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THANK YOU, SOLOMON BURKE On top of the shopping-hungry throngs who annoy me to no end, I missed the broadcast of A Charlie Brown Christmas. For my money, this is the only Christmas television special that matters; although The Simpsons one is also becoming vital viewing. Yeah, I know, everyone out there is going to write me and talk about The Grinch Who Stole Christmas, or whatever it's called. Sorry, folks, that one has never done it for me. As a preschooler, ma and pa had me on a strict regimen of Curious George and Clifford the Big Red Dog. When subsequently exposed to Dr. Seuss while in elementary school, I found the books bothersome and too cute. Because by then, I was into comic books, and Dennis the Menace, Sergeant Rock, and Batman just had a lot more credibility than the Cat in the Hat, y'know? The Grinch takes place in Weeville or Whoville or somewhere else that has hints to it of being created by someone who was smoking something funny. On the other hand, Charlie Brown is all real life, taking place on the snow-covered streets and playgrounds of Everytown, USA. The enemy is not some mysterious bogeyman who raids houses and takes away trees and gifts. No, the enemy is all of us - the kids who want real estate and tens and twenties for gifts, the dog who shamelessly decorates his doghouse for cash, the kids who dance endlessly instead of rehearsing for their Christmas play. The show asks "are you going to be part of the problem or part of the solution?" And in end, Linus lays down the Truth about Christmas (only TV special to do so) and all the kids chip in to help Charlie get his tree set up right. And dig that music! The cool-boppin' sounds of the Vince Guaraldi Trio! "Linus and Lucy" is far and above better than "You're a Mean One, Mr. Grinch" in my book! Soundtrack available in stores now!! So Charlie Brown is my Christmas guy - man, I love that show. Like when Lucy says "it's (Christmas) all run by a big Eastern syndicate, you know." Boom! Right there, even as youngsters, we were all warned about the commercialization of Christmas... Anyway, I sat here at home not feeling the Yuletide spirit and then late on a Sunday afternoon (a great time - not many lines), I made a daringly brilliant Christmas shopping run. In the span of two hours (includes travel time), I got most of it done, and also picked up a three-foot tree and lights for my home here in Number Nine. And then after wrapping the presents and while setting up my little tree ("it's not bad at all, really, maybe it just needs a little love"), I popped in some Christmas CD's and heard Solomon Burke's "Presents for Christmas." It's on the always-reliable Rhino Records' release titled The Best of Cool Yule. Also on this disc is (among others - some of it is great, but admittedly it's tough for me to dislike Christmas music) James Brown doing "Santa Claus, Santa Claus", in which he pleads his case for presents; Jack Scott singing "There's Trouble Brewin'", where he thinks Santa's after his girlfriend, so he might have drop Kringle to the pavement; and the Sonics doing a garage rock "Santa Claus". I especially like this last one - recorded in the year of my birth, they anticipate my wish list thirty-two years later: I want "a cute little honey and lots of money." The Burke tune is early on the disc and it did the trick. "We wanna give out a present to everybody this Christmas" he exhorts in his magnificent, compelling voice, "all around the world - for every man, woman, boy, and girl...are you ready right now? C'mon!" With that voice and the solid, booming rhythm of this tune - I got in the mood and quick. The tune inspired me to put my Batman action figurine on the top of my tree instead of an angel (a move I ripped off from Jack Fountain), and I have the Dark Knight holding a tree light over his head. And I remembered that I have Charlie Brown AND The Simpsons on tape, so I'm set. Holidays? Bring 'em on...
WHAT MADE MILWAUKEE FAMOUS... Anyway, things got straightened out eventually and I also picked up a case of
Huber Bock! Say it loud, say it proud - Huber Bock! The beer that is as much fun
to say as it is to drink! My favorite memory of a 1991 Neil Young show actually happened
before the show. We were walking towards one more bar before heading over to the
Target Center, and my main man Okie was talking about Huber Bock and how he buys
it for his hockey team. "Huber Bock?" I asked. "HUBER BOCK!!"
He yelled, than began trotting down Sixth Street with his right index finger pointed
to the sky kinda like Joe Namath after Super Bowl III, yelling again "HUBER
BOCK!!" Call me silly, but after that performance, "Cinnamon Girl"
just comes up a little short.
So I cranked the heat and took off, yelling "El Nino!" as I rolled down 35W at 60 mph, because it was a balmy twentysomething degrees instead of being cold. I got home and added a special holiday touch to the Sleeper: I found a dry-cleaner's bag covering a suit I never wear anymore, and the bag says "Happy Holidays" all over it in red and green letters. I taped that over the missing window and for a couple of days the Sleeper was appropriately decorated for the holidays. I didn't curse or yell while taping that plastic on the window. I simply did the job, then came inside, cracked a beer (which I wasn't even thirsty for, but I logically decided this was something traumatic that had happened and I should have one), and channel surfed. Then, oddly enough (or maybe not considering it's me), got pissed when Access America declared Billy Joel to be "rock 'n' roll's original piano man." "HEY WHAT ABOUT LITTLE RICHARD AND THE KILLER??!!" I yelled, at that point wanting to commit a random act of vandalism myself. Come to think of it, the real trauma of the evening was finding out the 400 Bar
doesn't serve Real Grain Belt longnecks anymore. It used to be just like at home!
I asked for one and Neve Campbell (I swear that it's her) told me that they don't
serve them anymore. Then later I saw members of the performing bands walking around
with those beautiful brown bottles with red diamonds on them. Yep, Rock Star Elitism
at its worse - or maybe the bar is just unloading its excess Belt on freebies for
the bands. Lucky folks either way.
THE GREATEST GIFT EVER MADE IN THE HISTORY OF HUMAN HOLIDAYS. NUMBER TWO: KISS ALIVE! A couple of springs ago, from the library I checked out a biography of Rod Stewart, which was written by Lester Bangs and Paul Nelson in 1981. Bangs wrote most of it, some of which he admitted he made up. So in between glossy fan-ready photos of Hollywood-era Rod were the fantasies and asides run amok that was Bangs' prose. I sat on the patio of a coffee shop, laughing out loud while reading. I eventually had to go home, as too many of the shop's patrons were giving me funny looks and I was getting a little self-conscious. Anyway, you too can enjoy Bangs' work - with his anthology titled Psychotic Reactions and Carburetor Dung. Ten years ago for Christmas, I received it from my brother and sister-in-law and it is the best gift I have ever received. Bangs has been my numero uno influence as a writer, the man who taught me how to ramble on and on with your pen as you never know what corridors you'll stumble upon while your pouring it all out onto paper; you might find out that you think a different way then you did previously, and you may end up questioning yourself, which is always healthy. Bangs was a stunningly brilliant writer. By placing himself near the center of most of his pieces, he dealt in writing about music as a highly personal subject. His writing dealt with the very democratic ideals that 1) anyone can make rock 'n' roll, and 2) rock stars are people, too. The natural consequence of #2 was that if a rocker started acting phony (or worse, acting better than the rest of us), than said rocker was to be openly mocked in Bangs' essays. "Bah!" he once wrote, "the whole musical world is packed with simpletons and charlatans, with few a genius or looney tune joker in between." He was also once banned from writing for Rolling Stone because Jann Wenner felt he was too disrespectful to artists. Further proof that Lester was on the right track. Bangs wrote from 1969 until his death in 1982, so his salvos were timely during that dark age known as the seventies, when it was taken for granted by too many in post-Woodstock America that Decadent Rock Stars were to idolized and revered (LB again: "It is ineluctable fact that beneath all that makeup, silk, Beelzebeads and hoodoo-voodoo drag, lies a true dork.") On the other hand, to read about artists Bangs loved and championed (Yardbirds, Clash, Lou Reed, among many others) is just as fun. And after seven years, my pal Turk and I read and re-read "The Guess Who: Live at the Paramount" and still can't figure out whether he dug their unassuming gutbucket attitude or is just being sardonically wicked. Many Bangs cultists are quick to revel in his early-to-mid seventies output (with titles like "James Taylor Marked for Death," "Jethro Tull in Vietnam," and "How to Succeed in Torture Without Really Trying, or, Louie Come Home, All Is Forgiven"), when he mainly wrote for Creem, but it would be a shame to ignore his more contemplative late-seventies work. His pieces on the deaths of Elvis Presley and John Lennon are brilliantly insightful, while "The White Noise Supremacists", a piece on racism in the then-burgeoning New Wave scene, is still a timely read; which is a sad thing when you think about it. What Bangs' writing ultimately comes down to is a love for the music. His emotion, whether he was writing about one-hit wonders like the Count Five or legends like Van Morrison, burned through the pages and makes you want to turn up the volume at home. So I suggest any fans of fantastic high-energy writing put Psychotic Reactions and Carburetor Dung on their holiday wish list or maybe just buy it for yourself. And now I leave you with one my favorite Lester quotes (read it aloud for best effect): "So perhaps the truest autobiography I could ever write, and I know this
holds as well for many other people, would take place largely at record counters,
jukeboxes, pushing forward in the driver's seat while AM walloped you on, alone under
headphones with vast scenic bridges and angelic choirs in the brain through insomniac
postmidnights, or just to sit at leisure stoned or not in the vast benign lap of
America, slapping on sides and feeling good."
Everything written by me, except where noted. In an attempt to break even, print readers are paying $1.00 for each issue ($4.00 for five issues.) This is going out free to you email and fax readers as there are no postage or photocopying costs. However, cash donations are glady accepted.
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