Confessions of a Middle-Aged Punk
by
Tom Chartier and Elizabeth
Gyllensvard
by Tom Chartier and Elizabeth Gyllensvard
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"All
you people, you know the blues got soul
Well
this is a story, a story ain’t never been told
Well you know the blues got pregnant
And they named the baby Rock & Roll"
~
McKinley Morganfield aka, Muddy
Waters
To play rock
you need to understand the blues. No, I don’t mean knowing those
three chords and that twelve bar progression. I mean indwelling
the soul of the blues. But, that achievement comes later in
life. Men play the blues. Children… like me… play rock and roll.
I’ve got some more indwelling to do.
About every
ten years or so up springs a new generation of hormone-driven youth
to reinvent rock and roll in their own image. That’s culture for
you. The reinvention is a healthy part of the genre. It keeps it
alive. For those enduring that teenage hell of being stuck between
childhood and adulthood, nine out of ten sufferers choose Loud
Music Therapy. What better cure can there be than to ROCK!?
I can’t think of one.
Lacking a
mature identity, the sufferers of those Happy Days really need a
voice shouting out: "We
are here! We are here! We are here!"
The resistance
phase when one seeks to break away from parental jurisdiction calls
for something so profound that no one over
the age of 25 can penetrate its measure or stomach its content.
That, my tinnitus-suffering friends,
is where rock and roll comes in.
I remember
a heartwarming moment with my father. I was deeply enthralled in
the full-length version of Iron Butterfly’s opus In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida
when my dear old dad turned from grading his school papers, looked
at me over his bi-focals and snorted: "That’s crap!" Well…
uh… he was right. But it was my crap!
Thank God
I never played the first side of that Iron Butterfly album around
my dad. That side was worse crap… Fans of Spinal
Tap may think otherwise. So I moved on to more substantial music
and fell into the thrall of The Who, Neil Young and the early Led
Zeppelin (you know, before they became too bloated for their own
britches).
Alas. With
every rock movement comes some schmuck wanting to make a profit.
Beware the recording labels and their bloodlust for money. Oh sure
a few decent artists slip through the corporate cracks. But, by
and large the bands that sell out to "top 40" sell their
souls to something worse than The Devil. After all, The Devil teaches
the blues and will let you rock.
Remember
the 1970s? You turned on the radio and were slapped in the face
by a farm-raised fish. In a tsunami of commercial pabulum, Casey
Kasem’s American Top 40 was enough to put you off those
fascinating controlled substances. FM radio offered a bit of an
"alternative," but that too was just another outlet to
sell more AMC Gremlins of schlock to the gullible. "Alternative"
rock today is no different.
And after
Top 40 Radio, it only got worse. MTV climbed out of the cesspool.
Man… If I ever get my hands on the executive who came up
with that... Well, let’s just say in some cases waterboarding
may be excusable. Since its inception, the rock
video has been the bane of real rock and roll. Sorry to break
it to you but rock and roll is NOT about dance
moves, fashion or how "cool" and stunningly
beautiful the "musicians" are. Can you imagine Janis
Joplin having any degree of commercial success today? I can’t.
Fortunately,
new generations come along and at least some aren’t as easily hoodwinked.
Maybe what
happened to the pretty Britpop boys was
the final lesson? The real musicians on the block don’t respond
well to being packaged and sold as This Year’s Model. Even some
of today’s iPod generation have wised up and don’t want
corn
syrup in their music. It
doesn’t take them long to listen to the big sellers and shout: "This
is crap!" And in response, a whole new wave of rock and roll
is born. If the newcomers get it right, the previous generation
will hate it.
I grew up
with the Woodstock
Generation but was too young to enjoy the perks… you know the
uh… well, never mind. I only got to listen to the music. The fraudulent
Vietnam Slaughterfest was punctuated by the kids’ anti-draft protests.
The Age of Aquarius knew how to make itself felt and heard. I think
of it as the golden era of rock. There were no rules and nobody
knew how to get their equipment to sound like today’s computer-mix
soup. Nowadays, thanks to high technology and places like Hollywood’s
corporate-sponsored Musicians
Institute of Technology (what a load of codswallop!) all guitars,
drums, keyboards and bands are often made to sound the same. No
wonder so many music-lovers look back to the rockers of the 1960s
who made music that was beautiful,
visionary.
As all good
things must come to an end so did the Summer
of Love. Altamont
shattered the dream of Woodstock
while the corporate world moved in for the kill. Safe
music came out… cringe. One cannot bare one’s soul and remain
"safe."
Well, rock and roll has never been about permanence anyway.
I
was a first generation punk from the late seventies. The unadulterated
anger, brutal
satire and total
lack of redeeming qualities were just a few of our admirable
traits. One did not want to play the Sex
Pistols for one’s mom. The corporate media declared punk the
scourge of the civilized world! Cool! If respectable folks hated
punk rock so much, then punk had to be good! Not to mention,
it actually helped if bands couldn’t play their instruments! Out
of that maelstrom, The
Rotters were born. With our awe-inspiring incompetence, we fit
the bill nicely.
As The Rotters’
vocal stylist Nigel Nitro’s’ (Mike
(in Tokyo) Rogers, remember him,
LRC readers?) father put it succinctly: "You ain’t never
gonna get nowhere playing that crap!" On receipt of that judgment,
Mike beamed with… uh… "Pride." The
Rotters had just got the ultimate stamp of approval!
People hated
us! We enjoyed such golden moments as being kicked out of a disco
club for sucking, being pelted with garbage and beer cans in Yoko
Ono Park in Goleta, being hailed at the Ventura Battle of the Bands
by a sea of middle fingers and the appropriate vernaculars. I was
favored by a beer bottle in the face at that one. One show was so
glorious it ended with an eight-car police riot. Ah… those were
the days my friend.
Still, times
change and rock and roll changed again. The Rotters may be too old
to rock. Well, not really… just me. I, for one, can’t help but feel
like a dork when I do…. But then I always did feel like a dork.
In the words of Grace Slick: "Old people look ridiculous on
a rock and roll stage and I’m no exception."
Nevertheless,
through various incarnations The Rotters survived for three decades.
Few bands of any genre are so lucky. Aside from the tragic vacancies
caused by chemical-induced death, there are the thousands of bands
crushed every year by the delusion of the Golden Dream… a recording
contract. It’s their funeral. "Flick
of the wrist and you’re dead baby."
All too many young bands sell their souls in pursuit of getting
"signed."
With
big money involved, technology served as the midwife to a canned
formula of consistent production and milk toast music. It was like
big agri-business killing off the family farm. What you got was
elevator music. Recording studios morphed from four-track recordings
to thirty-two track recordings to computer mixes and from thence
to synthesized, dry-cleaned drumming. The raw edges of creativity
were smothered by studio perfectionism.
One perfectly
engineered, boring album with no hit and "the commodity,"
formerly a band, doesn’t produce a profit and it’s tossed out on
the rubbish heap. If the latest Next Big Things are lucky and actually
have a hit, well then there’s the pressure from the music bosses
to do the near impossible, repeat the feat. Few groups succeed.
In the minds of record
company executives, bands are not people and there is no such
thing as "art." Record companies might as well be selling
Barbie Dolls and GI
Joes.
Remember Payola?
"The practice was criticized in the chorus of the Dead
Kennedys song "Pull My Strings," a parody of the song
"My Sharona" ("My Payola") sung
to a crowd of music industry leaders during a music award ceremony."
It has been
said that the music business is not about success. It’s about survival.
That’s God’s truth. If you want to experience real rock and roll,
don’t waste good money on giant stadium shows. Go to your local
dives and see your struggling
failures. That’s where the soul of rock and roll lives.
My
advice for budding rockers? Simple. Flip those "artists and
resources" bloodsuckers the bird and tell them to (vernacular
often used in the rock world) off. It’s not about fitting into a
formula to achieve fame and fortune. It’s about something much more
real. Play for yourself and you’ll do fine. Play the Chords
of Fame and you’re doomed. Remember, rock and roll is the baby
of the blues and The
Blues has soul.
January
16, 2008
Tom
Chartier [send him mail]
played lead guitar in legendary Los Angeles punk band The Rotters
for 26 years until their final appearance in January of 2004. He
has lived in Tokyo and Los Angeles. Currently he resides somewhere
in the Caribbean. Elizabeth Gyllensvard [send
her mail] no longer lives in Washington D.C., spends her time
reading British history.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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