I can see my house on the Russian River
Sunday, March 16, 2025
A Poem and a Back Story
Tuesday, March 11, 2025
Capsule reviews of John McLaughlin, Tom Petty and David Johansen from 1978
(Anyone familiar with the style of the well known rock critics of the 6os and 70s will without exception realize I was imitating the style of the Village Voice's Robert Christgau, who was and remains an argument-starter I admire. That said, forgive the obvious indebtedness).
Johnny McLaughlin, Electric Guitarist - John
McLaughlin (Columbia)
You're Gonna Get It -Tom Petty and the
Heartbreakers
This time out, Petty, and crew sound a bit less
journeyman-like in their mild manner brand of rock and roll. Petty's voice, a
limited vehicle for self-expression, is more soul-oriented this time out
(though not soulful), and the band, especially in the guitar work, is
crunchier, dirtier, and a little more committed to mainstream rock and
rollisms. In time. Petty and the Heartbreakers may become, as San Diego based writer Mikel Toombs
alluded to in his concert critique, a sturdy Rolling Stones type band. They
have sound and song writing talent. All they need is a little more hysteria and
bad luck. B.
David Johanson - David Johanson.
Johanson, the former lead singer for the well-loved New York
Dolls, has become another over-stylized non-entity who is salvaging what's left
of his "punk" reputation into an a priori mélange of typical street
posturing, none of it very interesting at this point. Johanson's voice, which
sounded good with the Dolls because he was buried in the mix, is an
uninteresting bellow, and having it upfront on this album, booming like cannon
fire and not much else, only accentuates the problem. The band. as well, are contrived
study in slick sloppiness, deliberating themselves through the material like
over conscious artistes calculating the effect of some mechanical vulgarity. In
general, David Johanson rolls plenty. but it hardly rocks worth a bean’s worth
of flatulence.
Saturday, March 1, 2025
DAVID JOHANSEN OF THE NEW YORK DOLLS, RIP
Gone is David Johansen, lead singer, AGE 75 for the groundbreaking New York Dolls and an odd musical chameleon when that band broke up. The Dolls interested me as a Detroiter who grew up with the MC5 and The Stooges playing local venues and getting songs played on area FM radio stations.
Those proto punk rockers, on whose shoulders I believe an entire generation of punk bands that follow stand, were rough, splintery, ill-mannered, simplistic, fast, purposefully sloppy, the dumb side of real life that the Velvet Underground never explored (to paraphrase R. Christgau). The New York Dolls, to my ears, were the first to pick up on what the MC5 were doing and made teenage outrage-your-parents music that was similarly chaotic and crashing, hoarsely bellowed vocals over careening guitars and a rhythm section that couldn't decide how fast to play or when to start or end a measure.
I saw the band at the now defunct JJ's on Pacific Highway and found myself enjoying their speed freak-junkie jitters show, and especially liked Johansen, who threw himself all over the venue's cramped stage, sometimes looking like a rag doll caught in the jaws of a crazed hound. I did, though, name the band as one of the worst shows I'd seen in a Reader year-end round up, a hurried listing I still regret. But they were great, a perfect demonstration of everything prudes, priests, and parents thought was wrong with American youth. And it's not the lyrics were in any sense reflective or revealing why teens were angry, confused, mixed up, inflamed by competing emotions and impulses; their music and their appearance shocked scribes, moralists, and meatheads all around, and the New York Dolls gave them no solace , no relief. Comprehension, coherence, manners or maturity as one got older were not the virtues the Dolls sought. Instead, they wallowed in their addled comprehension of world, they were in your face, they didn't give a flat f-bomb what you thought. You dug them or you walked away from them, grumbling under their breath. They were a high-ocatane wallow , in the moment, finding joy in the sensations that adrenaline provided.
Maybe they were Kerouacian in their own way, searching for new experiences, new kicks? Night likely, though one might look forward to someone writing a long treatise on Johansen and the New York Dolls. But be warned if such a squib appears in a bookstore window claiming to explain it all to you. For their Dolls, there was no transcendence. it was all RIGHT NOW, forever, until gravity and human fraility decided otherwise. They were gleeful in their general fucked-upedness and flaunted it merrily. They understood the founding principle of what became punk rock no less than the MC5 or the Stooges or the Who before them, to not have a good time flouncing about to a horrible racket and enjoying the old world as it squirmed in a pool of its own nervous sweat. RIP
Tuesday, February 25, 2025
Dylan: The Known Unknown
Exactly who Bob Dylan is remains a
mystery to his millions of followers. It’s been estimated that over two thousand
books have been written about Dylan since he emerged in the mid-Sixties, a
situation that gives us many versions of the who, what, and why of the former
Robert Zimmerman.Coupled with the songwriter’s infamous habit of fictionalizing
his biography, what we’ve had for
decades are many personal Dylans. You
could read him in any way that suited you. Dylan crafted a mystique by
withholding details about his upbringing. He remains a mystery, an enigma, a
man hidden in plain sight. The difficulty of saying who Dylan was hasn’t
prevented writers and filmmakers from creating versions of the Nobel Laureate.
The variations on the known facts of Dylan’s story settle nothing, of course,
and in fact compound the mystery around the man, a situation that only makes
the icon more alluring.
It was reported in July of 1966 that Dylan had a motorcycle accident while riding in upstate New York. The tour was cancelled. He was a recluse for eight years after the accident, not returning to the stage until 1974. He remained creative during his radio seclusion, releasing his John Wesley Harding album in 1967, Nashville Skyline in 1969, and Self Portrait in 1970, but this wasn’t enough to stymie the musings on who Dylan was truly and what he was up to. The absence of interviews, concerts, and new paparazzi photos resulted in artistic expressions about pop stars either ascending to unreal heights of influence or who performed vanishing acts of a sort. Great Jones Street, a brilliantly etched 1973 satire by novelist Don DeLillo, tells the tale of an influential rock star named Bucky Wunderlick who has burned out and finds himself approached, despite his seclusion, by promoters, fans, intellectuals, would-be gurus, and hucksters of all sorts, all of whom seek approval and a blessing from the reluctant Oracle, a stream of hucksters who need to be told what to do. A figure as vast, vague, and finally overwhelming as Dylan, though, makes for rich premises on fantasies about rock musicians who reach a level of influence in society and who become political tools to nefarious ends. 1968’s Wild in the Streets, based on a Robert Thom short story and who also wrote the screenplay, an American political party finds itself desperate to increase its power, with kingmakers seeking and getting the cooperation of an enigmatic and sullen rock star named Max Frost to convince the young fans to get involved in politics. In a sequence of events, the voting age is lowered to fourteen, Max Frost is elected president, and adults over the age of thirty are required to go to reeducation camps where they’re force-fed large doses of LSD.
With all the magical thinking about the meaning of Dylan, it’s a relief that director James Mangold’s biopic, A Complete Unknown, sticks with the best-known biographical arc associated with the singer. We meet him (portrayed by Timothée Chalamet) first being dropped off in New York and wandering into Greenwich Village, jean-clad, toting a battered guitar case. The world of 60s bohemia greets the man from Minnesota: coffee houses, poets, art galleries, street corner musicians, intellectuals, lifestyle avant-gardists—all real geniuses and posers alike—gathered in the few condensed New York blocks of the Village that comprised the free-thinking capital of America. And of course, the folk music, the folk boom, the sweeping interests in traditional music forms, Civil Rights, and opposition to the Vietnam War. This was a world the young Dylan wanted to be a part of, one he’d come to dominate. It was a world he conquered and abruptly left.
The movie is splendidly crafted, with Mangold’s
direction taking us through the known events in Dylan’s early life prior to his
1966 accident, progressing from his arrival in New York through his meeting of
his first girlfriend, Suze Rotolo (named ‘Sylvie Russo” in the film), meeting
Pete Seeger in folk legend Woody Guthrie’s hospital room, where the young Dylan
sings the patient a song written in his honor, his early days at open mics and
hootenannies, performing for benefits for civil rights and other lefty causes,
meeting Joan Baez, and growing attention from the public and the media. Mangold
and screenplay coauthor Jay Cocks (incidentally a former film critic for Time
magazine) enliven the oft-told incidents with precisely the right amount of
speculative dialogue, no speeches, no political rhetoric, and no exposition
dumps.
The interactions between the singer and those who
befriend him and come to love him are quirky, set in a natural rhythm of give
and take. It’s no small accomplishment that the screenwriter restrains a desire
to explain, hypothesize, or convert the Dylan saga into a weighty and unreal
melodrama. There’s a natural, unforced progression here, with telling scenes,
well known to Dylan completists, given the right emotional temperament. What
might have been a segment ripe for overdramatization, such as when Al Kooper
showed up for an electric Bob Dylan session for Like a Rolling Stone, preparing
to play guitar only to be temporarily sidelined when he hears the red-hot fret
master Mike Bloomfield play some snarling blues licks. Kooper knew he couldn’t
compete with Bloomfield but insinuated himself behind an organ, insisting
he had a terrific keyboard idea .Kooper had no
such idea and was barely a keyboardist at the time, but when the tapes
rolled, the musician’s poking and jabbing at the keys became an integral ingredient
in one of the greatest rock songs. There were any number of grandstanding
Hollywood clichés the filmmaker might have relied on to create this scene, with
fast edits, loud voices, cartoonish facial expressions, and lots of rapid edits
to enhance tension and drama, but Mangold maintains his sure hand. Obviously,
an abbreviated rendition, there is no natural arch nor false about the scene,
only an intriguing showing of musicians and producers working their way through
a problem.
A Complete Unknown doesn’t portray Dylan as a saint or would-be
prophet as (maybe) some fans might have liked, and one of the issues they
tackle with the icon is inconsistency with both who he is and how he treats
those close to him. Well known for telling tall tales and otherwise fabulating
about his upbringing and experiences prior to landing in New York, we witness
where those he meets are awestruck at the apparent uniqueness of the young
genius in their midst, only to have those closest to him become distressed and
(perhaps) a bit disillusioned when Dylan’s accounting of himself is found
wanting. He’s seen being duplicitous in his relationships with Sylvie Russo and
fellow folk singer Joan Baez, an unfaithful lover and user of other people’s
good graces to get ahead. Those who’d welcomed him into their world of folk
music and left-wing politics witnessed the man they looked up to. By the time
the film lands on the infamous Newport Folk Festival, where Dylan “goes
electric,” his relationship with the traditional folk community has become
tentative at best. He refuses to sing his old songs with Joan Baez when she
attempts to get him to duet on “Blowin’ in the Wind.”. Despite pleas from the
crowd and Baez’s chiding, Dylan walks off stage. Later, as the noise from his
performance with the Butterfield Blues Band creates a backstage argument, an
incensed Pete Seeger attempts to take a fire axe to the speaker cords but is
stopped by his wife. Dylan is booed after his three-song set but is coaxed back
for an encore with only an acoustic guitar, where he sings, to rapt attention,
“It’s All Over Baby Blue.”. It’s a fact that Dylan did perform “Baby Blue” as
an encore to the discontented crowd, and it works well as a subtle, cleanly
presented symbol of Dylan’s leaving the folkie world that nurtured him behind
as his music became more raucous and rock and roll and his lyrics ceased being
topical and instead became surreal, Dadaesque, a landscape of existential
confusion and wonder.
The casting is as perfect as one could want,
with Edward Norton virtually disappearing inside his portrayal as Pete Seeger,
with the entire ensemble, especially Monica Barbero as Joan Baez and Elle
Fanning as Sylvie Russo (the name given the real-life Suze Rotolo, Dylan’s
early love interest), inhabiting their characters with a particular reserve
that makes their changing view of the Dylan character through the movie’s near
two-hour length believable, credible as felt experiences. Early in the film,
Baez watches Dylan in a folk club as his voice, his words, and his wise guy
attitude captivate her. She’s aware that she’s witnessing something original,
unique. Later, after their affair ends and his continual flaunting of his
creativity, she tells him the morning following an unexpected one-night stand,
“You know, you’re kind of an asshole.”
Nothing overplayed here, just a hard stare and
some direct words indicating the end of something that was never going to
progress to anything fulfilling. The storytelling style, the reined-in
performances, and the uncluttered dialogue give the sense of the changing
status of Dylan’s relationships with others. The disappointments of others in
what the songwriter had become are tangible and powerful, effective without
bombast or visual flash. A Complete Unknown is a fine-wrought telling of a
well-documented life, laying out the slightly fictionalized iteration of the
tale that tells what we already know, that Dylan was an enigma in his early
life and has remained an enigma ever since those days.
(Originally published in the San Diego Troubadour. Used with kind permission).
Monday, February 17, 2025
WHEN DID THE STONES JUMP THE SHARK? A HOT TAKE
Some bands don't know when to quit, with the Rollings Stones at the top of that list. I believe Some Girls is the band's last great album, an obvious response to the punk rockers who rejected the Stones and their generational mates as old and in the way, utterly useless to the current cultural grimness. It seems the band knew they had something to prove, and did so powerfully here, the songs solid, tight but bursting with gang fight aggression, jaded but hardly retiring, momentarily reflective and even sentimental but kicking aside the repast for a crazed, speed freak delirium both exciting and suggesting complete and total collapse. "Beast of Burden", "Miss You","When the Whip Comes Down", "Shattered"--peak songwriting throughout from Jagger and Richards in their last important album. This was the last time they could get away with being purely the Rolling Stones of legend without being accused of being a parody of their former greatness. They had two resolutely mediocre albums following Exiles--Goats Head Soup and It's Only Rock and Roll--and it was my hope that the unexpected vitality and verve of Some Girls would be a long-lasting return to form. But alas, not the case. But it is, in my view, among their best work, and is the last significant record they made. Following were discs that were good to fair to middling at best , none of which generated lasting heat and little of which couldn't escape the feeling that this was band that replaced corporate style professionalism ahead of inspiration. Their occupation was to sound like the Rolling Stones.
BALD HEADED WOMAN by THE WHO
There were times when the usually spirited and inventive wave of Brit bands covering American soul and blues songs yielded music that was cartoonish and , say, insulting. The basic problem is singer Daltry, an energetic, versatile but sadly colorless vocalist who only manages a naive minstrel parody of , maybe, the Lightnin' Hopkins version that came before. Interestingly, the track was produced by Shel Talmy, who according to some references, claimed credit for writing the song , which was actually a traditional chain gang song , author unknown. Talmy is quoted why he took credit for composing a public domain song in Ray Davis: Not Like Everybody Else :"They were my perks, a way for me to get in on the publishing royalties, they were just folk things I adapted. Old public domain folk songs." It was a common practice. Much as I dislike the song, I do find the uptempo, gospel fervor of the conclusion pretty exhilarating . Keith Moon's drumming in this portion is him at his carpet bombing best.
Tuesday, February 11, 2025
A BRIEF EXCHANGE WITH BARRY ALFONSO ON BOB DYLAN WORSHIP
(Barry Alfonso, a scholar, writer and a cultural critic of uncommon depth and equipoise, is a friend with whom I've been having an ongoing conversation about many interests we have in common, Bob Dylan among them. I have been skeptical of Dylan's work since John Wesely Harding, and Barry has been an impressive defender. But with all things Dylan achieving critical mass , even Barry had to slam on the brakes. The dust mote that tipped the scale was an inanely praising review of Dylan's pricey retrospective, The Cutting Edge: 1965-1966 that appeared on the increasingly tone-deaf news site The Daily Beast. We had a brief exchange over what appears the relentless pouring over of Dylan's great period of work. We both agreed, it seems, that it's gotten thick and mindlessly redundant. -tb)
Tuesday, February 4, 2025
Todd Rundgren from 1977

Todd Rundgren is an annoying whiz kids who can dually amaze you with his music and embarrass you with his lyrics. The words he writes are themes of cosmic consciousness and verbose mysticism and rival Yes' Jon Anderson for elevated pretentiousness. The sincerity of both Rundgren and Anderson may well be real, to be sure, but lets say that the precision of the intricate music making s a bad match with the muddy thinking visible in the respective set of lyrics. .Anyway, Ra, a 1977 effort with an occasional band, the ostensibly progressive rock and sometimes brilliantly kinetic Utopia, continued the Rundgren tragedy of good music with awful lyrics. When matters are at their best when the singing stops and the band is given the room to negotiate odd time signatures and reveal, in doing so, a remarkable, amazing in fact capacity to handle any style that strikes their collective fancy. The band (Roger Powell, Kisim Sulton, John Wilcox) proceeds towards some charging, frenetic, deliciously clever music.
Monday, February 3, 2025
Ian Anderson and the Music of Jethro Tull
I'm the first to admit that Jethro Tull had "pretty parts", but I would reserve that classification for those musical moments where a shining bit of ensemble work actually clicked and highlighted a fine band raging happily along with some problematic time signatures. In that vein, I rather like the Martin Barre composed introduction to "Minstrel in the Gallery", a tour de force of quirky transitions and sculpted dissonance that rises to actual art.
Friday, January 24, 2025
PURE POP FOR NOW PEOPLE
Spearheading the new Power-pop movement is Nick Lowe, Lowe, a founding member and songwriter in the sadly departed Brinsley Schwartz and best known to rock fans as Elvis Costello's producer, released a record last year that laid out Lowe's methodology in the title: Pure Pop for Now People. On one level, the title was a perfect parody of the dumb products record companies used to release for consumers they perceived as being witless, gullible, and bereft of any sense of discrimination. Yet on another level, it reveals an transformed them into objects of art. Lowe the conceptualist, wanting nothing to do with the priggish high-toned pretensions of "art-rock" (ELP and Kansas, let us say, not Roxy Music or Steely Dan or Robert Fripp), nor with the knee-jerk anarchy of most punk-rock acts, wanted to produce music that had the same clean, self-contained aesthetic values of the Beach Boys and the early Who, and yet retained a smart-assed, snot-nosed, wise-guy cynicism. The result, Pure Pop, was just that: a smorgasbord of borrowed riffs and chord progressions, vocal arrangements lifted from any number of vocal bands from the sixties, a plethora of musical styles that ranged from rockabilly, boogie-blues, to Phil Spector. Pure Pop, though, was far from the knockout it could have been. Lowe's production was cluttered and muddy. Lowe, though, has made a sizable step forward with his new record, Labour of Lust. Like Pure Pop, the record is a mélange of contrasting styles and attitudes where Lowe demonstrates an impressive
character and nerve. Lowe's new material sounds better as well. The songs are better arranged, sound more complete, sound more like real songs rather than effete parodies. Lowe's humor is set in a sharper context. "Big Kick, Plain Scrap," featuring one of those James-Brown-style bass lines that defines the essence of funk, is overlaid with a mumbling, sleepy voiced vocal that utters a word salad of lyrics sounding like Captain Beefheart (if the Captain were the lyricist for K.C. and the Sunshine Band). "Dose of You," a perfect Buddy Holly emulation, puns relentlessly about VD, mixing up the tired theme of a young man trying to woo a woman with a seldom-spoken element of what can happen with love.Lowe remains a bright minor talent who has yet to show that he can break out of his narrow confines, but the improvement on Lust indicates that his will be a career that will warrant attention.
Thursday, January 23, 2025
COVID MEMORIES
Sticker balls (left), Corona virus model (right). |
I worked at the Birch Aquarium Bookshop for 14 years until I finally retired in 2015. In that time I saw the shop evolve into a gift shop, full of toys, games, artwork, delicate glass items, and hundreds of impulse boy toys for the kiddies. AndS yes, they kept books around. But parents with mewling toddlers were the rule of the day, the Aquarium needed their purchases to support their grand efforts to educate the public about Ocean preservation.
Among the kiddie toys featured in bins at the cashier stations were these items, rubber spheres composed of suction cups, which of course stuck to smooth flat surfaces. We called these things "sticky balls" (insert snicker here) and accepted that when school groups came through the store from the aquarium, toddlers, and teens would grab the balls and throw them at the counter glass.
There was a large painting of fish hanging behind the counter, which was protected by a large pane of glass. Of course, a flurry of sticky balls would be tossed at it and we would look behind us after a rush and realize the painting was covered with these multicolored spheres adhering to the protective glass; it looked as if it had broken out in Technicolor gin blossoms. They were among the many banes of my long-term Aquarium employment, and had gratefully forgotten about them.
That is, forgotten about them until the rise of the Covid pandemic. The nightmares haven't stopped since.
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