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

Author: Thoughts On The Dead (Page 134 of 1031)

Another Thought On The Bobflix Net Dylan Thing

I’m surprised Scorsese’s mother didn’t have a scene in which she cooked meatballs for Spooky Violin Lady; that’s how wasteful Martin Scorsese was with the time he had for Rolling Trucker Bob Thing. Two hours! The man had two hours–give or take–to tell the story of one of the greatest rockyroll tours of all time, or at least of 1975, and he squandered it on fooferall and squiddly-doo. Perhaps that’s what being a success is: No one will tell you to cut Sharon Stone.

MICK FUCKIN’ RONSON. At least Spooky got a couple lines, but Mick Ronson didn’t even get introduced. MICK FUCKIN’ RONSON! Allow me to catch you up, if you’re unfamiliar.

First, Mick Ronson was the best guitarist David Bowie ever played with (and I am including Stevie Ray Vaughn, thank you). This is the two of ’em, along with the rest of the Spiders, doing Moonage Daydream at the legendary Hammersmith Odeon:

Sure, TotD, that was pretty gnarly. But they were onstage. Anyone can be cool onstage. And so I shout HOW DARE YOU? and I spit on your children. Phlegmy spit, too, not just saliva. Colorful and sticky. Now your children are crying and your wife wants to fight me. Is this how you planned on the interaction going? I bet it wasn’t. Stop questioning me, goddammit.

Because, yes, Mick Ronson was also cool offstage.

Boy, howdy.

(It should noted that both men are properly wielding their cutlery, which sets them apart from most of their peers. None of The Kinks knew how to use a fork. Further, it should also be noted that someone has given David Bowie a medal.)

“Mick, I love you very much.”

“Thank you, David.”

“And to prove it, I’m going to completely ghost you after this tour. Won’t hear from me for decades.”

“But…why?”

“It’s something singers do. And movie stars. Men who get called ‘genius’ a lot, basically. We all do this to our creative collaborators.”

“Oh.”

“I’m sure you’ll catch on with a talented artist who’s pleasant to be around and deal with financially.”

NOPE!

It’s Lou Reed, everybody.

(Oddly, Mick seems to have regressed vis-a-vis flatware, and his handling thereof.”

Before Bowie dumped Mick Ronson, the two of them wrote Lou Reed an album. Ever wonder why Transformer was so excellent, and all Lou’s other records so numbingly mediocre? It’s because Bowie and Ronson wrote and arranged the songs, and then Lou came in and poetried over the top of them. You really thought Lou came up with Perfect Day?

Lou Reed doesn’t know that many chords.

We may assume that Lou punched Mick Ronson in the head several times, made at least two fumbling passes at him, viciously mocked his Mormonism, and then ran to a telephone to tell Lester Bangs what a bad boy he’d just been.

(Mick Ronson was a Mormon, which I did not think was an option available to a Yorkshireman born in 1946. The North of England was unbelievably distant from Utah in 1946, but Jesus finds a way, even when He’s weird, knock-off Mormon Jesus.)

Having had his fill of psychopathic Americans, Mick Ronson then partnered up with Ian Hunter, who wrote dark, funny songs that were forever fretting about the state of rockyroll. In addition, Ian Hunter wore splendid trousers:

Splendid. And they looked like this together:

Which is splendid, too.

The two men, Ian and Mick, became fast friends and palled about doing Rock Star stuff. Writing tunes, and conspicuous anal, and getting a place in New York. (“Getting a place in New York” is a classic Rock Star move. Garcia and Bobby shared one with Clarence Clemons in the ’80’s. True story.) One evening, the Brits met Bob Dylan at the Bitter End. Due to the loudness of the crowd, and Bob Dylan’s insistence on mumbling through his nostrils, neither man understood a word. They nodded politely, lifted their eyebrows in agreement, added the occasional “Go on.” Bob talked for a while, then left.

“Fuck was all that, then?”

“Not a clue.”

The next morning, a van arrived at the pad. Ian had scored with a fox, and had not come home. Mick Ronson was by himself. The man who had driven the van to the pad knocked on the door. BAPba bap. Friendly knock, but professional. Mick Ronson is wearing only his shorts when he opens the door.

“‘Ello.”

“Come on, Mick. Grab your guitar.”

“Wot now?”

“Let’s go. Please.”

Mick Ronson didn’t want to cause a fuss, so he got his guitar and asked for permission to put on his pants and put on his pants and then he got in the van. The first show was in Massachusetts, and it was cold. All Mick Ronson had was a frilly shirt and tight dungarees, so he was cold. He wondered if he should bring it up with Bob, but decided not to. After the show, the man who drove the van came for him, and said,

“We’ll be back in the van now.”

“Ah. Yeah? Ah, no. Maybe not. I’d quite prefer, if you wouldn’t mind–”

“We’ll be back in the van now, please.”

“Oh, all right.”

That night and into the next day, the man drove the van in great looping circles around New England. The radio would pick up the French stations from across the border, and then dying into Massachusetts. We are always, Mick Ronson thought to himself, dying into Massachusetts. Time came for sound check, and the van approached the venue. The show. The van again. This continues throughout November.

Mick Ronson accepts this life now; no one will speak to him for fear of joining him in the van. The per diem is left in an envelope in the van. He does not know who leaves it there. The amount varies, and occasionally is not money but a medium-sized scorpion. Mick Ronson fears Spooky Violin Lady. He has seen her bite several back-up singers’ auras off; she is surely a psychic dracula.

The second week of December, the van is driven by the man to New York City. The show is at Madison Square Garden. Mick Ronson engages in full-on psionic war with Spooky for the entire set, abetted greatly by his bold but successful choice of Double Denim:

She collapsed, spent. [NOT PICTURED]

After the drums and backline had been struck, Mick Ronson stood, waited, guitar in hand, This was when the man came by, brought him to the van. Have arrangements changed?  Mick Ronson looked for the man backstage for quite a while, and then went outside and searched the streets for the van. There were many double-parked on both sides of 39th Street, but none were his van. It was getting late, and Mick Ronson was tired, and so he walked south a couple miles to the pad he shared with Ian Hunter.

He was home.

“Oi, Ronno.”

“‘ello, Ian.”

“Where ya been, son?”

“On tour wit’ Bob Dylan.”

“Were ya now?”

And that’s the story of Mick Ronson’s time in the Rolling Thunder band.

Stop that.

You’re right. Mick Ronson deserves more respect than that. Listen to him on Hard Rain:

The solo’s at 3:00 in, but that’s not Mick Ronson’s brilliance: check out the tiny fills and doodlings he shoots all over the rhythm section. It’s an ejaculatory style of musicianship, and it’s rather disrespectful towards poetry. The sound is Marshall Stacky and phases, and mixed far too loud; Mick Ronson’s Les Paul and Spooky Violin Women’s spooky violin were the band’s voice.

Listen to this. It’s Isis. You know the song. Put on your headphones and listen.

Mick Ronson is on the left, and Spooky is on the right, and you can go and tear down the Rockyroll Hall of Fame, because that’s it right there. That was the sound everyone else was going for. Those shaggy boys and languid girls, they got it right that tour, and on the next one–arenas down south in 1976–and then never again because Bob fired everyone in the band and never spoke to them again. Geniuses do that sort of thing. Our hero, having lived through a similar firing, recovered quickly. It also helped that–over the course of two separate tours–he and Bob had never had an actual conversation

Back to his pal Ian, and to England, where they had a Top 20 hit with Once Bitten, Twice Shy and continued having great hair and enjoying themselves. Mick Ronson also produced. Did Jack & Diane for that roustabout Mellencamp. “Feisty young man,” he would later say about the small Indianan.

Mick Ronson produced this song, and Ellen Foley gives us hope:

(AN ASIDE: There’s a whole story going on with Ellen Foley. There is intrigue and trauma and machination in that story. I say we crowdfund an Ellen Foley documentary.)

For most of the 80’s, Mick Ronson putzes around the music business. Writing, producing, playing, whatever he can add. Give the man the nod, and he’ll do his thing. Last public performance was with his mate Ian Hunter at the tribute they threw for Freddie in 1992. First gig was in Brough Village Hall; last was at Wembley Stadium. The next year, liver cancer. 46 years old.

The extended canard about Bob ripping off KISS’ makeup a semi-underage Sharon Stone deserved to be in the film; more music would have simply gotten in the way of the improv. In fact, goddammit, I think there was too much Bob Dylan AND too much music in my Bob Dylan music documentary! More extended takes of Bob trying to explain baseball to an Italian journalist, or Ramblin’ Jack singin’ Commie work songs! But whatever you do–NO MATTER WHAT–don’t show me Bob and his band playing his music. That’s not what we’re here for!

Dude, what the fuck?

I’m being contrarian.

Not on my watch, which is strapped around my cock-and-balls.

Why?

Pleasure and punctuality..

Sure. I love the semi-fictional insertions to the narrative. 

Ugh.

And you know who else did?

Ah, shit.

AH LOVED EV’RY SECOND OF IT!

“AH’M A COP, NOW.”

This will end poorly.

“IT STARTED PRETTY DANG BAD, TOO! AH SHOT THREE PEOPLE, BUT TWO OF ‘EM WAS IN TH’ MEMPHIS MAFIA, SO IT DIN’T COUNT. AH ALSO BOTCHED A HOSTAGE SITUATION.”

“There was a hostage sitaution?”

“AH TOL’ CHARLIE HODGE T’ GO AN’ KIDNAP SOMEBODY SO AH COULD STEP IN AN’ BE TH’ HERO LIKE IN TH’ COMIC BOOK.”

How did that go?

“CHARLIE WAS BEATEN SEVERELY! HE PICKED HISSELF A REAL HOSS OF A TARGET. A STURDY WOMAN, TWO BILLS EASY. EASY TWO BILLS. THAT DUMB LI’L NUGGET JUS’ ABOUT BOUNCED OFFA HER. LOOKED LIKE A RACCOON RUNNIN’ INTO A MOOSE. LADY BARELY FELT IT, MAN.”

You should have played with Mick Ronson.

“SEND HIM TO MY DOJO.”

Sure.

Party Time In Little Aleppo

“How do you know you wouldn’t like it?”

“The same way I know I wouldn’t like being shat upon: instinctually.”

“Orgies are fun, if you’re in the mood.”

“Nuh-uh. They gimme the shkeeves,” Tiresias Richardson said.

She and Big-Dicked Sheila were nearly immobile in pool chairs; attractive people rogered one another in the water before them. An Olympic-sized pool for Olympic-sized fucking. Shoals of dick slammed into great reefs of pussy. The diving board was used improperly, and so were buttholes. Titties flopped, slapped, burbled, celebrated, shimmied: oh, those polymathic Hollywood titties. A character actor was being pissed upon. The pool house–far larger than Sheila and Tiresias’ homes combined–was behind them. Couples assignated within, and their hoots and grunts and safe words spilled out, rushed by the two women, dove into the pool, drowned.

“I feel like we’re being wallflowers,” Sheila said.

“Sweetie, if you wanna fuck, then go fuck. I’ll find Precarious.”

“I totally don’t wanna fuck. I have literally never had good sex on acid.”

“I can’t even imagine fucking right now. Like…some guy…like…GLAAAAAH all over me? Oh, God, not now.”

“So find a girl. They’re softer.”

Tiresias reached over, took Sheila’s hand, squeezed.

“Not bisexual, Sheel.”

“Everyone is bisexual, Tirry.”

“I can’t have this argument with you again.”

Overhead, the stars were orbiting as predicted; around the pool, the stars spanked each other and did foot stuff. The entire cast and crew of The Murph Show was there, including the monkey. It was a Capuchin named Frank, and he was wearing a toddler-sized Afrika Corps uniform. Murph insisted; he was really into Rommel. Citronella torches burned in tasteful lamps to keep the chinchity bugs and beetles off of sweaty flesh; the aroma of chemical lemons fought for dominance with the odor of balls. Murph showed his dominance by plowing his showrunner. I HAVE NOTES, Murph bellowed as he plunged.

“What’s Murph got that I haven’t?”

“A hard-on and a monkey,” Sheila said.

“The show’s gonna be syncopated.”

Both sat in silence only interrupted by the orgy going on around them.

“Syndicated,” Tiresias corrected herself. Acid always loosened the relationship between her brain and mouth; where they were–on a day-to-day basis–best friends, under the influence of LSD, they were merely fond acquaintances.

“Yeah, I think so.”

“Tremendous amount of money.”

“That’s the best amount of money there is.”

“What about ‘all?”

“But, you know, you couldn’t have all the money. Because it wouldn’t be worth anything. Because no one else would have any money and they couldn’t provide you with goods. Because it takes money to make money.”

More silence, orgy.

“AAAAHahaha! What the fuck did that mean?”

“I’m absolutely right, I just said it inside-out. Value is based in transaction.”

“Money is a verb.”

“We should be writing this shit down,” Sheila said, and began raccooning through her massive purse.

Murph stood athwart two lounge chairs. The actresses who played his daughters lapped at a ball apiece. He tried to piss on them, but his prostate was swollen. Murph demanded that the actor who played his best friend apply a forceful thumb to the gland. MASH THE BUTTON, he cried. A hesitant dribble issued from his dick, the urine’s arc not parabolic enough to reach either daughter. It was the middle of the night, so the moon was in charge, and the pool sparkled like a disco fractal–infinite mirrors spinning within mirrors-with an inflatable William Holden floating face-down, bobbing with inciting incidence. Murph had a laugh like sour meat.

Having forgotten why she dug into her bag, Sheila acted on muscle memory and pulled out her Camels and a lighter. Two from the pack, halfway to her mouth; there was a bird, maybe, or just her eyes getting giggly; she stared for a beat, two, three, four; turned to Tiresias, said,

“Yeah, okay.”

The cigarettes in her mouth, FFT PHWOO, and one to Tiresias.

“Guy’s a shmoo.”

“Which?”

“Murph,” Tiresias said, trying and failing to keep herself from pointing. “Goddamned shmoo.”

“Short Jew?”

“What?”

“I thought that’s what ‘shmoo’ meant,” Sheila said. “I’ve never heard you say that before.”

“Well, first of all: he’s not Jewish. And, second of all: I don’t call Jewish people ‘Jews.’ I mean, not in that tone of voice.”

“No, you’re like the fourth or fifth least-racist person I know. That’s why I was asking.”

“A shmoo. From the cartoon. Big white Blooby-blobby thing that bounced around. Dumb but unkillable. That guy is a shmoo.”

Sheila sat up, sort of, and squinted across the pool.

“Shmoo, yeah, okay.”

“Look at him, Sheel. Look at him.”

“I’m looking. It’s not great.”

“Objectively, I am better-looking than him.”

“Yeah. Oh, yeah. That’s not an opinion.”

“And I’m funnier.”

“Without writers,” Sheila said.

“That is a wonderful point to point out.”

“Point.”

“Stop it.”

“Point.”

The women collapsed back into the chaises, dragged their Camels PHWOO, and watched the sky above them wrestle itself. There was much zipping. The stars held hands, formed highways, rebuked one another. Brushstrokes were unignorable.

The deejay was spinning that Fungicore sound, with the occasional dip into Pagan House: it was music that was completely, utterly, 100% unlistenable if you weren’t on drugs. Was it even music, or just assembled frequencies? It sure did THROMP with purpose. Precarious Lee had not heard of Fungicore or Pagan House, so he had classified his current soundtrack as THROMP music. The blond was bopping his head along with the beat, strenuous as it was.

“You were in Brewster & McCloud.”

“That’s not the name of the movie. It’s just Brewster McCloud. You’re getting it mixed up with McCabe & Mrs. Miller.”

“You were Brewster.”

“Uh-uh.”

“You were McCloud.”

“Same person.”

Precarious supposed the blond fellow was an actor, and he was right. Tusk Cant had starred in several unaired pilots, five independent films, almost a dozen (national) commercials, and had an open invitation to the Scientology Celebrity Center on Franklin to “come down and hang out, real chill scene.”  His wrists were draped with bullshit–leather straps and red strings of yarn and a Rolex Submariner–and the flap of denim that covered the buttons of his fly had been sliced off. He was 34 and still referred to sexual acts by way of baseball analogy.

“You know how this guy made his money?”

“Which guy?”

Tusk gestured around.

“Guy who owns the house.”

“Buttermilk,” Precarious said.

“Yeah.”

“How?”

“Director’s chairs. Canvas and wood? Name printed on the back? Town goes through thousands and thousands a year, and he sells every one.”

Precarious looked around the ballroom. He was unaware that selling chairs could result in “house with a ballroom” money. Selling drugs or stocks, sure, but chairs?

“Huh.”

The cast of The Murph Show had been joined by the players from Pittsburgh Bomb Squad. The Top Dog, who was ex-military and loved his team, and the Main Hot Lady, who played it by the book, and the Secondary Hot Lady, who was the techie, and New Guy, who was the new guy. They ganged up on Wacky Neighbor, and Cantankerous Old Fucker. It was a crossover event for the ages. Murph had claimed Main Hot Lady, as was his right as an Executive Producer. She was bent over, and he behind her and thrusting, and a small but distinct bolus of vomit burped out of his mouth and spattered onto her back. There was no pause at all to the fucking.

“And they say romance is dead,” Sheila said, and Tiresias laughed AAAAHahaha! way too fucking loud; Murph searched around for the source of the laughter. The women cowered together, tried to suck their skulls into their chests, Sheila laid her purse over their heads.

“Don’t get his attention.”

“I don’t think he can see us,” Tiresias said. “We’re not famous.”

“If he comes over here, I’ll fuck him, but I’d rather he didn’t come over here.”

“Why would you fuck him?”

“An orgy is like a mosh pit: if you’re on the edge of it, then you’re in it.”

“Noooooo.”

Sheila popped an eye up, saw that Murph was no longer scanning the area, lowered the purse to her lap. Her left leg was out straight, and her right knee was up; now the other way; now the other way; now the other way. Her gestures were florid.

“Well, I could piss on him.”

“Go blow your nose on his balls.”

“I think that would play well over there,” Sheila said. “I’ll schnot all over his johnson.”

“AAAAHahaha!” and this time Murph did see them, but neither woman cared and they kept laughing. A rabbit, sizable and brown hopped behind their chairs. That morning, the animal had been in the north of France. Nibbled on some fescue WHAZZOOM now it was in a rich guy’s backyard in Los Angeles. The rabbit had no way to express what had happened. It had no way to understand what had happened. Stochastic teleportation was lost on rabbits.

Here is Frank now. You’ll recall the Capuchin. He has removed his khaki trousers but not the desert jacket. He is noticeably erect, and far faster than anyone–including a lagamorph recently become unstuck in time–would imagine. The rabbit lunges towards its left, but Frank has come under Sheila’s chaise. The only thing worse than a monkey with a boner is a monkey with a boner and the element of surprise. Frank drags the rabbit in between the two lounge chairs, hammers it right between the ears twice three four five times until its eyes go jagged, reaches around and grabs inside its mouth SNAP the lower jaw hangs dumb. Frank now gets to the fucking.

The women propped themselves on their sides, watched.

“I feel like we should stop this,” Tiresias said.

“Go ahead.”

“Hey! Monkey!” she stage-whispered.

“Be respectful. He’s got an Iron Cross. That monkey must be a war hero.”

(Frank did, indeed, have an Iron Cross on his chest. Murph insisted.)

Tiresias swatted at the air five or six feet from Frank and the rabbit. She would put her hand no closer, as she was not a complete idiot. Frank ignored both her entreaties and her pantomime. Frank kept fucking.

“Stop it. You’re better than this.”

“He’s clearly not, Tirry. Some monkeys are rapists.”

“I think all of them are.”

“No, that’s ducks.”

“Giraffes fuck way up high,” Tiresias answered.

“And they only got one position.”

“Giraffe-style.”

“People are lucky. We can fuck every which way.”

“It’s not lucky. I’d love it if, like, the human body could physically only do one sex position. It would take so much pressure off.”

Frank had the rabbit’s forepaws in his hands SNAP the limbs slop about; Frank is fucking hard tonight.

“Sheel, shoot him.”

“Nuh-uh.”

“This is why guns were invented. Shoot him. Or the rabbit. Put the poor thing out of its miserable.”

“Miserable.”

“Misery.”

“Tirry, sweetie, it’s a party. I’m not shooting a monkey.”

“Fire a warning shot.”

“Noooooo.”

“You fire warning shots all the fucking time. You did it twice last week.”

“Back home, sweetie, in Little Aleppo. We’re in a rich guy’s backyard in Los Angeles. And also we’re hiding from the police, remember? All the felonies we committed? And the cop I might have killed?”

“I don’t think he died.”

“But he might have.”

“His face hit the steering wheel pretty hard.”

“Right. So I’m gonna pass on the warning shot. What’s happening here–”

Frank fucked.

“–is gonna happen here.”

“You should be an action hero. You’re so good under pressure.”

Sheila started to reach out for Tiresias, but then thought better of it and snatched her hand back. Whatever hole Frank had chosen was beginning to expand, tear, fissure. The rabbit’s ass looked like an envelope opened by a toddler, the blood brown under the pool’s lighting.

“HEY,” Murph called from across the water. He was up to his balls in his own stand-in. “IS FRANK OVER THERE?”

The women both looked up. Tiresias gave a thumbs-up.

“HE FUCKING?”

Sheila added her thumb.

“THAT’S MY BOY!”

The rabbit had stopped moving. It experienced a miracle six hours previous, and now had been fucked to death by a monkey wearing half of an Afrika Corps uniform. Let that be a lesson to you.

“You never did any acting?”

“I was married twice.”

“Niiiice,” Tusk Cant said, and raised a hand for fiving. Precarious did, as he didn’t see the need to be rude yet. He had read somewhere that a gentleman is someone who is only rude on purpose, and he liked that. He was sure that the idiot with the expensive haircut he was talking to was an idiot, but he had nowhere else to be.

“I got a thing going. Pilot called Bletchley Park. About the code-breakers. I play Nigel Smythe-Yessington.”

“You break codes?

“I break hearts,” Tusk said. “And there’s, like, dramatic shit. I’m British and I fuck.”

“Cool,” Precarious said.

“This would be huge for me.”

“Yeah.”

“Second lead. Lots of comedy stuff, sex stuff. It’s the star role. I could break out from this. I mean, if the network’s behind it.”

“Network’s gotta be behind it.”

The ballroom was the tell. Wealthy is different than rich, and the ballroom is the tell. Rich folks have the same kind of houses as poor people, just moreso. Both got kitchens, the rich just got nicer; both got bedroom, the rich just got more. But only the wealthy got ballrooms and whatnot. Inspired sluttery amongst maximalist furniture; incommunicado drug deals under the eaves; O, those men in ascots and cock rings; the slapping like a captain’s table; Emilio Estevez fingering an Asian woman; good Christ, what’s occurring upon that pool table; get down , get real loose with it, disco dresses on all; some bastards like to fuck like the whole world’s watching. Hey, man, why do you think they call it a ballroom? Precarious took in the sights.

“You get it, man.”

“Sure, yeah.”

“What was your name again?”

“Archibald Leach,” Precarious spat into Tusk’s ear.

“Hey, Archie.”

“Hey, man.”

They clasped hands. Not “shook,” as this is for lessers. Thumbs back and manly. WHAMP the palms sturck. Chins thrusted.

“You get it, man. You really get it,” Tusk said.

“Thanks, bro.”

Precarious had been told that he “got it” on three continents and counting,, but he was clocking the window overlooking the backyard, overlooking the pool and the orgy that was going on, and the two women on chaise lounge chairs caught completely unaware by the large man with the crewcut and the broken nose standing above them. It was just like Precarious always said:  A good plan will work most of the time, but a terrible plan will work every time.

Not Playing Around

11/24/79 was the penultimate (David Lemieux’s second-favorite word) appearance in San Diego, as their 1980 show would be accompanied by Bobby, Mickey, and Rifkin getting hauled off to jail by the cops; the Dead would never return to the coast city.

BUT this time around, the Playing in the Band is so fat. May I describe the 11/24/79 Playing in one word? GLORIOUS.

What about in five words? NO PEPPER IN THIS AREA!

Four words and a number? THIS SHIT’S NUMBER 1, YO.

How about a sound? HHMMMNNNNNgh.

There is also a Terrapin that–for literally every second of its existence–threatens to crumble into pieces. This is some serious Grateful Dead fun, Enthusiasts.

Emphasis, Enthusiasts

I know you, rider. Gonna miss me when I’m gone. Your inner workings are plain to me, sexual partner. My absence will be keenly felt within you.

I Know. You Rider. I, a boy named Know, have been orphaned in the jungle and raised by gorillas, leading to a strange yet catchy way of speaking English, and have met a person called Rider.

I? No! YOU, Rider! You ain’t pinning his death on me, bitch. It was your machete.

i know you rider
gonna miss me
(when i’m gone) I am Emily Dickinson, and that last part’s a lie; you cannot miss me because I will not be leaving my room.

I know, you rider. I’m aware, Motorcycle Mikey. You don’t need to tell me again. I know.

Is there a point to this?

English is a fascinating language.

You’re done, slugger.

Twelve (Short) Thoughts On The Netflix Dylan Thing

ONE

Which God he? Answer now. Is our victorious figure Vulcan or thrice-great Hermes Trismegistus? Surely this Bob Dylan is exalted, surely his is on-high. He must be taken seriously, I know that. Heaven fucking help you if you flare your nostrils at Bob Dylan. Not at the poet. Praise Be Unto Zim.

TWO

I don’t know enough about Bob Dylan to do Thoughts on Bob Dylan; this is solely Thoughts on the Rolling Thunder Revue: A Bob Dylan Story by Martin Scorsese. I have listened to the proper albums, shows, collections, but I was never diligent about it. Vast tracts of ignorance pock the topsoil of my knowledge. For example, “Bob Dylan” is not his real name. It’s “Robert Dylan.” Bob is short for Robert. I just learned that maybe a week ago. I’m not qualified to judge.

THREE

White.

Person.

Bullshit.

Every second of this film is White Person Bullshit. There’s so much WPB that Joni Mitchell shows up. She appears when called, like Beetlejuice or the Candyman, and heard the Bullshit echo through Laurel Canyon. SHMAMP! There she is now in an attic with Roger McGuinn. Roger plays it cool, man. He’s used to chicks just popping in.

FOUR

Optima Cigars. Gotta pass by one if your movie’s set in 1970’s New York. If it’s set in 1950’s New York, then you need to pass a Chock Full O’Nuts.

FIVE

Everything that isn’t performance is a vicious waste of time. Go away, Sharon Stone, and take Bette Midler’s husband with you. You darken my door, half-baked improv sessions! Were you attempting to make a point about…something? Fame, show biz, golf course design, something?

Was it satire? Because it was not satire.

Was it meta? As surely the creators would realize that their lies would be caught out before the film’s premiere, and therefore a discussion of said lies would become part of the overarching narrative surrounding the film–by now a “film” more than a film–so all sorts of intention games could be played. So: was it meta? I do not care: it sucked. It sucked so hard.

SIX

Everyone wanted to fuck him. These were the last years of Dylan’s fuckability, and he was burning bright with fuckableness. Jewish men wanted to fuck him, and goyische women, too, and whatever the fuck Spooky Violin Lady was.

SEVEN

No one ever dropped the g’s off the end of words quite so conscientiously as Patti Smith did. She was a city girl; she had a city voice. Jesus grew up in the suburbs for somebody else’s sins, not hers.

EIGHT

Fuck you for not introducing the band, Marty. They’re important. They deserved it, not your tacky little make-believes. That band was so good that one of ’em was Mick Ronson. You know how good your band has to be before Mick Ronson will join it? His presence is quality’s guarantor.

Check out how bitchin’ Mick Ronson looked:

That’s bitchin’. And he didn’t need a giant hat, or a mustache and shiny jacket.

NINE

He named it after the bombing. He thought it was funny. I have no evidence to back up my statement, but I believe it to be true. A man wearing a hat that size has a morbid sense of humor.

TEN

Ginsberg was as pathetic as always. The man was a delicatessen bathroom.

ELEVEN

There’s only one non-music scene worth keeping: the bit with Bob trying to grin his way back into Joan Baez’ pants. She’s still hurt. He knows, gets off on it. When he compliments her, she says ‘Thank you.’ When she compliments him, he nods and accepts the praise without remark.

TEN

This didn’t make the film, but Sharon Stone pretending she was a teenaged groupie did.

Not a great decision.

TWELVE

“I thought we were both wearing big hats, Bob.”

“Ah, shaddup.”

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