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Intriguing Disenchantment
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Dear Chris,
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Yeah, right: a lot of Velvet Underground, a lot of Hendrix. And
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occasionally, they'd kick back with some Milton Babbitt or that guy Ornette
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Coleman stole all his ideas from.
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If history is written by the winners, is rock history written by the losers?
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By wounded fans correcting popular slights, redeeming ignored heroes?
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Miller gets his most contentious in the Velvet Underground chapter, when he
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challenges critic David Fricke's statement that the Velvets were " 'exiled from
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the mainstream' ... greeted with " 'almost total rejection.' " No, says Miller,
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the Velvets' debut had an "instant impact," going on to peak at No. 171 on
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Billboard's album chart. He then spins this not especially supportive
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datum (think how many fewer records were released in 1967) by saying how it
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should be compared not with the sales of the Beatles and the Rolling Stones but
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with those of minimalist composer La Monte Young, whose influence, via violist
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John Cale, the Velvets brought to rock 'n' roll. This has got to be some of the
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most tortured logic I've ever seen. Why can't he just say the Velvets were a
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great, hugely influential cult band? Maybe he didn't want to recycle the line
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about how few bought their records but everyone who did formed a band.
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As I skim Flowers in the Dustbin for fresh anecdotes (which we agree
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may be the book's real pleasure), I realize how many of Miller's vignettes seem
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chosen with an eye to '90s academic interests--gender, thanatos, whiteness
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studies. Not too shocking given his day job, but sometimes these pieces of
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"evidence" seem pretty chimerical, other times just hilarious.
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For instance, did you know ...
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That the Beatles singular revolution in rock sensibility was "camp," and
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that this was achieved through "the intersection of the band's alienated look
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and [impresario Brian Epstein's] longing gaze"--"a reverie of young lads in
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leather"?
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That the original lyrics of "Tutti Frutti" were not just off-color but full
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of, as Miller puts it, "thinly veiled anal eroticism"? And that Little Richard
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didn't shop that song to labels because he wanted to be "a straight blues
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singer" and " 'Tutti Frutti' was too queer"?
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That not just Wynonie Harris and Louis Jordan but also sax legend Lester
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Young got their starts with black minstrel shows?
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That the strict grammarian Pat Boone made a point of introducing his Fats
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Domino cover in concerts as "Isn't That a Shame"? And that, because he
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was so proud of his Ivy League education, he posed on the campus of Columbia
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for his first album cover?
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That when he was playing with La Monte Young, John Cale was given LSD, pot,
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and opium to help him "sustain a note on his viola for two hours at a stretch"?
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Do you believe this?
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Such apocrypha is the envy of any popular historian, and it's definitely a
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major selling point for Miller's book. It also serves to make Miller seem a lot
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more with-it than he might otherwise. You're right that Flowers is a
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personal project. Miller says as much in the preface, beginning with his
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magical discovery of rock back in 1956 and going on to share his eventual
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disenchantment with this "routinized package of theatrical gestures" in the
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'80s. This puts him in an odd, if touching, state for a critical endeavor.
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"Intrigued by [his] own disenchantment"--as elusive a mind-set as I've ever
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heard--he decides to figure it all out, to clarify "the cultural essence of
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rock and roll." Others might have just got into gardening.
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Re: The Pretenders. Are you sure you aren't thinking of, say, "Precious"
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(with its "fuck off" line) or "Tattooed Love Boys" (with Hynde's quip "I shot
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my mouth off/And you showed me what that hole was for")? Both a bit edgier than
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"Brass in Pocket," no?
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Yours,
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Chris
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