Kurt
Hernon:
April,
2002
From
Wire Reports:
Lorain,
Ohio - A thirty-five year old man was arrested and charged with trespassing
at a local Middle School yesterday after he refused school officials requests
to depart school property and to refrain from distributing free home recorded
cassettes to students. The cassettes reportedly contained home-recorded
versions of the now defunct hard rock act Squirrel Baits 1987 recording
Skag Heaven and contained a note that read, Its my gift to
you. Rock and roll is NOT dead; it lives in you - the young. Please listen,
learn, and let it LIVE Its not the most frightening
thing like this that weve had happen around here, said one
school official, But it is by far the weirdest.
Remember
Fun House? my friend Kenny asked. The Stooges Fun
House? Remember that fucking record? That was the goddamn record for
the whole bunch of us back when we were asshole know-it-all punks. You
know, when we were fucking younger and shit
The rest of us nodded our heads for a while and, after a moment of silence,
Ronnie put down the makeshift foil pipe that was making its rounds and
went over to the set of old milk crates that contained our collection
of house records. Fun House was, of course, one of them. And
everybody dug in as the needle dropped onto the fucking thing and Iggy
started to wail.
Fucking polyrhythmic master-fucking-piece, I said as Iggy
and the Asheton brothers induced chaos. Forget that fucking world
music shit
this is the shit right here. Straight out of the primitive
fucking American life were stuck with man.
It was the sort of scene that, if we were still as young as we once were,
would often end up with an irrational decision to form our own band. The
Magnificent Dicklers
now that was one memorable incarnation of our
pot-deluded Stooges by way of free-form blues dream. And the Dicklers
were but one of at least a dozen bands that were the inspiration
of melting minds and modern music, but of all those lost ideas and stupor-induced
inspirations I most vividly remember the Ungodly Giants - a band that
came about when one of us (must have been Kenny - he was the only one
amongst us who was employed at the time, and thus had at least a few dollars)
bought an old Albert Ayler record that hed brought home and we wound
up playing for four and a half hours straight while we swallowing the
contents of four bottles of three dollar Beaujolais before ultimately
deciding that the tenor saxophone that Ronnie had in his closet would
be a good centerpiece for a new, white (caucasian), suburban blues/jazz
fusion group. The Ungodly Giants spent an hour arguing over that useless
name and a full forty-five minutes or so as an actual performing combo
- but burned itself into my history because it was the only time in my
life that my music obsession paid of with a woman and got me laid.
Ronnie played his sax in the Ungodly Giants as I let loose on Kennys
three-stringed bass and Kenny tried to play his better-equipped guitar.
Old-friend Gary Hastings was the handclap percussion and spiritual inspiration
(his old man owned a liquor store - spirtual by default). It was a chaotic
free form jazz group with an aggressive up-tempo blues guitar line (the
only riff Kenny knew was something off a lousy old B.B. King platter that
only he could stand listening to) that defied the very idea of free form.
The bass was expected to hold it all together - on a mere three strings
being played by an untutored player. This odd configuration (and substance
abuse) had us convinced that we would be nothing but visionary originals
- unknown for now, but revered forever in the future. Forty-five minutes
of loose and wild jazz-blues explosions and an ensuing hour of arguing
about the title of our fresh composition gave us a band in turmoil (and,
in fact, in disintegration - I suggested a trip to the roof of the apartment
building for a Let It Be type farewell performance) and one thirty-three
minute composition that would ultimately become known as Tabs
Mother is Calling (Kenny was in the midst of an affectionate relationship
with a chunky little waitress at the local Ponderosa Steak House named
Tabitha who, it turns out, was only 16 years old at the time - although
Kenny swore up and down that she showed him a drivers license that gave
her age as 18 - the Ungodly Giants own Yoko Oh no!).
It must have been 1986, or 87 - whenever the Squirrel Bait Skag Heaven
record came out on Homestead - that this queer obsession with getting
blottod and then deciding to start our own band reared its ugly
head. I remember the time frame because my life is measured in these sorts
of things - record release dated and other such nonsense. I remember being
obsessed with the thrash bass-beat of Squirrel Bait and stealing a Skag
Heaven cassette from some chick Id been seeing (which, considering
the lengthy time frames between women in my life, is a pretty accurate
way to pin down the time frames of my life) after shed bought the
record (a fairly pathetic effort to, believe it or not, try to impress
me) and played the damn thing for me on her shitty car stereo in her shitty
86 Chevette. She was a cute but imprudent gal whod parlayed
the misfortune of drinking with the whole lot of us on a night during
this lets form a band period on which we all got fumed
up on either Nyquil, beer, vodka, pot, or Jack Daniels and decided that
wed be a pretty damn killer Husker Du styled band into a short but
volatile relationship with me.
After enduring hours of insane and violent stupor-induced noodling shed
happily declared us brilliant and followed it up with a point
blank statement that she wanted to sleep with me - right this minute,
now and forever! (Forever, laughed my friend Nick who
witnessed this open display of emotion, aint really all that
long a time. He winked; I understood))
Nine days later Kathleen Sue Irving was slapping me across the face in
her parents living room in front of a Sunday dinner everybodys there
crowd: mom, dad, two younger sisters, aunt, and a really dopey looking
twenty-something male cousin. All becasue she caught me trying to merely
brush my hand over her thirty-six year old Aunts Carols ass
(hey, it was perfect, I swear!). I was booted from the premises and became
completely annoyed with myself for trying to cop a cheap feel before fucking
dessert was served (food thus remaining ahead of the ladies in my life
forever more). I then had to walk what must have been three miles to a
fucking Burger King to place a collect call to Ronnie for a ride home
(Go get the Aunt, he said, And bring her too!).
During the walk and wait I replayed the relationship in my head - to assuage
any guilt I might muster - and all I came up with was that I had possession,
back in my room, of the Skag Heaven tape shed bought. So, it seemed
to me, that the entire ordeal was an irrefutable, albeit emotionally scarring,
win.
Now that seems a pretty damn heavy load to toss onto a single record,
and I know that. But Skag Heaven was and still is (recently re-issued
by the smiling faces at DragCity) a walloping howl of a record. It just
happens to be a very good record that became a great one to me via its
role in a part of my life. A big part of this whole music shindig is exactly
that: taking a record for what it is, what it means to you, and understanding
the frame of reference from which it tattooed your psyche. Different music
matters to different people for very different reasons, and the music
of permanence in your life doesnt rely on some knob-headed critic
telling you the value of your tastes, or what tastes you may need to establish
to be worthy of higher rockcred approval.
Which really is about the only honest way to say my peace here because
the music on Skag Heaven isnt the sort of undeniable life-altering
brilliance that Im bound to take any of you to task over. That sort
of music seldom flies off of those shiny silver discs these days. But
Skag Heaven plants itself squarely onto my list of immortals via the unbridled
sweat, youth, energy, nonsense, fear, amateurishness, sincerity, mimicry,
idolatry - in other words, everything that the past fifty years of rockroll
has been all about - all in concert with the moments it shared in my life
as it crept into my being some fifteen years ago.
Peter Searcys uncommon teen growl (and it is the best and only thing
youll probably want to ever hear of Searcys - I know hes
made the rounds since, but trust me
) is nothing more or less than
Little Richard pressed forward into historys ugly future, which,
by the time the band dwindles and fades away on Phil Ochs Tape from
California (I'm not sure that any of us had been there by
the time Skag Heaven was recorded says guitarist David Grubbs in
the liner notes) we find out isnt really so different from an ugly
past. Skag Heaven, like so much of what can pass for rockroll brilliance,
exists in the moment; it is a slice of revivified air, inhaled every time
its played. That is where the secret of rocks power truly
rests - the kick you get at the point of consumption, when it becomes
another pleasurable-dose in the never-ending narcotic syndrome.
Ive never specifically tried to be a critic, at least not in the
sense of trying to place concrete value (personal and subjective assessment
portending truth) on music. I tend to despise this approach and thus avoid
writing - as much as possible - the new standard capsule review,
either rated or graded. That sort of thing (and I know a lot of my good
friends get by on such fancies) is just vile and unsavory as hell to me.
I dont feel that I have the ability (not to mention the stomach)
to squash an albums worth of work into a 75-100-word babble that
will tell you nothing substantial about the music but will unfailingly
assign some sort of symbolic rating or grade that relieves (restricts)
the dear author (or more likely advertising sensitive publisher) of having
to be clear, honest, or hell, even involved. That, to me, is an insult
not only to those who make the music, but also - and moreover - to those
who care enough to want to read about it. A single record sought out on
the counsel of a short, thoughtless, letter-graded blurb has personally
never fulfilled me. Thus, elongated rants like this one that is selling
the idea of a little record by a semi-obscure band that called itself
Squirrel Bait; or rather a glimpse into my relationship with the music
that I think matters.
In the end it all comes down to a matter of tastes and we all know that.
Youre the pothead and Im the drunk; she digs pills and he
craves powder; he says, she says, and que sera sera to the motherfucking
hilt! Were all going round and round chasing the same tail only
to end up in the identical goddamn place - the place that we all seem
to want to be anyways: anywhere other than here. I dont ever (intentionally)
profess to have any of the answers. I dont necessarily know which
records are good records, but I do know which records matter
to me, and as the means to an end of these silly rockwrite exercises I
go through I try like hell to share twisted perspective on rockrolls
meaning in our lives and culture as I live it (and I only hope that maybe
you can relate - I ought to be cutting checks to all of you out there
who read this shit and send me note because its you who are doing me the
service of retaining the sliver of sanity that I cling to).
A great record, one that I find mattering to me over the course
of years and years, according to my, um, aesthetic (I pause because that
word is such a groaning knowitalls term), is one that can just about
always bring on that elusive rockroll jolt that I so often seek and lean
on to get me through the day. The music isnt everything in my life,
but it sure damn well helps, and the ones that seem to help most are the
ones I consider dear.
So with all that said, in my mind great records (the ones
I call great) dont necessarily infer that theyre transcendent,
or even remotely accessible for that matter. They just happen to be records
that (and this is the hardest part for most people) honestly stand up
to time as a personal source of escape and pleasure. A great record, to
me, not only sounds great (which it should), but it also - and this may
be the most important part - feels great. Those feelings can come from
a myriad of places, especially, but not limited to, the personal (i.e.
I finally got my hands down Amy Jenkins pants in 8th grade while Tom Pettys
Louisiana Rain played on her brothers record player - a crass
but fairly accurate and completely honest example, I still devour that
song whenever I hear it).
But, whilst approaching one of these writing exercises to share my musical
thoughts and ideals with some hopefully like-minded souls I do take careful
consideration of the records I happen to be writing about because - as
anyone who has followed my ramblings can attest to - when I pour myself
into one of these howls of mine, Id damn well better be comfortable
that the music is at the very least good (which is sort of
self-prophesizing because I probably wouldnt, or couldnt waste
my time with something I didnt have a hankering for), otherwise
youd all see straight through me.
But ultimately it all boils down to preference of course - my preference.
If a record gets me going, and if it does so often as it becomes one of
those rare rackets that can be counted on to deliver me from whatever
the fuck it is that I am trying to escape every time I turn to it, well
then, thats when Ill suit up and get into the game. There
is no honesty in telling you that the noise that turns me on is the noise
that you need to hear, but I can try my goddamned best to convey to you
the moments and music that just make me go. And that sure as hell isnt
to say that I think that Im the one who is right, or even that it
is me who ought to be telling you what it is that you should be listening
to (or worse - how you should be listening to it and what you should hear).
I dont review records - I even sort of hate that idea; I just try
to relate them to you.
Whats it matter? Whats it all mean? And, why the fuck should
you care? Well, you shouldnt really. But this rockroll life isnt
the normal life that most others lead, although it remains similarly short,
so youre stuck with whats out there.
And in the end these are the real reasons that I tend to stay away from
reviews (especially in the disingenuous hegemonic form that
thrives these days). What does it really matter if I think that Britney
Spears sounds as though shes swallowed an alien when I could just
put a coupla stars or an A, B, or C, or a check mark by the record title?
It seems to me that all noises tend to have their places and their fans,
but that my job is merely to sell concurring people the reasons
to believe - in something. Anything.
Skag Heaven is todays reason. Right now, right here. Squirrel Baits
second record still shoots through me as an ice cold reflection of something
I once was - which is also something I still, and will always, aspire
to be (an entirely unattainable state, this one of rockroll bliss - thank
God - because it forever remains worth the reaching for, and it is the
reaching for that ideal that keeps us alive). So my purpose
ends up becoming an inexplicable and merely theoretical adventure at best.
But the reason for living the purpose, like listening to a record like
Skag Heaven and discovering that wicked bent once again, is always pure
revelation. Somehow that moment, when the needle hits the plastic (so
to speak), erases the lines of improbability and carries me across the
boundaries of impossibility straight into a place where not only is anything
possible, but where it all is downright likely. And thats where
Ill always want to be. Thats all Im trying to say.
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