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Aquarian
Weekly 5/4/11
REALITY CHECK
ART
OF THE GIDDY HANGOVER
or How Hunter Thompson and The Stones Drove
a Spike into Hippie Hearts
Did
you ever wake up to find
A day that broke up your mind
Destroyed your notion of circular time
It's just that demon life has got you in its sway.
- The Rolling Stones/Sticky Fingers
Our energy would simply prevail. There was no point in fighting--on
our side or theirs. We had all the momentum; we were riding the
crest of a high and beautiful wave....So now, less than five years
later, you can go up on a steep hill in Las Vegas and look West,
and with the right kind of eyes you can almost see the high-water
mark --that place where the wave finally broke and rolled back.
- Hunter S. Thompson/Fear & Loathing in Las Vegas
It
happened in the spring of 1971, forty years ago now.
It
was like a snap; the kind of ghastly sound a finely tuned athlete
hears when it all goes wrong inside. A major tendon gives way.
A knee buckles. The elbow dangles gruesomely. Pain. Terror. The
very real sensation that the change from full-speed ahead to over
can be cruelly immediate, and soon, very soon there will be a
long, dreadful period of rehabilitation. Even then, there's no
guarantee the body will ever be the same again.
Oh,
the game goes on, but not for some.
This
is what happened when the fast-paced, anything-goes wild and free
Sixties youth movement heard a snap from deep inside. Actually,
it was two snaps; one literary, the other musical. A long-form,
two-part journal piece gone awry for Rolling Stone magazine, rather
haphazardly titled, Fear & Loathing in Las Vegas, and a
ten-song ball-breaker of a record called Sticky Fingers.
In
March of '71, journalist Hunter S. Thompson, who was a year removed
from "inventing" a frantic style of fantastic deadline humping
gibberish called Gonzo, escaped to Las Vegas with a Chicano lawyer
by the name of Oscar Zeta Acosta to ostensibly work on an investigative
piece about a slain East L.A. activist named Ruben Salazar. To
bankroll the proceedings, Thompson accepted a Sports Illustrated
gig to cobble together 300 words on a weird desert event called
the Mint 400 motorcycle race, but ended up delivering a 25,000
word screed about drugs, violence and mayhem.
Fear
& Loathing in Las Vegas would become a sensation, then a book,
and inevitably made Hunter Thompson a star, helping to create
a bestial character which would enslave him for the rest of his
life. But as he struggled with the mountain of his random scribblings
and garbled tape musings in a San Francisco hotel room through
much of April and May, what Hunter Thompson was actually doing
was fashioning a eulogy; a final dirge for the hippie generation
and an ugly mirror poised on a drug culture he would expertly
exploit in a long and very successful literary career.
Thompson's
last biographer, William McKeen aptly describes Fear & Loathing
as "a look back at the promise and hope of the Sixties that had
been stomped to death somewhere in the middle of 1968", the year
that the its author was beaten with other anti-war protesters
outside the Democratic Convention in Chicago.
As
the crippling images of hotel, automobile and brain cell destruction
began to careen from his IBM selectric typewriter, the dark, savage
rhythms of "Sympathy for the Devil" blasted from Thompson's tape
recorder -- a song recorded in 1968 by The Rolling Stones and
one quite prevalent in his unfolding tale. It was the very song
the band played at the infamous Altamont free concert just outside
San Francisco in December of 1969 as a man was being stabbed to
death by a pack of booze-addled Hell's Angels. Ironically, two
years before, and one year before the Stones unleashed "Sympathy"
into the fading echoes of the Summer of Love, Hunter S. Thompson
made a fringe motorcycle gang famous with his first groundbreaking
book, Hell's Angels.
In
April of 1971, across the Atlantic, The Rolling Stones' new album,
Sticky Fingers was wrapping blues riffs and snarling vocals
around what would be Thompson's final bugle call for the Sixties.
Before long the two would remain connected by time and tone for
what would be dueling Baby Boomer tolling bells.
The
Stones had been hinting at what might be coming for two previous
records, Beggar's Banquet and Let It Bleed, both
sinister clarions to the darker side of the counter-culture soon
to be realized in political assassinations and street riots, an
escalating Viet Nam War, the Manson Family murders and the deaths
of four pop icons, one of them a former Rolling Stone. But Sticky
Fingers is different. It is a dreary exhale, less foreboding
and more grimly apathetic, as if the sense that doom could be
avoided or marked as historical imperative was laughable. It was
just doom, both personal and cultural, and that's all.
But
this was The Rolling Stones, so the doom was fraught with tongue
wagging humor, a whistle past the gallows reeking with funk and
jazz and down home raunchy blues, country honk and bittersweet
melancholia. Never had the death knell of fast times sounded so
goddamn good.
"It's
a bleak record about what the morning looks like after a decade
of unchecked hedonism," rock journalist and author, Robert Greenfield
told me on the occasion of his last book about his time with the
Stones in the South of France. "The Stones were making it clear
the party was over and what was left was not pretty." Sticky
Fingers, it's most charming song boasted a rather spot-on
metaphor for the sharp decline in hippie ardor, "Dead Flowers",
was the kind of "fun's over" message the purveyors of
decadence would be gleefully inclined to make.
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As
Thompson was imagining the Death of the American Dream as
a fat-cat fascist money-grubbing moral sinkhole on the Vegas
Strip invaded by acid-crazed radicals hell-bent on wresting
its corpse from Mother Authority, The Stones filled the
airwaves with odes to slave master rape, misanthropic suicide
jags, and morphine hallucinations.
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As
Thompson was imagining the Death of the American Dream as a fat-cat
fascist money-grubbing moral sinkhole on the Vegas Strip invaded
by acid-crazed radicals hell-bent on wresting its corpse from
Mother Authority, The Stones filled the airwaves with odes to
slave master rape, misanthropic suicide jags, and morphine hallucinations.
Thompson's "gross, physical salute to the fantastic possibilities
of life in this country" is echoed in Mick Jagger's haunting "Moonlight
Mile" with his "dreams fading down the railway line" or Keith
Richards' rather dire "I have my freedom but I don't have much
time" from the gorgeous "Wild Horses".
Then,
of course, there is the drugs; as in the opening paragraph of
Fear & Loathing wherein a phalanx of pharmaceuticals is
recited as if names in an invading army troop, soon to be consumed
in herculean fashion by men (too weird to live, but too rare to
die") who would finally be overcome but not defeated by the "excessive
consumption of almost every drug known to civilized man since
1544 AD". Not to be outdone by the "cocaine eyes" and "speed-freak
jive" of Sticky Fingers, wherein nearly every song has
at least one reference to mind altering -- it's seductions, consequences
and mysteries.
Make
no mistake, Fear & Loathing in Las Vegas nor Sticky
Fingers celebrate drug abuse, although both Thompson (an openly
unrepentant dope fiend until his suicide in 2005) and Richards
(Keith is still kicking and has recently released his memoir,
which reads as an unapologetic junkie handbook). They simply tell
the truth about the experience -- something rarely found in either
the Feed Your Head or Just Say No camps four decades since. In
these tales of excess, the piper indeed comes to call. And
perhaps no more honest portrayal of the drug culture has been
improved upon since Thompson's masterpiece hit the streets in
late 1971.
"We
are all wired into a survival trip now. No more of the speed that
fueled the 60's. That was the fatal flaw in Tim Leary's trip.
He crashed around America selling 'consciousness expansion' without
ever giving a thought to the grim meat-hook realities that were
lying in wait for all the people who took him seriously... All
those pathetically eager acid freaks who thought they could buy
Peace and Understanding for three bucks a hit. But their loss
and failure is ours too. What Leary took down with him was the
central illusion of a whole life-style that he helped create...
a generation of permanent cripples, failed seekers, who never
understood the essential old-mystic fallacy of the Acid Culture:
the desperate assumption that somebody... or at least some force
- is tending the light at the end of the tunnel."
Hell,
or maybe it's "Love...it's a bitch!"
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