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meegbear

(25,438 posts)
Mon Oct 28, 2013, 02:41 PM Oct 2013

The Rude Pundit: Dead Rock Artist

"Something flickered for a minute and then it vanished and was gone."

Lou Reed's New York, his 1989 album, hit the Rude Pundit like fist in the solar plexus. It's hard to remember that era, over 24 years ago, in a nation that had been dragged back to a crueler time by the unregulated capitalism and ruthless pseudo-imperialism of the Reagan administration, heading into the dim era of Bush the First. The poor had been turned into a pestilence by the rhetoric coming from the right, by the policies from Reagan, and by the lies from Christian charlatans. More homeless were created in order to pay for a military build-up that brought huge deficits for the nation and enormous wealth for a few cronies. And so, so many Americans bought the bullshit illusion of national greatness, the post-Vietnam War self-fellatio that this country was a destiny, a Valhalla, and not a messy conglomeration of people who, for fuck's sake, needed to learn how to live together or were gonna sink. It was, frankly, an ugly time.

"This is no time for Optimism
This is no time for Endless Thought
This is no time for my country Right or Wrong
Remember what that brought."

For the Rude Pundit, still young, still a bit naive, still believing he could change the world but with grown-up doubt starting to creep in, New York offered a cynical view of an America that had indeed fucked itself. But the cynicism was tempered with a hard-won, embittered hope. The city and the nation that Reed saw had dragged itself into the gutter, all through self-inflicted wounds, and we had to look at ourselves, all of it, understand it, get enraged by it, before we could even begin the long crawl out of this shit-filled pit. Oh, and it helps if you've got insanely great guitar riffs to accompany you on the journey.

"Americans don't care too much for beauty
They'll shit in a river, dump battery acid in a stream
They'll watch dead rats wash up on the beach
And complain if they can't swim."

What always stuck for the Rude Pundit was how immense Reed's vision is on New York. It's got Reed's usual sympathy for freaks and outsiders, for the damaged and the alienated, but the majority of the album is given over to images of our monstrous complicity in our own damnation. Take the lyric up there, from "Last Great American Whale." In the song, Reed mourns the disappearing Native American, but he uses that to take on environmental degradation and "Some local yokel member of the NRA." And on "Xmas in February," he describes a veteran who returns from war with no hope for the future. It's depressing how relevant the album still is today.

"There's no such thing as human rights
When you walk the N.Y.streets."

The most piercing rage on New York is saved for the title city. On the opening song, "Romeo Had Juliette," Reed sings, "Manhattan's sinking like a rock, into the filthy Hudson what a shock/They wrote a book about it, they said it was like ancient Rome." He calls out the police brutality, youth violence, Rudy Giuliani, racial upheaval and more, in specific, even shocking terms. Lou Reed loved this city, yes, but he saw it as being dragged down by the stupidity and ignorance of those leading and "protecting" it.

"'Give me your hungry, your tired, your poor, I'll piss on 'em'
That's what the Statue of Bigotry says
'Your poor huddled masses, let's club 'em to death
and get it over with and just dump 'em on the boulevard.'"

Others will no doubt choose albums like Berlin or Street Hassle or something by the Velvet Underground as their way to memorialize Lou Reed, who died yesterday at age 71. Idiots will play "Walk on the Wild Side," a song Reed could barely stomach performing anymore (although it is still about as subversive as rock music gets). But the Rude Pundit will always remember New York leading him to an understanding that the issues he had embraced were born out of real world circumstances for people who had been shoved to the margins, people who are still at the margins. This is not to mention that "Busload of Faith" got him through more than one fucked-up time.

Lou Reed was the poet of a city, in all its decadent glamor and breathtaking squalor, and New York was a chronicle of our plunge into an abyss of consumerism, victimization, and apathy, the skid marks of the last century polluting this new one.

http://rudepundit.blogspot.com/

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Glorfindel

(9,732 posts)
3. I'm sorry the Rude Pundit thinks I'm an idiot, but I still love "Walk on the Wild Side"
Mon Oct 28, 2013, 03:21 PM
Oct 2013

I couldn't believe what I was hearing, when I first heard that song! No one ever mentioned - let alone sang about - "giving head," cross dressing, male hustlers, or transexuality in 1972. (It was even a year ahead of "The Rocky Horror Show.&quot

FSogol

(45,514 posts)
5. Then, I hope you'll take the time to read, Nelson Algren's novel, "A Walk on the Wide Side."
Mon Oct 28, 2013, 03:38 PM
Oct 2013

Algren influenced Jack Kerouac and wrote similar stuff at least 10 years before Kerouac. Of course Lou Reed was a big fan too.

Plot summary here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Walk_on_the_Wild_Side

deutsey

(20,166 posts)
6. Dime Store Mystery, about Andy Warhol's death, is one of the most incredible
Mon Oct 28, 2013, 03:40 PM
Oct 2013

pieces of music ever made, imo.

Musically and thematically, it's a perfect end to the album New York (with John Cale performing on the song with Reed), but it also stands alone as a haunting meditation on the meaning of life and death.

I'm unable to post the video of it at the moment, but here are the lyrics:

He was lying banged and battered, skewered and bleeding
Talking crippled on the cross
Was his mind reeling and heaving, hallucinating
Fleeing what a loss

The things he hadn't touched or kissed
His senses slowly stripped away
Not like Buddha, not like Vishnu
Life wouldn't rise through him again

I find it easy to believe
That He might question his beliefs
The beginning of the last temptation
Dime story mystery

The duality of nature, Godly nature
Human nature splits the soul
Fully human, fully divine and divided
The great immortal soul

Split into pieces, whirling pieces, opposites attract
From the front, the side, the back
The mind itself attacks

I know this feeling, I know it from before
Descartes through Hegel belief is never sure
Dime store mystery, last temptation

I was sitting, drumming, thinking, thumping, pondering
The mysteries of life
Outside the city shrieking, screaming, whispering
The mysteries of life

There's a funeral tomorrow
At St. Patrick's the bells will ring for you
Ah, what must you have been thinking
When you realized the time had come for you

I wish I hadn't thrown away my time
On so much human and so much less divine
The end of the last temptation
The end of a dime store mystery

Warpy

(111,319 posts)
7. Reed's home was alwas more east coast urban than west
Mon Oct 28, 2013, 04:14 PM
Oct 2013

where we all knew about how dark and gritty things could become and the daily struggle to keep going without knowing precisely why we bothered.

It's always amazed me that people in the rest of the country could relate to any of it.

And yes, his "Walk on the Wild Side" got airplay in some surprising places because it was so far ahead of its time that most people didn't know what the hell those lyrics meant unless they'd read extensively. I think Reed grew to hate the song precisely because it got the most airplay by morons who didn't have a clue what those lyrics meant.

Of course, that's exactly what makes it his most subversive song.

Me? I'm a total Reed slut. I love it all.

 

Clyde Tenson

(65 posts)
11. Not to mention the MoFo could rock.
Mon Oct 28, 2013, 04:56 PM
Oct 2013

I give you "Rock and Roll Animal". The best live Rock & Roll recording ever pressed to vinyl. Period.

nolabear

(41,990 posts)
12. I needed this. I'm looking for Lou everywhere today. "Embittered hope..."
Mon Oct 28, 2013, 05:20 PM
Oct 2013

So true. So true. Can't give up, but the wounds are hard to ignore.

mimi85

(1,805 posts)
17. I needed it as well.
Mon Oct 28, 2013, 07:27 PM
Oct 2013

I actually shed damn tears on our banana album last night. I am a California girl and when I got the album it was like a whole new world opened up. Or a blow to the stomach. Maybe a combination of both. I'll never forget the first time I played it. It's like I kinda grew up that day.

nolabear

(41,990 posts)
18. I was explaining to a friend who's older and completely unfamiliar that Lou brought
Mon Oct 28, 2013, 07:38 PM
Oct 2013

necessary darkness to Rock and Roll. Bravest mother of his time.

 

Spitfire of ATJ

(32,723 posts)
14. "bullshit illusion of national greatness, the post-Vietnam War self-fellatio"
Mon Oct 28, 2013, 05:45 PM
Oct 2013

That's it in a nutshell.

Nixon bullshitted America by turning Vietnam into HIS war and then using it to get reelected with his "secret plan" of "Peace with Honor" which turned into the iconic picture of people hanging off of helicopters.

Talk to a Moran and they will tell you CARTER was president and LOST the Vietnam War because he was "WEAK" and it's all part of him being "The worse president we've ever had".

According to Moran World Reagan then came along and stepped on Carter's neck on his way into the Oval Office.

Morans get a blank look when you mention Ford.

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