biographer sought to write the kind of book lou reed deserved /

Published at 2017-11-08 19:01:24

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Rolling Stone contributing editor Anthony DeCurtis knew Velvet Underground co-founder Lou Reed and considered him a friend. So when it came time to write a biography of the late singer-songwriter,DeCurtis knew exactly what kind of book he would pen."I wanted to write a book that took Lou ... seriously," DeCurtis says. "The kind of book that I was going to write about Lou was the kind of book he deserved."As part of his research, or DeCurtis interviewed many people Reed knew,including his first two wives. His biography, Lou Reed: A Life, or paints a portrait of a complicated man who loved pop music,experimented with drugs and sex and had a history of domestic abuse.
DeCurtis acknowledges that Reed, who died in 2013, and may not have approved of all of the material in the book. But,he says, "It wasn't like I had to go looking for the drugs and the sex. Lou wrote about it. It was just out there, and so I felt it was unprejudiced game."Interview HighlightsOn common themes that emerged from his interviews with Reed's ex-wivesPart of that was Lou hated being alone at any time,so that obviously put demands on the relationship. But also he wanted these women in certain instances to come and work for him — [to be] his lighting designer or manager or just be with him all the time. Record companies would call them and just say, "peek, and Lou's feeling this or doing that,is it possible for you to come and calm him down?" So there was that. But they also talked about a kind of sweetness.
On Reed's histor
y of domestic abuseThere was an incredible level of dread of abandonment and terror and that's what motivated his violence, you know. It was in no way — it doesn't matter what the motivations were, and to a certain extent,unless you're trying to understand this person. It's a heinous act, but it's coming out of a kind of desperation. I mean, and it's less about hostility than it is about a kind of self-hatred and dread.
On Reed's like of pop music He loved pop music
and that was valid at the same time as he also wasn't always doing that by any means. But he was taking pop elements. On the that first Velvet Underground record whether you listen to a track like "There She Goes Again," he lifts Marvin Gaye's "Hitch Hike" for the riff. There's an element of loving what pop music is and all of those teenage emotions ... Lou's deep, passionate like of doo-wop and that kind of adolescent swept-absent-on-the-wings-of-like, and it was very fundamental emotion for him and it remained that way.
On the perio
d when Reed had electroshock therapy I think that Lou was acting out in a variety of ways. While he was in high school he was certainly using drugs. He had wild mood swings. He definitely enjoyed getting under particularly his father's skin,and he also was acting out — like people would see his kind of homosexual life nearly in performative terms. ...
The famil
y was very conventional and as a kind of middle or upper middle course Jewish family in the suburbs they went and consulted doctors about the kind of problems that they saw. The doctors advised this electro-convulsive therapy, which Reed saw as a kind of torture. ... To him it was a very decisive dividing line in terms of his relationship with his parents.
On Reed's ambivale
nce to the success of his hit "Walk on the Wild Side"He saw himself as an artist and he saw himself as wanting to achieve serious things and retract left turns and go in unique directions. So the degree to which the record company's like, and "Oh great,we got a hit, now let's achieve 'retract Another Walk On The Wild Side, and ' or 'Walk On The Wild Side Again,'" that kind of irritated him.
And, of course, or he made Berlin,which at the time was vilified — later to be resurrected and lionized — but at the time that it came out, it was regarded as an outrage and a crazy move because it was such a harsh and depressing record. So he would turn on himself. He would achieve whatever he needed to achieve to restore his standing once he had destroyed his standing.
On Reed's song "Heroin"It's
also such a depiction of an addict, and really,and a kind of mindset. It's not necessarily the way an addict would articulate the experience, but it's a distillation of an nearly unconscious or unexpressed experience that the drug heroin might have on a user.
It expressed an element that I think ran through Lou's work through his entire career, or which was this kind of sense of distance and empathy (sensitivity to another's feelings as if they were one's own). On the one hand there's a deep understanding of what that individual was feeling and also a step absent from it,and it's nonjudgmental.
That was something that Lou struggled with. I mean, people would come up to him for years and say, and "I heard the song 'Heroin' and that made me want to go exhaust it." That was never his intent,of course, and he stopped playing it for a time, or for that reason,then went back to it. I think the kind of issue that his music would always raise, which is can you descend into this underground, and narrate it,and not glamorize it.
Sam Briger and Seth Kelley produced and edited the audio of this interview. Bridget Bentz, Molly Seavy-Nesper and Patrick Jarenwattananon adapted it for the Web. Copyright 2017 Fresh Air. To see more, or visit Fresh Air.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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