THE WYMAN WEEKLY
Just Another Empty Head.
Issue 11 April 19,1996
So
I’m walking down the east sidewalk of Freemont Avenue enjoying the beautiful
weather when I notice a rather cute girl wearing sweats and walking a black lab
heading my way. As we meet, the dog saunters in my direction to take a sniff of
my leg. The girl smiles sweetly and waits for me to say something. The dog
glances up at me and I point at him and say “hi.” I say nothing to the cutie. Why?
All I’m thinking about is getting home and writing The Wyman Weekly. This is what we call Suffering For Your Art.
THE IG
Another
week and another knockout show at First Avenue. This time it was Iggy Pop and I
still haven’t come down from the cloud he put me on.
The
Ig appears onstage in skin-tight shiny rock star pants. He’s got long bleached
blonde hair and is shirtless, showing off his exquisitely toned and muscular
bod. Just like the cover of Raw Power minus
the lipstick and makeup. But Raw Power
came out twenty-three years ago and Iggy’s face looks like he’s aged about
eighty years in that time. His band all (‘cepting the drummer) have long frizzy
metal band hair and hunch over their instruments accordingly. Iggy entertains
by mouthing obscenities, diving off of the stage into the crowd a few times,
and repeatedly sticking his hand down his pants. He proceeds to kick our asses
with renditions of his songs old and new. The place is going nuts and then a
few songs into the show, they break into “Raw Power” and everyone goes doubly
nuts. When watching the Ig the best thing to do is drink your beer and just go
with the feeling that he radiates. What feeling is that? Well, the best way to
put it is that Iggy is like your uncle who always gets drunk at family reunions
and gatherings. You feel for him as he’s cracking you up and embarrassing you
all at the same time. Iggy is one of the most alive, animated and intense
performers I’ve ever seen, right up there with Springsteen and Soul Asylum.
Before
they go into “I Wanna Be Your Dog” Iggy sends the song out to “all of the black
sheep.” And by black sheep, he doesn’t mean just punkers or rebels. Because
this song is on the same Stooges album that contain two of the greatest
teenage-loser anti-anthems of all time - “No Fun” and “Not Right.” As much of
an unreal cartoon character that the Ig seems to be and as easy as it is to
just write him off as such; the bottom line is that he knows what it means to
be alone and what it means to have the pain that goes along with it. Maybe
that’s why he performs “Death Trip” (the most terrifying song I’ve heard along
with the Stones’ “Sister Morphine” and Metallica’s “Master of Puppets”) with
all of the lights off.
But
there’s light at the end of the tunnel as my prayer from last week comes true. At
the end of the extra-long encore, Iggy and the band go into “Louie Louie” and
of course the Ig sings the mythical dirty lyrics, although he prefers “I feel a
rose down in her hair” to “I felt my boner in her hair.” Iggy remembers to
shout “Let’s give to ‘em right now!” before the guitar solo and he sings in the
last verse “Now ‘Louie Louie’ is a stupid song / But it’s all we got left so
sing along” and although the folks around me were curiously silent (what - they
were expecting “Bridge Over Troubled Water?”) I shout along until the song and
his set are over.
After
the show I’m walking through the upstairs bar and some dolly of a girl pops out
of nowhere and clinks her beer glass against mine. I look at her blankly. “I’m
just friendly.” she says. “Here’s to another verse of ‘Louie Louie’” I say as I
raise my Leiny in a toast and then walk away as I don’t want to talk to any
babes when DUH-DUH-DUH DUH-DUH DUH-DUH-DUH DUH-DUH is going through my head.
REFLECTIONS ON THE IG
First
time I saw Iggy (besides that picture of him in The Rolling Stone History of Rock and Roll where he’s crouched
onstage with his hand down his pants and the caption - by the late great Lester
Bangs - says something like here’s Iggy
Pop about to do something naughty) was on Letterman in the early eighties. The
Ig came out and did some furious number. Which one I don’t remember, but what I
do remember is that the Ig had short black hair with a purple streak in it. The
thing that absolutely sticks out in my mind about the Letterman appearance is
that he sat down to talk to Dave and had a slight Scandinavian accent. Swear to
God. (Is Osterberg a Norwegian name?) And this did more to win me over to the
Ig than anything else because it just went to show that after all these years
the Ig was still just some Midwestern punk (as in garage, not Sid Vicious) with
an accent and a mischievous streak.
Unlike
Lou Reed, who is from the East Coast - specifically New York - and therefore
cannot be totally trusted, Iggy is from blue collar Detroit and doesn’t have
all those art school pretensions about him. I’ll take Iggy’s thrown off lyrics
over Lou’s worldly wisdom any day. And although Iggy has written some great lyrical lyrics like “Brick by Brick” and
“I Need Somebody”, when I think of the Ig I think of stuff where the title says
it all like “Raw Power”, “Search and Destroy” and “Your Pretty Face is Going to
Hell.” And while AC/DC has more phallic metaphors, only Iggy would have a fast
blues song called “Cock in My Pocket” where only he would rhyme “it’s shovin’
up through my pants” with “don’t want no romance.”
WYMAN’S SEARCH FOR THE HOLY
IG GRAIL
Last
year I went to Let It Be on my lunch hour and la-de-dah they had a vinyl
section. I hate vinyl and just like every other sorry thing from the past I
wish it would go away instead of being revived. I just don’t feel like cleaning
the needle and album every time I want to listen to twenty minutes of snap,
crackle and pop. Unless it’s Iggy and the Stooges. You see, I had been on a mission
for years to score a copy of the Stooges’ Metallic
K.O., which is a legendary semi-legal quasi-bootleg import recording of
their last ever show which took place in Detroit in January of 1974. (The funny
thing is that I used to always see it in Grand Forks at Mother’s Records in the
used bin when I’d go there after high school every Friday afternoon. It was
usually right by those used Prince records for fifty cents that I also didn’t
buy.) Why is Metallic K.O. legendary?
Glad you asked. At the time, nobody thought of Iggy as some sort of icon. (Like
I remember - I was in elementary school and listening to the Jackson 5.) People
would actually show up at Stooges shows to heckle and pick on the band. The Ig
just ate it up and threw it back, so on Metallic
K.O. we get to hear Iggy detailing all the eggs and stuff being thrown and
he baits the crowd by saying things like “You pricks can throw every goddamn
thing in the world ... and your girlfriend will still love me” and “I won’t
fuck you while I’m working.” He also introduces a song by saying “One two fuck
you pricks!” The album finishes with “Louie Louie” where Ig sings all the dirty
lyrics with the last line in the song being “they threw a Stroh’s!” The last
sound you hear is a thrown bottle breaking on the stage after the song is done.
REFLECTIONS ON THE IG
(REPRISE)
Iggy
gained notoriety in part by stabbing himself with pencils while performing. I’m
still waiting for him to thank me as that’s a move he copped from me. I stabbed
myself in the head (mere millimeters away from my right temple) with a blue
pencil when I was two - well before the dawning of the Stooges. Don’t believe
me? Check out the blue mark that’s still there twenty-seven years later!
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