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Re: Laurie Anderson writes:

Posted: 01 Nov 2013 08:17
by arjan
iaredatsun wrote:Laurie Anderson writes
Thanks for that. Guess we were all hoping Laurie would write something, but I could not begin to expect her to do it so soon after Lou's passing. Great words.

Re: Lou Reed is dead

Posted: 01 Nov 2013 09:08
by DavidH
So, it's been a few days, and I haven't really felt like posting anywhere about this before, but think I should do it now. I don't need to say anything about what I feel about Lou that you can't guess from the fact I post here. I found out the news browsing here Monday morning (Australian time), and have been listening to Lou and the Velvets all week.

I think what hurts most is that despite his age, until he was really hit with bad health recently, he was still a vital creative force, still annoying people and being 'Lou'. I actually enjoyed his collaboration with Metallica - partly because I've been a Metallica fan for a long time, but haven't followed them for a while. Lulu gave me an excuse to delve back in to that world. I appreciated the perversity of the whole exercise, for both sides, and felt joyful that I could get a glimpse into what it would have been like to be around when Metal Machine Music was released.

The world won't be the same without that constant threat of something outrageous coming from him.

Re: Lou Reed is dead

Posted: 01 Nov 2013 14:36
by lurid
DavidH wrote: The world won't be the same without that constant threat of something outrageous coming from him.
I agree 100% - the world is a poorer place without Lou. It's maybe appropriate in an odd way that his last commercially released output was Lulu, reviled by both Lou and Metallica fans and generally panned in the press. His very last "f*** you all" statement..... and I can just hear him saying "but it's the best thing I've ever done!".

Re: Lou Reed is dead

Posted: 03 Nov 2013 20:27
by django70
Something I wrote on my FB page:

I remember many years ago, a dear person Louise, took me on the LIRR. We went to the beach on Long Island. The power of the ocean was incredible, just as she was.Nothing but waves crashing in, as far as the eye could see. A sense of rapture. I felt insignifigent in the most wonderful cleansing way. Something that was so much bigger than me. There really is a song that comes off the wind that rolls down by the sea. I picture Lou Reed so many years ago on that beach, capturing that song and writing it down many times. Then rolling those pieces of paper up and filling thousands of bottles, tossing each one out into the waves.Personal notes that would hopefully reach the right person somewhere all alone. I was one of the lost kids that got one of those bottles. The songs in that bottle sustained me to no end. Some people have religion. I have a hard time with a god that helps a little old lady find a car with her favorite color while a little girl whose smile lit up a room is found raped and murdered in a ditch. Discarded like rubbish. A New York City rock and roll band was my salvation. I never felt alone with those songs and I am certain I would have killed myself as a teenager if I did not have them. A old friend that I never met, they let me know that it could be all right. As life progressed they were like a secret handshake that informed friendships. If you were a fan of Lou, chances are there was a lot of common ground that was shared between us. I've spoken to many others who felt the same way.Almost 2 decades in NYC, many life experiences and most of all so many amazing people were brought to me as a direct result of them. Now so much older those songs still mean just as much. Sounds kind of crazy...but not, right? You never do forget your first love.

Thanks Lou, Leigh Zurek

Re: Lou Reed is dead

Posted: 04 Nov 2013 14:17
by schnittstelle
POSTSCRIPT

LOU REED
BY PATTI SMITH

On Sunday morning, I rose early. I had decided the night before to go to the ocean, so I slipped a book and a bottle of water into a sack and caught a ride to Rockaway Beach. It felt like a significant date, but I failed to conjure anything specific. The beach was empty, and, with the anniversary of Hurricane Sandy looming, the quiet sea seemed to embody the contradictory truth of nature. I stood there for a while, tracing the path of a low-flying plane, when I received a text message from my daughter, Jesse. Lou Reed was dead. I flinched and took a deep breath. I had seen him with his wife, Laurie, in the city recently, and I?d sensed that he was ill. A weariness shadowed her customary brightness. When Lou said goodbye, his dark eyes seemed to contain an infinite and benevolent sadness.

I met Lou at Max?s Kansas City in 1970. The Velvet Underground played two sets a night for several weeks that summer. The critic and scholar Donald Lyons was shocked that I had never seen them, and he escorted me upstairs for the second set of their first night. I loved to dance, and you could dance for hours to the music of the Velvet Underground. A dissonant surf doo-wop drone allowing you to move very fast or very slow. It was my late and revelatory introduction to ?Sister Ray.?

Within a few years, in that same room upstairs at Max?s, Lenny Kaye, Richard Sohl, and I presented our own land of a thousand dances. Lou would often stop by to see what we were up to. A complicated man, he encouraged our efforts, then turned and provoked me like a Machiavellian schoolboy. I would try to steer clear of him, but, catlike, he would suddenly reappear, and disarm me with some Delmore Schwartz line about love or courage. I didn?t understand his erratic behavior or the intensity of his moods, which shifted, like his speech patterns, from speedy to laconic. But I understood his devotion to poetry and the transporting quality of his performances. He had black eyes, black T-shirt, pale skin. He was curious, sometimes suspicious, a voracious reader, and a sonic explorer. An obscure guitar pedal was for him another kind of poem. He was our connection to the infamous air of the Factory. He had made Edie Sedgwick dance. Andy Warhol whispered in his ear. Lou brought the sensibilities of art and literature into his music. He was our generation?s New York poet, championing its misfits as Whitman had championed its workingman and Lorca its persecuted.

As my band evolved and covered his songs, Lou bestowed his blessings. Toward the end of the seventies, I was preparing to leave the city for Detroit when I bumped into him by the elevator in the old Gramercy Park Hotel. I was carrying a book of poems by Rupert Brooke. He took the book out of my hand and we looked at the poet?s photograph together. So beautiful, he said, so sad. It was a moment of complete peace.

As news of Lou?s death spread, a rippling sensation mounted, then burst, filling the atmosphere with hyperkinetic energy. Scores of messages found their way to me. A call from Sam Shepard, driving a truck through Kentucky. A modest Japanese photographer sending a text from Tokyo??I am crying.?

As I mourned by the sea, two images came to mind, watermarking the paper- colored sky. The first was the face of his wife, Laurie. She was his mirror; in her eyes you can see his kindness, sincerity, and empathy. The second was the ?great big clipper ship? that he longed to board, from the lyrics of his masterpiece, ?Heroin.? I envisioned it waiting for him beneath the constellation formed by the souls of the poets he so wished to join. Before I slept, I searched for the significance of the date?October 27th?and found it to be the birthday of both Dylan Thomas and Sylvia Plath. Lou had chosen the perfect day to set sail?the day of poets, on Sunday morning, the world behind him. ?

http://www.newyorker.com/talk/2013/11/1 ... l_tablet_t

Re: Lou Reed is dead

Posted: 04 Nov 2013 16:54
by bleach
Thanks schnittstelle, thats a beautiful piece of writing. As an aside if anyone here hasn't read 'Just Kids' its great - a powerful & poignant tale of NYC bohemian life.

"Before I slept, I searched for the significance of the date?October 27th?and found it to be the birthday of both Dylan Thomas and Sylvia Plath. Lou had chosen the perfect day to set sail?the day of poets, on Sunday morning, the world behind him."

I must have read 30+ pieces of writing on Lous death and only Patti makes the poetry connection that Lou died on Thomas & Plath's birthdays. Well spotted Patti.

Re: Lou Reed is dead

Posted: 06 Nov 2013 23:49
by Warlock

Re: Lou Reed is dead

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 09:38
by threechordwonder
Lou Reed's will ... most of his estate goes to Laurie, a portion goes to his sister and there is provision for care of his mother http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-24815926.

And 'Transformer' has crept back into the UK albums Top 40 (at number 35) http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-24794320.

Thanks for all the links friends, there are some touching eulogies surfacing.

Re: Lou Reed is dead

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 12:53
by arjan
Other tributes...

Bono: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/ ... e-20131106

Morrissey: http://true-to-you.net/morrissey_news_131027_01

Mick Rock:
Mick Rock wrote:Thus began our friendship and my fascination with his image, which we endlessly explored, weathering the slings and arrows and the outrageous antics of that crazed decade, the '70s, and beyond. He was a true gladiator, a fearless warrior and also a man of extreme kindness and compassion. If he was your friend in the fullest sense, he was your friend forever. He had a singing soul. And I miss him so much already.
Excerpt from obit in Time magazine (http://content.time.com/time/subscriber ... 61,00.html - subscriber only; also printed in the Nov 11 issue).

Re: Lou Reed is dead

Posted: 07 Nov 2013 13:17
by arjan
threechordwonder wrote:And 'Transformer' has crept back into the UK albums Top 40 (at number 35)
"Perfect Day" entered the Dutch Mega Top 50 at #33 for last Saturday's list, on downloads presumably. No re-entries in the albums list, so far.