Beginning To See The Dark: An Introduction to The Velvet Underground

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Hi there, tumblr. I’m Paula Mejia, an unabashed noise nerd from Texas, and I’m psyched to be covering the strange and sultry Velvet Underground for One Week // One Band. Hopefully you’ll enjoy what I have in store for you this week — a combination of ramblings and varied angles to re-imagine The Velvets both conceptually and sonically.

Any mention of The Velvet Underground is typically uttered with either a reverent or fearful tone. Or both. And it’s not undeserving. Before writing “Heroin” and taking up residence at Warhol’s Factory, Lou Reed had been raised on a lifetime of shock treatments. John Cale was squandering at dealers’ apartments holding down the same viola note for three hours straight.

Although only active for less than ten years, and only about five years with core members Lou Reed, John Cale, Sterling Morrison and Maureen Tucker, The Velvet Underground had one of the most short-lived but heavy resonances in the canon of rock history. What would be re-shaped and re-throttled as punk rock has velvet roots. The Velvets contorted white noise into a textured, hypnotic form. You can even call it desirable.

The funny thing is, the band credited with “changing everything” was never supposed to be famous. The Velvets rubbed with fame by pure mistake.

The Velvets (sans Nico) had a two-week residency at New York’s Cafe Bizarre, a place for tourists which, in the words of The Fugs’ Ed Sanders: “Nobody wanted to go to Cafe Bizarre because you had to buy these weird drinks — five scoops of ice cream and coconut fizz.” The troupe of weirdos had to have begun somewhere strange, sure, yet it’s hard to believe a tourist audience would have been happily sipping on prosecco during “The Black Angel’s Death Song”. But Andy Warhol was in the audience one of those days. 

I have friends who believe that anyone crediting Andy Warhol with The Velvets’ success is a hack. While The Velvets’ story is so rich, it’s impossible to recount without touching on Andy Warhol for at least a second. After all, the silver-haired scenester was complicit in giving The Velvets material, financial support, and most importantly, opportunity. Warhol sculpted them into a living, gasping piece of what we would later call performance art: ironic, in your face, and commanding all the same.

Still, it amazes me how The Velvet Underground acquired such a status of cult fame that only intensifies as time passes. Lou Reed’s squeal ranges from uncomfortable to insecure at best. John Cale’s electric viola wheezes melodies like a hospital patient without relief. While accompanying scenesters posed with whips and chains onstage, The Velvets had their backs turned to audiences, unable to look people in the face. Albeit they were donning black shades before donning black shades was cool, so you couldn’t see the manic nerves in their eyes anyway. 

We were never supposed to love The Velvets, a band both capitalizing and cursing their own depravity. For them it was all about the excess in the extremities. You gave them a choice, and they’d pick both. Not the poison nor the antidote, but rather the pharmakon — the sickness and the healer. The band placed the blackened death angel on a pedestal, and subtly championed sadomasochism as a lifestyle.

So what about this wayward group of vagabonds that still continues to swoon, petrify and mystify us nearly fifty years later? That’s what I’m here to discover with you.

This week, I’ll be tracing the shadows left by The Velvets and discussing what’s captivated me about them (thematically and otherwise) through the dissection of songs like “Sister Ray”, selected interviews, a cast of characters and more to piece together the enigmatic rise and fall of rock’s most peculiar success story.

15% off The National titles all week

Also, because we’re nice, we’re going to offer 15% off The National back catalog all week.

Use the discount code “oneweekoneband” at either Bandcamp (for digital copies) or MyShopify (for CDs & vinyl).

Thanks One Week // One Band. We’re fans of you too!

I am lucky enough to have been invited to write something at One Week, One Band

My week will come up August 15th and I’ll be writing about….wait for it…. Queens of the Stone Age.

Anyway, you should follow One Week One Band because it’s a fabulous idea. This week, Jake is writing about The Hold Steady.  Here’s a list of bands that have been covered in the past.

Allow me to introduce myself...

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Hello everyone! My name is Max Mertens and as Hendrik said already, I’ll be taking over the site this week to talk about my favourite British indie rock band Bloc Party. That’s me on the left in the photo awkwardly posing with drummer Matt Tong sometime in 2008 (I don’t think I’ve gotten any less awkward since then but at least I’ve stopped wearing sweaters from American Eagle).

Bloc Party - lead singer and guitarist Kele Okereke, guitarist Russell Lissack, bassist Gordon Moakes, and Tong - to date have put out four studio albums, two remix albums, and a handful of EPs. Their 2005 debut, Silent Alarm, is regarded by many as one of the best albums of the early 2000s. They followed it up with the Garret “Jacknife” Lee-produced A Weekend In The City, which is just as good, if not slightly underrated.   

While there were rumblings that they were calling it quits after 2008’s electronic-focused Intimacy, they returned last year with the plainly -titled Four, which went largely ignored but marked the band’s return to basics.  I’ve been fortunate to see them play live three times, and even got the chance to interview Okereke this past summer, and I’m looking forward to talking about their music as both a fan and a music journalist.    

One more note: I’m covering Toronto’s Canadian Music Week all this week (which coincidentally is where I first saw Bloc Party for the first time four years ago - more on that later) so these posts will probably go up later in the day, but hopefully you’ll enjoy my ramblings and for the diehard Bloc Party fans, I’ll try to post a few rarities that you might not have heard before.

One Week One Band—The Whole List

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Total posts: 31 
(Average: 6 posts/day.)

Approximate word count for the week: over 8,000.
(Average: 258 words/post, but the longer ones clocked in at around 500-700, and the shorter ones at 100 or so.)

Change in follower count at OWOB: 13,268 when I made my first post on Monday, 13,689 when I made my last post on Friday.
(Debatable how much credit I can take, but the important thing is that I didn’t cause a net loss.)

Thanks, everyone. If you’ve been following along, I hope you enjoyed it. And because it bears repeating: thank you, Bruce, for all your help. None of this would have ever happened without you.

Signing Off

…And, with that, we find ourselves at the end of 1965. Brian was holed up in the studio nit-picking the album that history would deem his masterpiece while the rest of the guys toured, dodged the impatient foot-tapping of the folks at Capitol, and fretted amongst themselves about his drug intake and mental stability.

I chose to cut my coverage off here partly because a week is not as long as you might think and there’s a lot to talk about with this band even in just the four years I’ve sketched out, and partly because, in the timeline of the Beach Boys, their next two moves are the point around which the subsequent forty years would pivot. Pet Sounds would stretch them to their limit and SMiLE would shatter their confidence and send them spinning in all directions. Each of those records, because of the mythology surrounding them, casts a shadow over the way people listen to this band. Not that I wouldn’t love to spend weeks dissecting the minutia of those songs (or even the traditionally ‘underappreciated’ democratic albums of the later 60s and early 70s, which are great in their own different ways), but I thought some writer far more skilled than me deserved that chance (if you are a skilled writer and love the Beach Boys, consider talking to Hendrik about doing this—it’s fun!). Besides, ‘serious’ music people can be quick to dismiss these early fun-n-sun tunes as nothing more than backdrops for group harmonies. I hope I’ve gone at least a little way toward dismantling that idea this week.

A hearty thanks to Hendrik for trusting me with the keys to the blog, to my friends and roommates for putting up with the irate requests for silence because I can’t write with the TV on dammit, to all the other writers/tumblrers who’ve encouraged me, and to all of you for reading this week. My most humble thanks and all my love to G, who’s support and enthusiasm I would not have been able to finish this without.

If you care to read more of my musical ramblings, follow me on tumblr. I promise I talk about other bands besides the Beach Boys. Thanks for reading—surf’s up!

My second day writing about QOTSA at One Week//One Band

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Today I take on their second album, Rated R. Four posts queued throughout the day. Enjoy. I hope.

One Week // One Band: Patrick Wolf

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For those who missed it, I took the helm at One Week // One Band this past week and churned out 26,000 words (give or take the length of quotes from interviews and song lyrics) about Patrick Wolf.

Part of me wishes I had started preparing a bit earlier, especially for the last day, which felt rush and a little less thorough, and towards the end I worry that I lapsed into straight up narrative and description instead of analysis or criticism, but overall I’m satisfied with how it turned out, even if part of me wants to go back in time and do it again to make it better.

The lesson from this is that if I can write 60 pages about Patrick Wolf in a week than a 25 page paper in 6 weeks should not be a big deal at all.

I love One Week One Band, but a whole week stuffed with Spotify links is a bit of a bummer.

All The Small Things

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“All the Small Things” by blink-182

Just read this and now going on a Blink nostalgia trip.

(jammed June 23rd 2012)

“But the chorus is like a diamond so small it can easily be missed. It isn’t repeated nor lingered on, but the song effectively pauses for a brief moment while Brock expresses a sentiment that is almost tailor-made for aimless 20-somethings that have opinions about everything: “Talking shit about a pretty sunset/Blanketing opinions that I’ll probably regret soon/Changed my mind so much I can’t even trust it/My mind changed me so much I can’t even trust myself.” I’ve said this previously, but one of the best qualities of Modest Mouse is their refusal to condescend to the self-involved angst that plague everyone, but, for some reason, is culturally snickered at. While the main verse is almost an indictment of the narrator’s negative tendencies, the chorus is more empathetic about the dread of feeling adrift. Who talks shit about pretty sunsets? People afraid to be a part of a group because it would compromise their individuality. But what if that individuality is built on halfhearted opinions that only serve to differentiate you from a group. Who are you really if you can’t trust yourself? “TSAPS” doesn’t answer any questions but the coda suggests something inherent to these bouts of existential crisis: relief comes from the knowledge that everyone experiences these struggles in one way or another.”

Week #103 of OneWeek // OneBand was written by Vikram Murthi on Modest Mouse.

OneWeek // OneBand did Modest Mouse a while back and today I finally got around to reading through all of the posts. If you’re a fan it’s definitely worth a look. I don’t totally agree with his take on everything but there were a few bits I really liked. Some good insights.

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parklakespeakers replied to your video: Never Seen Your Face - Bishi The un-remixed album…

YES, I was hoping that it would be Patrick that you would be doing.

Cat’s out of the bag, I guess. Starting Monday I’ll be writing about Patrick Wolf for One Week, One Band.

I’m psyched and terrified in equal measure, especially given the curse of “insanely busy the week of OWOB” that seems to afflict all contributors. We’ll see how it goes.

Lil Wayne Traxx

Given the recent release of Lil Wayne’s painfully mediocre Dedication 4, I found myself clamoring for some classique Wayne.

Accordingly, I came up with a list of my favorite Wayne tracks, leaning towards more cohesive single-y songs, but making exceptions where appropriate.

I know that there was a {presumably} great OWOB survey of Lil Wayne’s career done by David Turner, with {presumably, again} lots of similar such personalized Tumbles. But that was earlier in the summer amidst my summer ‘ship (a period of time where I rarely found myself surfing these Tumblr waves). 

The list of 14 entries is not arbitrary: I set the limit to those songs that I felt most strongly about.

1. Tha Block is Hot

2. Go DJ

3. Gossip

4. Gettin Some Head

5. Yes

6. Bring it Back

7. A Milli

8. Single

9. Upgrade

10. Famous

11. Money on My Mind

12. Sportscenter

13. Fuck With Me Now

14. Stuntin Like My Daddy

Honorable mentions: Up In This Club (for its Wayne-driven warbly absurdity); Pick It Up (another non-Wayne track, but enough from Wayne to almost justify inclusion)

Guess what?

I’ll be writing for One Week // One Band this fall! It’s one of Tumblr’s featured music blogs so I’m stoked to have the opportunity to contribute. 

At OW // OB, music-loving journalists and bloggers get to take over the site to write about any band they want for a week. For my week, I’m doing 90’s U2.

U2 did so much brilliant work with electronic music in that period that most people overlook because of their 80’s hits and Bono’s megalomania, so I can’t wait to spread the Zoo TV / Passengers / Pop love to more people!

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