Ultra Violet is gone, Lou Reed is gone, Nico is gone, Andy Warhol himself is gone, and photographer Billy Name died this year on July 18. Many of the mainstays and scene-makers that entertained a post-Woodstock, club-centric, drug-fueled New York downtown scene are disappearing in the rear-view mirror.
Isabelle Collin Dufresene [aka "Ultra Violet"] was a Warhol creation as much as her own -- artist, playwright, and Warhol superstar who in 1980 wrote the autobiographical play "You Are Who You Eat." As early as 1988 she published
her memoirs Famous For Fifteen Minutes, My Years With
Andy Warhol. It received the Frankfurt Library Award and has been published in 12 languages.
Every
generation makes its own icons to suit itself, but in the hazy days of
the mid- to late sixties, Warhol's Factory and the Velvet Underground upped the ante considerably in
the battle of the generations. Lou Reed, John Cale, Sterling Morrison,
and Maureen Tucker, first under the aegis of Andy Warhol, re-wrote the
book of love to include obsessions of dirt and noise and sheer panic.
The Velvet Underground's third album
(photo by Billy Name)
That
panic and noise came out of New York City, a far distance from the
peace-and-love message emanating from San Francisco and the general
good-vibes rock generated by Woodstock. The Velvets were more art than
rock, more an experiment in tension than release. By the time they came
to Warhol's attention the band had already been through some
permutations of what is usually called "creative differences." There were more to come.
With
that kind of tension it was obvious the band couldn't last, and each of
the Velvets' four official studio albums reflected a different side of
the creative battles within the group. That the band succeeded in
recording at all beyond the marquee patronage of Warhol is a story of
record-company insecurities as much as the band's own personal dramas. Up-Tight: The Velvet Underground Story (re-issued by Omnibus in 2003) is
a relatively concise oral biography that details the trajectory of the
Velvet Underground month-by-month, year-by-year, until the group finally
splinters for good.
Out-of-focus Lou, with Sterling Morrison, Nico, Maureen Tucker,
and John Cale: The Velvets, 1966 (photo from The Daily Beast)
By
now it's an often-told, backbiting and bitchy story. The group evolves
from Lou Reed's pop-rock roots to Andy Warhol patronage and art-rock
noise, through a subdued, confessional third album and finally, "despite
all the amputations," to rock'n'roll. Victor Bockris and Gerard Malanga
have assembled a witty, detailed, mostly-oral version with first-person
accounts, full of the band's personal turmoil, drug use, and ego-fueled
confrontations.
The interviews illuminate the art of the music and the band's struggle for commercial success in equal measure, two opposing goals that lead to the inevitable end of the band with centrifugal force. In the main, Up-Tight is rock's original cautionary tale of too much, too soon somehow not being enough: a template that survives, on a much different scale, with every 21st century pop sensation.
Bockris' and Malanga's collection of great
black-and-white photographs capture a band as interested in its own
look as in its music. This is much more than a fan's book, and the
Velvets' highwire act performed without a net ought to dispel any notion
of the monolithic "peace and love" image of Sixties' music.
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