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Rock'n'roll has always been as much
about attitudes and ideas as it is about music, at least insofar as it appeals
to me. In fact, the first thing that drew me towards it involved the printed
word rather than anything audible. I loved the surreal malapropisms and black
humour of John Lennon's books In His Own Write and A Spaniard In The
Works, and read them over and over again. (If you're looking for punk
antecedents, come to think of it, you could do worse than such choice Lennon
similes as "His face lit up like a boiling wart" and "He leapt off the bus like
a burning spastic".) From there I progressed to collecting The Beatles' music,
and thence to the Stones, then Hendrix, Zappa and beyond. I remember the first
time I bought an LP that didn't have a picture of an apple in the middle, and
regarding it as something of a novelty.
A rather more significant revelation came in 1972, my last year at school. There
was a great radio show - the ONLY great radio show - on the ABC on Monday
nights: Chris Winter's Room To Move. One week he did a two-hour special
about The Velvet Underground, and I can still 'feel' the visceral excitement of
first hearing I'm Waiting For The Man. As well as Velvets' songs, he
played a selection of their solo material, and I was equally stunned by the
transcendent power of Nico's Janitor Of Lunacy.
I got introduced to The Stooges' music slightly more directly. I'd read (in
Circus Magazine) about Iggy's onstage outrages with candle wax and
drumsticks and peanut paste, and been suitably taken with the Grand Guignol
shock value of it all - as I had with Alice Cooper - but never actually heard
the Stooges' songs. But in July 1973 I dropped out of WA Uni, after a fairly
token stab at an Arts course, and got a job at the ABC. In October '73 I got
transferred to a new office. I walked in, and was introduced to my new clerical
workmates in turn. One of them was James Baker (Jim, as I've always called him).
To my astonishment, his opening words - literally - were "Come with me, man.
I've got a great record I want you to hear." Without further ado he walked out
of the office, and I followed him to the ABC Record Library, wondering vaguely
how this abrupt departure squared with the boss. Jim proceeded to play me
Funhouse, at full blast. Apparently he'd seen me wandering around the
premises, and was waiting for the opportunity to find out if this fellow
longhair was a potential kindred spirit.
But if we're talking moments of epiphany, the key one came the following year -
May '74 to be precise. I'd quit the ABC and was bumming around Europe. One night
in Amsterdam I went to see Lou Reed, and it really did change my life. This was
during his so-called amphetamine Nazi phase, when he was skeletally thin and had
cropped dyed-blond hair with iron crosses shaved into his scalp. The band were
tight and poundingly loud. Lou was unhinged. He leapt or rather lurched around,
repeatedly knocked over his mike-stand, and his only comment to the audience was
"Why don't you start clapping, you little motherfuckers?" It was transfixing and
incredibly exciting.
The net result was a sort of paring-down process. I was already into most things
protopunk. What changed was that suddenly a lot of other current music -
especially of the 'progressive' hippy variety - lost all its appeal. It seemed
anachronistic, long-winded and kitschy (in a bad way), and quite simply it
didn't rock. Louis Armstrong was onto something when he said "If you can't tap
your foot to it, forget it."
Back in Perth there were very very few people - at least that I was aware of -
who shared this aesthetic. And it was hard to find a shorthand way to describe
what all the inspired bands and solo artists had in common. There's an attitude
of mind, or at least intention, which united The Velvets, The MC5, The Stooges,
The Dolls, Mott The Hoople, The Blue Oyster Cult, Dr. Feelgood, The Dictators, John Cale, Brian
Eno, Kevin Coyne... But the music itself was diverse. Certainly we didn't call
it punk. And it wasn't confined to music as far as I was concerned: you could
get exactly the same kind of enrichment from, say, reading a William Burroughs
novel, watching an old Kenneth Anger or Cocteau film, or looking at a Warhol
painting.
In the absence of any local support network we devoured issues of Creem,
Circus and Rock Scene (with its tantalising B&W photos of the
nascent New York scene, and its agony column by Wayne County), and lamented
being stuck in remote Perth. We groaned in disbelief as antipodean jokes like
Skyhooks were lauded as keepers of the flame; there were bands who DID get the
point - The Saints and Radio Birdman - but they were way over East, and as yet
unknown to we benighted Sandgropers.
So anyway, Jim and a guitarist called Lee started a band called The Slick City
Boys, exalting his love of flash and trash in the grand Johnny Thunders manner.
To dress like that in Perth in the early 70s - or even, as in my case, to
associate with someone who dressed like that - was to take your life in your
hands, I can tell you. As far as I can remember, they never played a gig.
Cut to London in November '76, and my first exposure to punk-rock as such, as
opposed to 'avant la lettre'. (I remember seeing my first real-live punk
sitting in the Sun In Splendour pub in Notting Hill. He had a dog collar and
peroxided spiky blond hair, and he looked like he'd just arrived from outer
space: the look was new even if the rock'n'roll wasn't. It turned out that he
played in a band called Generation X, and his name was Billy Idol.) There were a
surprising number of young English groups knocking out live versions of Ramones,
Stooges or Velvets songs, or rip-offs thereof. To appropriate Dr Johnson's line
about a woman speaking in public, the surprise was not to hear it done well, but
to hear it done at all. Many of these bands were woeful - stand up Slaughter And
The Dogs and Eater - but others, such as The Damned and the criminally
underrated Vibrators - were brilliant. And the Sex Pistols released the greatest
rock song ever, Anarchy In The UK. It was a matter of vindication rather
than revelation: suddenly the spirit and style and sounds we'd cherished for
years were occupying centre stage, and key influences were being duly
acknowledged. We saw The Heartbreakers, went to The Roxy, I nipped over to The
Big Apple and checked out Patti Smith and Television and The Dolls... You get
the idea. It was a lot of fun.
OK, so now it's 1977, and punk is getting a fair measure of publicity, even in
The Arsehole Of The Universe, to employ the title of my heartfelt paeon
to my home town. [Ed. note: This song
title staked Demetrius's band, The Exterminators, a spot in Perth punk history]
(Actually, New Wave is a rather more evocative term for the aggregate of noises
crammed together under the punk umbrella. Or at least it would be, if it didn't
also evoke memories of the ghastly and weedy and watered-down thin-black-tie
brigade, enamoured of Elvis Costello and Graham Parker and The Rumour, who
followed in its wake.)
I won't buy into the who-was-Perth's-first-punk-band debate, and it's probably
unresolvable anyway. (A case could even be made for Dave Warner's 1974 outfit
Pus, incidentally, with their Troggs and Fugs covers, but I was out of the
country at the time and missed them completely.) But my favourite one was
definitely The Victims. I can't be objective about The Victims, having seen all
their gigs and many of their rehearsals, but talk about a power trio! Their
formation derives from an evening when Jim introduced himself to Dave Faulkner,
who was then playing keyboards with The Beagle Boys
[Ed. note: one of the establishment 70s Perth
blues bands] and was said (accurately) to be a fan
of Jonathan Richman and The Modern Lovers. As everybody (hopefully) knows, Jim
played drums, Dave sang and played guitar, and with the addition of Rudolph V on
bass The Victims were born. |
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