Archive for the ‘Pearl Jam’ Category

Pete Townshend, Empty Glass

Friday, April 10th, 2009

“I hope I die before I become Pete Townshend,” wrote Kurt Cobain in his journal in the middle of one of his rants against the rock press establishment. Why? Because I had become a bore? Because I had failed to die young? Because I had become conventional? Or, simply because I had become old? In fact, in the early Nineties, when Kurt was struggling with himself over whether or not to do an interview with Rolling Stone magazine, I was not boring, neither old nor young, and I was not dead. I was, unlike Cobain, hardened. Tempered, beaten and subjugated by all that rock had delivered to me and via me over 30 years. Rock is, I think, particularly hard. And in this statement Cobain appears to be hard on me. But perhaps he is sad for me?

***

It is desperately sad for me to sit here, 57 years old, and contemplate how often wasteful are the deaths of those in the rock industry. We find it so hard to save our own, but must take responsibility for the fact that the message such deaths as Cobain’s sends to his fans is that it is in some way heroic to scream at the world, thrash a guitar, smash it up and then overdose.

– Pete Townshend’s reviewing Cobain’s Journals

I firmly believe that rock and roll can save your life – though if that’s the case, I’m not sure your life was worth saving.

– Me (during some snark spasm or another)

Conveniently for me, my birthday coincides with the annual soft-focus reminiscing on the passing of rock martyr Kurt Cobain. It’s a convenient hook upon which I can hang my reflections on mortality and my inability to remain squarely in the youth cult demographic which rock and roll (disingenuously) posits as its core audience. Of course rock and roll (especially the semi-popular smartipance stuff I like) has long been the weapon of choice for moody overthinkers way too old to qualify as a “kid” of any kind. As many smart folks have pointed out before me, rock and roll serves a vaguely pagan religious role for sensitive types who need meaning and ecstasy and whathaveyou. The analogies are pretty easy – the icons, the ritual of communal rock happenings, the frenzied adulation/dancing, the bedsit contemplation and adoration of pop stars, the call to authentic living, the empty going-through-motions faking it when ecstasy isn’t forthcoming.

Still, when you do see the real deal in person, the whole rock-as-religion thing makes a lot of sense. In honor of my birthday, I received a ticket to see Morrissey at the Midland Theater. I’m not going to bore you all with a show review wherein I splutter about Morrissey’s fabulousness as a performer and object of rock veneration. I just wanted to mention the frenzy that occurred when Morrissey discarded a sweaty shirt by pitching it into the crowd. Ripping. Rending. Snarling. Weeping. Mania. I was reminded of the anecdotes about newly dead saints torn to bits by relic seekers. I’ve been in hundreds of rock audiences, and rare are those audiences where actual group madness breaks out. Some performers have “it” and some don’t. Morrissey (as if anyone was still unaware) possess the ability to inspire this old time religion. Slate recently ran an interesting article about Morrissey in middle age examining the roots of his appeal. What I came away with is that the holy weirdness of Morrissey’s awkward youth.

“I’m sick of being the undiscovered genius,” scribbled the 18-year-old Steven Morrissey. “I want fame NOW not when I’m dead.” He’d have to linger in the bed-sit five more years. In the meantime, his life consisted of: the dole, writing letters to New Musical Express, reading manifestoes with titles like “Men’s Liberation” and The Female Eunuch, and taking up—and abandoning—the musical instruments traditionally associated with playing rock ‘n’ roll. At 19, he sang twice, poorly, in a band called the Nosebleeds and, refining his skills of lonely pop adulation, published two monographs—fanzine one-offs, really—one on James Dean, the other on his beloved New York Dolls. But New Year’s Eve, 1979, captures young Morrissey best: As the clock chimed midnight, alone in his bedroom, the 20-year-old Steven ushered in the 1980s by reading Pride and Prejudice.

Even more than the frenzied pagan mass of the rock show or the idol worship, the actual religious act of rock and roll practice is the time spent in the misfit wilderness of adolescence. Adolescents, historically, have not made much excellent rock music. And many of rock’s true geniuses have been the sorts of people who were weird enough that you could imagine them spending their teenhoods in pain and seclusion. Of course, the essentialness of an awkward adolescence for any true rock believer leads a lot of folks to manufacture phony bologna accounts of their troubled coming of age (See Stuff White People Like #83 and #17). Heck, I’ve got some self-mythology I can lay on you if you’ve got a few hours.

Because rock and roll – while self-involved – is not often a terribly reflective form, most of its saints are treated as savant-type shamans only barely aware of their powers. Of course this is a crock – one look a Cobain’s Journals will show that even the most authentic-seeming rock icon does a lot of intellectualizing and conceptualizing. Nevertheless, institutionalized rock and roll (the audience, press, etc.) is suspicious of thinking or trying too hard. To be seen working at it is to be, at best, inauthentic (e.g., Bowie, Beck) or, at worst, a hack or careerist.

Pete Townshend has always been an odd rock and roll star. In many ways, he helped create and promote the awkward adolescence model of rock initiation. The protagonists in Who singles like “Can’t Explain,” “I’m a Boy,” “The Kids are Alright,” “Pictures of Lily” and many, many others are screwed-up, awkward, sensitive types. Angry young men wrestling with their feelings. Townshend’s later long-form conceptual pieces Tommy and Quadrophenia are likewise about rock and roll and idolatry and alienation and junk culture. I’m sure there are plenty of second and third generation rock adherents who can’t honestly tell you where their actual teenhood ends and Townshend’s stylized myth of spiritually unmoored teen angst begins. I’m not sure if I know the difference anymore.

Because the teenhood myth is central to the religious experience of rock and roll, youth itself is often venerated in song, performance, etc. Some obvious examples are twee’s obsession with childhood or 28-year-old indie rockers referring to themselves and their peers as “kids.” There’s no good model or myth to support the adult practice of the religion of rock and roll. There’s craft – which is boring and requires chops and often leads to dull dabbling in “roots music” or jazz or Pet Sounds-style pop. Sometimes perversity or eccentricity or cult cachet can provide an escape hatch. Most often though, adulthood and rock and roll combine to form a smug, bloated arena spectacle reeking of nostalgia and reverence. Occasionally an artist (not usually an audience) will emerge from the other side of adulthood as a wild old coot still in command of his or her old spell book – Dylan is the most obvious example.

Empty Glass is (among other things) Townshend’s best effort at giving adulthood the kind of rock myth meaning that he helped create for adolescence. As with much of Townshend’s work, there’s a hefty bit of autobiography and spiritual seeking going on in Empty Glass. It’s an album about purging and transcending the pain and longing and pettiness that you accumulate once you quit being a holy dumbshit teenager. It’s a record about needing help. Empty Glass’ best-known single is a love song where God offers to fix all the crap you screwed up.

“Let My Love Open the Door” – Pearl Jam @ Soldier Field

In Townshend’s own words, the album is about hitting bottom and needing to be refilled.

And when I did my first solo album, I called it Empty Glass, ’cause of this idea that when you go to the tavern — which is to God, you know — and you ask for His love — He’s the bartender, you know — and He gives you a drink, and what you have to give Him is an empty glass. You know there’s no point giving Him your heart if it’s full already; there’s no point going to God if your heart’s full of Doris.

I suppose it is easy to imagine that we all had tortured teenhoods which we romantically endured. It’s much less heroic to admit that getting older hasn’t made things easier. Grown-ups are supposed to be on top of their personal shit. They’re not supposed to whine. They’re not supposed to be paralyzed by fear and fatigue. I think that’s why the rock and roll youth cult continues. It allows you to fantasize about a difficult trial already overcome while nostalgically ignoring today’s horrible bullshit. My mother is fond of dismissing injustice or pain in adult life with a glib “That’s just the way things are” – as if someone isn’t making it that way or as if you shouldn’t even try to change it. I think that attitude is comfortable, safe.

Seeking authenticity. Looking for answers. Breaking down. Transcending. These activities are unbecoming. They certainly don’t help you project authority and bootstrapping self-sufficiency. Angst is bad for business. Doubt seems a bit self indulgent when practiced by adults.

We live in interesting times. It can be tempting to retreat to our imaginary high school days and obsess over the now tidy concerns of bruised feelings and mussed pride and simple loneliness that seemed oppressive then. It makes the very real hurt of right now go away for a while. Still, nostalgia is a cop out. Perpetual adolescence is a cop out. I do think that rock and roll can point to some kind of personal transcendence. I think the best of it is spiritually nourishing. At the very least, it can encourage contemplation and sensitivity. Still, rock and roll does its best work in conjunction with immediacy. Yesterday’s rock and roll listening won’t do you any good today. There’s no point in coming to the bar if your glass is already full of yesterday’s fake memories.

Pearl Jam, Merkinball

Thursday, July 3rd, 2008

I was unpacking my CD collection last week when I ran across this particular “rarity.” I know that rarities and singles don’t exist anymore because I can now, thanks to the internet, buy wholly obscure albums while wearing my underpants. A non-album single by a major band at the peak of their popularity really doesn’t seem “rare” now. I can still remember the day I bought this disc. Tony Real and I went to Record Swap in Homewood, and this disc was right up front in the “recent arrivals” section of the used CDs. I think I paid $3.49, which seems like highway robbery under today’s free-download-or-at-the-very-most-$0.99-per-track ethos. Nevertheless, I think it was a bargain. I know that “I Got Id” is few folks’ favorite Pearl Jam track (though it comes close for me). But if anything this two song alt-era souvenir is a study in rock and roll dynamics – and I don’t just mean the Pixies-style *LOUD-soft-LOUD* thing.

“I Got Id” begins with a ragged confession before building to a defiant, swaggering declaration of “I got memories/I got shit” before the chorus swoops upward into an unintelligible yarl that splatters into a glorious bit of Neil Young guitar – that sputtering, electric, lumbering search for melody soon swallowed by feedback. Soon were back to the confession into declaration and swagger before another thumping, assured chorus that’s more the sound of transcendence than meaningful words. And Neil’s guitar – stumbling around, grasping for a way out. The song doesn’t so much end as it sails away on a wave of lingering guitar noise.

“Long Road” presages Pearl Jam’s dalliance with “eastern” feeling drums and drones on 1996’s No Code. It’s a relaxed bit of drums and pump organ where slashes of guitar clang occasionally interrupt the placid ruminations. At six minutes, the song never really explodes or changes, rather it swells and crests. Waves of pure sound washing over a scant organ melody. Vedder’s voice becomes another sonic element – a counterpart to the growling guitars.

If anything, this disc shows a good ‘90s style band reaching towards becoming simply a good band by embracing sounds and textures beyond what had become recognizable grunge tropes. Of course Neil Young’s influence has a lot to do with this shift in tone and approach. Regardless, “I Got Id” is almost as great a song as Neil’s best from his 1990’s rebirth, “I’m the Ocean” from the Mirrorball record – recorded with Pearl Jam at the same time as the Merkinball* tracks.

I suppose it could be generational bias or rose-colored goggles, but the 1990s bands with their back-to-vinyl posturing and singles-plus-b-sides releases seem to be the last go around for “traditional” rock and roll methods – not to mention the thoroughly retro sounds most “alternative” bands were chasing. Whether it’s a shame to see such pretense fall by the wayside is another, larger discussion.

Still, I can remember, thirteen years later, where I was when I bought Merkinball. I can’t even remember what the last thing I downloaded sounded like.

*Merkinball was the first disc I bought that taught me a useful vocabulary word. A merkin is a pubic wig. Knowing this can slightly enhance viewings of Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove.

Pearl Jam, Vs.

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

I occasionally visit the musicians’ forums at www.harmony-central.com. This morning I popped in to check up on a thread I’d posted when one of the message headings caught my attention. Some kid was asking for advice on how to best nag his parents into furnishing him with a cell phone. Being a Luddite, my first response was to respond and tell the kid that he didn’t need no damn cellphone. Upon opening the thread, I found that a good number of folks had already offered the very same sound advice. My second instructive tidbit (”Get a job and buy yer own damn phone.”) was also well represented amongst the already posted. In short, it appeared that all was right with America on this particular April morning. Reading deeper into the chain of responses, I saw that the original poster had made some additional points in his own defense — the most memorable one being something like “You guys sound like a bunch of antisocial dudes who grew up in the ’90s.”

Yikes.

I’ve been 30 for a week and I’m already untrustworthy. Basically, I’m old and afraid that wolves will eat me. I am out of touch. I don’t *get* it. My gut response to the existential pain of this poor young consumer was essentially “Suck it up and get a job.” I’ve changed, maaaan. I mean, just look at this recent photo.

Abe Simpson or Thirteen Birds?

All kidding and sarcastic self-pity aside, was I ever THAT youthful? I’m thinking not. I was prolly more of a self-righteous pain in the ass. I was prolly more awkward and self-conscious. And petulant. Can’t forget the petulance. Of course the era of my teenness were also self-righteous, awkward, and petulant. The youth culture of the 1990s is (in the popular memory) marked by a certain sullen seriousness, an indignant moralizing tone inherited from the more puritanical underground youth cults of the embattled Reganite ’80s.

Let us consider the big-dog tide-turner album of the 1990s. Not the “Teen Spirit” album — we’re talking about the album turned highschools across the country “alternative” forever and ever. That’s right, I’m talking about the annoying, now uncool, unit-shifting Vs. The album sold 950,378 copies in its first week — I bought mine on cassette — and pretty much ruined “alternative rock” by making it as the dominant teen music in white suburbia. Vs. was the album that was different-sounding enough to be “alternative” but classic rock or hard rock sounding enough to push backwards-looking classic and hard rock purists like my buddies and me into the now. Vs. was my first foray into mass youth culture or liking what everyone else liked.

In junior high (Fall 1990 – Spring 1992) I started regularly purchasing music on my own. I’d always listened to my dad’s stuff as a kid — Neil Young, Jeff Beck, Springsteen, R.E.M., U2, the Who, Hendrix, etc. — and subsequently developed a taste for rock music that was a little “old” compared to that of my peers. When I started buying tapes, I got into Van Halen and Aerosmith and Ozzy and Zeppelin. These bands appealed to my already whetted appetite for classicist rock while having enough “metal” cred to ingratiate me to my poser rocker dude junior high friends.

I was already sneaking some R.E.M., Matthew Sweet, U2 and other assorted “wuss rock” bands on the side, but I didn’t admit it to my Slayer- and Metallica-worshipping friends. When Nirvana hit in 1991 I came *this* close to checking out Nevermind before I reaffirmed my proper rocker tastes and cozied up to the new Def Leppard release. Chicago was then and is now classic/hard rock territory, and I was too big of a weenie to cast my lot amongst the weirdo bands that were starting to crop up on Headbangers’ Ball between the “November Rain” and “No More Tears” vids. I’d had some exposure to the Replacements and local alternative sensations Smashing Pumpkins via WXRT, but for the most part I wanted my rock orderly and decked out in the appropriate signifiers of rockingness.

I spent the better part of my freshman year of highschool listening almost exclusively to the White Album. I’d heard that it was an important record, so I decided spend some time with it. I credit the Beatles’ self-titled with expanding my notions of what is acceptable within rock music. By the time I started my sophomore year in 1993, I’d picked up the Breeders’ Last Splash and Westerberg’s 14 Songs – both technically part of the alt-rock boom, but kind of marginal, semi-popular records.

I remember still being slightly skeptical of all of the alternative business swirling around — the messy sounding rock, the girls with kelly green combat boots and cough-syrup colored hair, the idea that you could just be a weenie or a nerd without having feign a macho pose to get by. Basically, my initial response was to reject all this stuff that challenged what I thought everyone else thought was “normal” or “cool” — even though I liked a lot of what I was seeing and hearing.

My conversion to the church of ’90s alternative youth culture came oddly enough during afternoon religion class (I went to a private Catholic highschool). I forget the context, but one of the girls played “Elderly Woman Behind the Counter in a Small Town” for the class and led a little discussion about it. I can’t remember he name now. She was incredibly tall, willowy with lots of sparkly, smudgy eye make-up. She smelled like cigarettes. She was the kind of older-seeming hard ass girl who scared the crap out of me when I was young — I was the token bookish “good” kid whose smart mouth got him in with the “bad-ish” crowd. (We all attended a suburban parochial school after all.) I remember her relating how the song reminded her of her dead grandmother, and she started crying. I bought my own copy of Vs. a few days later, no longer worrying how liking a certain band would make me seem.

Confession time — I don’t listen to Vs. that often any more. When it comes time for some Pearl Jam, I typically reach for one of the double-disc official bootlegs or all-time, all-time favs Vitology and Yield. A lot of the standouts from Vs. are now live show (and thus bootleg) staples. When I decided to give the album a spin the other day, I recalled the other reason why this one tends to stay on the shelf. I can’t listen to Vs. without having my adolescence rush back on me. Some of the songs are a bit strident and obvious now. “Glorified G” and “W.M.A.” are very earnest, very well meaning, very sophomoric songs. They’re kind of embarrassing.

I (like lots of folks) tend to use songs mentally to soundtrack random clusters of sense memory. This album is intensely sunny in my mind, like a lot of the “alternative nation” records of my early highschool years. Despite the dourness of a lot of the alt-rock bands, I remember the time as multicolored and energetic and most of all sunny — perhaps believing that you’re indestructible and that your self-satisfied, free-thinking goodness will prevent you from ever selling out makes every memory seem like a glorious late-summer afternoon. As I’ve become more cynical, I suppose that I don’t always feel up to re-experiencing the ardent, finger-pointing soundtrack of my naive teenhood.

Bringing this all back home, the whippersnapper who didn’t get why antisocial old farts like myself didn’t see why he needed a cellphone was prolly “right” on some level. When I was 17, you called folks and tried to catch them at home to make plans. Or you drove around in circles with a couple friends looking for something to happen. To pass the time, you listened to the radio or dropped by a record shop and scoured the used racks for something you’d heard might be cool. And when my parents or school or marching band or work interfered with driving around and shopping for used CDs and blowing money on fries and coffee at Denny’s, I’m sure I was a royal shithead. I certainly didn’t turn to the internet for reasonable advice. I prolly argued the rightness of my situation and stormed off to sulk, as was the style at the time.

As a “child of the ’90s,” I should remember what it’s like to be talked down to by a generation of moralistic know-it-alls who think they are cooler than and more self-reliant than any other group that has previously or will subsequently grace the planet. Sorry, kid. Or whatever…