Lou Reed says 'Lester Bangs - who?'
For those who have read any of the compilation books of Lester Bangs work for Creem and the like, you'll know that there were some legendary bouts between the writer and Lou Reed. Reed, moody old queen delivering snide put-downs and Bangs, a fanboy who wouldn't let on... the tussles were epic. Well, Jim DeRogatis, Bangs biographer, has kicked up a stink about Lou Reed after he said "who was Lester Bangs?".
DeRogatis wrote "Oh, that Lou: He's such a curmudgeonly old crank, unwilling to ever acknowledge that anyone else in any way enhanced or even shed light on his unparalleled genius. (John Cale what? Robert Quine who?) Witness this dis of his critical amanuensis Lester Bangs the other day at the Tribeca Film Festival, during a conversation with handpicked interviewers Julian Schnabel, director of the new "Berlin" concert film, and overpaid Vanity Fair rock gossip columnist Lisa Robinson, who no one will ever, ever quote about anything."
Audience question: “Lester Bangs said Berlin was the most depressed album ever made. What are your thoughts on that?”
Reed: “I don’t have any thoughts on Lester Bangs’s comments. What does that have to do with anything? You just saw it.”
Schnabel: “I just thought it obviously made me want to make the movie.”
Robinson: “I just want to say we knew Lester Bangs and would not 35 years later quote him. However –”
Reed: “Who is Lester Bangs?”
Schnabel: “Isn’t he the guy who Chris Walken drowned in At Close Range?”
DeRogatis continued: "As Bangs' biographer, I'm rarely peeved enough to defend his legacy - it doesn't often need it - but every once in a while, it's worth setting the record straight. Compare Reed's cavalier and dismissive comments above with Bangs' poetic prose on "Berlin" below, which I first dusted off after hearing Reed contend at SXSW that critics all trounced his dark orchestral epic upon its release. Reed can rewrite history all he wants, but the fact remains, Bangs' championing of his best work helped in large part to build the audience he now enjoys.
What ["Berlin"] really reminds me of, though, is the bastard progeny of
a drunken flaccid tumble between Tennessee Williams and Hubert (Last
Exit from Brooklyn) Selby, Jr. It brings all of Lou’s perennial themes - emasculation, sadistic misogyny, drug erosion, twisted emotionalism
of numb detachment from ‘normal’ emotions - to pinnacle. It is also
very funny – there’s at least one laugh in every song - but as in
‘Transformer,’ you have to doubt if the humor’s intentional.
‘Transformer’ was a masterpiece at least partially by the way it proved
that even perverts can be total saps - whining about being hit with
flowers, etc. - and this album has almost as many risible non
sequiturs as that did: the heroine gets up from a beating and says that
it’s ‘no fun... a bum trip,’ and the protagonist’s plaints draw a laugh
just when they’re most spiteful.” – Lester Bangs, Creem magazine,
December 1973
Hey, Lou: You know who Lester Bangs was. The last time I interviewed
you, when you were hyping your rewriting of Poe for "The Raven," you
asked me to mail you a copy of his biography, and you spoke quite
warmly of him. The Catskill comedian shtick really gets old sometimes."
[via TheDailySwarm]
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