Paperback Rocker #2 – Don’t Bogart That Joint, My Friend

DIRECT DOWNLOAD HERE

In this episode, I try to say ”um” less. I start out with some Beatles news. First was the tenth anniversary of the “Let It Be…Naked” album, which was Paul McCartney’s attempt to strip Phil Spector off the record. Phil Spector is in jail for murder. The Beatles weren’t getting along, even though George looks ecstatic on the cover of “Let It Be”. I grew up hearing the strings on “The Long and Winding Road”, but Paul hated it. I don’t know why, but it was probably because Macca is a control freak.
The second anniversary was that of the last George Harrison album, “Brainwashed”, which was released after his death. It’s a great album. Jeff Lynne of ELO and the Traveling Wilburys and George’s son, Dhani, finished the album.
I talk about the movie “Easy Rider”, the classic motorcycles and hippies saga. I saw this movie as a freshman in college. I wrote a paper about the music in the movie, but I bet it was tripe, since I didn’t have the internet and was pretty naive musically. The movie starts out with a drug deal. This reminds me of the cartels outside my cinder block shack. The cartel member is dressed nice. They sell the coke to Phil Spector at the airport before he takes off to London to screw up “Let It Be”.
I talk about how small gas tanks are on chopper motorcycles, so they had to stop a lot on their way to New Orleans. There is some heavy-handed symbolism when they change a motorcycle tire in front of a blacksmith shoeing a horse. They meet a hitchhiker who takes them to a scary commune with screaming kids and goats. Worst of all are the mimes, who speak when they aren’t supposed to. They try to grow corn. Free love ain’t all that great. Lucy agrees.
I talk about how destructive hippies are, giving examples of Woodstock and Altamont, as well as the parking lot after the Grateful Dead hit Seattle. I finally remember the name of Dennis Hopper’s character. There’s some foreshadowing when they get to New Orleans. They go to a whorehouse and see Toni Basil of “Mickey” fame. The movie ends tragically. The movie holds up well, but the camera work has aged. The music is good – Steppenwolf, Byrds, etc. “Don’t Bogart That Joint”, my friend.
I talk about the book “Cannery Row” by John Steinbeck, which takes place in Monterrey, California. It’s a great setting for a novel. I love Steinbeck. Doc is a marine biologist who makes money selling octopi and stuff like that he collects in the tidal flats. Vagabonds live in the Palace Flophouse, led by Mack. The book has a sense of whimsy. Steinbeck has a gift for illustrating the common man without pretension. There is a sequel called “Sweet Thursday”, and it’s a great book, too. It was written years later when Steinbeck was more experienced. The movie of “Cannery Row” is a hybrid of those two books. The guy who plays Mack was the shooter in “The Jerk”. He hates these cans! The movie is narrated by John Huston and stars Nick Nolte and Debra Winger. I do a poor imitation of Navin Johnson. I can’t say the actor’s name very well.
I observe the passing of the great Lou Reed. I love the “Berlin” album. Most people just know him from the song about the transvestites.
I do some housekeeping regarding the first episode. The intro song is my song, “Chemical Marriage” off the Saturn Lander eponymous album. “I Love Rock and Roll” was by the Arrows. Kim Fowley was a svengali, not a savant. Kim Fowly produced three songs by Flash Cadillac and the Continental Kids on the American Graffiti soundtrack, which I love. Fowley wrote for Helen Reddy and others. The Gettysburg Address has less than half the words of the Barenaked Ladies song I talked about. The sitcom I talked about with Bronson Pinchot was “Perfect Strangers”.
They found the bones of Coneheads in France, just like they said on SNL years ago.
I quote Jack London.
My website is www.PaperbackRocker.com. You can find the podcast archives there. Find my books on Amazon by searching my name, Matt Syverson. Follow me on Twitter @PaperbackRocker. Email me at [email protected]. Thanks for listening!