The Punk Rock Mid-Life Continues

Wearing a punk rock t-shirt (I’m obsessed with the sociology of concert shirts) to high school in Murfreesboro, TN in the year 1985 was a mark of incipient coolness that all of the Journey t-shirt wearers could only hope to understand. It's commonly thought that youth are more open to new ideas, but this is not really accurate. Teenagers may be outwardly showing rebellion, but there's a narrowness of thought even in this. I'd try to play a punk tape on the bus in '83 and everybody would scream at the driver to take it out of the player. Along with the music came an interest in books, which was a guarantor of outcast status back then and probably still is today. This post is about those books that helped shape me and the connection with my rock and roll rebellion against the mainstream.

This first book actually tells the story of a group that was considered a teeny bopper band so how rebellious was I being? I did go against my own tastes to even read it so it accomplished more open thinking on my part, but most importantly it paved the way for much of what followed in my life. I can't completely hold No One Here Gets Out Alive by Danny Sugarman responsible for my twenties spent playing in rock and roll bands, but it undoubtedly bears some culpability. The Doors are still big business and much of the credit should be given to Sugarman's book. When the book came out, the Doors had yet to achieve the full icon status they have today, but a groundswell of Jim Morrison adulation was building. At the time I began the book I hated the Doors. Every time I heard Manzarek's organ I turned the radio dial. One day in my graphic arts class, where I spent most of my time playing hangman, one of the juvenile delinquents who barely ever spoke to me slid No One Here Gets Out Alive across the desk to me. "You like to read and you like rock and roll, so I thought you'd like to read this book my sister got," he said. I glanced at the cover and saw that it was Doors related so I turned him down. "Come on, man! It's a great book. I don't usually like to read, but I liked this one." I didn't want to fight with him about it (and there was always the chance that a fight could break out in graphic arts) so I took it from him and told him I'd give it a chance. I read the thing in one night and in a few weeks; my notebook covers saw The Doors added to the front roll call of rock bands that adorned each one. I also was listening to The Doors first album as often as possible as I let Manzarek's organ sound grow on me. Morrison's story had touched me in a big way. I didn't care if it had been embellished or if the Doors had been primarily considered a teenybopper band in their heyday. I've had others who also found the Doors in their sophomore year of high school so maybe the teenybopper tag is still appropriate. I still enjoy the Doors music today, but not like I did back then. The Doors are like a gateway drug. I was soon led to stranger bands, most notably Velvet Underground. So the book got me into the Doors? Big deal, some might say. That was the least of the book's influence, for it was a brief section in the first few pages of the book that had the biggest impact. It was a list of the books that Morrison read. I would draw from this list in my high school days and beyond and get pulled into the world of existentialism, the beat generation, Greek philosophy, and more.

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  • 1 - dbcooper

    Jan 27, 2005 at 6:35 am

    What a great read Wally. I related to so much of this that I thought I would add a comment. I too read No One Here Gets Out Alive in high school, and in many ways it had a profound affect upon me. I also tracked down the extensive reading list of Morrison documented in his bio, and was introduced to the fantastic works of the Beat Generation.

    I re-read No One Here Gets Out Alive recently for the first time in many years, and strategic attempts at building an icon were far more obvious than during my high school days. Today, I am saddened when I read about Morrison, mainly because his death apparently was such an unintentional tragedy. I am of the opinion that The Doors' greatest album was their final one LA Woman. In many ways, it is a testament to what could have been. I don't think Morrison was going to escape jail time due to the Miami debacle. And I believe a part of the reason he fled to Paris was to escape the potential of incarceration (documented in a fine Rolling Stone article). He was alone in Paris in so many ways.

    Their music transcends the 1960s, and it serves as a link between the rebellion of the 1950s through to 1970s and 1980s. When we mention great rock bands, it seems like within the first breath we spat the English Beatles, Stones and Zepplin. We can say Elvis, bred in the Southern U.S., schooled on the rock and blues of that region. The Doors sprouted from the suburbs of the U.S., well-schooled and sick of the very lifestyles that eventually were adorned in Journey t-shirts. Their music, like the works of Kerouac and Ginsberg and Salinger, transcends an era. The anger allows us to pull ourselves from the muck of American conformity. We have civilization. But The Doors started many of us on the road to culture.

  • 2 - wally bangs

    Jan 27, 2005 at 8:46 am

    Thanks for the compliment. Your comments are just as good if not better. I agree with your Doors viewpoint too. They really did make some ground shaking stuff, but Morrison's iconic image always got in the way even before Sugarman was builting him up post death.

    "The Doors sprouted from the suburbs of the U.S., well-schooled and sick of the very lifestyles that eventually were adorned in Journey t-shirts. " - what an awesome quote, db.

  • 3 - Eric Olsen

    Jan 27, 2005 at 9:14 am

    being from L.A. and being functionally alive at the time, I had a lot of built-in resistance to the Doors but I eventually succumbed and think they really are great and iconic. I think the first and last albums are the best, so I mostly agree there. They never could escape the filler, though, and I think the first has less of that.

    I am a huge Salinger fan and reading him in my late-teens really did change how I looked at reading and writing, realizing the possibilities had only been scratched, although Catcher in the Rye is my least favorite of his tiny body of published works.

    Though if I reread it now I would doubtless be disappointed, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maint had a huge impact on me too, and led me to add a second major, philosophy.

    Thanks Wally, super job.

  • 4 - wally bangs

    Jan 27, 2005 at 10:28 am

    I've never read Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, although I've always had an interest in Zen. I agree that Catcher In The Rye is the least of Salinger's works, preferring Nine Stories and Raise High The Roof Beam, Carpenters myself. Thanks for the kind words.

  • 5 - Eric Olsen

    Jan 27, 2005 at 11:07 am

    based on your other interests I would strongly encourage you to check out Zen, although it isn't really about zen at all

  • 6 - HW Saxton

    Jan 27, 2005 at 1:17 pm

    Interesting post Wally.Judging from your
    taste,you might well enjoy reading the
    book "Confederacy Of Dunces" written by
    John Kennedy O'Toole. It is one of the
    ultimate "outcast" books.You'll either
    love it or you'll hate it depending on
    your worldview. That is if you haven't
    already read it.

  • 7 - Eric Berlin

    Jan 27, 2005 at 1:41 pm

    Wally - This is one of the best posts I've seen yet on Blog Critics. It's amazing how closely I related to much of it.

    I was introduced to The Doors during my Junior year of High School by way of the Oliver Stone film. I remember not enjoying it very much, but something about it -- and especially the music -- fascinated me. Soon I had We Could Be So Good Together and Peace Frog and Maggie M'Gill blaring through my Walkman and my nose into No One Here Gets Out Alive. As I later read Kerouac and became very interested in his life, I began to see that I was drawn (like many young men) to these darkly romantic, drunken poet-philosopher figures. What's funny is that both Kerouac and Morrison were, especially later in life, nearly unbearable to be around.

    The sound of The Doors has always been immensely appealing to me: Manzarek's organ, the hollow sound, jazzy backbeat, the dark and strange lyrics. More recently, I became very interested in Manzarek and was surprised at how much I enjoyed his memoir of his days with The Doors (Light My Fire, it's called). He also wrote an enjoyable little novel in which he envisions a fictionalized Jim who faked his death and finds peace on an island in the Indian Ocean. I began to see Morrison and Manzarek as a ying and yang (or yang and ying?) combination that made The Doors what they were and are. I had the pleasure of seeing Manzarek live with poet Michael McClure (a friend of Morrison's and beat figure) performing at a strange little mission church in San Francisco a few years ago.

    Catcher was another big novel for my youth, though On the Road was what really was one of the most important in terms of setting the stage for my travels and yearning to find myself and the writer I would later become.

    In terms of the Zen talk: I'm curious what people think of Dharma Bums. I really enjoyed it, though I'm (almost) amazed at the influence it's said to have had on the hippie movement and the Backpack Beatniks, etc.

    By the way: I reviewed Jim Morrison: Life, Death, Legend by Stephen Davis about a week ago. It gives a much fuller and richer (and more realistic) picture of Morrison's life than Sugarman's serviceable work.

    Eric Berlin
    Dumpster Bust: Miracles from Mind Trash

  • 8 - wally bangs

    Jan 27, 2005 at 2:10 pm

    The comments on my post have been more interesting than the post, in my opinion. HW - I came to Confederacy Of Dunces later in life around when I was 30. It is one of the top books I've ever read (right up there with Abbey's A Fool's Progress, I even try to make a point of re-reading it every year.
    Eric, I'll have to check out both the Manzarek book along with the Stephen Davis book.

  • 9 - Mark Saleski

    Jan 27, 2005 at 2:42 pm

    excuse my french, but son-of-a-bitch that was a fine read.

    also, On The Road is one of my favorite book, though i didn't discover kerouac until far beyond my college years.

  • 10 - Shark

    Jan 27, 2005 at 2:55 pm

    Nice post. I love to read about life changing books. (It's almost as interesting as hearing about life-changing teachers.)

    One small caveat: In 1966 and 1967, the Doors were not a "teeny-bopper" band.

    No way.

    We Doors fans who were contemporaries of Jim Morrison (yah, I'm ancient) were doing acid, Rimbaud, Tzara, Jarry, French New Wave films, Maldoror, Sade, Nietzche, et al.

    Although a lotta young girls creamed in their bell bottoms over Morrison, the Doors were, in the early days, about as far from a "teeny-bopper" band as one can get.

    At least if memory serves.

    As to the vibe in 1985 (your high school era) I dunno. I cuturally and psychologically punched out in the 80s and didn't come back until 1990.


    PS: Saw the Doors live 3 times. Early, Middle, and Late (next to last show ever) Periods.

    Jealous, ain't cha.

    PPS: Dharma Bums is better than On the Road, imo.

    PPPS: Morrison Hotel is the best album (after the first, of course)

  • 11 - Distorted Angel

    Jan 27, 2005 at 2:59 pm

    Simply a great post, Wally. It's interesting to me how it caused me to flash back to my own youth, which took place many years prior to your own - it's funny how the same cultural influences are showing up twenty years down the road. The Doors were one of the bands that shaped my high school music experience -- I sort of got to see them live the night that Morrison got arrested and dragged offstage in New Haven -- not much of a concert, but one hell of an experience for a young girl growing up in the '60s. My dad, who didn't graduate high school but read more books than anyone I've ever known in my life, got me started on Kerouac with On The Road. And it seems like Catcher In The Rye is every generation's coming of age book -- I read it, and my son read it just a few years ago. Apart from the usual surface generational differences in music and clothes, there's a universality of experience among those of us that survived the experience that is high school in America that I find very interesting.

  • 12 - Eric Berlin

    Jan 27, 2005 at 2:59 pm

    Shark: I'm beyond jealous. I'd love to hear all about The Doors shows that you saw -- the more the better.

    The cloest comparison that my relatively young self can make is that I saw Nirvana live in Buffalo, New York about six months before his untimely end. Great show, great road trip, great memories.

  • 13 - dbcooper

    Jan 27, 2005 at 3:10 pm

    Shark did indeed see the second-to-last Doors show of all time. It was in Dallas at the State Fair Music Hall. They played two shows that day. They are the only concerts in which "LA Woman" and "Riders on the Storm" were ever performed live before an audience.

    The Doors last concert (or last with Jim Morrison) was a day later in New Orleans when a despairing (and drunk) Morrison quit midway through the fourth song.

    I am impressed Shark.

  • 14 - Mark Saleski

    Jan 27, 2005 at 3:12 pm

    dang, i never saw the Doors.

    i did see Angel though...

    ;-)

  • 15 - JR

    Jan 27, 2005 at 4:12 pm

    More fluid than Jeff Beck?

  • 16 - Shark

    Jan 27, 2005 at 4:59 pm

    DB, you are correct re. the Dallas show. Morrison & Co. were great during the first show. He got drunk for the second, and depending on your take, was either worse or better.

    EBerlin, the first show was in the early summer of 67. They played a small teen marketing extravaganza at "The Roundup Inn" (the Friday night "teen-a-go-go" locale!) in Cowtown, aka Fort Worth. They played in the late afternoon. Stage was a small chunk of plywood about six inches off the ground. We punks were standing around about ten feet from the band. It was like a garage rehearsal, except they kicked ass -- and ended with "The End."

    Oy.

    "Break on Thru" had been out for a while, and "Light My Fire" was just about to break on thru into the national consciousness. This was just prior to that moment.

    Matter of fact, they were so relatively unknown, GET THIS, they were they played and were billed under The Box Tops and the really big headliners, The Seeds.

    You're pushing too hard.

    Wherez *Sky Saxon today, btw?



    *dead, i think


  • 17 - Shark

    Jan 27, 2005 at 5:02 pm

    PS: A listing of the bands I've seen live would make ya faint.

    I still have a ticket stub for Hendrix' first tour (opening bands: Moving Sidewalks and Soft Machine!)

    Concert ticket was ---

    THREE DOLLARS.

    What a great time to be a rock music fan.

  • 18 - Shark

    Jan 27, 2005 at 5:04 pm

    And my wife saw the Beatles in 64.

    What a fossil.

  • 19 - Eric Berlin

    Jan 27, 2005 at 5:10 pm

    Ah but Shark, how's this lineup for the first several concerts I had the pleasure of seeing as a youngster in Long Island, New York:

    - Skid Row (S Bach at his late 80s best)
    - Bonham (featuring the son of Led Zed's legendary drummer... one highlight: cover of Moby Dick)
    - Dangerous Toys (featuring "hit": Teasin' Pleasin')

    And, get this...

    - Aerosmith's Pump tour live at Nassau Coliseum: more black leather and Harley Davidson shirts and bleach blondes and hairspray than you could shake a stick at.

    No wonder I listened to Classic Rock almost exclusively until about 1989 or so.

  • 20 - Shark

    Jan 27, 2005 at 5:18 pm

    Eric,

    Who?

    How's this for the first few concerts as young kid...

    (Just off the top of my head:)

    The Animals (w/Eric Burdon)
    Spirit
    The Byrds
    Miles Davis
    John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers
    Jefferson Airplane (way pre-starship)
    Janis Joplin
    Led Zepplin (3 times)
    Cream (twice)
    Blind Faith
    Sam & Dave
    Doors (3 times)
    Hendrix (twice)
    Delaney, Bonnie & Friends (w/Clapton)
    Grand Funk
    Chicago 'Transit Authority' (opened on Hendrix 2nd tour)
    Canned Heat
    Jethro Tull
    Yes (before they were bad)
    Soft Machine (best concert in history!)
    Fever Tree
    13th Floor Elevators
    Crosby, Stills, Nash
    Crosby, Stills, Nash, Young
    John McLaughlin
    Free <--(I'm one of about 8 people)


    There's plenty more, I'm sure, but those brain cells are a bit on the roasted side...



  • 21 - Eric Berlin

    Jan 27, 2005 at 5:22 pm

    Shark: You're trying to piss me off, right? Well, it worked.

    Except for the confusion and (hard) drugs and war and lack of good TV and Internet, I'd dearly love to transport myself to about 1965 or so for a dope seven year ride or so.

    I'd take up the free love and the music though for sure.

  • 22 - Eric Berlin

    Jan 27, 2005 at 5:25 pm

    Seriously, here are the Top 5 concerts I've seen live, off the Top of my Head:

    - Rage Against the Machine, NYC
    - Nirvana, Buffalo NY
    - Mighty Mighty Boss Tones, Albany NY ('93 or so)
    - Perfect Thyroid, Binghamton NY
    - Black Crowes, Ithaca NY

    Bonus:

    - Brother Meat (who no one has heard of), Bing NY

    Long live the Brother!

  • 23 - andy marsh

    Jan 27, 2005 at 5:48 pm

    Damn Shark, I didn't know you were THAT old!

  • 24 - wally bangs

    Jan 27, 2005 at 6:19 pm

    Man, this has turned into a blast to read. Seeing The Doors live must have been just fantastic. Even better would have the Miles Davis I saw listed.

    The first real concert I attended was Van Halen on the 1984 tour. Soon I was going to all of the metal shows that hit Nashville, TN until I started hitting the club scene a few years later. I've seen lots of great shows since, but the most memorable one was actually a local Murfreesboro, TN band one night. The band was called Jack (and they're still playing) who had been together since 1987 or so. I'd played on some bills with them before, but they were always terrible with most of their shows degenerating into fist fights between themselves, but by 1994 they had become a tight unit wailing a Sonics, Pere Ubu, Creedence, Captain Beefheart type mix of stunning original tracks with a handful of really obscure cover songs. Damn they knocked my ears back that night. The transcendent glory of rock and roll was upon them then.

  • 25 - Eric Olsen

    Jan 27, 2005 at 7:12 pm

    First few shows: Deep Purple, Springsteen and the first E Street Band opening for Wishbone Ash, Queen and Babe Ruth, Roxy Music and Camel, Bowie with the Spiders, Lynyrd Skynyrd in a high school gym, BTO and Aerosmith - hey, it isn't Shark's Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, but it wasn't bad for the early-'70s

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