Archive for January, 2009

The Hair Metal Files: Poison

Posted in Music, The Hair Metal Files with tags , , on January 14, 2009 by jnagle4

poison_group

Personnel:

Bret Michaels- Vocalizin’ and Socializin’

Bobby Dall- Bass Rapin’ and Heartbreakin’

C.C. DeVille- Guitar Screechin’ and Hair Bleachin’

Rikki Rockett- Sticks, Tricks and Lipstick Fix

Every time I turn on VH1 I see Bret Michaels.  He’s always waxing philosophical about how he wants to find the perfect woman, and the only way he can find it is to sort through dozens of starfuckers.   On the rare occasion that I watch Rock of Love, I automatically think like the rock critic I’ve become.  Thoughts run through my head about how utterly vapid it all is, and how Bret should be ashamed, yadda yadda yadda.  Then I take a step back, and I remember how much Poison meant to me.

Ten years ago, I had a series of major surgeries.  I had a steel plate put in my hip in January, and three rods put in my spine in November.  It was the darkest point of my entire life.  Through those dark times, Poison was a constant companion.  The weekend before one of my surgeries my mom took me out on a shopping spree.  We stopped at Waves music, and I bought Look What the Cat Dragged In, because “Talk Dirty to Me” was my anthem of the moment.  I bought it, and it didn’t leave my CD player for two years.  On the day of my big spinal surgery, the doctor came into my room and said that I could listen to music as I was being put to sleep.  I gave one of the nurses my CD, and he did a double take.

“How old are you?! This is a classic!”

They removed Bach from the CD player, and “Talk Dirty to Me” echoed off the OR walls.  My dad said that it was one of the most surreal moments he’d ever experienced.  I lost consciousness as Bret said “C.C., pick up that guitar and talk to me!”

When I recovered, Poison remained my favorite band.  My friends liked to tease me about it because they were so profoundly uncool.   The thing that they never understood about Poison is the thing that most people don’t get about Poison.  No matter who you are or where you come from, you are invited to their party.  They lack the hipness of exclusion. I saw them live only once, but I’ll never forget it.  The lights went out, and there was a huge explosion.  Bret came running out, and he was so magnetic that I felt like he was my best friend.  They only played for a little over an hour, and the setlist was predictable, but I didn’t care.  I was just happy to be there.  Towards the end of the show, Bret came over to my side of the stage.  I held out my hand, and he flashed me a smile.  He ran over to slap my hand, but couldn’t reach it.  I expected him to give up, but he got down on his knees and grabbed my hand.  I was so happy I burst into tears.

Each time I saw Bret live, he made the extra effort for me.  When he played the Recher, he signed my CD onstage.  When he played the House of Rock for the first time, he recognized me in the front row and personally said hello.  When I finally met him in 2005, he called me his brother and gave me a hug.

As I grew older, I slowly grew out of Poison.  I wanted more than just lyrics about sex, drugs and rock n’ roll.  I discovered new bands, got new heroes.  I would criticize Poison and their ilk in a snarky tone.  It was just stupid, inconsequential party music that was strictly adolescent.  The zealous tone of some of their fans made it easy for me.  Rock of Love made it even easier. Bret Michaels’ latter-day sins made him a rich target.

I was on Facebook today when my friend Thom mentioned that he watched Poison’s episode of Behind the Music and still knew every word.  We started trading quotes from the episode.  There was some snark there, but there was a great deal of affection behind our remarks.  After our conversation subsided, I pulled out my copy of Look What the Cat Dragged In and put it on.  Whenever I listen to it, I immediately become a teenager.  I didn’t bitch about set lengths or lyrical content, I just wanted fantasy. Poison provided the ultimate fantasy.  Their music is totally cliché and derivative, but I don’t care.  I just want to put my fist in the air once in awhile.  I want to hear about a girl goes down slow like a shot of gin.  I want to have nothing but a good fucking time.

I wrote a similar essay to this one last year that was more sarcastic in tone.  There is an unwritten rule in rock journalism that metal isn’t meant to be taken seriously. I chose to follow that rule, and sounded like one of those snobs that I hated as a teenager.  I wanted to show it to a friend, but was afraid she’d balk at the tone.  I’m proud of that essay, but Poison deserved more respect.  Because as this feature has proven, you never quite get over the music of your youth.

The King and I

Posted in Music with tags , , on January 8, 2009 by jnagle4

15-elvis-presley-081407

Elvis Aron Presley came into this world 73 years ago today.  In his 42 years, he changed the course of American popular culture with a sneer, a hiccupping vocal style and a shake of his pelvis.  Yet today he is widely regarded as a camp figure.  When people think of Elvis Presley, they don’t think of the rebel who was only filmed from the waist up on The Ed Sullivan Show.  They don’t imagine the Greek God in the black leather suit tearing through “Lawdy Miss Clawdy” on The ’68 Comeback Special. The prevailing image of Elvis Presley today is a fat clown in a white sequined jumpsuit.

If you have followed my writing over the last few years, the latter paragraph might seem familiar to you.  Every year I write a column about Elvis’ birthday.  I suppose that it is redundant to wax philosophical about Elvis every January 8, but I can’t help it.  I do it because our generation doesn’t appreciate the impact that he had on our society.  The Beatles, Dylan and Frank Sinatra are treated with the respect and reverence that they deserve, but Elvis is nothing more than a bloated recluse who died on a toilet.

I shouldn’t have to explain to people why I am an Elvis fan.  Liking Elvis should be a fundamental part of human biology.  However, some people just don’t get it. I understand it to an extent.  Some Elvis fans are completely out of touch with reality.  To them, every single song he recorded was a masterpiece. Every film was worthy of an Oscar, even Roustabout, in which he portrayed the life of a carny. Some people even claim that he is living in Duluth Minnesota under the name Rory B. Bellows.

I am not one of those fans.  Elvis recorded a lot of bad music, especially towards the end.  I’ll never understand why his estate feels the need to put “Polk Salad Annie” on just about every greatest hits compilation.  His movies range from great (Jailhouse Rock), to painful (take your pick, I hate Clambake).  He is six feet under in the Meditation Garden at Graceland.

I don’t buy into the iconography of Elvis, which is what turns most people off.  I am an Elvis fan because when he was motivated, nobody on Earth could come close to him.  Elvis is my favorite male vocalist of all time, because you can’t categorize his style.  His voice was such a remarkable instrument, a combination of baritone and tenor.  When he walked into the Sun Studios for the first time, he told secretary, Marion Keisker, that he didn’t sound like nobody, and he was right.  But Elvis’ voice is only part of the equation.  He never wrote a song in his life, but few people could interpret a song the way he could.  “In the Ghetto” could have been condescending, but Elvis turned it into a heartfelt plea for social change.

Even towards the end of his life, when he had become a sad parody of himself, his talent never betrayed him.  One of his final shows was filmed for a CBS special.  His final song that evening was “Unchained Melody.”  He was terribly overweight and drenched in sweat.  A member of his entourage held the microphone for him as he sat at the piano.  It doesn’t look like he will be able to perform the song, but he belted out the song with a fire that he hadn’t shown in years.  It’s hard to watch Elvis in that state, but when he hits the high notes, everything disappears.  You forget the fact that he’s probably wearing a girdle underneath his suit.  You forget that he is drenched in sweat despite the fact that he has barely moved.  You forget about the lethal cocktail of uppers and downers circulating through his system.  For those few minutes, it’s 1956 and he’s the Hillbilly Cat.  For those few minutes, it’s 1968 and he’s in that black leather suit.  For those few minutes, he is the King of Rock n’ Roll once again.

Elvis Presley was a man with many flaws that was given an unbelievable gift.  He chose to share that gift with all of us.  When Elvis Presley sings a song, you are the only person in the room. Give Elvis another shot.  Listen to a song or two, watch Viva Las Vegas on Turner Classic Movies, and eat a fried peanut butter and banana sandwich.  Pay the King some respect, he deserves it

Happy Birthday Elvis.  Thank you very much.

RIP Ron Asheton

Posted in Music with tags , , on January 6, 2009 by jnagle4

Without this man’s guitar tone, punk rock never would have existed.

ron-asheton1

Rest in peace Ron, you will never be forgotten.

More PBF Love, plus an update!

Posted in Music, The Hair Metal Files on January 5, 2009 by jnagle4

Hello everyone,

Posting might be slightly slower then usual this week, since I am lining up some interviews and working on a major post for Thursday.  Bear with me.

I forgot to put a PBF video in the Leather Boyz post, so here it is.  Enjoy!

The Hair Metal Files: Pretty Boy Floyd

Posted in Music, The Hair Metal Files with tags , , on January 3, 2009 by jnagle4

pbf1

Personnel:

Steve “Sex” Summers- vocals

Kristy “Krash” Majors- guitar, backup vocals

Vinnie Chaz- bass

Kari “The Mouth” Kane- drums

Scott’s patience was wearing thin. Did we really need to visit another record store? Hadn’t we seen enough? We hadn’t. I could tell from the look in his eye that he was regretting signing on to this intrepid quest for vinyl. I was doing research for my final journalism project, and enlisted Scott to come along because he is one of my most patient friends. He’s feigned interest when I’ve breathlessly recounted the Flair/Steamboat feud of 1989. He’s put up with more Butch Walker pitches than I care to count, and has nearly gone deaf at some of the shows I’d dragged him to. After a day of criss-crossing the greater Baltimore area popping in and out of record stores, his seemingly infinite amount of patience for my quirks began to wear off. I was getting frustrated too, but I didn’t let my weariness show. As we pulled into Joe’s Record Paradise, I had a feeling it was going to be worth the drive.

When I walked through the doors of Joe’s, I had a vision of what I want my apartment to look one day. There were records and CDs as far as the eye could see, old stereo systems and vintage Kiss posters on the wall. It was one of the last bastions of the true music geek. I was practically skipping through the aisles, perusing the racks with joyous glee. Scott stayed toward the front with my mom, occasionally stopping to check out the selection.

After 20 minutes, I had a few cool albums but nothing truly amazing. Michael Monroe’s Not Fakin’ It was out of print, but I could probably find it on eBay for a fiver. Before we left, I asked Scott to help me browse the P section, since I was unable to reach it. Scott dutifully bent down and began to flip through the thick rack. At first, the rack was pedestrian: The Police, Pretenders, Tom Petty. They were pretty much the run of the mill records you saw in every used record store. I was about to pack it in when I saw it flash before my eyes. I let out an audible gasp. Scott was still flipping.

“DUDE! GO BACK!” I yelled.

“What?” Scott asked, frightened by the frantic nature of my request.

“GO BACK!”

Scott flipped backwards, and there it was. A copy of Pretty Boy Floyd’s Leather Boyz With Electric Toyz, in its original shrink-wrap. I shrieked like a fourteen year old girl at an *NSYNC concert. Scott handed it to me and I held it above my head as if I was Indiana Jones handling The Holy Grail. I was nearly in tears as I breathlessly showed it to my mother, whose response was as warm as I thought it would be.

“That’s great John. Can we go home now?”

This was a good idea. I needed to purchase this as soon as possible, before somebody else does. The clerk looked at me in disbelief when he rang up the record, especially my zealous response when I mentioned it. Nobody understood what a momentous occasion this was. I’d seen this record on eBay for more than $50, and I was getting it for a measly seven. It was the culmination of the intense obsession I’d had with this record.

It all started with a magazine. An issue of Spin with pre-cornrows Axl Rose on the cover. I remember buying the issue and thinking he looked like a god. He was rail-thin, poured into a pair of black leather pants. The look on his face conveyed both apathy and sensuality. He looked so cool. The feature story of that month was the legacy of the Sunset Strip during the 1980s. When I bought the magazine I was still relatively new to the genre of androgynous looks and hard rock hooks. The stories that I would know by heart a few years later were still fresh and exciting. It was the first time I’d read about the complete and utter debauchery of the Motley Crue house. Taime Downe from Faster Pussycat talked at length about receiving oral sex under a table at the Rainbow Bar and Grill. As a fourteen year old kid, it was one of the most exciting things I’d ever read.

Unfortunately with every rise there is a fall. The end of the article spoke of the thousands of bands that glutted the Sunset Strip by 1989. These subpar bands were being snapped up by every record label, completely diluting the genre. Eventually the public got sick of it and the flannel monster from Seattle named grunge took over. Spin cited Pretty Boy Floyd’s Leather Boyz With Electric Toyz as one of the final nails in the Aqua-Net coffin.

I was a young and impressionable lad then, and completely bought into that statement. If Spin said it, it must be true. After all, you have to truly be enlightened about music to make such a broad statement. Despite what the magazine said, I really wanted to hear this record. I figured it would be like watching a really bad movie, and besides this band supposedly killed an entire genre. That’s pretty hard to do.

Hearing Leather Boyz was easier said than done. The album had been out of print for over a decade, and copies of it started at $35 on eBay. I scoured the site for six months, and every single copy was out of my price range. Then I found a copy for the low price of $10. There wasn’t a picture on the auction, but I was so desperate that I took a chance. When the album finally came, I found out why it was so cheap. It was a cassette. I was so anxious to get my hands on a copy that I’d neglected to notice. I was bummed, but at least I could finally hear the band that killed my favorite genre of music.

I held the record that supposedly killed hair metal in my hands. Before I took the cassette out of its case, I examined the cover. It was the kind of cover that could only be taken seriously in 1989. Four transvestites were standing on top of a skyline, and the one in the center was shooting lightning out of his hands. For a brief second, I wondered if this was Nitro redux. Was this just another case of image without the songs to back it up?

I blew the dust out of my dormant cassette deck and prepared myself for the worst. The title track began with a slow fade-in and an explosion of drums. Then Kristy “Krash” Majors played the opening riff, and Steve Summers sang something about being a “black on black sex attack.” I must have been a moron, because this song didn’t suck. In fact, it kinda ruled. I listened to the album once, twice, three times. By the third time I knew every word and was singing along. It was one of the best examples of the genre that I’d ever heard.

So why is Pretty Boy Floyd only known to hair metal nerds? If their record is so good, why aren’t they on a package tour with Poison or Motley Crue? PBF are victims of bad timing. In 1989, hair metal was becoming a parody of itself. The once vibrant scene was awash with generic bands. The threatening sleaze of Motley Crue, Ratt and W.A.S.P. was replaced by generic pretty boys. Winger, Danger Danger, Firehouse and Slaughter were virtually identical, and the music was overproduced and polished. They were as safe as they could possibly be. Even the Crue became homogenized, releasing the safe and unremarkable Dr. Feelgood.

In the midst of the blandness, Pretty Boy Floyd was a throwback to the early days of the scene. When most bands were going for a more subdued look, the pictures on the inside of Leather Boyz make Poison look butch. The songs were straightforward and memorable, with strong hooks. Each chorus contained a word or a phrase that was designed to be chanted back at the band: “ROCK!” “ON FIRE!” “LAST KISS!” The record’s pacing ensured that there was never a dull moment. Kristy “Krash” Majors was not Dylan or Leonard Cohen, but knew how to write a catchy guitar riff, which was all that mattered.

The reason that I connected with PBF was because it sounded like a hair metal record I would have made. The lyrics are endearingly clumsy, but the band had attitude to spare. When Steve Summers sang about running away to Hollywood, rocking and rolling all night long (like he never could), he really meant it. There’s a Mickey Rooney/Judy Garland, “Hey kids, let’s make a hair metal record!” aspect to the album, which is something that the scene lost towards the end.

There is a lot of controversy about Pretty Boy Floyd. They were complete posers and were not ready to be signed. The songs were not written by Kristy Majors, but by Ariel Styles. Steve Summers is a tyrant who conned former bandmates out of their share of writing credit. I don’t care about the politics that went on with these leather boyz; I just really like listening to their electric toyz. PBF is everything some people hate about hair metal, and it is everything I love about it. It’s a record that you don’t really think much about. You put your fist in the air and chant when the band tells you to. Besides, it does provide one universal truth, rock n’ roll will always set the night on fire.

Recommended Listening: Leather Boyz With Electric Toys, duh.