Lenny
(and God) having a sense of humor, decided to put together a bunch of his
favorite songs and simultaneously bust Jac Holzman's balls. Jac was the
president of the very important Elektra Records and even though his place in
Garage history was secure by signing the MC5 and The Stooges, Lenny was
determined to make him infamous. And besides, every Lenny being a true artist
and visionary (read - broke and powerless), needs a patron. Jac Holzman is the
accidental Patron of Garage and we all owe him a debt of gratitude The record
was called Nuggets by the way.
Lenny,
now indisputably recognized as the unintentional yet inevitable Godfather of
Garage, couldn't have known that his
not-exactly-the-most-important-work-he-ever-did-in-his-life efforts would last
this long, create a new sub-genre of Rock and Roll along the way, become
actually important as time went on, and turn into an international movement
influencing at least two generations including the one currently limited by Rap
and Metal and Pop pablum.
And
the Lord, regretting his decision to cancel Shindig and Hullabaloo, decided Real
Rock and Roll couldn't be any more dead and created the Rhino. Just to mess with
everybody a little bit He made the Rhino a really cool wacky looking animal and
a really cool wacky looking compilation record company. It was on the latter of
the two that a four CD box set of Nuggets was released in 1998.
This
new box included and expanded on Lenny's original record and was
surprisingly well done and lavishly packaged with all the care and love only a
new batch of weirdo freaks would have taken the time to do. These degenerate
iconoclasts include Gary Stewart, Michael Johnson, Patrick Milligan, Bill
Inglot, Mike Stax, Alec Palao, Mike Markesich, John Hagelston, and a hundred
others, raising the Rhino flag to new heights and doing a surprisingly
impressive job.
Lenny,
dumbfounded I'm sure at the thought of anybody but him caring about this,
endorsed it and wrote new liner notes to go along with his old ones which were
wisely included in the package.
Fr
om
and
Andy
Gary
U.S. Bonds may have literally recorded "Quarter to Three" in a garage
but this was a band! And bands were a new concept. (For the definitive story of
"Louie Louie" I refer you to Louie Louie - The Book by Dave Marsh
published by Hyperion)
For
any kind of clarity on this particularly subjective subject it is helpful to
consider the British Invasion as the center of the universe and The Rolling
Stones as the archetype Garage Band. Mick Jagger's attitude and the Stones'
exquisite lack of "professional" sophistication would influence
everybody in music that doesn't suck. The Kinks, The Yardbirds, The Animals, and
The Who would soon follow and be very influential also. And the Beatles, who got
very sophisticated very quickly once they hit, started the whole thing off as a
bar band in Hamburg that miraculously managed to breach the walls of the
mainstream music business and redefine it, and sound more Garage with every
passing year. 
The
fifties Rockabilly gang, including what was probably the universe's first rock
band, the Crickets, as well as the early sixties' surf instrumental guys, and
others would have a role as early Garage or major Garage influences. But mostly
it's the British Invasion that serves as the epicenter to which all Garage
pointed to and continues from. Eventually leading to everybody rewriting Richard
Berry's Louie Louie or Van Morrison and Them's "Gloria," which Van
probably rewrote from the Stones' "Last Time" and, in the best classic
Garage tradition, unashamedly copied Jagger's vocals on.
The Kingsmen
It is mostly sneers and snarls, guitars with fuzztones, harmonicas, maracas, tambourines, and Farfisa or Vox Continental and Jaguar organs. Timeless in both its attitude and relatability due to both its unrealistic expectations and its unintentional limitations. And, by the way, it's ideally communicated in three minutes or less which is why the Punks connected so readily.
It
was the Rhino re-release of Nuggets (an equally impressive all European Nuggets
is also out now) that seemed to spark or at least coalesce the 2nd Generation of
the eternally underground Garage movement.
But
we're getting ahead of ourselves.
In
1965 the new art form of Rock Music was born (see the From E Street to the
Disciples of Soul Essay for further explanation) and when everybody realized it,
after the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper album in '67, institutions began to be built
around it to preserve it, give it longevity, explain it, and of course, make a
shitload of money from it.
Serious
art forms deserve serious discussion so Rolling Stone Magazine and Crawdaddy
were created for that purpose. The division between Pop and Rock would be
absolute, and a complete fragmentation of the music world would begin in the
70's, directly leading to the permanent chaos the Powers That Be are in denial
about today.
But not so fast! said Creem Magazine. We already kind of miss 16 Magazine, the innocence of Pop, the purity of the 50's Rock and Roll pioneers, and ain't quite ready to buy into this Art Form stuff, and the portentious hyperbole and grown-up type sophistication that would accompany it.
So
Lester Bangs, Dave Marsh, and the entire city of Detroit decided everything
sucked except the MC5 and the Stooges, which Lester called Punk. The writers
were seen as fringe-element contrarions-for-its-own-sake at the time but history
would prove they were on to something.
Skip
to 1977 and the Ramones and the Sex Pistols became the living embodiment of what
Creem had in mind all along and now the whole world calls it Punk. Where did
they come from? The MC5, the Stooges, and the Lenny Kaye 1972 Nuggets
compilation, among other places.
Okay
so now here comes our next contrarion who likes this Punk Stuff but recognizes
that all this fragmentation is starting to leave a vacuum in the middle where
60's rock used to reside and is being replaced by not-so-friendly fragments like
Disco, Diluted Philly Soul, and Corporate Rock.
Ladies
and Gentlemen I give you the occasionally disputed, semi-controversial, he's not
aloof he's the shy Beatle, Father of the Modern Garage Movement, Greg Shaw.
Real
quick. He started Mojo Navigator Rock and Roll News a year before Rolling Stone.
As West Coast edtior of Creem he might have used the word Punk before Lester
Bangs. He managed the Flaming Groovies. He started Bomp Magazine and the
internet Bomp list and Bomp records. He put out the Pebbles compilation series
(23 volumes and counting!). And a lot of other crazy shit.
All
that was fine but what really impressed me was him putting out Stiv Bators' solo
records which proved he had impeccable taste and was, of course, hopelessly
insane. 
Anyway
around '79 or so he decides to launch the Voxx label for 60's related, back to
basics bands but couldn't find any. So he did a nationwide competition, like the
band battles we all participated in back in the 60's, and attracted the core of
what would be the 1st Generation of Garage-Rock. Yeah since Punk was now taken
he called it Garage.
Greg's Battle of the Garages series would include the Fuzztones, the Vipers, the Lyres, the Cynics, the Chesterfield Kings, and virtually everybody else that would be banished forever to the underground by a culture consciously engaged in killing the Rock and Roll spirit.
For
those of you keeping score at home a quick word about how this fits together
generation-wise.
1st
Generation of Rock and Roll
The Birth -
2nd
Generation
The Renaissance -
British Invasion, Beatles, Stones, Dylan, etc. 1960's
3rd
Generation
The Business - Aerosmith, Springsteen, etc. Mostly 70's but you could
start this generation as early as '65 or '66.
4th
Generation
The Rebellion - Ramones, Pistols, etc. into U2, R.E.M., etc. Late 70's,
80's.
5th
Generation
The Aftermath - Guns 'n' Roses, Nirvana, Pearl Jam etc. Late 80's and
90's.
6th
Generation
Hasn't happened yet as of this writing.
So
the 1st Generation of Garage as an acknowledged genre (acknowledged by who?
acknowledged by me) would coincide with the 4th Generation of Rock and Roll.
The 2nd Generation of Garage, which we're still in, due to a latency period in the early 90's, was largely perpetrated by our latest villain in this tale of Whoa.
Ex-Viper Jon Weiss (1st Generation Garage), picking up the flag from an understandably distracted Greg Shaw, started his Cavestomp! Festaculars in 1997, featuring, and sometimes reuniting, the Standells, the Blues Magoos, the Pretty Things, Richard & The Young Lions, Barry & The Remains, the Chocolate Watchband, and other 60's legends. Alongside the legends, he booked what remained of the 80's Garagers - Lyres, Fuzztones, Cynics, Hate Bombs, Woggles, etc. and in 2001, went from once a year to 16 sold out shows at the Village Underground and Warsaw in New York City. These shows included everybody already mentioned plus newer Garagers like the Greenhornes, the Moviees, and the Swingin' Neckbreakers.

With
Cavestomp!, the Rhino reissue of Nuggets, and other related goings on like the
Las Vegas Grind, all of a sudden it ain't over 'till it's over and the internet
started lighting up like the Blues Magoos' old suits and the cries of a new
generation of there's-got-to-more-choices-than-we-see-on-MTV began to be heard.
The
exciting part of all this is that there are new groups popping up all over the
place doing it. The musical form is easy, it's just a matter of young bands
having the balls to go on stage a little more musically naked. No big distorted
guitars, no tape loops, no synthesizers, and no big pianos or organs to hide
behind.
The
tough part will be in the two areas that have plagued rock for at least ten
years (you could argue thirty years) and that means songwriting and live
performance.
Songwriting
is pretty much a lost art, but if new bands study the sixties (as every band in
ANY genre should do) and compare their stuff to the 20 or 30 great Garage
classics, something good is bound to happen.
Performance
is a bigger problem. Keep in mind that, one hit wonders or not, every Garage
band wanted to be stars. They weren't intentionally sloppy or out of tune. Okay
the Stones were, but most weren't. The bands had a look, they had style, and
they had a common concept or philosophy going on once they hit the stage. It
might be cool and casual, it might be aggressive, it might be individual
expression rather than band 'uniforms,' but there was always a unifying or
complementary thing happening that spoke with one voice.
Modern
performance has been influenced most by the Grunge type, post-punk bands that
have a specific anti-star, regular-guy, embarrassed-to-be-successful
sensibility.
This
is not a good thing.
First, all art needs an element of mystery to be
most effective. It needs to be something that cannot be completely explained or
understood. And second, people need artists and performers to do the job they
are paying them to do. To be in touch with some part of themselves that the
average person can't easily access. That access allows the artist and performer
to communicate, motivate, inspire, make some sense out of life, or at least help
one make it through it. That gift is most effectively communicated by a look and
attitude that an audience member may aspire to, or may be satisfied to live
vicariously through, but for whatever reason cannot achieve on their own. If
they could, what do they need you for?
Let's
hope that studying the 60's inspires a new attitude, look, and performance
commitment to match the new music. An attitude with a desperate need to
communicate a save-your-soul catharsis. The way God intended.
To
those who can barely afford to rock we salute you!
Lenny
Kaye we salute you!
Jac
Holzman we salute you!
Greg
Shaw we salute you!
Rhino
Records we salute you!
Jon
Weiss we salute you!
Being
a righteous artist and eternally optimistic (read - hopelessly deluded), I
believe rock might be still breathing after all. This could be the start of
something underground and even less commercial than the first time around!
But
there's got to be a few social misfits with mothers yelling at them to
"turn that damn noise down the neighbors are complaining" in some
garage somewhere dying to get out. And if just one of them makes it, somebody's
world will change.
Only
giving everything,
Little
Steven
©
2002, www.littlesteven.com