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- <text id=89TT2302>
- <title>
- Sep. 04, 1989: Roll Them Bones
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Cover Stories
- Sep. 04, 1989 Rock Rolls On:Rolling Stones
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MUSIC, Page 58
- COVER STORIES: Roll Them Bones
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>It's middle-aged and still crazy. It's only rock 'n' roll. And
- it's still the Rolling Stones
- </p>
- <p>By Jay Cocks
- </p>
- <p> There was so much history this summer, and so little change.
- </p>
- <p> The anniversary of Woodstock arrived and waned, much like
- the first time around. It was mostly a convenience for the
- media, a way to get a handle on an upstart pop phenomenon. For
- music, a fan remembered, all the festival symbolized was a
- washout. Lysergic mud and bad amplification. The rest was a
- fairy tale.
- </p>
- <p> And, as the fairy tales say, it seemed that it might be time
- again for legends. Twenty years later there were suddenly on
- every side the familiar sounds of the '60s: Bob Dylan, the Who,
- Van Morrison, the Bee Gees and the Jefferson Airplane. But the
- flashiest news was that the Rolling Stones, well aged and
- embattled, would be lumbering out of the woods and into the
- lights again. "The world's greatest rock 'n' roll band" (an
- unofficial title the band never originated but did little to
- discourage) had not only cut a new record but was embarking on a
- tour that would take it to nearly 40 U.S. cities.
- </p>
- <p> Just look at these guys. Giants. Golems. Geezers with a
- quarter-century of history together, "a long shadow," as Keith
- Richards says, "that we drag around." Their tour starts Aug. 31
- in Philadelphia; when the New York City shows were announced,
- some 300,000 tickets (at an average price of $28.50) were sold
- in a record six hours. The band, which fussed over choosing
- photos and picking among twelve different covers for their new
- record, knows it's no longer got the look knocked. Image is
- vital, and taking the stage will be a severe test.
- </p>
- <p> Steel Wheels is the name of the record; Nothing Ventured
- would have suited too. It boasts five reprobates cranking
- themselves up for yet another crack at the distance, showing
- their years--flaunting the things, in point of plain fact--while they swan around some of the nation's largest concert
- stages, soaking up the applause and the revenues, blowing off
- their greatest hits, taking the new material out for an
- audience airing.
- </p>
- <p> Of course, the audience has had a summer of softening up.
- The Who, who had played at Woodstock, had already come back,
- getting a jump on things when they were meant to be gone for
- good. Keith Moon, their great drummer, had taken some of the
- band's careening keenness with him when he died in 1978. Pete
- Townshend, their great songwriter and guitar player, his
- hearing shredded by more than two decades of high decibels,
- could not even re-create all his lead parts. Still they
- soldiered on, three bowed veterans suffering the onset of shell
- shock from a barrage that hasn't even landed yet.
- </p>
- <p> With a splendid new album, Oh Mercy, due out in September,
- and on the strength of permanent regard, Bob Dylan hit the road
- again, doing the vintage songs in new ways, singing the newer
- songs as if they'd just been minted. Dylan perpetually remakes
- himself, reshapes his work. He has made history, but even the
- most dedicated fan knows that Dylan's history is peculiar, part
- of the past with a claim on the future, but existing in a kind
- of new space, a new tense: the present imperfect.
- </p>
- <p> What did this have to do with now? The fan grew up with rock
- 'n' roll. He gawped at Elvis on the Ed Sullivan show. He thought
- Jerry Lee Lewis on Steve Allen's TV program was the wildest and
- altogether greatest thing he had ever set eyes on. When Chuck
- Berry showed up on American Bandstand, one young world got
- jolted into a different orbit. The music was that strong. All
- velocity and no drag.
- </p>
- <p> And it had no past, either. Not at first. Rock 'n' roll put
- down roots like some jungle creeper, overnight, and was suddenly
- there one new morning, loud and outsize, full of lurid colors
- and maybe even a little poison. It was new, and it could be
- owned, wholly and instantly, by a new generation. It was what
- everyone was who heard it first and would love it forever. It
- was young.
- </p>
- <p> No more. Not on the calendar, and not in the heart. Now rock
- has some 30 years of history behind it. That's time enough, and
- weight enough, to make it hidebound.
- </p>
- <p> Grim prospect. All summer, the fan looked about for
- reassurance. There were familiar sounds all around. Van
- Morrison, a favorite since the early '60s, released yet another
- album, Avalon Sunset, a lyrical, ruminative shard of
- spirituality that he refused to push or publicize. The Grateful
- Dead persisted, a whole band of Peter Pans camping out in a
- hippie never-never land. The Bee Gees returned; so did the
- Jefferson Airplane and the Doobie Brothers. These weren't
- revivals; they were exhumations.
- </p>
- <p> Paul McCartney issued a sprightly new album, Flowers in the
- Dirt, on which he collaborated with Elvis Costello, and
- announced a world tour to begin Sept. 26 in Oslo. And Ringo
- Starr, fresh from an alcohol rehab, hit the road backed by a
- peerless band of studio all-stars. Strawberry Fields forever.
- </p>
- <p> The fan felt often, now, as if he were out in the middle of a
- foggy sound, in a weathered boat, with an old radio that kept
- drifting from station to station. To be sure, there was a lot of
- new stuff on. Madonna: slick and smart. Rap: angry, slangy and
- assaultive, good and righteous, but restrictive in its heat.
- </p>
- <p> Honest, now: Can you be a veteran fan and still respond as
- rock 'n' roll demands you respond--by belief, by passion, by
- always raising the stakes--to performers who may be a
- quarter-century younger than you are? You could do it with
- Springsteen; you both were younger then. You did it with U2.
- But for somebody new? Was rock 'n' roll, forever young, finally
- middle-aged?
- </p>
- <p> The questions went deeper than chronology. Rock wasn't just
- the sound track for the '60s. It spurred on and helped shape a
- whole culture. It was central to change in a way that nothing--certainly no music--has been since. Rock was always a music of
- turbulence, and history, for a while there, caught the beat.
- Woodstock was a dodge, a growth industry that tie-dyed much that
- was fierce and righteous in the music into something stuporous
- and evasive. The seeds of nostalgia were planted in those
- sodden, trodden New York State fields before the festival was
- over. Memories were rolled like joints. Smoke 'em if you got
- 'em.
- </p>
- <p> Nostalgia was the only dirty word in the rock vocabulary.
- This music had never looked back before. But history could walk
- away from rock once it had been put snugly into that Woodstock
- pasture. Rock reacted by turning inward, to the softer personal
- speculations of the '70s singer-songwriters, then reacted
- again, first by exploding (punk), then by chilling out into the
- cerebrations of the New Wave bands like the Talking Heads and
- the slick, slightly spooky amusement-park soul of Michael
- Jackson.
- </p>
- <p> But is it nostalgia that is keeping the sound of the '60s
- alive in 1989? It has to be something more. Something like...that sound on the radio now. Some kind of homing signal. Coming
- in strong now, and now you know the sound. It's only rock 'n'
- roll, but no mistake: it's their rock 'n' roll. It was even once
- the title of a Stones song, a hit...forget the exact date.
- Not so long ago, after all.
- </p>
- <p> Mick Jagger, the Stones' co-leader, co-writer, singer, front
- man and flakmaster, is supposed to have said he didn't want to
- be a full-time rocker past 40. He denies saying it now, maybe
- because here he is, 46 and still doing it fine. That makes him
- older than the fan by a few years. The fan feels better already.
- Smiles, settles back, listens close.
- </p>
- <p> The boat starts to move. That's encouraging. After all the
- band's public bickering and rheumatic concertizing, after all
- this time and all these damn years, the Rolling Stones can
- still rock the boat. They are back all right.
- </p>
- <p> The Stones know their audience, though. It's pretty much the
- same as it's always been, and it will be happy to see them. It
- will also be happy to know that the material on Steel Wheels is
- a lot like them--up to date but fundamentally unchanged. The
- record kicks off with Sad Sad Sad, a creditable attempt to
- capture again the dynamics of the group's early sound, when the
- rhythm came in solid sheets and the lyrics sounded as if they
- were being spit out of a semiautomatic weapon. After that, it
- bustles through a very commercial, danceable tune or two, a
- couple of extravagant experiments (including Terrifying, with
- some heavy jazz underpinnings) and a few desultory rockers,
- performed with practiced agility.
- </p>
- <p> The fan heard it right away. The Stones still have the
- stamina, but there's always at least a hint of strain in the
- music too, a self-consciousness about the energy, as if they
- were the oldest guys at the gym and trying to look good on the
- Nautilus. Rock 'n' roll may be their life--and their
- business. It may come naturally to them still, but it sure
- doesn't come easy. That's what's different. That old winning
- smugness--their magisterial self-assurance--is gone. There's
- a lot of sweat in these songs.
- </p>
- <p> The band must know it too, because finally, on the last
- song, they face it. Slipping Away is a song about--indeed,
- almost consumed by--a sense of impermanence, of loss, of
- lives eliding into compromise. It's about ending. It's about
- dying, and it's a great Stones song. Jagger and Richards have
- some supernal ballads to their credit (As Tears Go By, Wild
- Horses, Moonlight Mile), but busy being naughty, they did not
- cultivate their more sensitive side. Slipping Away is an
- autobiography that could be anyone's life story.
- </p>
- <p> Jagger and Richards have spent a fair part of the '80s
- separately pursuing extra-Stones interests, playing the
- Bickersons in the rock press whenever they were queried about
- the plentiful tensions within the band. It was tough to pin
- down, even when the sniping drew a little blood, precisely what
- the boys were bitching about. Keith wanted to tour, Mick wanted
- to cruise the night life; individual ambitions ran contrary to
- the good of the band. Whatever it was, it seemed likely that
- they had been together too long--27 years, to be exact. So
- when Slipping Away begins and the husky fragility of Richards'
- vocal takes instant hold, it is clear that this is more than
- just a good closer for a record. Richards takes the lead for
- once, and Jagger glides in on harmony. It's a political
- gesture, a way of dealing with all that friction, even as it's
- being moved out front. And it's something more, an envoi, the
- start of a long goodbye.
- </p>
- <p> The Stones always encouraged a dynamic of dissipation--"their satanic majesties"--and loved flirting with the flame.
- That shadow Keith Richards talks about was always there, deeper
- and darker than with most bands. Mick was a dandy about his
- decadence; Keith was devout. One book about the Stones even
- insisted (over Richards' later bemused denials) that Richards
- had his blood washed, changed and purified.
- </p>
- <p> No surprise, then, that the last time the Stones took an
- American stage, in 1981, they looked like the supporting cast
- from a George Romero epic, specters from the boneyard of the
- pop psyche thirsting for a transfusion of celebrity. Now the
- boys have regrouped and regroomed; better care is being taken
- all around, and light is being made of age, of gossip, of old
- reputation. Charlie Watts, the Stones bedrock drummer, who was
- never one of the group's wilder revelers, looked momentarily
- startled the other day when a visiting writer extended a hand in
- greeting. "Sorry," he said, recovering. "I thought you were
- going to take my pulse."
- </p>
- <p> "There's a lot of energy in the band right now," says Keith.
- "This new record's been miraculously fast for us. Mick and I are
- still holding our breath, saying, `This can't last.' We pretty
- much wrote it in a month and laid down the basic tracks in about
- five weeks.'' To get the steel wheels on track so quickly,
- Jagger and Richards set aside those publicized vexations to find
- a common footing.
- </p>
- <p> Richards made a solid solo album last year, which was
- helpful. It got him a piece of the cynosure that has always
- been Jagger's property. Mick turned out two solo albums himself--the second enterprising and entertaining--but neither
- enjoyed superstar success. Jagger, when interviewed, had put the
- Stones in a coffin, but never lowered them into the ground.
- When rapprochements were reached and offers tendered, he was
- ready to listen.
- </p>
- <p> "It's the easiest thing in the world to work with the
- Stones, and for me to work with Mick," Keith says. "Mick and I
- work together perfectly. It's when we're not working that we
- have problems." If Steel Wheels does not have the full surprise
- and thermal energy of a Stones classic like Let It Bleed or
- Exile on Main Street, at least it holds on to a sense of
- continuity. No advances maybe, but as another great songwriter
- put it, no retreat either.
- </p>
- <p> The Stones are aware of the risks. What looked cool, dodgy,
- outrageous a while back could look antique and stupid now, more
- like a Monty Python skit. "The parody aspects of it are
- overwhelming," Keith admits. "It'll kill the music, you know?"
- Watching the Stones take their chances with all this--for
- revenue, for glory and for something more--has become a new
- part of the show. They could become what they used to mock.
- </p>
- <p> What will save them is that in a positive way, in a way that
- rock was never expected to tolerate, they are acting their age.
- The fan keeps coming back to Slipping Away and thinks about the
- deaths in the band family. There was, famously, the passing of
- Brian Jones, one of the formative members and chief sybarites,
- overdosed in 1969, found dead floating in his swimming pool. And
- more recently and just as crucially, there was Ian Stewart, the
- keyboard player, who died of a heart attack in 1985.
- </p>
- <p> "That was probably the final nail," says Keith. "That really
- took the glue and the heart out of us all. It has taken us this
- long to reconcile being able to put the Stones together without
- him. Nobody knows much about Stu out there, but to the boys in
- the band, the Stones was his band. He was a real taskmaster,
- strictly rhythm and blues, jazz. You could see his face when you
- were writing, and if it sounded like a pop song, you knew he was
- cursing under his breath. In a way, we're all still working for
- Stu."
- </p>
- <p> Easy to imagine Stewart smiling over Slipping Away. Easy,
- too, to hear such a stalwart pro lose patience with all this
- fretting about age and nostalgia. That may be the better way.
- Play the music, keep it up front and don't sweat the future.
- "Talent will survive," says Aretha Franklin, who mounted a
- successful tour herself this summer. "People with true talents
- and gifts will stand the test of longevity, with good business
- management." Right. Leave the fretting to everyone else. There
- is, indeed, a good measure of concern to go around.
- </p>
- <p> Even Jagger, when pressed, can come out with an observation,
- characteristically jaded and spoken like rock's foremost
- mandarin. "There's not a lot in rock that is new," he says.
- "It's the same kind of chord sequences and the same kind of
- rhythm references and the same recycling of subject matter. But
- I don't think it's a problem. I mean, traditional musical forms
- like folk music in three chords or blues are endearing to
- Americans. They find some comfort in them."
- </p>
- <p> Neil Young, who has a new album coming out in October, isn't
- bothered about restrictions of form, or of age. "Rock 'n' roll
- is about life, and age is a state of mind," he says. "The
- music's still wide open. All you need is the nerve, the nerve to
- do what you want to do." It takes more than nerve, though, to
- get played on the radio. Ken Barnes, editor of the industry
- trade magazine Radio & Records, figures that at least 40% of
- what is available to the whole American radio audience is
- "classic" or "oldies" rock. Demographics restrict station
- playlists and tie up formats; besides, as Barnes puts it, "the
- sheer cultural weight of what we're now calling classic rock is
- somewhat stifling."
- </p>
- <p> Rock's been a megabusiness for much of its adult life. In
- 1973 there was $2 billion worth of record and tape sales in the
- U.S.; in 1988 total sales (including CDs) were $6.2 billion.
- Bucks like that encourage uncivil marriages of commerce and
- creativity such as tour sponsorship (the Stones are going out
- under the aegis of MTV and Budweiser--careful driving home
- from the show, now) while discouraging the innovation, the
- sheer recklessness, that rock music needs in abundance.
- </p>
- <p> Legends are tough to fight; legends with fat wallets become
- moving targets. "I grew up on most of these people. But I don't
- really like what a lot of them are doing anymore," says Perry
- Farrell of the cutting-edge Los Angeles band Jane's Addiction.
- "A lot of bands are willing to be commercial or a commodity.
- It's kind of like a drug problem. I think rock 'n' roll has
- money in its veins."
- </p>
- <p> Peter Case, a wondrous songwriter and singer whose recent
- album The Man with the Blue Postmodern Fragmented
- Neo-Traditionalist Guitar is good enough to carry like a
- talisman into the uncertainties of the '90s, sees the
- difficulty in broader terms. "Rock 'n' roll has just become a
- new form of Disneyland," he says. "The whole thing has got
- mythologized to the point where it's just a bunch of rubbish."
- Greil Marcus, who writes formidably on popular and radical
- culture (the recent Lipstick Traces), talks about the "suicidal
- nostalgia" surrounding a lot of contemporary music: "People have
- been sold a bill of goods about the '60s, as if it were some
- kind of social Golden Age, when there was no Viet Nam, no
- social conflict. There weren't any Negroes, nothing bad
- happened. You have Woodstock, but you don't have the war. You
- have Jim Morrison as some image of sexual nirvana, but you don't
- have Janis Joplin for the miserable junkie she was. But Dylan,
- the Beatles, Aretha, the Stones, all the good music cannot be
- separated from the fear and the terror that people were
- feeling."
- </p>
- <p> What matters is that the best of the music--and the Stones
- made a fair portion of it--blowtorches nostalgia away,
- enlarging the memory, terror and all. The music reasserts
- history, not sentiment, and makes the same tough demands on
- head and heart as more traditional literature. Says the writer
- and essayist Steve Erickson: "Rock displaced the impact of
- American fiction because it wasn't afraid to believe in itself."
- </p>
- <p> As some of the greatest American novels of the past
- quarter-century, Erickson would put up Blonde on Blonde, Frank
- Sinatra's Where Are You, Little Richard's Grooviest Seventeen
- Original Hits, Springsteen's The River and Marvin Gaye's What's
- Going On. And anyone who's scandalized by such an idea...well, they just haven't been listening. Try this simple test at
- home. Ask what made more sense to your life: any novel by V.S.
- Naipaul or any record by Bob Dylan. Any voters for Naipaul
- probably wouldn't have read this far.
- </p>
- <p> Now maybe rap is shaking and shaping different lives the
- same way. It has some of that same risky, visionary power. "Rap
- today is what lyrical rock 'n' roll was in the '60s," Neil
- Young says. "The message is really important, and it's a rebirth
- of language," says Peter Case. All right. History will see to
- that.
- </p>
- <p> What's happened already, and a fair, far time ago, is still
- happening too. There was never any cardinal rule about rock--that was its only cardinal rule--and it can't be written off
- or knocked off because, from its sheer quality and audacity, it
- has persisted. No rules, no predictable half-life. Rock may
- have become Big Business, but it still has no set agenda and no
- fixed address. Lots of names, lots of labels, lots of styles,
- and by now lots of history, some of it even proud.
- </p>
- <p> But despite everything, it still can't be tightly classified
- or tied down. It's still a cultural orphan, hiding out on the
- far end of respectability: it has age, but it has no home. Or,
- as the greatest rock writer of all put it, splitting the
- distinction like an atom, no direction home. Like a complete
- unknown. Like a rolling stone.
- </p>
- <p> Caps on those last two words at any fan's discretion.
- </p>
- <p>-- Elizabeth L. Bland/New York and Denise Worrell/Los Angeles
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-