,
Rolling Stones Records, 136 136,
207, 208, 259-60, 263
529
Pop
162, 163
and, 275 Baby Boomers and, 3 15, 417
128, 129, 131,
Bob Dylan
214 synthesis and, 66 technology and, 53-54
Rock
169 Rock
V Roll Confidential, 412
Rock
'n'
Rock
press,
214-15, 226, 227,
228,300,301,323,391,393, 406, 412, 416, 442, 500, 502,
517-18,522,525,549 Rock Seme, 276, 326 Rockabilly, 34, 41, 43, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 70, 370, 390,
490
Rocket from the Tombs, 340, 341, 342
Rocket
460
to Russia,
214 Cbckwork Orawje and, 128, 129
Rockin' Ramrods, 167
Rockonomics,
3
1
Rocky Horror Picture Show, 279-
Rotten, Johnny, 26". 34S. J49, 350, 352, 354, 355. 357, 360.
Roxy. 351
Elmore James and, 48 of,
Rough Trade
label,
88,
405 105, 12"
Music. 21". 275, 287, 288,
319, 556,
>W,
Royal. Bilk/ Joe,
innovations and, 416
>>:. 504
89
Royal Guardsmen, 162
1
legacy of, 418, 4R>, 420. 453
Royalties, 61, 82
Liverpool Sound ami. 102
RSO label,
127, 12
503, 504
Roulette Records, 70-71. 73,
Row
123-24,
and, 2
367, 373, 386, 387
317
anil, 125, 126, l
>,
130, 151. 132.
Rubber Soul, 112-13, 182, I'M. 201
134, 135, 136, 139, 163.
80,310 Rodgers and Hammerstein, 60 Rodgers and
Rotolo, Suze, 146, 14°
drugs and, 131, 138
machismo
Rockpile, 345
Rossington Collins Band, 320 Rothchild, Paul, 258
Rowe, Dick,
Johnny Winter Rockin' Roberts, 95
the Hurricanes,
Rose, Frank, 33
commercialism and, 134, 319,344,416,417 David Bailey and, 269 decadence and, 259, 261, 263,312-13 Decca Records and, 105
125-26, 127, 138
488
&
Rorv Storm
Roslie, Gerry, 95
and, 121, 124,
127, 128,131, 132, 136,
formation
59
and,
121-23, 125
A
1
Rootboy Slim, 529
Rose, Fred, 28
movement
Chuck Berry
Roll Trio, 54
Rocket, The,
134,543
British blues
and, 165,
454
303, 305,
Rooftop Singers,
Rose, Ad, 455, 456
and, 149
Brian Jones and, 127, 132, 133,
Ronstadt, Linda, 223, 299, 300,
101
124, 125
and, 89, 118
transition to
191,259
Blues and, 161
revival of, 213,
244
Rollins, Sonny,
Ronettes, 84, 85, 326 3 16,
Blues Incorporated and, 123,
payola and, 68-69
Henry, 373, 381, 383,
434, 529
Romantic Moods, 74
Beatles and, 111, 122, 127,
nostalgia and, 524-25, 528,
168
Rollins,
Andy Warhol
533-34, 541
of,
Allen Klein and, 136
drugs and, 112, 114, 131 explosion of, 79
of,
133-34, 137 violence and, 125-26, 128
Altamontand, 134-35,
and, 65
12''.
U.S. derivations
American marketplace and,
legacy
136.261
touring and, 110.
Aerosmith and, 279
52, 58,
use of classic line-up
of,
tax laws and, 134,
325, 334, 356, 366, 384, 387,
73, 134, 149, 167, 556 Country/ Blues and, 41
first
Punk and, 138,365,375 Rock and Pop crossover sitar and, 191
1
Rolling Stones
116
128-29
IIS
391,393,406,412,464
Roll
'n'
Rogers,
ROIR
524, 525,
537, 541
apex
psychedelia and, 216
261,273,300,301,317,323,
Rock Hall of Fame, Rock
Phil Spectorand,
Rogers, Kenny, 254
Rolling Stone, 2 14, 2
ment, 355, 385
Rock and
Roessler, Kira, 507
RoUerderby, 433, 517
Rock Against Racism move-
587
1
lart,
Rodgers, Jimmie,
60
17,
Rodgers, Nile, 405
Rodman, Dennis, 440
Rubell, Steve,
226 maturation of rock and, 130
158
Michael Cooper and,
Moshe Brakha
New
1
1
1
Ruhmoos, 330
&
Ruin
and. 334
York Dolls ami, 276,
277
1
Rubin, Rick. 40S. 44o
Marshall Chess and. 38
Rue.
(
the Rednecks, 278, 124
'.iiolinc.
Rumblers, "4
5
16
5
1
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
588
Savoy Records, 25, 35, 41, 65,
Rumours, 303
Runaways, 280, 478, 489, 529, 546
454
Sex and the Single
Saxon, Sky, 224
Sex
Saxon,
Sayer, Leo,
304
Rushing, Jimmy, 62
Scepter
Leon, 170
336
Sexism, 299, 423, 425, 426, 427,
85
label,
430-32, 436, 443, 445, 446,
Schaumberg, Ron, 167
Rudes, 528
Schilling, Peter,
Rydell, Bobby, 72
481-82,483,492,507,514, 516,546
413
Scholz,Tom, 314, 316 School's Out,
Sabu, 244
Sexual revolution,
267, 275
10,
Sconfeld, Robert, 101
426
507
Seals,
Sgt.
Scratch Acid, 463
389
7, 9,
SF Sorrow, 189
Tom, 297
Scott,
200
Saints, 274, 363,
Peppers Lonely Hearts Club
Band, 116, 117, 119, 132,
Screamers, 371
153,189, 192,193,194,195,
Saloman, Nick, 490-91
Screaming Trees, 469, 484
Dave, 255
Sammy the
SF
Scott, Shirley, 75
Sadomasochism, 518, 519
6-7,
5,
156,157, 158,257,258,
260,261,262,294,308,312, 395,421,422,423
495
Scott, Robert,
Saddlemen, 44
&
374,380,381,386,387,436, 455,457,464,472,473,484, 489
446
Scavullo, Francesco,
Ruskin, Mickey, 257
Safe as Milk,
56
363, 364, 366, 367, 368, 370,
Scaiface,
Sacrilege,
1
167,202,
356, 358, 359, 360, 361, 362,
Scandinavian Rock, 545
Rush, Tom, 203
Russell,
Girl,
Pistols, 57, 165,
267,274,312,328,345,349, 350,351,352,353,354,355,
464
Sly,
Scaduto, Anthony, 143, 144
Rupe, Art, 50, 66
Sam
Sex, 347
Saxon, 381
Run-DMC, 537
ROLL
Sex, 433
Rundgren, Todd, 229, 232, 233, 278, 287, 543 407, 408, 437, 438,
N'
196, 199, 202, 227, 262, 265,
Screeching Weasel, 488
Snooper, 441
Seals
Sampling, 387,406,407,
&
Croft,
269,283,285,311,316,317, 344,414
234
ShaNaNa,214,
Searchers, 110, 162
327, 332
440-41,443,446 San Francisco scene,
1
Shadows, 160
66
Sears, Zena,
80, 181,
182, 183, 184, 185, 190, 206,
212,220,249,378,379,380,
Seattle scene, 457-58, 459, 461,
462, 465, 468, 475, 476, 477
117, 168,
Shaggs, 502
Sebadoh, 498, 499, 500
483, 543, 544
Shadows of Knight, 224
296
Shakers, 166
Sanchez, Tony, 260
Second City
Sander, Ellen, 221
Seconds,
Sanders, Deion, 440
Secrets, 541
Sham
Sanders, Ed, 172, 173,206
Sedaka, Neil, 84
Shamburg, Robin, 518
469
Shakur, Tupac, 537, 555
Seduction through Witchcraft,
404
Seeds,
Sargent, Stefanie, 483
Seeger, Pete, 143, 145, 146,
Satan's Rats,
360
Satriani,Joe,
424
Saturday Night Fever,
Shankar, Ravi, 191
Sharpton, Al, 402 Shatter, Will,
147,232,323
385
Shaw, Arnold, 63
Seger, Bob, 165-66, 171,224,
305,306,313,315,316,375,
Shaw, Greg, 215, 323 Shell,
550
377, 393 3 10, 3
1
5,
316,317, 318, 416
Shelley, Pete, Seinfeld,
359
484 Shelton, Robert, 146
Selling
Saturday Night Live, 296, Satyrs,
268
168,202,227,349,389
Santana, Carlos, 185, 233, 290
Satan Rock, 264, 266, 267, 268
364
69, 360,
Shangri Las, 85, 86
Sedgewick, Edie, 346
Sanders, Pharoah, 252, 289 Sanders, Randy,
Television,
3
England By
the Pound,
547
284 Shepherd
1
85
Sisters,
September 11th Sheridan, Tony, 103
Serpent Power, 185 Sauceiftl of Secrets, A, 189
Sherlock, George,
Sesame
Savage, Jon, 349, 350
7 Year Bitch, 482, 483,
Savage, Roger, 127
Seven Seconds, 384
Savoy Brown, 216
1
3
Serrano, Andres, 43 3
Saunders, Mike, 226, 298, 323, 391
Shernoff, Andy, 226, 331 Street,
520 She's So Unusual,
78
RPM,
478
Shimmy
Shindig, 169
15
414
Disc, 503, 504
8
3
1
INDEX FOR SONIC COOL Shipp, Matthew, 553
Ska, 216, 377, 378
Shirley
&
Shirts,
324
Smith,
Lee, 241
160
Skiffle, 97,
Smiths, 45, 359, 387, 554
Skinheads, 217, 262,439
Sinoker You Drink, The, 302
Shocklee, Keith, 404
Skrewdriver, 360, 364
Shoegazers, 493
Skronk, 338, 339
Shonen Knife, 528, 553
Slackers, 461, 476, 477, 497,
Smothers, Smokey, 239
Shrimpton, Chrissie, 128
Snail, Azalia,
518
Snider, Dee, 425
502, 504
Wayne, 289
Shorter,
273, 278, 324,
Smith, Clarence Pinetop, 26, 62
Skin Yard, 459, 468
Shocklee, Hank, 404
Patti, 184,
325,326,336,340,341,374, 457,478,513
Skid Row, 468
85
Shirelles,
589
Slade, 262, 263,
Sniff
324
&
the Tears, 376
344
Slamdancing, 379, 380
Sniper,
Sid and Nancy, 516
Slammies, 434
Sniveling Shits, 360
Sidran, Ben, 243, 245
Slanted and Enchanted, 462
Snoop, 537
Signifying 45
Slash Records, 376, 456
Snow, Hank, 52
Shuman, Mort, 239
Silber, Irwin,
148
Slayer, 382,
406
Silk, Sills,
&
Slaughter
Silver Apples, 270, 281
Sleepyhead, 52
Silver Beatles, 100
Slick,
Silver Metre,
Soft Machine, 283
Grace, 182, 183,478
Slick Rick, 408, 426,
220
Simmons, Joe, 407
Slickee Boys, 388
Simmons, Russell, 403, 404, 407,408
Slint,
Simon
&
Garfunkel, 171
Slits,
Simon, Paul, 231, 232, 234, 285,419
Slut Rock,
Simpsons, The, 449,
Sly
&
Some
383
Simon, Carly, 230, 298
Simply Saucer, 289
Solanis, Valerie,
P.
524
the Family Stone,
John, 223, 226
Smalls, Biggie, 537, 555
476
Sioux, Siouxsie, 350, 352, 353,
361,362 Siouxsie
&
the Banshees, 361
Lord Baltimore,
Sir
2
1
Sire Records, 318, 329, 334,
335, 342, 376 Sitar,
191
Sixteen, 2 16,
Smash Your Head on Rock, 499
86,
14
159
370, 389, 390, 393, 425, 42^.
431,434.455, 456, 45". 45''. 463, 464, 470, 471. 47 l >. 4S2.
the
Punk
507,508,511,513,516,528, 529 Sonics, 95, 161, 167, 458. 464.
528
Sons of Adam,
1
95
Smashing Orange, 493, 507, 509
Sons of Champlin, $78
Smashing Pumpkins, 336, 507, 520, 536
Sony Records. 46
Smile, 194, 195
Sopwith Camel. 185, I'M
Smith, Arlene, 84
Soul Benders.
Smith, Arthur, 34
Soul Fire
Smith, Bessie, 145, 183
Soul Music, 262
Smith, Dr. David, 205
Smith,
Elliot, 52'),
79
484, 493, 495, 496, 497. 501.
Sinclair,
Singles,
1
348Stooges348
Small-band influence, 23
229-30,231,232,233,369, 549, 550
1
Sonic Youth, 267, 336, 339,
Small Faces, 164, 165, 347,
Nancy, 89, 312
Singer-songwriter movement,
1 1
Sometimes a Great Notion,
427
Sinatra,
Sing Out, 148, 159
1
138
Something/Anything?, 287
Small, Millie, 216
235,529
Girls,
Something Neir,
F, 170
246,249,250,251,403
Sinatra, Frank, 25, 62, 65, 87,
346
Solitude Standing, 5
361,479
Sloan,
Sohl, Richard, 326, 335
Sohn, Amy, 518
445
462, 463, 499
Slip it In,
Soft Boys, 288, 387 Soft Cell, 387,413
Sleeper, 512
93
Social upheaval, 157, 158, 177,
250
383,426
Sleater/Kinney, 545-46, 549
Lester, 80, 81
Silly Surfers,
the Dogs, 360
549
Sony, 404 l
>.
475
Sopor Generation, 264. 265
V^
label. 551.
552
album market and, 250, 253 business practice changes
and, 242
Smith, Jean, 51S
Chicago Soul and. 241 Smith, Jimmy, 75
60 Minutes, 137
Smith, Mamie, 16, 61
$64,000 Question, The, 75
Smith,
Mark
E.,
360
church's influence and.
2 J6,
237,241,242,253 crossover mu\. 238—39, 25
1
8
1
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK 'N' ROLL
590
electric guitar and, 248,
255
heroin and, 243-44
Spinners, 254
Stewart, Ian, 123, 124, 125, 127
Having Flown,
Spirits
innovations and, 249
3
1
inverse racism and, 255 "Spirituals to
Islam and, 244
Memphis sound
Motown
Swing" concerts,
Spock, Dr. Benjamin, 156, 418,
Spooky Tooth, 216
urbanization
Springfield, Dusty,
of,
250, 251,
520
461,465,468,469,475,477, 484 Soundtrack album syndrome,
306,326,363,365,393,412, 416,418,419
310,317
Sprinkle, Annie, 433
Chimnoy, 233
461,462,484,486,497,498, 544
South Park, 524 South Park Psycho, 449
Southern Culture on the Skids,
547
St. Vitus,
Southside Johnny
&
the Asbury
Jukes, 305
Spacemen
Star
Spades, 168
& Our Gang,
116-17
Spann, Otis, 47, 125
and Bible
Black,
Starr,
Edwin, 249 Ringo, 105-6,271
Steel Wheelchairs, 137
Special Ed, 445
Steele,
Specialty Records, 35, 50, 66,
Steeleye Span, 216 Steely
93, 106, 118, 128-29, 170,
272, 297, 529
Tommy, 160
Speedies, 338
Spencer Davis Group, 162, 165, 188 Spencer, Jon, 43
431,462, 528
Stein, Chris, 320, Stein,
336
Seymour, 329, 332 label,
360
Stephens, Leigh, 219-20
Steppenwolf, 219, 227 Stereolab, 507, 509, 527 Sterling
363,371,373,382,389,391,
544
Straight Outta Compton, 423,
Company, 28
Steve Miller Band, 185 Stevens, Cat, 230, 234, 285
Spin Doctors, 453
Stevens, Jay, 177
Spinanes, 507
Stevens, Ray, 213, 529
Spines, 389
168,195,220,225,226,227, 251,262,264,267,272,273, 274,278,289,321,322,323, 324,326,328,331,339,340,
Storming Heaven, 177
Dan, 198, 296-97, 328
404
Speed metal, 374
477, 505
473, 489, 499, 502, 527, 543,
Step Forward City,
Pilots,
Stones' innovations and, 123
392, 412, 423, 425, 430, 464,
Steam, 263
Spector, Phil, 79, 80-81, 84, 85,
484
Stone Roses, 493
341, 342, 347, 350, 360, 361,
Stax label, 240, 242, 248, 253,
Spears, Britney, 554
Spectrum
284
Starr,
Speakeasy, 186
82
Stone, Oliver,
Stooges, 90, 112, 128, 165, 166,
255,337
Sparks, 275
Stompd^eat, 240
Stooge, Iggy, 225
Wan, 313
Starless
Mike, 81
Stonewall Riots, 258
Starbucks, 477
387
Ballet,
Spaniels, 39
Spanky
389
180
Star Club, 103, 105
492, 509
Stoller,
280, 407
Standells, 202, 323,
Stanley, Owsley,
420
Sting, 412, 419,
Stone Temple
Space Oddity, 271 3,
Stephen, 222, 233
Stimulators, 339
Stone, Sly, 248, 249, 251,255,
374, 383
374
Stains,
1
324
Stollman, Bernard, 173
SSD Control, 381,382 SST label, 373, 374, 383,458,
South, Joe, 213,265
Stills,
3
365 363
Sanson, Bob, 436
Spungen, Nancy, 367, 474, 516 Sri
Stigwood, Robert, Stilettos,
89
Springsteen, Bruce, 301, 305,
Soundgarden, 284, 459, 460,
Spandau
Stiff Little Fingers, 362,
Springer, Jerry, 529, 547
Soul Stirrers, 239
275 Stiff label, 338, 358, 364,
249 stomp-beat and, 240 street culture's emergence and, 250-51
254
&
Sticky Fingers, 136, 260, 261,
Spitting, 372
and, 240
politicalization of, 242, 243,
Stewart, Sylvester. See Sly
the Family Stone
62
and, 240
Stewart, Rod, 215, 217, 229,
233,278,319,344,365
14
Spirituals, 13,
Spin,
7
441 Straight
to Hell,
388,391,484,485 Strangeloves, 45
Strange, Steve, 413 Stranglers, 361
Strawberry Alarm Clock, 202,
529 Strawbs, 216 Stray Cats, 390 Streisand, Barbra, 145 Strictly Personal,
Stewart, Al,
516
Straightedge, 372, 380, 381,
200
304 Strokes, 529, 538, 539, 540, 541
INDEX FOR SONIC COOL
591
Strong, Barrett, 240
Swan Records,
Strummer, Joe, 357
Swank, 430
Student Teachers, 339
Swans, 423, 431
Tears for Fears, 409, 413
Studio 54, 313,403
Sweet, 262, 313, 324, 344
Techno, 438
Sweet, Matthew, 338
Teddy
Sweet, Rachel, 365
Teddy boys aka "Teds," 213,217,347
448
Studs,
254
Stylistics,
Styx, 314, 320, 375,
377
Sub Pop Records, 376, 391, 458,460,461,462,463,464, 465,468,469,470,471,478, 483,485,487,489,490,498,
72, 85
Taylor,
Sweet Revenge, 313
Idles,
389
Teen
Idols,
75
Swervedriver, 493
Teenage Fanclub, 338, 455, 491, 493
Swing, 18-19,20,63
493
Singles Club, 461, 462,
Switched-On Bach, 280
463
Sylvester Stewart. See Sly Stone
Subteiranean Pop, 458, 460
Teenage Jesus 339
Teicher, Louis, 527
Suckdog, Lisa, 433, 517, 528,
Sympathy
for the
Record
Sugarhill
Synthesizers, 280, 281,282,
Gang, 405, 440
Sugarhill label, 405,
406
Suicidal Tendencies, 383 Suicide, 278, 324, 548,
Suicide
285,287,309,314,386,413, 438
Temptations, 240, 249, 25
Terminator X, 438 Terry Knight
301
&
the Pack, 224
T Rex, 262,270-71
Thatcher, Margaret, 345
Tad, 465, 468
That'll
Summer, Donna,
Taking Tiger Mountain By
Thayil, Kim, 460
317,335
Strategy,
Summer
of Love, 185
Sun City
Girls,
506
287
Talking Back,
Talking Heads, 288, 332, 335, 336, 337, 358, 370, 507, 508
Sun Records,
Talking Heads 77, 3 3 5
39,212
Tall
Sun
Sessions, 221
Sun
Studios. See
Super Shitty
Dwarves, 389, 494
in the
Max, 544
Super Stocks, 93
Tampa Red,
Tangerine Dream, 282 Tar,
Them, 11". 221,224
162. 163. 164. 171,
Theremin, ^2~ Tarantula, 152
Tate, Sharon, 207
Supertramp, 529
Tatoo You, 138
Theremin, Leon/Lev, 2S0. 527 There's a Riot Coin'
Supremes, 86,240, 249, 251
Tavares, 305 Taylor, Cecil, 57, 187,245
161,170,390
Taylor,
Swrea/istic Pillow,
1
82
99-
Swa, 383 Swaggart, Jimmy, 54 Rats, 168
100, 102-3
Hound Dog.
Third, 1X>
Third Bardo, 168
Taylor, Dick, 124
94
On, 24".
Thick as a Brick, 286
Surf music, 91,92,94, 95, 96,
Swamp
553 Their Satanic Majesties' Request,
Theoretical Girls. 338
463
Superfuzz Big Muff, 464
Sutcliffe, Stuart,
Thee Michelle Elephant Gun,
131-32
18
Superchunk, 502, 507
Surfaris,
Thee Headcoats, 490
Talmy, Shel, 164-65
Sun Records
Be the Day, 347
Theatre of the Ridiculous. 276-77
250
Sun Ra, 224, 246-47, 374 35, 49, 56, 40, 38,
255
Tex, Joe, 236
Sultans of Swing, 67 309, 311, 312,
1,
10 Years After, 216
Szymczyk,
550
Commandos, 342
Temple of the Dog, 475, 477
Synth-Pop, 413, 419 Bill,
8-9, 438-39,
324, 325, 326, 327, 539. 543
Sid, 32
Suede, 493
486
6,
Television (the band), 184. 278,
Industry, 489, 540
Suffer,
1, 5,
524, 525, 528, 536
Sucking in Stereo, 554
Symphony
the Jerks, 338,
Teenage Lust, 278, 324
Television,
mentary), 133
550
&
Teenagers, 39
Sympathy, 489 Syvipathy for the Devil (docu-
4
Suburbia,
53, 99,
Teen
Swirlies,
Sublime, 554
Bears, 80
Sweetheart of the Rodeo, 210, 211
499, 505, 544, 545, 547
Sub Pop
Sam, 83
Icardrop Explodes, 387
132,241
Third Generation, 220, 228, 267, 322, 323
Taylor, James, 111,229,230,
232, 234, 29S, ^y>
Thirteenth Floor Elevators, 171,228, ^44. 189, 528
Taylor, Mick, 133, 135, 136,
'137-38, 139, 163 Tavlor, Plithv Animal, 361
33
RPM.26,73
This Wideness Goes, 506
2
"" 1
Webb, Chick; 63
371
Venet, Nick, 92
426
Re|*>rt.
Weaver, Courtney ^1S
Vie, 543
Waiters, 94-95, 161, 167,458
382,
Weather
Weathermen, 205,
513,521,527,528,529,539, 540, 543, 547, 554 1
155, 156, :: ,J
529
Vollenweider, Andreas, 424
Underground, The,
the Electric
Chairs, 278
label, 15, 61
344, 358, 361, 380, 387, 389,
414
;"i>
Wayne Count) &
Vol. 2,
Velvet
Waters, Roger. 2s2
249-50
Vogues, 89
Vom,
1". is. 18, 19,
Watts, Charlie, 122, 124, 126,
321,322,326,336,337,340,
502, 504, 505, 507, 508, 509,
aka McKinlev
Watts 103 r\l Street Band.
169, 171, 175-76, 177, 195,
412,460,491,492,494,501,
Muddy
Morganfield,
12l/l25. 128,213,239, 540
violence, 125-26, 128
226, 271, 272, 287-88, 289,
Watergate, 294, 2^5. 306. 175,
Waters,
Vee, Tesco, 384,427
116, 133, 164, 165, 166, 168,
359
89,
WASP, 426
53, 57, 103, 117,
160 46, 47, 107
Warner- Ame\. 410
397, 400
101
Vedder, Eddie, 476, 477, 520
Veejay Records,
&
318,329,337,343,3*6.455. 488,491
Warwick, Dionne,
300, 337, 406, 443,
Voice,
88 230,
W arrant, 466
Village People, 311,312
Vapors, 376
(studios),
Warner Brothers Records,
Vietnam War, 6, 171-72, 235, 294,295,306,375,397,415, 435,444,556
Vanderpool, Sylvia, 405
Vanguard
Warner Brothers
Video Jukebox
111.
233
Webb, Jim, 231, 253
Wedding Present; 493, 494 KferfFcrcstn',498
1
.
2
8
1
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
594
ROLL
N'
Wolfe, Allison, 517
Weezer, 529
Who
Weil, Cynthia, 84
Whyte
Weird-Ohs, 93
Wild Kingdom, 436
Wonder,
Wild Ones, 166
Wondt-rwall Music, 191
Weirdos, 341,370, 371
Pitt the
Bmnp, 323
Wolfe, Tom, 79,293,295
Boots, 86
Stevie, 250, 280,
Wood, Andy,
405
498
469, 475
Welch, Bob, 302
Wild
Welch, Raquel, 271
Wild Tchoupitoulas, 241
Wood,
Welden, Mike, 339
Wildflowers, 245
Wood, Ron,
Welk, Lawrence, 74, 155, 526
Will Bradley Orchestra, 62
Wood,
Weller, Paul, 358
Williams, Allen, 100, 104
Woods,
Williams, Hank, 17,18,21,23,
Woodstock, 134, 184, 204, 205, 210,297,528,556
Wells, Junior, 218, 241
27-28,30,31-32,33,35,40, 79,235,491,502,538,540
Wells, Mary, 86
Wener, Louise,
Style,
5
Wennerjann, 138,412 it for
the
Money,
Hank Jr., 485
Williams, Paul, 214
Williams,
Wesley, Fred, 248
Wendy O,
379, 423,
430 West, 218 label,
Western Swing, 43,212
297
Woodstock Nation, 204
World War
87,125,163,239
tion,
Bob and His Texas
Playboys, 20, 21
348, 350
Willy
Wexler, Jerry, 83,221
Weymouth, Tina,
Chocolate
511
Wilson, Brian, 90-93, 94, 106, 170, 193, 194, 195,232,280,
Wetton,John, 283
record produc-
Worrell, Bernie, 46
Wray,Link,51,75
Wurlitzer Company, 22 Wurtzel, Elizabeth, 518
Wyman,
Bill,
122, 126
Wynette, Tammy, 213
298, 303
336, 507
II
24
Wreckless Eric, 358, 365
Wonka and the
Factory,
306
305
World of Pooh, 513-14
Wills,
Westwood, Vivienne, 346, 347,
class appeal,
Workingman's Dead, 212
Williamson, Sonny Boy, 18, 47,
Wills, Bob, 22, 28, 32
Weston, Randy, 244
Working
Works, 285
251, 252, 312
20, 21, 23, 33,
Woodward, Bob, 295
Williamson, James, 273-74
Weston, Kim, 240
Wet Willie,
Phil,
Woolies, 224
Williams, Tennessee, 257
199
Westbound
138
Roy, 189,285
1
Williams, We're Only in
Chris, 188
Wilson, Carl, 91
What's Goiri On, 250, 254
Wilson, Cassandra, 552
X,45, 370, 371,376,459
Whiskey A
Wilson, Dennis, 91,94, 206
X
Wilson, Jackie, 239
X Generation, 418,
Wilson, Murray, 90-92, 93, 94,
X-RaySpex, 511,362
Go Go,
298, 368,
369
Whitcomb,
Ian, 22
White Album, The, 119,214
206
Files,
XTC,
529 517
288
White, Barry, 253, 254, 312
Wilson, Teddy, 62
White
Wilson, Tom, 87, 171
Yancey, Jimmy, 62
Winger, 466
Yardbirds, 111, 129, 161,162,
Boots, 529
White, Bukka,
17, 18
190,216,221,222,276
White, Clarence, 211
Wings, 301
White, Jack, 548
Winner, Langdon, 215
Yelvington, Malcolm, 53
White, Meg, 548
Winter, Johnny, 2
Yes,
White Panther
Winwood, Muff, 188
Party, 223, 224,
225
167,
Winwood,
White
Stripes, 540, 541,
548
White, Tony Joe, 213
1
Steve, 165-66, 188,
Wire, 359, 360, 511,513
Wired, 290, 477 Wish You Were Here, 282, 344
111, 162, 163, 164, 165,
189,190,214,215,221, 266,280,313,315,333,344, 166,
Witchfinder General, 426
With
the Beatles,
108
Wizard, 218
348, 349, 355, 365, 375, 380,
412,417,419,420,470
Who Do We
Think
We Ai-e, 265
Wizzard, 262, 285 Wizard,
A
Rush the Shaw, 439
YoLaTengo,
333, 370,479,
500, 501, 507, 508, 509, 529
Whitman,
Who,
Bam
To!
221,419
Whitfield/Strong, 240 Slim, 365
193,223,227,262,275, 277,281,283,284,285,287, 297,338,370
Yo
Yos, 545
Yohannon, Tim, 378 Yorke, Ritchie, 166 You
Axed far It, -Ml
You Can't Argue with a Sick
Mind, 302 True Stmy, A, 287
INDEX FOR SONIC COOL Young Americans, 319 Young, Charles M., 356 Young, Faron, 29 Young, Jesse Colin, 233 Young, Joe, 429
Young, Neil, 29, 111, 167, 202, 223,229,230,232,296,301, 303, 419, 459, 460, 497,
499
Young, Rusty, 211 Youngbloods, 171 You're Living All
Over Me, 497,
498 Yow, David, 463
Zapata, Mia, 483
Zappa, Frank, 116, 193, 197,
198,199,200,201,214,231, 261,266,283,284,288,290, 296,297,314,342,368,425, 426, 477 Zawinul, Joe, 289
Zevon, Warren, 300, 303 Zmieski, Paul Simon, 449
Zombies, 110, 163, 188
Zoom,
Billy,
371
Zulu Nation, 404
ZZTop,218,269,419
595
SONIC COOL: THE LIFE & DEATH OF ROCK
fr (TOE
S.
'N'
ROLL by Joe S.
HARRINSTOiO
N THE TRADITION of Nick Tosches, Torrl Wolfe, and an epic and
riveting history of rock
'n' roll-
rock.
Immense,
movement backdrop
and
it
is
the
first
fierce, opinionated,
and
of social factors
electric guitar, the jukebox,
recession, the
Reagan
in
in
the
the spirit of
book portrays rock as a and masterfully presents it against a
and important events such as the invention of the LSD, the 12-inch phonograph record, the Seventies
revolution, the Internet,
and the
movement, one
had meaning, but ultimately
that
written
hilarious, the
it's
never been
many ways
be
to
the history of rock as
inclinations. In
Bangs comes
a novel. Sonic Cool
we have to genuine myth
book about rock
of near-religious proportions
Lester
that reads like
presents the saga of rock as the closest thing u,o .-modern world
Harrington
told,
Harrington's
9/1 1/01 attacks. This
as the legend
book reads
of
a massive
is
cultural
own worst
fell
prey to
like
the raging polemics of
its
Jones (aka Amiri Baraka). Radically egalitarian in its assessments towering figures such as Lennon, Dylan, and Cobain stand alongside lesser-known but equally influential
Leroi
—
artists like the is
MC5, the
gripping reading for
Misfits, and Joy Division—Sonic Cool anyone who ever believed in the music.
JOE
S. HARRINGTON began writing at the age of 10, an act that provoked a rejection slip from Mad magazine. He has written about music for the Boston Globe, Boston Phoenix,
New
York Press, Seattle Stranger, Lowell Sun,
Wired, Reflex, Raygun, High Times, Seconds, Rollerderbfi
and numerous fanzines. He
lives in Portland,
Maine.
ISBN D-b34-DEflbl-fl
U.S. $24.95
CANADA $37.95
o
"73999 30763 1 HL00330763
4
HAL«LEONARD®
9
780634 028618