I'm not someone who trusts all this modernity that chokes me (us) more every day. I don't even feel too good amidst all this progress, but what progress is it if Berluska is still in Rome and still has the right to speak?
Maybe it's because I've never particularly loved that little white box that's the iPod.
Maybe it's because I wouldn't know what to do with a hard drive full of mp3 files.
Maybe it's because if I don't have the record I'm listening to in front of me, I feel like I'm wasting time. I'm made this way: if I can find it on vinyl, I end up directly among the clouds. If it goes bad, at most I have a friend make a copy on a compact disc (how I hate that small piece of plastic) that I then put on tape.
Sometimes I wake up in the morning with a terrible headache and too many rewinds to press. My head really spins, as if it were a reel. Side A, side B. A nice 90-minute cassette, 45 per side, on which I had recorded Unknown Pleasures, and on the other side the White Light/White Heat by the Velvet. I was in love with that cassette, it had accompanied me everywhere, Waldo Jeffers even to the bathroom.
But, like all things you care about, it got lost.
I feel the need to climb the dusty stairs that lead me to the attic every time I need to dive back into the past, a bit like Machiavelli who, after drinking and playing cards in a tavern, goes to read Dante or some Latin author dear to him.
In the boxes, I found what I was unconsciously looking for: a '67 live of Reed and the gang, which I bought in 2008 at a market in Barcelona. A vinyl copy. Never seen this bootleg before. Listened to it. I remembered nothing.
I went back down, put the blessed LP on the turntable, and I'm Not A Young Man Anymore started:
Hey, I'm not a young man anymore
Hey, I'm not a young man anymore
I got five nickels in my pocket
You know that I can get me some more
Acid. It would have been nice to see the faces of the audience, at Monterey in '67 they were all bewildered, but when the Velvets started The Black Angel's Death Song, what happened? Unfortunately, there's no version of the song here, but to compensate there's the debut of Sister Ray...
Reed whispers, shouts, hollers, Tucker performs the miracle of making her lousy technique go unnoticed in exchange for a primitive and sick energy, Cale is superb, the true architect of the Velvet's sound. Morrison is hardly heard, or almost. A Run Run Run stretched to 6 minutes that makes you want to go back to '67 and become part of the 100 that bought The Velvet Underground & Nico.
Well, but these things aren't called experimental, post, punk, or any of that stuff: it's pure Rock and Roll. Read this review, and you'll understand.
Tracklist and Lyrics
05 Sister Ray (00:00)
Doug and Sally inside
They're busy cooking for the down five
Who're staring at Miss Rayon
Who's busy licking up her big man
I'm searching for my mainline
I said I couldn't hit it sideways
I said I couldn't hit it sideways
Ah, it's just like Sister Ray said
Rosy and Miss Rayon
They're busy waiting for her booster
Who just got back from Carolina
She said she didn't like the weather
They're busy waiting for her Sailor
Who said he's just as big as ever
He's just here from Alabama
He wants to know a way to earn a dollar
I'm searching for my mainline
I couldn't hit it sideways
Ah, just like Sister Ray said
Cecil's got his new piece
He cocks and shoots between three and four
He aims it at the Sailor
Shoots him down dead on the floor
Oh, you shouldn't do that
Don't you know you'll stain the carpet
Don't you know you'll stain the carpet
And by the way man, have you got a dollar
Oh no man, I haven't got the time time
Too busy sucking on a ding dong
She's busy sucking on my ding dong
Oh, she does it just like Sister Ray said
I'm searching for my mainline
I said I couldn't hit it sideways
I couldn't hit it sideways
Oh, just like, just like Sister Ray said
Now, who's that knocking
Who's that knocking on my chamber door
Now could it be the police
They've come to take me for a ride ride
Oh, but I haven't got the time time
Too busy sucking on my ding dong
She's busy sucking on my ding dong
Oh, now, just like Sister Ray said
I'm searching for my mainline
I couldn't hit it sideways
I couldn't hit it sideways
Oh now, just like, just like, just like.....
Sister Ray says.
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