Musings on the Most Ridiculous Band I Can't Stop Listening To

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Cavett Emptor

How did anyone ever take more than ten seconds of Dick Cavett? He’s like Alan Alda’s bookish sister. Watch Mick slap away his silly bullshit about Keynesian economics with merely the power of British silence at 17 minutes in.

Hey, look! It’s the songs that weren’t good enough for Goat’s Head Soup! First tune’s a cover of Dobie Gray’s Drift Away and it gets progressively more dire from there. For obsessives only.

Now I want some Rice Krispies.

Tips For Flu Season

It’s upon us again, Enthusiasts. Influenza gonna getcha, gonna run up your nose and set your eyeballs alight and make your asshole do the hoochy-koo. The flu is on the march and, just like those migrant caravans, is most likely infested with terrorism. That’s right, folks: Saudi Arabia is sponsoring the flu this year.

2018, right?

Anyway, here’s some helpful, and healthful, hints:

AVOID PEOPLE They’re filthy. Studies show that human beings are just walking toilets, and not even fancy toilets. Portable ones. If you have to be in the same area as other people, wear a surgical mask like the Japanese do. If you have to be in the same area as Japanese people, don’t bring up Hiroshima. They’re still sore.

STARVE IT Or feed it. One or the other. And really do it, too. Starve yourself to death or eat so much your stomach ruptures. Basically: if you get the flu, kill yourself.

LISTEN TO YOUR HEART Only love’s innocent cry can lead you to the forest of childhood’s delights.

POP FIVE OR SIX VICODIN Will do nothing for the underlying illness, but being sick won’t bother you quite as much. (WARNING: Do not pop five or six vicodin. The acetaminophen will fuck your liver up. Cold-water-extract the hydrocodone, yo.)

BLAME THE JEWS Much like the vicodin, blaming Jews will not ameliorate any physical symptoms, but will make you feel better. Blaming Jews: The Easy Answer For 5,000 Years!™

VICKS VAPORUB Slather it all over your nude body and then run through the mall. This is my grandmother’s remedy for the flu. Granny was a drinker.

Did you have a premise here, champ?

Not especially.

Just started typing again, huh?

Little bit.

Wastoid.

Jewish, Star

Why are you wearing Jewish stars?

“I’m not. It’s just a pattern.”

Everything’s just a pattern until you slather some meaning on it. You’re all Jewishy.

“Nope.”

You’re Hora-dancing in a burning room.

“I am not.”

Play me some Klezmer music.

“Stop it. These are not Stars of David. It’s just a pattern.”

What about your shmata?

“It’s not a whatever-you-called-it. It’s a custom bandana.”

From Bandana Dan?

“No. His sister.”

Bandana Jan?

“Yeah.”

Sure.

CELL PHONE NOISE

“C’mon, man.”

You dressed yourself. You did this to yourself.

“Asshole.”

“You’re on with John.”

“Ah’ll eat your asshole with biscuits and gravy, boy. An’ not inna pervert way, you filthy Semite.”

“Hey, Sarah. Once again: I am not Jewish.”

“Then why you wearin’ all them Jew stars? You think you’re Sammy Davis or sumpin?”

“I do not think I’m–”

“You ain’t half the man Sammy Junior Davis was! Don’t you never pretend to be no Candyman! That’s an affront to our community!”

“Your community?”

“The sloppy eyeballed”

“Not a community.”

“Ah’ll throw Peter Falk’s corpse at you, boy.”

“Please stop calling me.”

“President Trump, Praise Be Unto Him, just signed an Executive Order makin’ you illegal.”

“Me?”

“You personally. You ain’t no person no more.”

“You can’t do that.”

“Ah can’t, but He can.”

“Are you capitalizing pronouns referring to the president now?”

“Ah am. He deserves that respect.”

“Hanging up the phone.”

“Shoulda been you in that synagogue, boy.”

“Stop calling me, you monster.”

“YOU AIN’T NO SAMMY JUNIOR DAVIS!”

DIAL TONE NOISE EVEN THOUGH PHONES NO LONGER DO THAT

“Is there any way to get those calls to stop?”

Vote.

“I hate you.”

Oh, you hate yourself.

A Terrible Poem About A Work Ethic

What a fansippy time!
Glorioski, all near!
Life is lubrious, laurious,
Downright mainglorious:
Executive Time is here.

Don’t holler or warble;
And slip off your shoes.
We’ve got nine whipknife hours
To flooby and flower,
And I think Bannon forgot some booze.

Kellyanne, bring your pompoms;
Stephen Miller, your pills.
The fathead is sleeping,
Or internet creeping.
The White House is here for our thrills.

Oh, who summoned the demon?
People, really not cool.
Now it’s making a dinner
Of Billy Shine’s innards;
Dammit, who chanted the Rites of Mar’Kuul?

What a fansippy time!
Glorioski, all near!
Life is lubrious, laurious,
Downright mainglorious:
Executive Time is here.

 

Yesterday’s Papers

“Is this your granddaughter, Mr. Wood?”

“She’s me woif, she is, Y’r ‘ighness.”

“Oh, how unseemly.”

Psychedelia was not kind to Charlie Watts, at least not sartorially. Don’t make Charlie Watts wear a caftan with magical sigils all over it. Let Charlie wear his hand-tailored suits.

This was ’67. My high school band, A Bunch Of Guys From France, had more equipment than this; it’s downright adorable. Plus, those are pussy-ass Vox amps and they’re underpowered. No one in that auditorium heard a damned thing.

Let’s see what a real band’s backline looked like in ’67:

Oh, just as rinky-dink? Forget I said anything.

The Headiness Of Youth

Did you ever not smoke?

“Buzz off, man. You’re kind of a downer.”

What’s with Punk Rock Girl?

“She’s my date for the Sock Hop.”

I see you’ve already got your socks on.

“Can’t help it if I’m a Beau Brummel, man.”

Your pale shin is hypnotic.

“We’re done.”

CELL PHONE NOISE

“What the hell is that?”

Check your pocket.

POCKET-CHECKING NOISE

“Huh.”

Just slide the doodad.

“It’s very intuitive.”

Yup.

“Garcia here.”

“Hewwo, is this Jewwy Gahcia?”

“Yeah, who’s this?”

“It’s Mick. Whoss ‘er name, then?”

“Who?”

“Th’ bird next t’ you.”

“Don’t worry about her name, man.”

“Tell ‘er that Mick Jagger is callin’ from th’ future.”

“I’m hanging up.”

“How do I hang this up?”

Big red button.

“Ah.”

DIAL TONE NOISE EVEN THOUGH PHONES NO LONGER DO THAT

“Hey, man.”

Mm-hmm

“Don’t ever do that to me again.”

Sorry.

“Bother Weir with that shit.”

I said I was sorry.

Winter Land

Hey, Nephew on the Dead.

“Uncle?”

Yeah?

“Dude?”

Uh-huh?

“What the fuck?”

Aw, c’mon, buddy. Language.

“What is going on? Why does the world hurt?”

That’s called winter. It’s getting cold.

“Today? Is winter like Halloween? Is it just a one-day thing? This is just today, right?”

No. Won’t be warm again for six months. I mean, it shouldn’t be. But there’s probably gonna be a lot of 70 degree days because we broke the sky right before you were born.

“Please make sense, Uncle.”

Sorry, buddy. In the general sense, the next half-year is gonna be way chillier than the half-year we’re emerging from.

“Was this expected?”

Yes.

“Why does it happen?”

The truth or the baby version?

“Baby version.”

Allfather Odin has entered his sacred sleep and the Frost Giants have rule of the land.

“That is very metal.”

The world’s as metal as you make it, Nephew.

“Back to the weather. Is this as cold as it gets?”

God, no.

“You’ve got to be kidding me. It’s like the air is made from scalpels and hatred. It gets worse than this?”

Yes. Right now, the temperature where you are is in the 40’s.

“I have no referent for that number.”

Remember when it was nice and warm?

“Uh-huh.”

That was 80.

“Okay. And it’s 40 now. Okay. How much colder than this does it get?”

40 colder.

“DUDE!”

Not always. Just for a couple weeks, usually.

“This is not okay. Who do I speak to about this? The Guy or the Lady?”

Neither?

“Grandma?”

It’s the weather, buddy. Can’t do anything about it but complain.

“What about voting? People keep telling me how important that is.”

The weather does not respond to plebiscite.

“Wait. Is this everywhere?”

Winter?

“Yeah.”

No.

“You’re pulling my binky.”

No. There’s plenty of places in the world where they never, ever, ever have winter.

“Civilized places?”

Florida, Australia, San Diego. So: no civilized places.

“Why the hell are we living here in this frozen wasteland then?”

You have to live in Brooklyn. Your parents are foodies.

“The Guy ate a slobbered-on chicken nugget I dropped on the floor.”

Your parents still consider themselves foodies. Kid, you’re stuck there in the cold.

“Nuts. Uncle?”

Yeah, buddy?

“What’s going on with my headgear situation?”

I honestly have no idea. It seems like a chicken to me.

“They just jam stuff on my head, man.”

You make it work.

“It’s in the attitude.”

There ya go.

Thoughts On Altamont

Altamont was the best thing that ever happened to the Rolling Stones. Getting busted with naked Marianne Faithful was good, but it didn’t have legs and wasn’t even that scandalous any longer in 1969–all the Rock Stars got busted, man–and the teens down front, the shimmying and swaying teens down front, looked up at Mick and Keith and Charlie and the other two and said, “You keep singing about the Devil. Prove it.”

That’s a terrible paragraph. 

Altamont was a success. Think of what might have happened: stampedes, riots, zombie attack. No one got cholera! There were literally no bathroom facilities. Someone should have gotten cholera, but no one did and that is a win for the good guys. Yes, four people died, but two people died at Woodstock and no one blames Mick Jagger for that.

You are missing the point. You are, in fact, missing every point. 

Musically, Altamont was not the Rolling Stones’ best showing.

Jesus.

Everyone involved in the Altamont Speedway Free Concert was the stupidest fucking human on the face of the earth. I am aware of the logical impossibility inherent in my statement, and yet I stand by it.

I’ll allow this thesis.

The Grateful Dead were stupid and naive. And entirely complicit: Altamont does not happen without the Dead. They smoothed the way into San Francisco for the Stones, they made all the important introductions, they vouched. Do you know who the soundman at Altamont was? Bear. Do you know who his assistant was? Healy. Altamont doesn’t happen without the Dead. Buuuuuut…

Rock Scully was the worst of ’em all. “The Angels are men of honor,” Rock told the Stones when he visited London in the summer of ’69. The Hells Angels had made an appearance at the Hyde Park show, the free one where Mick wore his poodle frock and recited Shelley, except they were the weird, bland, foreign version of Hells Angels. Some of them rode their scooters to the gig, and others took the bus in. Most motorcycle gangs call themselves “social clubs,” but the London Angels actually were a social club. Any random rugby side could’ve beaten the shit out of them. But the lads wore their jackets with the colorful patches and whatnot, so they got their pictures in the papers. The Stones would have had a good opinion of the “Hells Angels” from their experience.

“The Angels are men of honor,” Rock told the Stones. And then he told the Angels, “We’ll buy you $500 worth of beer if you watch the stage.” This was the worst deal in the history of deals, maybe ever.

Michael Lang was stupid and can-do, and that is a fearful combo. Most folks are stupid and lazy, and that is good for humanity as a whole, but some special sparrows get up real early and work real hard all day, and they’re complete nitwits; those fuckers are dangerous, and Michael Lang was one of ’em, him and those Shirley Temple curls.

The concert was originally planned for Golden Gate Park. This would have been ideal: amenities, logistics, access, public transportation, plus the SFPD could ride through on a phalanx of horses and clear them dirty hippies out after the show was over. The Diggers would distribute food and water, the Hog Farm would handle bad trips and broken ankles, the Mime Troupe would pretend to do stuff. Multiple stages to eliminate between-band downtime. The Airplane, Santana, the Dead, and the Stones–the motherfucking Stones, man–for free in the park! Nice day out, sounds like.

This plan was immediately torpedoed from within via incompetence and macho bullshit. The local planning committee had taken care to go through the City Council to get the permits, because the mayor at the time was a hippie-hatin’ cowboy, but there was a hold-up and so the Stones took charge and–despite the express warnings of the planning committee–called the mayor right up. Golden Gate Park was no longer happening.

A new site was found–this is less than a week before the show, remember, an event that was expected to draw hundreds of thousands of kids–at Sears Point Speedway. This is Sears Point Speedway:

See the embankment on the right? You put the stage there. Push in some dirt with a ‘dozer to level out a platform and lay your scaffolding and plywood on top of that; boom: stage. Ten or twelve feet above the crowd. See all those access roads? This is what’s called an easily policeable property. The location was secured and the production was installed.

Then the deal fell through because–again I remind you–everyone involved with this debacle was the stupidest fucking man on the planet. (I chose my noun with care. No women were included in the decision chain on this one. Altamont was entirely comprised of drugged-up egotists waggling their cocks at one another, metaphorically or literally.) It is Thursday, December 4th. The concert is scheduled for the 6th. “The show must go on” is a maxim, not a suicide pact; the saying isn’t legally binding.

But this is for Rock and Roll, man. It’s for the Stones, maaaaaan. It’s for the kids, maaaaaaaaaaaaaan. If Mick Jagger says it’s safe to surf this beach…well, you know how that one goes.

So Rock and Michael Lang take a helicopter out to some boondock in the San Joaquin Valley to take a look at a racetrack. Now, at this point it should be noted that Michael Lang had no particular ties to either the Stones or to San Francisco, nor had his presence been solicited by either party. Fucker just showed up. The racetrack they are going to is called Altamont, and it is owned by a fellow named Dick Carter. He is broke and desperate and, as befits a character in this story, an utter moron. He has heard on the radio all about the Stones’ free show, and all the troubles finding a location those young men have been having. Dick’s not a Rock and Roll guy, prefers Buck Owens, but he can smell a way out of the hole. Publicity. Spread the name far and wide. Make it so everyone knows Altamont. Calls up the Stones and offers them his track for free. Didn’t know ’em. Fucker just cold-called. Stupidity converges and entwines just as does destiny. Rock and Michael Lang are in the helicopter and they’re over the site and look down and this is what it looked like:

Michael Lang, cherubic Michael, he smiled and his dimples were deep enough to bury your dead in.

“We can do the show here.”

Rock Scully twitched skeletonishly.

“That’s William Blake’s engraving of Lucifer. I think that’s a bad sign, man.”

“We can do it, Rock. It’s for Mick.”

“Where would we even put the stage?”

“Allah will provide.”

This was the man who had produced Woodstock, or at least taken the credit for it, and so Rock agreed. The show must go on.

(That photo is, of course, not Altamont Speedway, but suffice it to say that it’s the worst possible location. Access was inadequate, the facilities were non-existent, and the layout was the opposite of Sears Point; instead of the stage being at the highest point in the venue, it would be at the bottom of an enormous natural basin, which history buffs will recognize as the exact same kind of geography where Custer became famous.)

Melvin Belli was stupid and pompous, but he looked like he was having fun.

Sam Cutler was stupid and reckless and got dumped by the Stones before the sun had risen. Remember what I said about Rock? Well, Cutler might have done that stuff. We’ll never know. Cutler sure got blamed for it, even though…

The Hells Angels were stupid and brutal and all the violence was their fault. It’s tough to blame anyone but the guys who brought pool cues to the party. They knew what they were doing. “Being reasonable” is always an option. Jesus said that, I think.

The Rolling Stones were stupid and arrogant. ’69 was their first modern tour of America. They hadn’t been since ’66, when they played 30-minute sets through tiny amps to shrieking crowds of teeny-boppers, but Rock and Roll was Art now, maaaaaan, and tours were headline news. The Stones broke sales records everywhere, partially because their tickets were around twice as much as any other band’s. Naturally, the Rock Press was besides itself. Rolling Stone called them Capitalists. Mick Jagger! They called him a Capitalist! Bill Graham ranted about them on the radio, about those damn foreigners coming over here and stealing all our blowjobs and cocaine. Ralph Gleason declared them the un-heppest of cats.

And the Stones, don’t forget, were not at Woodstock.

This was not good. The Rolling Stones could not be seen as caring about something as non-cool as money. This was 1969, and Rock Stars did it for the music, or the fans, or the movement, even, but not for the money. A gesture had to be made. Someone suggested lowering the ticket prices, and he was fired immediately. Someone else suggested a free show, and then Mick said, “How about a free show?” and everyone said, “Good idea, Mick,” and wheels became enmotionated.

Mick Taylor had been in the band fifteen minutes–Ian Stewart was still calling him “Nick”–and so did not have the authority to stop the train. No one has ever given two fucks and a shit about Bill Wyman’s opinion about anything, no one ever, not once, and so neither did he have any ability to direct events. If Charlie Watts had refused to play, the show would have been canceled, but Charlie would never do that. Keith Richards is a five-year-old who thinks everything is an adventure, so he wasn’t the one to stop the onrushing disaster. Only Mick Jagger could have.

But he didn’t, and something weird happened when they started playing Sympathy. Something weird always happened when they played that number.

Meredith Hunter was stupid and yes this comes off as victim-shaming but don’t bring a pistol to a concert? And, if you’re a black guy with a blonde girlfriend in 1969, don’t stand next to the Hells Angels. They’re incredibly fucking racist. Again: the Angels are responsible for their own actions, and Hunter did not cause his death. But he didn’t do a lot to prevent it, either.

Chip Monck is stupid and has a stupid fucking name and everyone’s stupid.

I Can Make You A Baby

Hey, Nephew on the Dead. You look adorable.

“I always do.”

But you look especially delicious at the moment.

“Please don’t refer to me as ‘delicious.'”

I must, because you’re scrumptious and I want to eat you right up.

“A surprising number of adults have told me that.”

Evolutionary Psychology would point to the lion, and suggest that you were seen as a threat to the adult’s genetic line.

“Evolutionary Psychology sounds pretty stupid.”

It is. Good call.

“I think it’s just a saying.”

Yeah. I’m not actually a nepophage.

“Pardon?”

It just means “nephew-eater,” but I mixed up Latin and Greek to make it sound official and scientific.

“That’s a good trick.”

It’s a great trick. Stick with me, kid. You’ll go far.

“Uncle?”

Uh-huh?

“What am I wearing? And what is everyone else wearing? What is going on? That’s the general ask here, Uncle: what the hell is going on?”

You are wearing a costume. You’re at a party and everyone is dressed up.It is Halloween.

“Gotcha. You realize none of that made any sense to me, right?”

You’re a smart boy.

“Well, thanks, but I just had my first Swedish Fish. Not one hour ago. So no matter how bright or thick I actually am, I lack experience. I’m still filling in a lot of blanks about reality here.”

I love you so much.

“What’s a costume? Is it clothes? Because these seem like clothes, but not really. None of my other shirts have abs. Is that the new thing?”

No.

“Is this Hypebeast?”

No.

“Am I Scumcore?”

Costume is a subset of the greater set [clothes] and refers to any garment meant to disguise the wearer’s identity and/or project a false one. It belongs to a grouping of high-context outfits. Such clothing includes wedding gowns, sporting uniforms, and mascot suits.

“When can you wear a costume?”

Well, legally, you can dress as Batman all year long.

“God bless America.”

But you wouldn’t have an easy go of life that way. Tough getting a job. They won’t let you be a bank teller like that.

“Isn’t that racism?”

I think so. Anyway, costumes are just for costume parties. Or comic book conventions, but I think your mother is going to raise you better than to be a cosplayer. Your dad would’ve already turned you into Rocket Racoon and hit the Javits Center if he had any crafting ability.

“I can see that.”

Don’t be a cosplayer. I won’t have it in the family. Muddies up the blood.

“Weird. Okay, so you can only wear a costume to a costume party. Sorted. Now: what costume am I wearing?”

You’re Rocky Horror and your parents are Brad and Janet.

“Then why do I have festive armbands?”

Because there’s no such thing as a baby Rocky Horror costume, so your folks went with the Ultimate Warrior.

“Didn’t he go all Nugent?”

Oh, yeah. Long time ago.

“Rocky Horror. This is a movie?”

A musical. You should get your parents to play it for you. Or just say “Cortana, play Rocky Horror Soundtrack” out loud.

“What’s it about?”

Violent homosexuality.

“Ooh, nifty.”

And there’s aliens and Meatloaf sings a number.

“All the better. On to the next topic: what is a Halloween?”

It’s a holiday. Wait. It’s not legally a holiday. It’s an observance. I have no idea what the federal status of Halloween is, Nephew. That’s on me.

“Still love ya.”

Nice. Anyway, Halloween is the day everyone puts on their costumes. And there’s a parade and trick-or-treating and whatnot.

“Why?”

Life is dreary if not ornamented with fancy and frolic.

“Stop talking like that.”

Why? Why not? Why do anything? It’s a tradition. The Pagans invented it or something like that. Halloween is fun. It’s a non-family holiday with a blanket amnesty on besotted shenanigans. You’re allowed to do all sorts of stupid stuff on Halloween.

“What about me? Do I get to do stupid stuff?”

Did you have a Swedish Fish?

“I did.”

There you go. You’re running wild, Nephew.

“It was excellent. And I liked the texture of it. I didn’t know that consistency existed in nature.”

Oh, it doesn’t. There’s nothing natural about a Swedish Fish.

“I don’t care. I’m gonna eat more of ’em.”

Just be careful. Didn’t you run full-tilt boogie into the wall twenty minutes ago?

“I did, yeah. I’m gonna take a gamble and say that you don’t clearly recall learning how to walk.”

Correct call. Lost to memory’s appetite.

“It’s a process. There’s a bit of a learning curve. Once I get myself moving, I’m at best 85% in charge. At best. Momentum and inertia are my co-pilots. There’s a good chance on any jaunt that I’ll just be along for the ride after five or six steps. And, you know, I wobble quite a bit.”

You do. You wobble like an angel.

“Right. Well, sometimes I wobble at just the right frequency to start a resonance loop and this gives me a huge burst of speed. Like hitting the nitrous button.”

Babies are weird.

“You have no idea.”

 

 

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