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Aquarian
Weekly 10/6/10
REALITY CHECK
WHY
THE FUCK ISN'T KISS IN THE ROCK & ROLL HALL OF FAME?
or Why The Hell Is There a Rock & Roll Hall
Of Fame In The First Place?
Boys, I'm not gonna go on and on about this fucking spirit
shit. I'll talk about the blues and influences and how I dig you
guys and bing-bam-boom, I'll be out of there. It's just fucking
rock n' roll, after all.
- Keith Richards to the members of ZZ Top backstage at the 2004
Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony
The
Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Committee (whatever the hell that is),
has seen fit to nominate Alice Cooper, sixteen years after his,
or if you prefer the band to the character, its eligibility. This
makes what is already an abject mockery of what even the most
casual observer of the genre would consider downright silly.
For those of us who cherish its everlasting effect on our souls,
it is an insult. After all, The Coop, an icon and creative pioneer
in 1970s hard rock, is as influential to rock and roll history
as Elvis Presley and his Caucasian-hijacking of an African-American
invention is to the '50s, The Beatles and its image-driven cultural
phenomenon is to the '60s, Madonna and her sexually-charged chameleon
star-trip is to the 80s', and the spit-in-the-face of all that
is holy Nirvana in the '90s.
For
several decades, Alice Cooper was a drunken, spiteful, sloppy,
defiant, obscene, deafening burlesque freak show that cared less
for anything healthy and descent than anyone or anything imaginable;
or as he put it to me in this magazine last year, "You couldn't
have a rock and roll drama without a villain." That, my friends,
is rock and roll in a nutshell. Refusing to recognize that impugns
any point of celebrating it.
Shit,
anyone failing to list "School's Out" in their Top Ten of most
on-the-money rock and roll songs has no fucking clue what the
entire rock and roll trip is about; or more likely the case in
the realm of the high-brow geeks running this vapid dog & pony
show in Cleveland, got off the train with anything post-Traffic.
Turns
out Cooper's drinking buddy, Jim Morrison was right about handing
the rebel stick over to the Madison Avenue suits and Hollywood
posers who would likely render whatever erect pecker or moist
pussy it manifested into a flaccid, dried up twat.
Keith
Richards, the godfather of all that is modern rock and roll, and
the man for whom even death recoils in horror, would concur. At
least if you judge it from the look of a man who'd worked his
ass off concocting an outlaw life of violent upheaval and massive
substance abuse into gorgeous riffs of heavenly power only to
be dumped in his waning years headlong into presenting goddamned
ZZ Top to a bunch of gut-sagging, hair-thinned cretins posing
as rock critics boozing beside the putrid gaggle of industry turds
dressed for prom night.
Video
evidence of the event shows Keith looking sick to his stomach
and cackling like a hyena at the absurdity of his mission, and
doing it right in the heavily-bearded faces of the band he was
to induct into this laughing stock of an embalming center.
Keith
and Jimmy Morrison knew what those of us who ever cared for rock
and roll know; Alice Cooper is the real deal; whether the "keepers
of the flame" deign to admit it or not. The Coop and his band
kicked the ass and took the names to the tune of record numbers
when they ruled the world, and there was a time when they sure
as hell did. For a few years no one manipulated our wicked zeitgeist
or exploited its most precious disgust better than Alice Cooper.
The
only act that even comes close is Kiss. And guess what? Kiss has
never even been nominated.
Kiss.
The
biggest-selling live act in the history of rock and roll, which
not only emerged full-fledged from the gloriously outlandish Alice
Cooper excess-driven, shock-treatment womb, but also liberated
the genre from its deadening artsy-fartsy, late-sixties to early-seventies
jam-band, self-indulgence -- predating the usually lauded Bruce
Springsteen and the soon-to-seek vengeance of Punk.
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Sorry
if condescending scribes at the hippie journalists' convention
thumb their coke-addled noses at it, but Kiss stomped the
terra without regret and didn't beg your permission.
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Kiss
is rock and roll, as much as Parliament is funk, the Bee
Gees disco, Michael Jackson pop and Joni Mitchell folk, all of
whom have already been inducted into this so-called HOF.
Kiss
was, and stupefying still is theater, pomp and bombast; a distorted
blitzkrieg off-spring of a Jerry Lee Lewis piano assault, a Jimi
Hendrix guitar fire, The Who's instrumental auto-destruction,
an Iggy Pop chest carving, and whatever crazy crap Peter Gabriel
or Frank Zappa ever dreamed up. Grease paint, pyrotechnics, leather,
and juvenile odes to sex and mayhem are a recipe for rock and
roll greatness, and yet for some reason it is trumped by The Pretenders,
Fleetwood Mac, and REM -- all acts I enjoy and certainly belong
in whatever goofy palaver dinosaurs like Jann Wenner fabricate
these days, but not at the exclusion of motherfucking Kiss.
I'm
sorry, kids, nothing that aforementioned trio produced approaches
the anthemic core of the rock and roll gut like "Rock N' Roll
All Nite", never mind the brilliant fist-pump of "Detroit Rock
City".
Recently
a friend, while speaking of his time in Cleveland, asked if I'd
visited the HOF museum. To which I followed with a twenty-minute
diatribe culminating in the notion that any such asinine endeavor
calling itself a rock and roll institution (whatever the hell
that is) and claiming to celebrate those whose fame is worthy
of its blessed enshrinement, but yet so completely incapable of
seeing the worth and testament of titans like Kiss, is nothing
I need to see. It's akin to going to a pizzeria and getting served
celery.
And
let's be honest, the entire concept of having a shrine or snobbish
observance of rock & roll is antithetical to everything the damn
art form stands for in the first place, and second, and most disturbing,
is it confirms what purist caretaker, Lester Bangs predicted and
oft-times celebrated as its demise propagated by the over-intellectualizing
arrogance of the "rock critic elite".
Barely
aware of the comings and goings of something as moronically feckless
as a Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, I was unaware as recently as a
week ago that neither Alice Cooper nor Kiss had been included,
yet the very bands they helped launch, specifically Van Halen
and AC/DC, waltzed in before them. This seemed beyond ludicrous,
until I saw the roll call of acts that have preceded their groundbreaking,
hit-making, record-smashing concert-receipt resume.
Metallica?
Without Alice Cooper and Kiss, where is Metallica beyond a garage
in suburban San Francisco? But then at least it's a rock band,
unlike folkie Pete Seeger, gospel queen Mahalia Jackson, soul
master Curtis Mayfield, torch song goddess Billie Holiday, crooner
Nat "King" Cole, country outlaw Johnny Cash, or for the sake of
the Christ, The O'Jays, Jelly Roll Morton, , Brenda Lee, Bill
Willis & His Texas Playboys, or fucking Bob Seger.
Bob
fucking Seger? What's next Barry Manilow and Bread?
When
Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers were playing backyard barbecues
in Gainesville and Elvis Costello was learning to snarl with horn-rimmed
glasses, Kiss was plowing through America and everywhere making
noxious rip-roaring cacophony -- making movies, starring in comic
books, and turning pop culture sideways.
Sorry
if condescending scribes at the hippie journalists' convention
thumb their coke-addled noses at it, but Kiss stomped the terra
without regret and didn't beg your permission.
Oh,
and this year's nominees -- alongside the long-overlooked Alice
and in place of Kiss? Dr. John, Beastie Boys, LL Cool J, Donavan,
and Donna Summer.
I
rest my case.
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