Music


16
May 10

Ronnie James Dio – R.I.P.

Ronnie James Dio, who died this morning after a bout with stomach cancer, was revered in the metal world while also representing, to many outside of it, the typical heavy metal cliche. The man who claimed to bring the devil horn symbol to metal (the raising of the forefinger and pinky in salute was something, he said, he picked up from his Italian grandmother) dressed in theatrical black velvet and leather, and tackled lyrics strewn with tales of devils, dragons, and rainbows with the same sincerity Barack Obama has when addressing the oil spill in the Gulf.

But to those of us who reveled in the excitement of a Ronnie James Dio song or performance, it was exactly this earnestness, careening madly and purposefully through an ironic world, that made the man so special. Dio’s music was often melodrama, but it was always in the service of optimism and joy.

While much of Dio’s music was special to me, a standout will always be the first song on his first album with Black Sabbath, “Neon Knights.” Alongside a defiantly simple but propellant statement via riff from Tony Iommi, a bold first step in the Sabs’ post-Ozzy existence, Ronnie easily matched his new band members’ kinetic metal energy and bombast while blending it seamlessly with the bright power of his own musical legacy to date.

Hardly in search of conventional narratives, Dio’s otherworldly poetry nonetheless did what any great creative fantasy should do, in that like these lines from “Neon Knights,” it enveloped the listener in another world.

Circles and rings, dragons and kings/Weaving a charm and a spell/Blessed by the night, holy and bright/Called by the toll of the bell/Bloodied angels fast descending/Moving on a never-bending light/Phantom figures free forever/Out of shadows, shining ever-bright.

Dio’s music was not always about the creation of stories (although it was sometimes that as well), but about the weaving of just these sorts of dreamscapes – sparkling and mystical raw settings onto which readers could implant their own detailed visions of his world.

I had the privilege of interviewing Ronnie James Dio twice – in 2000, and again in 2007. During our 2000 conversation, for his Magica album, we discussed how in his later days with Sabbath his lyrics had briefly shied away from fantasy, but that his fans clearly preferred his more natural lyrical inclinations. Then, Ronnie gave me some of this thoughts on the nature of death and the afterlife (or lack thereof).

…for Dio, who’s latest album, Magica, tells of a fantasy world where, as in much of his writing over the years, good battles evil, writing about reality left both him and his fans unsatisfied. “I’ve done things that haven’t struck fantasy at all,” recalls Dio, “that were much more socially realistic. I got very angry at the world around me, and felt I couldn’t speak in terms of dreams. I spoke about how if one doesn’t have a goal, then life’s pretty well non-existent. Looking around me, I got so angry at the injustices, especially for young people – no employment, drugs running rampant, disease everywhere, over-population, especially the AIDS situation, and it got me angry that nothing was being done about it and people were dropping like flies.”

But Dio found that addressing life’s everyday problems was the last thing his fans wanted from him. “I kept hearing from Dio fans that they loved the way I write, and wished I would go back to writing the way I did before. They said it gave them hope, it gave them a chance to think, so I changed, and wrote Magica. It was a reason to revert to writing the way I had.”

Dio describes Magica as “a morality play – good vs. evil,” saying that its “what life is all about.” Dio thinks of life in these absolute terms.

“There is good and there is evil,” he explains, “and in my belief it resides in each human being. I’m not a believer in an underworld, or an overworld, although I use those analogies as many writers do, because we don’t really know if there is or there isn’t. Death is the only time we’re going to find that out. So in my belief there is no heaven, there is no hell, it’s here on earth. That’s what this is all about.”

(Photo by fürschtua)


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18
Jan 10

Does Bob Dylan support Conan O’Brien?

As the battle between Conan O’Brien, Jay Leno, and NBC roars to a close, and the question of who’s to blame rages throughout the Internet, rock legend Bob Dylan throws in his two cents for Team Conan. Or does he? Enjoy.

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3
Jan 10

The Clash meets Nick Jonas

It speaks to the awesome diversity of my life that I get to have articles on the 30th anniversary of the U.S. release of the The Clash’s landmark “London Calling” album and an interview with Nick Jonas in the Post on the same day. (And, to carry that one step further, I also have an interview today with Broadway legend Elaine Stritch.)

If I were pressured at gunpoint to come up with two more completely different musical acts in sound, craftsmanship, approach and appeal, it would be a close to impossible task. The mystic creative alchemy that led to “London Calling” was a reaction to the explosion of musical norms at the hands of the Sex Pistols, and the deepening poverty faced by British youth. The Clash elevated punk by defying people’s expectations of it, including the punks themselves. In expressing both the political and the personal through styles from rockabilly to reggae to clear-eyed pop, The Clash not only brought the genre one more step toward defiance of the mainstream (Don Letts, who directed the “London Calling” video and who I interviewed for the piece, passed along a statement he heard long ago declaring that “The Sex Pistols would make you wanna smash your head against the wall, the Clash would give you a reason), but also poked a sharp stick in the eye of the “punk police,” those rebellious style mavens who relished punk for the mohawks and safety pins and a touch of the ultra violence, but missed the message about expression and individuality.

And Nick Jonas? Well, would you respect him more if I told you that one of his greatest influences was Elvis Costello? Named his band and his dog after the man and his work. Gotta count for something, right?

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18
Dec 09

FLAMING LIPS TO COVER “DARK SIDE OF THE MOON!” (cue inflatable moon)

Well, this just makes sense, now, doesn’t it? The psychedelic weirdo band that sends human-sized beach balls bouncing around the crowd (often filled with actual humans!) covers the classic album from the band that sent inflatable pigs flying over theirs.

Ladies and gentleman, I present to you:

“THE FLAMING LIPS and STARDEATH AND WHITE DWARFS WITH HENRY ROLLINS AND PEACHES DOING THE DARK SIDE OF THE MOON!”

rick.gershon@wbr.com_154114_DARKSIDEcoverartjpeg

The album, featuring the Lips “unique” take on the Pink Floyd classic (accompanied by fellow Oklahoma City band Stardeath and White Dwarves, and special guests Henry Rollins and Peaches), will be released online only, exclusively through iTunes, on December 22. One week later, it will also become available through other digital outlets. Then, for those lucky enough to live in Oklahoma City, The Lips – accompanied by Stardeath and White Dwarves, which I know little about except that one of the members is Lips’ leader Wayne Coyne’s nephew – will perform the album in its entirety at midnight on New Year’s Eve, following full individual sets by both bands.

The track listing for the recording is as follows:

1. Speak To Me / Breathe (featuring Henry Rollins and Peaches)
2. On The Run (featuring Henry Rollins)
3. Time / Breathe Reprise
4. The Great Gig In The Sky (featuring Peaches and Henry Rollins)
5. Money (featuring Henry Rollins)
6. Us And Them (featuring Henry Rollins)
7. Any Colour You Like
8. Brain Damage (featuring Henry Rollins)
9. Eclipse (featuring Henry Rollins).

If you’re wondering how Rollins and Peaches fit into all this, you’re not alone. Can’t you just imagine Rollins wailing out on that awesome vocal solo in “Great Gig in the Sky?” No? Well, me neither. But since that’s the only song Peaches is featured on, you can pretty much figure she’ll be tackling, and putting her own sexy pervy techno spin on, that classic bit of rock history.

Here’s Lips leader Wayne Coyne telling you how you can get tickets to the New Year’s Eve show – which will include both the world’s largest balloon drop and the world’s largest mirrored disco ball – for only $10.

And, to further set the mood, here’s some rare Pink Floyd from San Francisco in 1970.

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15
Dec 09

Led Zeppelin Live with Keith Moon, and the legend that might have been.

Keith Moon, as the infamous (and apparently true) legend has it, accidentally gave Led Zeppelin their name when, as he and Who bandmate John Entwistle grew fed up with how Pete Townshend and Roger Daltrey were getting all the attention in that outfit, they considered pairing up in a band with Jimmy Page and Jeff Beck. (This was several years pre-Zeppelin.) Moon joked that it would go down like a lead zeppelin, and Page remembered the comment several years later when naming his new outfit.

But while the story passed into legend, (recently verified in Mick Wall’s excellent new Zeppelin bio – more on that when I finish the book), the band that never was remained an unsatisfied legend. Sure, The Who and Led Zeppelin became two of the best bands in history, but still…any real classic rock fan has to wonder what could have been, even if just for one album. Moon, Entwistle, Page, and Beck – would it have worked? Could it have worked?

There are two huge questions here. First, could Page and Beck, great friends and yet occasionally bitter rivals around this time, have co-existed in their own band? (Yardbirds aside, since they were more of a pop outfit at that point – had Page and Beck went out on their own, the focus would have been MUCH more on the guitars, a la Zep and The Jeff Beck Group).

But let’s remove Beck from the equation for a moment, and look at the remaining trio. Consider how Pete Townshend became one of the greatest guitarists in rock by figuring out how to fill the not-exactly-plentiful spaces Moon and Entwistle left open; a rare six-string legend defined by the situational nuance required by his rhythm section. Then consider how John Bonham and John Paul Jones, while certainly explosive (especially Bonham), were far less a rhythm section devoted to the pure flurry of music, the endless cavalcade of notes and beats, as Moon and Entwistle were. In a sense, Moon and Entwistle were their respective instrument’s versions of Jimmy Page. So taking all this into account – would Moon, Entwistle and Page have created an explosive outfit a la The Jimi Hendrix Experince, all guns blazing and pushing each other to amazing feats of instrumental daring ‘do…or would they have simply overwhelmed each other, beats stepping on notes stepping on riffs until Moon finally exploded in rage, shaking the life out of the rail thin Page and wringing him out in frustration like a sopping wet rag?

We’ll never know, of course. But still, the lingering question of what might have been makes this clip all the more special, if only for the novelty. And this appearance from 1977, when Moon joined Zeppelin on stage in Los Angeles, is only for the novelty. The clip is one of many taken from 8mm fan footage for Led Zeppelin’s official YouTube channel, and for reasons unknown (but probably having to do with copyright or legalities of some sort), the powers-that-be took the annoying step on many of these clips of hacking all this exquisite footage into bits so that it jumps after 10 or 20 seconds to a different section of music – basically, it’s a Zeppelin medley where the reel-to-reel master tape was edited by Edward Scissorhands.

But still, the bits themselves are wonderful, and the moment at 6:07 when Moonie hits the stage is still pretty thrilling. He then joins John Bohnam on percussion for “Whole Lotta Love” and “Rock and Roll,” including the slamming drum bit at the end of that song. Like I said, the quality – both audio and video – makes it appreciable as little more than a novelty. But still, with Zeppelin and Moon on stage together, what a novelty it is. Enjoy.

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11
Dec 09

Muppets + Christmas Carols = Brilliance

As a special holiday treat, here’s Beaker, Animal, and the Swedish Chef (plus some special guests at the end) regaling you as only they can. Merry Bork Bork.

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7
Dec 09

Ten Mesmerizing Images from “Gimme Shelter,” the legendary documentary about the tragic Rolling Stones show at the Altamont Speedway

Yesterday was the fortieth anniversary of the Altamont Speedway Free Festival, the free concert headlined by the Rolling Stones on December 6, 1969 that ended with the fatal stabbing of an 18-year-old black man named Meredith Hunter by a member of the Hells Angels.

I interviewed Ethan Russell, the official Stones photographer for that tour and author of a book about it called “Let It Bleed,” and Albert Maysles, co-director of the infamous documentary about the show, “Gimme Shelter,” (which was just released on Blu-Ray DVD) for an article for yesterday’s New York Post.

Mick Jagger at Altamont, from the film "GIMME SHELTER." Courtesy of the Criterion Collection.

Mick Jagger at Altamont, from the film “GIMME SHELTER.” Courtesy of the Criterion Collection.

The article deals with both the events of the show itself and its eventual impact, as many regard it, having come less than four months after the successful peace and love fest Woodstock, as the end of the sixties — a status I feel, having recently read the riveting book “Helter Skelter,” that it shares at least equally with the Manson murders.

In viewing “Gimme Shelter” for the first time in years, I was struck by how portentous many of the film’s images were. The more you learn about that day, the more the tragedy seemed inevitable, and the more you actually see of the day, the more the myth of the sixties is exposed as an idealism that simply could never have stood the test of time.

Here’s my list of ten remarkable images from the film, along with the times they appear, that reveal more than meets the eye. I’ve left out some of the obvious ones, like the stabbing of Meredith Hunter or the numerous pool cue beating scenes. In fact, the violence during the sets by the Stones and the Jefferson Airplane contained too many incredible images, I felt, to single out. The images included here are less obvious, but no less powerful. They don’t bash you over the head with meaning – they’re more subtle – but within that subtlety they say something profound about the event, the participants, and the nature of the times.

1. Mick Jagger’s self-revelation – 15:50-16:20
In a press conference about the upcoming concert, a female reporter riffs on the Stones’ hit “Satisfaction” by asking Mick if he’s any more satisfied in his life, and Jagger responds “do you mean sexually, or philosophically?” He then says, to the amusement of the assembled media, that he’s “sexually satisfied, and philosophically trying.” The edit then quickly cuts to Jagger, post-Altamont – now older, wiser, and, presumably, philisophically scarred – who solemnly blurts out, “rubbish.” The moment is fleeting, but from someone as iconic (even then) as Mick Jagger, it’s a fairly startling bit of sincerity — a true rock legend, the ultimate celebrity, calling himself out on his own bullshit.

Gimme Shelter_image2

Mick Jagger at Altamont, from the film “GIMME SHELTER.” Courtesy of the Criterion Collection.

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1
Dec 09

The Beatles…with Scottie Pippen?

What kind of world would this have been had the Beatles included Scottie Pippen? Why, the kind of world where the Beatles win the Super Bowl, star in I Love Lucy, and have their back catalog destroyed by Emperor Gorlock.

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21
Nov 09

DEVO – HISTORY BOTH FUNNY AND SAD

Proving They Are Still DEVO (from today’s New York Post)

I first “met” DEVO in 1982, when they played the Palladium in New York, a great little concert hall on 14th Street now better known as the NYU dorms. (Actually, it is now the Palladium NYU dorms, but I refuse to acknowledge that they retained the name, the same way I refuse to call Irving Plaza “the Fillmore.” The Fillmore was a legendary venue (two, actually – east and west) of the late 60s/early 70s, and I refuse to soil that name by using it for a venue that hosts the likes of the Hip Hop Karaoke Championship.)

So when I saw the band there in ’82, Mark Mothersbaugh wowed the crowd in mid-show by leaving the stage during one song, then re-appearing on the venue’s balcony, and using a rope to climb down into the crowd.

Continue reading →

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15
Nov 09

All We Hear is – Radio WTF???

Check out my take on some of the more bizarre “highlights” of the new Lady Gaga video, “Bad Romance” in today’s NY Post. Whatever your feelings on Gaga, it’s surely entertaining viewing. If you think of a filmed piece of work as the art of creating images that suck you in – images that are fascinating to watch and that make it hard to look away – then she and director Francis Lawrence created a masterpiece. Of course, it may be somewhat of a B-movie masterpiece, as in, so bizarre, awful, and mystifying that you can’t look away – but fascinating nonetheless.

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