Good-Bye,
Ruby Tuesday
by
Bill Bonner by
Bill Bonner
Today,
we write about the difference between price and value...and about
an amazing summer 40 years ago.
Forty
years and two days ago, Lyndon Johnson opened a new phase of the
war in Vietnam. Instead of observing, training, advising and protecting...U.S.
soldiers were to go on the offensive. It was already nearly a half-century
after Woodrow Wilson had put America into the empire business; still,
the country was just getting the hang of it. But in a matter of
months, there would be more than half a million U.S. troops in that
steamy hellhole. Their mission was to protect Western democracy
from the communist menace. That they were on a fools’ errand, sent
by imbeciles and commanded by blockheads was apparent then, as now,
to anyone who took a minute to think about it. But only a philosopher
with a stone heart could do so; almost everyone else went along
believing what they had to believe.
People
think the most preposterous things. But the most preposterous thing
they think is that they think at all. We have come to that conclusion
after much observation, reflection and experience. Practically every
stance any man ever took can be traced not to his head...but down
to his feet...to the circumstantial rocks and sand upon which he
stands.
When
America was a humble republic, with neither the means nor the will
to play a part on the world’s great stage, its leaders were content
with minor, supporting roles. "Mind your own business,"
was practically engraved on the nation’s currency. Then, when its
economy became the world’s largest, in 1910, and its ambitions grew,
it stepped out under the proscenium arch with the cautious confidence
of a young Booth or Barrymore. It knew even then that it was destined
for a long career before the limelight. So, it adjusted its ideas.
It found that it had to "make the world safe for democracy."
Because democracy was what it had. For reasons that are still largely
inexplicable, it decided that Germany, rather than England, represented
a threat to democracy. As a matter of logical thinking, it made
no sense. But thoughts are always subordinate to circumstance. Britain
was in decline and ready to hand over the imperial baton to America.
Germany, on the other hand, was an ascendant industrial power. It
was Germany that had to be defeated in order for the U.S. imperium
to rule the world.
In
this instance, as in so many others, America may have miscalculated.
In defeating Germany, she gave rise to another competitor the
Soviet Union. And by the summer of 1965, this new empire with
its comic creed and suicidal tendencies had taken over the half
the world. So it appeared to the empire builders in Washington that
they couldn’t afford to lose another square meter to the red menace.
They
did not know it, but communism had reached a peak. It was overpriced
and overbought. A quarter of a century later, it would be history,
probably whether a shot was fired or not.
If
that were all that had happened in the summer of ’65, it would have
passed in through these Daily Reckoning pages as just another warm
spell of fraud and claptrap. But something important happened that
year too.
Earlier
in the year, Keith Richards, was staying in a motel in Clearwater,
Florida, with a guitar and a tape recorder by his side. He was 21
years old. Having a hard time sleeping, perhaps jet lagged, he worked
on a riff modeled after something by Chuck Berry.
The
year before, The Stones had done their first tour of the United
States. Unlike The Beatles, they were received poorly. Dean Martin
mocked them. Ed Sullivan was cold and reserved. But their popularity
was growing. In 1964, their manager, Andrew Loog Oldham, had practically
locked Richards and Mick Jagger in an apartment in Chelsea. They
had to write some songs, he told them. What they wrote was the tender,
"As Tears Go By."
Readers
may wonder why we are writing about The Rolling Stones. We answer:
first, because we have been thinking about the difference between
price and value. We find the subject sticks in our brains, like
a melody. We remember when "As Tears Go By," came out.
That too haunted us like a ghost it was there when we went to
bed. It was still there when we woke up in the morning. It was a
sound track in the back of our brains. We never new exactly when
we would hear it...or when it would be silent.
That
is the way good music is. Whether it is popular or classical...it
sticks with you. Somehow, without passing through the logical, word-processing,
humbug-churning part of the brain, it goes into the mind and furnishes
the sentiments. It has value a value you can’t put a price
on. You can hear music for nothing. In the summer of ’65, some of
the best music ever produced by man came out. For some extraordinary
reason, the world was flush with political claptrap for which it
paid a high price, but high value popular music you could get for
free. All summer long, the Stones’ new hit "Satisfaction"
was on the radio.
We
are not music critics. But we can’t help but notice that most of
the music played by most of the world’s people most of the time
is bosh. We do not know how it works; it does not appeal directly
to the intellectual faculties. There is no rational way to judge
it; still it seems as stupid and puerile as a Senate speech. The
ideas, sentiments, and musical combinations themselves are worn
out. They sound like humbug set to music. This true of all musical
genres. You’re as likely to find it in high-brow opera houses of
Paris as in the low dives of the Tennessee backwoods...in the avante
garde, as in the traditional.
Against
this backdrop of lame mediocrity in the early ‘60s came an exceptional
group of fresh and talented musicians; in the summer of 1965, they
reached a kind of bull market peak. There was Bob Dylan with his
"Like a Rolling Stone." The Beatles came out with "Yesterday."
The Who produced "My Generation." And the Beach Boys classic,
"California Girls," also came out that year.
Each
had its own sound. Each left tunes in your mind that stayed for
days...weeks...months like an immunization against tetanus, some
remained in the blood for years. Many are still there...40 years
later...coursing through our vessels, pumping through the old heart
valves, occasionally spraying up in our brains, too, like happy
memories, for no apparent reasons. We recall when we first heard
them. It was as if we had done more than merely listened to music.
We thought we had lived through something special, something important.
It was if we would never be the same, never able to go back to our
work in quite the same way...or to look at things in the same way.
They
say that great artists are tortured...that they feel pain more acutely
and are able to express it more eloquently than most people. "My
compositions," said Schubert, "spring from my sorrow."
Beethoven’s genius was traced to Guileta Guicciardi. The Beach Boys
had no shortage of California girls to provide inspiration and suffering.
The Stones were no exception; they shared models and mistresses.
They had their Ruby Tuesdays who could not be tamed. But they also
had plenty of women "under my thumb."
That
was the nice thing about the Rolling Stones; they were able to turn
the conventions around. They were raw, but still refined. They were
tortured, but they were torturers, too. They could dig around in
the mud of man’s eternal tragedy, but they could have fun doing
it. They appeared to trashy, cheap, layabout drug addicts, but it
they were imposters; they were far more than they appeared to be.
Their music rested on the work of Berry, Muddy Waters and Bo Diddly,
but they added some delightful nuance that the old rockers couldn’t
manage. "When Blue Turns to Gray," "I’m Still Sittin’
On a Fence," as well as "Ruby Tuesday" were not just
songs of disappointment and disillusion. They have a kind of elegant
sweetness that surpass the genre.
In
"Satisfaction," Keith Richards began by borrowing from
Marvin Gaye, but he worked on it and gave it more life. In a Los
Angeles studio, he worked with a collaborator of Phil "Wall
of Sound" Specter and the sound engineer David Haslinger. They
managed to fill it out and give it that distinct distortion
that makes the opening of "Satisfaction" sui generis.
By
mid-summer, the song was a #1 hit in practically the entire world.
Young American boys listened to it on their way to getting themselves
killed in the rice paddies and jungles of Vietnam.
Some
things have no value. Others have no price. A young man tends to
focus on prices. But a middle aged man, sitting around in the French
countryside, listening to old Rolling Stones tunes, in the summer
of 2005, wonders more about value. He sees more life behind him
than in front of him, like a man down to his last dollar wondering
how to get the most of it.
July
16, 2005
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st Century.
Copyright
© 2005 Bill Bonner Bill
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