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#jocke och
slavghoul · 1 year
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At Wednesday's Grammis gala, Ghost was honoured in the Hard Rock/Metal of the Year category, and Tobias Forge is keen to point out how much the Swedish award means to him - while at the same time thinking that others who have not been honoured deserve it more.
"It actually means much, much more than people might think. Now that I get it a fourth time, it means a lot. I am very happy. For me and everyone who has been involved in the work, it is a huge recognition, that what we have done has gained some kind of metric significance," says Tobias Forge.
Ghost were nominated in three categories, but lost out to Tove Lo in both Album of the Year and Artist of the Year. To accept the award for Hard Rock/Metal of the Year, the singer brought his collaborators on stage, including producer Klas Åhlund and songwriters Vincent Pontare and Salem Al Fakir. However, one of the songwriters on his latest album Impera was absent - Kent's former frontman Joakim Berg.
"I love Jocke, and I love Kent. I think he's a great songwriter, and a great person. I wish he was here tonight, I missed him tonight, it would have been nice if he had been here to share it. I tried to get everyone involved," says Tobias Forge after the gala and continues: "It is an honour to work with someone like Jocke."
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I accidentally reset all youtube history on my ipad so now my recommendations is fucked. Please I do not want to watch jlc or jocke och jonna I am not 13
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Kulturtältet på Mat & Ölfestivalen
Vi kommer att bjuda på mycket härlig levande musik på Mat & ölfestival Kävlinge den 3 och 4 maj. I det tält som kallas Kulturtältet kommer det att bli jazz, blues, trubadurer, stand up och “dynamisk americana”. Ingrid Savbrant trio, Sigvard & The Bonewhispers, Jocke Lantz trio. Jazztrio, Tommy Lindskog och Olof Samuelsson, Stand up med Sandra Westin-Blomberg, Hanna K Mölstad m.fl stay…
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28th March 2024.
𝐓𝐡𝐮𝐫𝐬𝐝𝐚𝐲 𝟐𝟖𝐭𝐡 𝐌𝐚𝐫𝐜𝐡 𝟏𝟗𝟕𝟒. On the junior page of the Heywood Advertiser, Ten year old Ellen Douglas thought that the best music of all was Lena Zavaroni's music.
𝐒𝐮𝐧𝐝𝐚𝐲 𝟐𝟖𝐭𝐡 𝐌𝐚𝐫𝐜𝐡 𝟏𝟗𝟕𝟔. Lena told the Sunday Mirror what she was sending to her mother for Mothering Sunday.
𝐒𝐚𝐭𝐮𝐫𝐝𝐚𝐲 𝟐𝟖𝐭𝐡 𝐌𝐚𝐫𝐜𝐡 𝟏𝟗𝟖𝟏. Music Week reported that Lena had been signed to President Records.
𝐓𝐡𝐮𝐫𝐬𝐝𝐚𝐲 𝟐𝟖𝐭𝐡 𝐌𝐚𝐫𝐜𝐡 𝟏𝟗𝟖𝟓. The weekly newspapers listed Lena's appearance in A Royal Night Of One Hundred Stars on Sunday night.
𝐒𝐚𝐭𝐮𝐫𝐝𝐚𝐲 𝟐𝟖𝐭𝐡 𝐌𝐚𝐫𝐜𝐡 𝟏𝟗𝟖𝟕. Lena recorded her part in Blankety Blank, broadcast on BBC 1, Friday 18th September.
𝐓𝐮𝐞𝐬𝐝𝐚𝐲 𝟐𝟖𝐭𝐡 𝐌𝐚𝐫𝐜𝐡 𝟏𝟗𝟖𝟗. In the Daily Record, Lena’s family denied claims that she was going to marry Peter Wiltshire.
Lena's family denying any knowledge of anything wasn't news, it was their response to anything and everything.
𝐒𝐚𝐭𝐮𝐫𝐝𝐚𝐲 𝟐𝟖𝐭𝐡 𝐌𝐚𝐫𝐜𝐡 𝟏𝟗𝟗𝟖. The Daily Record reviewed Och Around The Clock, the history of "Jock Rock", saying that even obscure acts like Lena Zavaroni got a mention at 40:55 and 41:30.
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importanttragedyfan · 7 months
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Lars Winnerbäck och Jocke Berg på Aviciis arena.
Mikael vasara Spotify
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mrchiipchrome · 7 months
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Life was so much easier when I was watching jocke och jonna try American candies
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pappatarzansblogg · 8 months
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Flashback: Alanya, Turkiet
Men säg god dag då, nu var det dags för tidsmaskinen att ta oss tillbaka till 2001. Detta handlar om en sista minuten resa jag åkte iväg på med min vän Jocke och hans dåvarande flickvän Mi, och den flygande mattan tog oss ända till Turkiet! Denna resa utspelade sig bara några veckor innan jag skulle påbörja min tjänstgöring inom Försvarsmakten för att sedan åka vidare till krigsdrabbade Kosovo i…
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danjalkanani · 10 months
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bookio · 2 years
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Come and involve me, you bastard (1997) by Stefan Ekberg
Martin och Jocke are two best friends, both grew up with similar childhoods of neglectful parents. Now they're 26 and struggles to have enough money for food and rent. They spends their time trying out different scams to collect minor sums of cash - such as fake subscription services through letters (this was back when you could send money through mail) and fake charities. Even though they have the creative skills to sell trash through phone or door-to-door, the money is never enough. Even if they successfully get a bit of money, they instantly spend it on material for the next scam.
Martin, the MC and the most educated of them two, is not entirely against taking regular jobs. For the first half of the book he works as a coffee machine maintenance worker, where he mostly spends his time in an empty office waiting to be called, to then drive around and fix machines at different companies. Every day he bothers his boss about getting an upgraded workposition, and eventually lands the job as a seller, but in another town. He feels that this is an opportunity to finally get rich so he leaves Jocke behind and moves there.
There's a quick subplot in this segment, where Martin's alcholic father resurfaces and wants to have contact after spent 2 years in rehab. Dad's crying and telling his sob story to a numb Martin, who's silently reminiscing how his father used to physical abuse him. He's not going to forgive him but instead sees a chance to ask for money. His dad, desperate for forgiveness, gives him 15 000 SEK just like that, which Martin uses to drive all the way to the new city, and rent a room at a woman's villa.
Through long distance, Jocke suggest they still try to make some scam money together, in case Martin's new job doesn't work out. They come up with the idea of making a dirty book (not to be confused with erotica) as their next gig. So the plan is: Martin is to steal already written stories from dirty magazines (but change the characters names), and Jocke is to draw silhouettes based on the photos of the adult workers from said magazine. Then send the mix to a printing company, order about 10 000 copies and sell them to different local book stores and kiosks. Jocke manage to contact serval stores, and there's definitely an interest but Martin never finds time to put 100% effort into it. Instead he tries to write his own dirty stories, while driving around trying to sell coffee machines. His stories are based on women he has shallow encounters with or see randomly on the street. It's quite creepy tbh. Like fanfiction.
We get to witness Martin's coffee machine selling skills at various companies, and it's quite obvious the product is not very attractive. The businesses in this town are too small to be in need of such big complicated machines in their lunch rooms.
After weeks of running around trying to sell, Martin goes to a bank to collect his monthly pay, only to discover - there is none! His boss says (on the phone?) that this position is a comissioned job, he has to sell at least ONE machine to be accessed payment.
Desperate and scared of going broke, he successfully gets a quick buck lifting boxes onto a ship at the nearby harbor. He brags to Jocke that this might be his new job, instead of selling machines. But the harbor never needs his services again after that. He however finds a new money opportunity with his landlord. She aims to redesign the place for a future Bed & Breakfast and smalltalks with him about it, saying it will cost 17 000 SEK to hire people to complete this transformation. He offers to help and she cooks lunch for them both, unknowingly that she'll now be included in his dirty stories.
He takes the liberty to fix and set up the wallpaper in every room of the house when she's not home (without asking), bragging to Jocke on the phone about how he'll soon have 17 000 SEK in his pocket. After he's done, it takes a couple days before their schedule opens up for him and the landlady to actually cross paths again (he still trying to sell machines) and when they do meet, she's insanely grateful. She hugs him and will prepare a huge dinner for them, making Martin think that he might be okay to even get into a relationship with this woman, to live there rent free and earn money with her future bed & breakfast.
But all of this daydreaming immediately shatters when she exclaims "Thanks to you i saved 17 000 SEK!". He quickly realizes that she never intended to pay him (she didn't even ask him to help tbh). To save his pride, he tries to hint that he wants something sexual as thanks, like his "fanfiction" about her. But his attempts are futile as she has no interest for him in that way. The only physical contact he gets is a sympathetic comforting pat on the cheek (face).
Jocke calls and tries to get Martin to move back home again, mostly because he's lonely but also because it's hard scamming without his wingman. So with his last money, Martin says "fuck it" and buys a wholesale stock of shady candles whose packaging says 100% stearic candle wax, but is actually made of cheap paraffin. He drives all the way home, leaving the town of oppurtunities behind.
Even though i didn't like Martin's personality, i did find it entertaining to read how his character was motivated to constantly get into all these strange situations in hunt for financial freedom. But he would always end up making bad decisions - everytime something went well for him, like getting a large sum of money from any of the scams, he didn't save any of it! Instead he'd spend it on the next idea and next, even if it was obviously something that wouldn't actually profit.
It was exciting following the different ways they tried getting money, things that wouldn't work today! Like mailing letters to gas stations lying that the machine ate their money and get easily comped for it. Or pretending to be a charity caller on the phone, and give them his own bank account number for transactions. The guys even installed serval gumball machines around town, which they spent way too much money fixing up, transport and refill, only to suffer big financial loss on it.
I didn't mention it before, but one of the creepiest things with Martin beside writing dirty stories about women he just met, is throughout the book, he stalks his high school sweetheart. He uses an old shirt she once wore (she forgot it at his parents place once) to masturbate - which means, everytime he moved, the shirt got brought with? Ew! Not only that, she was 16 when they hung out. That was 10 years ago! This 26 year man sniffing a then 16 year old's shirt is really.. vile! He even makes time in his schedule to drive up to her house, where she now as an adult lives with her husband and child. He has a specific bush that he crawls into to watch their windows and spy on them. Even calling their phone only to hang up as soon as someone answers. Martin dreams of "saving" her from that "boring normal life", which is craaazy because he has literally nothing to offer in exchange. It's too disturbing to think about.
Also, because of Martin's pent-up frustration of being used as free laborer, he sometimes enter a.. what he calls, "therapy mode", where he finds a silent place (often his car) and imagine himself going batshit crazy on people he has anger towards. This is not something neccessarily bad, since he's not actually doing anything, and i just know sometimes people find it stress-releasing to think of such things in a way to calm the mind down and stay professional. But since Martin is the MC, we the reader get to experience his "therapy modes" and it's really disturbing. Killing, r*pe threats, murder, torture, shootings etc
This story is kinda like a tragic portrait of man who keeps going around in circles without result, even though he really really wants to grow. It reminds me of Sisyphus, that guy who pushes a rock up a hill only for it to roll down again so he has to push it back up again and again. Eager to get the boulder up the top without looking for other solutions something idk. So even if the MC makes me uncomfortable, it was an interesting read. I really liked the dynamic of his best friend, another third guy joins them later on and they just seem wholesome together, pulling out the best of each other. Like the guys encourage him to stop stalking the high school sweetheart and even try to make him see that the coffee boss is taking advantage of him and so on. 3/5 stars
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Occupation: Influencer. How to make a career online! (2018) by Linda Hörnfeldt
Not really a how-to book despite what the title claims. Instead it feels like a obscure 3 step work instruction manual for a new job? The intro goes into how influencer came to be on the Swedish market but then quickly goes to how important it is to build a brand so you can make money out of it. The first part is to find a nisch, or a theme for yourself. Try to stick out among all the rest, find a 'purpose' for your social media presence. They remind you that influencers can make millionss~
Second part of the book is how to connect to your audience. They want you to be personal, share your life to feel relatable. "Erase the borders between private life and worklife." (p. 61). Sell yourself through attending events, invite yourself to podcasts, commercialize yourself like the newest item. They encourage you to show your face (was this before vtubers?), claiming "Selfies get the most likes, and the youtubers who choose to look people in the eye grows the fastes." (p 76). Post or create drama to keep people intrigued and wanting to return for more updates.
The third part is heavy about collecting that sweet sweet money when grown yourself an audience. Sell ads, create products, offer web classes, hold free seminars to keep your relevance. Hold contests, giveaways and "like" lotteries for your followers. Everytime you travel, make it into a business opportunity by creating a series, like "Five best restaurants in London" or something. The furthur you go into this book, the crazier it gets. If you decide to change something with your social media or stop something, you have to tell your audience and update them about your "friendship" (p. 74) and let them take action or have an opinion about your new deal, or give the ultimatum to break up. Huh??
So make yourself a relatable person, start accepting sponsors and ads. Sell sell sell, win win win. Become a living walking ad board. At the end they lists how your social media should look like at the end of the day. Blog should have display ads. Your instagram should also have display ads, shout-outs and collabs. You should attend Podcasts and Events to sponsor yourself. You should create products for people to consume, like books, web seminars, podcasts etc. If you have a youtube, you should have sponsors and commercial ads, even in the description. That's.. INSANE.
It's also scary that the book doesn't mention the possible risks and negative impacts of this profession. Only be positive (even drama has to be spun around to make yourself look positive). Ignore haters, block them. Popularity is apparently good no matter the shape? The end disturbingly lists 3 pages full of rules for their company if you ever feel like joining. Like reading a brochure for a new workplace with suspicious malice intentions. 1/5 stars
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minkolja · 5 years
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Jag har haft nån slags kent-reunion för mig själv senaste dagarna. Detta var en av mina absoluta favoriter.
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svenskjavel · 3 years
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Trevlig Söndag för att få lite stämning kan man gå in och streama Jocke Bobergs klassiker "Mästerverk", med sådanna hits såsom "Play That Balla Trazan", "Alexander Kyckling" och "Drop It Like Its Hejsan": https://jockeboberg.bandcamp.com/album/m-sterverk
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kvetchlandia · 4 years
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Richard Meltzer     Lester Bangs Passed Out on Meltzer’s “Highly Uncomfortable Living Rm. Chair,” 104 Perry St., Apt. 4, West Village, New York City     1972
On December 14th, this December 14th, Lester Conway Bangs, while probably not the greatest writer of his generation, arguably its most vital so far to die, would have been 36. Haunted and driven by demons, so- called, a cheerless many of whom/what/ which — or their kindred ilk — he directly sought, found cum stumbled upon, or was inadvertently ensnared by on the demon picnic grounds of Rock and Roll, he never made it to 34.
Following the lead of a handful of babes in the rock-critical woods, one of which I'll admit (if sometimes reluctantly) to having been. Bangs at the dawn of the seventies played as prominent a role as anyone in both expanding the expressive boundaries of rockwriting as a form and giving it a voice that played the newer, more mannered and cautious, mass-market rockmags like Rolling Stone and Creem — the latter of which he even edited for awhile — as on the dime as it had played the catch-as-catch-can, limited-edition fanzines whence it came. Though he also served as the burgeoning genre’s most prolific scribbler, a mission he sustained with relative ease for the bulk of his days, it is to the man’s lasting credit that he rarely delivered copy on anyone’s dotted line. In fact, he probably “got away with more’’ in major- publication print than all his rockwrite brethren combined, conceivably (however) because it merely simplified matters to have a single Designated Outlaw, one entrusted with a blanche enough carte — and unmonitored options galore — to spike with “authenticity ’’ a rock-media stew of bogus Freedom and ersatz Candor.
Retrospectively cliched or not, there was an existential purity to the sheer commitment evinced by Lester’s prolonged wallow in (and about) the rock- and-roll Thing-in-itself. It was, in many ways, the critical headbang to end all critical headbangs; it would be hard to even imagine, for instance, a professional art-film bozo, a jock-sniffing sports jerk, or a food-review lunatic more uninsulatedy gung-ho vis-a-vis x — either as primary experience or typewrite wankery. His patented shameless multipage gush, coupled with an unswerving advocacy of certain conspicuously over- the-top rock genera (Velvet Underground offshoots; Heavy Metal; Punk Rock), made him a must-read favorite with both cognoscenti and dipshits alike, and he came as close to encountering idolatry per se as any non-musician in R&R. A good deal of which — natch —could not help hitting the self-consciousness fan, but while a man’s life was ultimately undone in the process (“I’m Lester — buy me a drink! ’’), the integrity of his art/craft was essentially unaffected. For, while he might have been a tad too glib-messianic those last couple years, he was by no stretch of things an opportunist, never really giving a hoot for what in squaresville would be known as a career. (Or, perhaps, unlike his role model Kerouac, he simply didn’t live long enough for that, too, to be strenuously tested.)
In any event: dead, cremated, literal ashes. California born (Escondido ’48), bred (El Cajon, ages 9-23), and traveled (I first hung with him in San Francisco, last in L.A.), Lester bought the big one on the opposite coast — his final home, the fabled Apple — April 30/82, ostensibly from a hefty pull of darvon employed, in lieu of aspirin, to placate the flu. Since his death, variously interpreted as a mile-radius teardrop’s once-in-a- lifetime terminal burst, a joke and a half on both himself and his precious chosen whole damn Thing, and — by occasional uncouth louts — the final glorious triumph of his excess, the spectrum of Bangs-in-ongoing-print has dwindled from monochromatic /sparse to colorless/ nonexistent. Of the two books in his name which appeared during his lifetime, quasi-coffeetable numbers on Blondie and Rod Stewart, neither a particularly representative Lestorian effort (or even particularly good: the former admittedly hacked out “in two days on speed,’’ and looking it, i. e., ad hoc and forced; the latter disowned as a clumsy, if innocent, foray into “writing as whoring’’), both are either out of print — officially — or on the back burner of barely having ever been in same, at least as regards this coast, where I’ve yet to see either in bookstore one. Nor have two posthumous whatsems. Rock Gomorrah, cowritten (early ’82) with L.A.’s Michael Ochs, and a projected collection of unpublished fragments scrounged from Bangs’s apartment a day or two after his death, gotten more than inches off the publishing ground — the former for reasons which if herein revealed would get me sued but good, the latter because, in the words of editor Greil Marcus, “the stuff is less tractable than I thought at less than 5000 words or so.’’ Also stalled, and/or abandoned (and/ or nonspecific pipedreams to begin with) : all known plans to reissue out-of- print Live Wire LP Jook Savages on the Brazos, recorded, Austin, TX, Dec. ’80, by Lester Bangs & the Delinquents, lyrics and vocals by guess who. In fact, the only anything by L. C. Bangs readily available where availables are sold is his liner copy for The Fugs Greatest Hits Vol. I, released by PVC/Adelphi some months after he’d croaked, for which he (or rather his atoms) later copped a Grammy nomination, and for which, reliable word has it, he never was paid.
Well, I’ve been proven wrong; it hasn’t been easy recollecting Lester in even half a toto in so much tranquility. Didn’t seem like such a bad idea back when obits were appearing left & right and at least two- thirds of ’em smacked of revisionism at its well-intentioned worst; having ridden the range with the guy, having been as intimate with his daytime/nighttime revealed essence — I would bet my boots — as anyone in or out of various possible beds with him, I had fiery goddam galaxies to say in his behalf that were simply not being said, at least not in print by his designated peers; and, although my no longer living in New York couldn’t help but delay my shot, remote and after-the-fact seemed like the ticket, y’know anyway, for some major necessary rerevision.
But here it is two, two and a half years gone & more, and whuddaya know if all the raw goddam pain (at the loss of, yes, a brother) and jagged fucking anger (at a waste of life, life-force, and relative inconsequential like “talent” and “genius”), an unbeatable duo which for weeks, weeks, months gave the Lester totality so cosmic a shape, scale and intensity, have by their own inevitable burnout given way to the contemplation of standard-issue mere data, of the skeletal remains of a larger-than-life life which have come to make sense (or not) in too neat, too linear, a manner. Well — hey — fuggit: Even if grocery lists, chalk diagrams and hokey storytellin’ are the forms ongoing life-as-life has imposed on the mission, there’s still a heap of essential Lester information that could use, uh, exposure to printed-page light.
What too many write-biz intimates sought to do in the wake of his death was debunk the Lester Legend (solely) by reciting evidence that his bark was worse than his bite. While I’m sure he’d have “wanted it done” (i.e., have the saga-as- litany scraped of treacherous barnacles, or at least of their treacherous vogue), I can’t imagine the projected post-life intent of such a wish as in any way entailing cosmetic overhaul, especially in the service of moral/experiential object lessonhood. Lester’s day-to-day transaction with post-adolescent life-as- dealt was — let’s be conservative — 94 % anything but pretty. If he’d have wanted his entire whatsis to serve up viable scenarios for intimates and non-intimates alike (gee, would the Pope prefer to be Catholic?), there’s no way the deal’d come out even provisionally Lester-functional without interested non-intimates having retroactive access to as hefty an eyeful of the not-so-pretty — in all its hideous, non-Clearasiled blah blah blah — as intimates galore regularly managed to cop and, in their various personal ways, have already learned from. To deglorify an earlier incarnation of shit (which the man himself was clearly hellbent on doing in his waning days on earth) you’ve got to at least speak its name — loudly! — for the whole entire planet: c’mon now, one & all. A solemn responsibility (I call it) which, credibly/incredibly, the smelly sumbitch’s closest associates have, to this day, all but refused to consider.
To wit: For every time anyone saw the defanged, declawed Lester teddy bear rear its cuddly li’l head (see obits 2, 3, 5 & 7) the man was uncountable times the asshole, the buffoon, the sodden tyrant; been those things myself — in semi-prior lifetimes — so I know. Back in ’73, for inst, the soon-to-be-dead Lillian Roxon gushed shameless love for the s.o.b., in New York on Creem business, ordering up a Lester button and leaving it in his hotel box; response to this purest of offerings was “What’s that fat cunt want from me?” About a year later I get this call from Nick Tosches requesting that I please take Lester, who’d shown up at his door on acid, “off my hands”; took him to a party at John Wilcock’s place, during which he verbally brutalized Wilcock’s wife (in green Fingernails) for being a “hooker,” snapped at an affable Ed Sanders for being “the only alkie in the counter-culture,” and had nothing more to say to Les Levine’s Asian girlfriend (wife?) than “Yoko is a lousy gook”; further into the night, at Vincent’s Clam Bar in Little Italy, he literally bellowed ( more than twice), “There’s a lotta tackin’ wops in this joint.” And how can I forget the way he treated me and Nick, his closest approximate friends f'r crying out loud, as our wonderful editor while at Creem? He’d call us each up at 3 a.m. to urgently solicit various (rather specific) reams of pap, needed via Special D toot sweet; we’d climb outta bed, peck away bleary-eyed to whack out the closest possible takes on what he’d claimed he wanted, whereupon he’d reject ’em with a vengeance (“I won’t print beatnik shit”), then run thoroughly like-minded i. somethings — under his own byline — or with our words, usually verbatim, laced throughout. Just a few “examples,” dunno if they sound like big stuff or small, in any event typical Lester, with plenty, plenty more where they came from — y’know times n-plus-many.
In spite of such anticommunal upchuck, or quite possibly because of it — post-adolescent of a post-summer-of-love feather & all that — I did have deep affection for the bastard during my final years in New York; he could really piss me off (and I, I’m assuming, him) but bygones were always eventually ditto. In those days I generally shared his affection for The Edge, and might even’ve gone extreme slightly ahead of him; in January ’72, this is true, he actually dubbed me “the Neal Cassady of rock and roll.” But by fall ’75, when I split New York to at least simulate an escape from the Frantic and Hyper (and he subsequently arrived, ostensibly to embrace same), I was feeling the first stirrings of apprehension re my own prolonged massive intake of Edge Substances (emotional, cultural, but above all chemical) and was on the verge of an early series of attempts to, y’know, cut down, to maybe get off my collision course with all sorts of walls, both metaphoric and real. Lester, meantime, seemed on a rapid upswing in the intake dept.; what had so far served as mere horizon or frame for his trip, or at most been its semi-essential fuel, was now lunging headlong for the foreground of his life ... or should we call it the twin foregrounds (life as Mythic Construct; life as physical/emotional/cultural Hard Mundane Reality).
Hey, the guy was beginning to scare me. Certainly as an advanced — or rapidly advancing — version of what I no longer wanted to be and could (possibly) imagine once again becoming, but more as this vivid, palpable spectre of specialized human decomp not just out there but right there: a pal & a buddy headed (willy nilly?) for the sewer. From late ’75 immediately onward, on those unlikely occasions when separate coasts — underscored by far fewer rockwrite junkets — any longer allowed for it, I was usually unable to handle being in the same room with him, knowing I’d have to witness whole new increments of what could really no longer be passed off as anything but (gosh) misery and (dig it) horror. Where in the earlier ’70s it was almost cute — once in a while — the way Lester would stumble into classic self- directed drunk jokes (like the time he called me from the Detroit airport to tell me he was headed for an Alice Cooper show in London, presumably England, only he’d drunkenly got it wrong and was on his way to London, Ontario), there was this half-week in ’79, for inst, during which he hung out at Michael Ochs’s house in Venice with no daily design but to get skid-row-calibre gone and stay there, that was just fucking grim. Looking an unhealthy as I’d ever seen him, basic shit-warmed over with an ngly bump on his forehead (which he claimed he was “treating with Romilar”), he refused to eat without an Occasion. When, one evening, Michael and I pretty much dragged him to a Mexican restaurant, he refused to actually step inside until he’d fortified himself with the cottons from six Benzedrex inhalers — the local pharmacist was out of Romilar — busted open on the sidewalk with a shoe.
Washing down their remnants with a Dos Equis as his enchilada sat there staring at him, he quoted (or claimed he was quoting) Sid Vicious: “Food is boring.”
So, inevitably, when Billy Altman rang me up from N.Y.Clearly on a California morn, to let me hear it straight from a friend — “instead of from a creep” — my immediate response to no more Lester, steps ahead of all the pain & anger & whut, was holy fucking shit, the fucker finally did it; it’d been in the real-world cards for long-long times for Lester to cease to be. Though even on his gonest days he was no way a classic cornball suicide-romantic — heck, I don’t really think he was all that clinically suicidal (big-sleep fantasies never overtly/covertly lured him, not even metaphorically, from the darkest sub-basement of his World of Dread; nor was Danger, though he often nonstop lived it, itself the merest tickle of a ripple of a thrill for him, a context before the fact) — he’d sure staged more corny, frightful dress rehearsals than Jim Jones plus Judy Garland (squared) for simply ending up dead.
Biggest of which I ever saw was January ’81. I’m at Nick’s place in New York, en route back to L. A. from Montreal, when who should pay a surprise visite but Mr. Bangs, cassette in hand. It’s a tape of these tracks recorded during an Austin romp I’d heard about second or third hand (he’d planned to “live there forever,” it was said, ’til a night in the local drunk tank — on top of who knows what else — totally changed his mind), and in the course of the next 12-15 hours he played it, for us and at us, many times. Also during this stretch, after boasting, rather proudly, that he no longer drank, he managed to ingest at least 36 cough- suppressant tablets (three 12-packs of Ornical — we weren’t always watching) washed down with sizable slugs of bourbon, as there was nothing else but water to wash ’em down with.
All stages of this ordeal, in which Nick and I were little more than foils for surge upon surge of what we’d come to regard as typical Lestorian bathos, were hardly bearable in the state we were in (after far too many “nights with Lester,” going back to the days when we even could dig it, we’d opted for a change to take this one straight), but the morning-after phase was literally one for the books. On the umpteenth playback of what was soon to hit the racks as the Jook Savages LP, Lester insisted that one particular vocal was pure Richard Hell (in Lester’s cosmos an a priori yay); my dogtired no-big-deal of a response was it sounded existentially neater than that, more on the order of Tom Verlaine (a Lester nuh-nuh-no). Suddenly hair-trigger sensitive — in a performance-trigger vein — he tapdanced back with “Then I might as well go sell shoes in El Cajon.” Next cut he compared himself to somebody (very contempo) else, prompting me to comment, for non-pejorative, sleep- denied better or worse, that his vocals (across the board; in general) had the same basic flavor as those on such country-western parodies as Sanders' Truckstop or the Statler Brothers’ Johnny Mack Brown High School LP. Affecting grievous offense, as if any of his b.s. actually mattered (the Lester of ’73/’74 — in any chemical state — would merely’ve giggled), he took things up a full notch of indignant/sarcastic: “Well I guess I’m just no fucking good. ”
But he wouldn’t stop playing the crap, not with every cut looming as a supercharged occasion for kneejerk call- and-response, a challenge for him to goad Nick and/or me into goading him, in turn, into mock-self-deprecatory one-liners ad nauseum — a dress rehearsal, as it were — his puke-stained sweater seemed appropriate — for his triumphant appearance on Johnny Carson, which he had no doubt the worldwide success of his Blondie book would imminently require . . . along with a shot of his mug, cleanshaven, on the cover of People (over which he whined “fear” of besmirched personal image).
Ultimately Nick and I, weary of further compliance in so shoddy an interpersonal number, old buddy or not (and/or old bud in particular), found ourselves laughing in his face; enough was enough, and the sight of this bumbling mammal going gaga for an audience of two-who-knew- better was kind of otherworldly amusing. The object of our yuks, however, took it as us laughing with him: Great Moments in Standup/Audience Rapport! Swollen with illusory (or whatever) whacked-out self, Lester then proceeded to announce his program: (1) to save Rock & Roll; (2) to become president (presumably Oi the U.S. of A.); (3) to move to England and in turn save their Rock & Roll. As mere dipshit goals, nos. 1 and 3 meant topically little to either of us — geez, we’d all but buried the Anglo-Am mainstream as even an idle, y’know, sometime hobby or whatnot — but (2) hit us firmly, instantaneously, in the breastplate.
Lester’s neurons, no recent model of health to begin with, had made the short-circuit of Lester Bangs . . . [tenor saxophonist] Lester Young . . . (latter's nickname] Pres . . . Pres/U.S.A. per se!!!
Guffaw, guffaw — we guffawed — though I guess we could've gasped (or shuddered). Then: a heavy silence, as cosmic (or whatever) as it was awkward, filled presently by the man himself:
"Hey! I'm gonna buy some import albums! I'll get a whore I know to lend me her charge card! Cab fare too!" And he was off; no amiable nudging, no “Get the fuck out of here" could take the place of timeless vinyl hunger. Gone at last — and we gave him (in all solemn, empirical, non-jive reckoning) six months to live.
But of course he fooled us, by (nearly) a whole damn calendar year. Surprise, surprise: but an even bigger surprise was the extent to which he managed to actually turn things around — well, almost — during that extra annum, especially during its. and his. final months. Not only was he still among the living, not only did he no longer seem conspicuously earmarked for premature exit — the Lester with whom I spent a rather refreshing week in February '82 gave every indication of having already gone beyond mere survival (as an issue) and appeared, astonishingly, to be thriving on the theme.
In L.A. following his mother's eventually fatal stroke and staying with his 56-year-old half-brother in Studio City, he accompanied me one night to a low-stakes poker game attended by members of the Blasters, the perfect setup, you’d figure, for Lester to revert to type. But no, he just minimally fun-&- games'ed it like anyone else — no lookin' for opportunities to “be Lester," no showing off for rock-roll peers either verbally or intakewise. no diving for the evening's jugular and letting 'er rip — and after two beers (!). without so much as a grimace, he declared he’d had enough. Postgame he engaged Phil Alvin in a lively musical dialogue, but at no point did fightin' words fill the air, or were axes even poised for grinding. The pair agreed to exchange tapes — a wholesome friendship in the making — and next day Lester complained (true, true) that reefer had been smoked.
As the week wore on in consistent, low- key fashion. I was struck by the fuckload of inner capacities the guy was perceptibly calling on, left, right and center, to extend his defiance of Death to the domain of just plain living, capacities I hadn't caught sensory evidence of — all previously told — for more than 11 minutes total. A far cry from anything as cheaply benign as, let's say, more frequent eruptions of "Lester washes the dishes" (see obit 04), what I got to witness was kind of on the order of a whole new Lester, one who'd finally found a non-lethal, functionally less jagged (though in no way “benign") rhythm for his life. Engaging him in tight quarters with more open-heartedness per se than I*m sure I’d ever mustered (sharing an Edge does not always make for brotherhood-by-numbers. let alone by pure, unedited inclination), I willingly submitted to his rap/rant and bought its tenor if not its verbatim transcript; by the time he returned to New York, his mother still hanging on. I’d seen and heard a New Lester series pilot that could credibly have played — prime time — on the Pro- Life Network.
For starters, he’d learned to slow down, to proceed apace through a given experience without easy reliance on everpopular on-off switches. He'd gotten far more selective about the company he kept, seeking out, for the first time in his known adult life, social interactions stressing soulwarming interpersonal comfort over thrash-trigger me-you tribulation. A good deal less insistent upon strapping each day to an emotional chopping block (as recalled, for inst, in that old chestnut of his, “I need to be in love!"), he'd begun to let his life embrace emotional motifs of greater duration and resiliency. And. as stuff like this fed back to his theoretic apparatus, even Lester's ideas (as stated) began to display an unexpected day-to-day congruity; no longer, it seemed, would he write an anti-racist wowser for the Village Voice in one breath and scream, "Fuckin’ niggers!” at Village Oldies the next. Lester-as-flux had had its thoroughly engaging run. and for this to give way to a “maturer” unpredictability was not the worst of possible outcomes.
Even the drastic reduction in Lester’s intake of physical poisons bore little trace of on-the-wagon-or-bust — y'know, as if any day, minute, second the tension of it all would cause him to snap right back with equal vengeance — particularly with its status as but part of a whole-body package that included both eating at regular intervals and a radical olfactory modification: He now took baths. (One afternoon in ’74 Nick and I met Lester at some ritzy midtown hotel. Though he’d been in the room all of an hour, the smell was like a dog had died there, and been left to rot, weeks or months before. Consequently, we vetoed his offer to call down for drinks on Creem’s tab, suggesting, to his consternation, that any dump of a bar would be more, uh, whatever. Many of his heterosex liaisons had foundered on the rocks of precisely this issue.)
In terms of cultural orientation, no longer was he monomanically enslaved to rock & roll (-or-perish). For virtually the first time since the sixties he didn’t need, burningly, brand new Big Beat LP’s in his mail slot each (and every) day; the state of the Art, wobbling on a multi-year terminal gimp, no longer served as his external psychic barometer, his armband of first-person pride (or shame); having finally produced Music of his own, to severe personal specifications (regardless of the giggles it inspired in jerks like me), he no longer needed to prove anything with it or through it. Crucially, though some would probably like to deny it. he no longer saw Rock’em-Sock'em as a viable metaphor for his (or any, kindred or otherwise) state of being, viewing it as the all too easy — and ultimately, revoltingly, unsatisfactory — crystallization of (mega-numerous) blank and scattered lives. Lester's break with rock-roll mythos as his be-all/end-all of etc., which I have no doubt (had he lived) he’d've sooner rather than later made official, was as profound, and profoundly moving, as his break with the Myth of Lester. As one committed jackass who’d made the same painful transition — goodbye, Rock-Automated Self! — I knew how tough a bond the chronically intermingled personal/cultural can be to crack (and my heart went right out to him).
It also warmed my cockles, considering his record in the mere civility dept., to see him relate (graciously) to his half- brother’s wife, this unaffectedly pretty 21- year-old rural Mexican the macho blusterer, a stuntman by trade, had recently acquired, maritally, while on location Down South. Though she knew pun near zero English, my first sight of her she was watching some random English-language crap, while hubby rested for a shoot of the Fall Guy series, on the tiny TV in her fussy suburban kitchen; materially cozy for the first time in her life, she seemed lonely, disoriented, far from home. Silent and solemn, she visibly stiffened — shyly? menially? — at the intrusion of Lester, my girlfriend Irene and me. only to be put at ease by Lester introducing us, without missing a beat, as, well, friends of the family. Like it mattered to him that she feel like family — and thus shared in all aspects of etc. — and for a moment the loneliness left her face; she smiled broadly, shook (or at least took) our hands, went back to her tube.
But what came off as so genuine when he was dealing with his family, his friends, kind of sputtered into the ether when he tried to branch it to the family of Man. Whenever he got to talkin' Hard Humanism, which had all the earmarks of being his preoccupation of (Rock- replacement) record, he’d make these broad, lecture-ish, relatively flavorless statements which often didn't wash.
Never wholly credible 'cause once again he seemed to be performing — without booze/etc. but surely with a script — he’d say thus & such about human courage and folly that not only had an artificial ring, it tended to run in direct opposition to what had clearly been his experience. Even his word choice sounded stilted, alien, not his own; when he spoke of "women" he could easily have been reading straight from a column in Cosmo.
A lot of which suggested a Lester so hellbent on being a good boy once and for all that to merely work overtime cleaning up his own act was scarcely sufficient; he had to render a transpersonal commentary that made his good intentions “universal,” even if the topical universality he’d taken an option on was simply the first he found it comfortable song-&-dancing a provisional connection to. There were moments when his bill of particulars made me uneasy, realizing that to intellectually challenge any of this would be like kicking mud on some kid’s newest/truest pastime, 'specially when it was one so socially redeeming, so non- self-destructive. one which, for all intents and purposes, I basically shared with him anyway. What really counted was the miracle of Rock Tough Guy #1, after 15 years of rocknroll plug-in and little else, during which he'd come to thread that needle upside down (and asleep), to the point (even) of smugness, flipness, pomposity, out on a goddam limb over something else: a neophyte at last! (I could dig it.)
Anyway, finally, on the last night of Lester's stay — which worked out as our last time together, period — we did something we’d previously never found the appropriate nexus for: trading rants (in earnest) with blank tapes a-rolling.
For something like five-six hours we went apeshit re such topics as: the sellouts & prejudices of mutual colleagues; novels and novelists; New York as (quite possibly) the coldest outpost on Emotional Earth; the usual standard rockish garbidge (plus some un- and some non-). We also hit on shrinks-we- have-known, with Lester's rap on this rooty-toot of a subject being the single one, from the four-and-a-half hours I’ve so far transcribed, which most tellingly nutshells the excruciating self- examination he had to've undertaken — and undergone — just to be sitting around discoursing as fluidly as he was, to’ve transcended whatever the fuck en route thereto:
“Like I went to a psychoanalyst, one in New York and one in Detroit, for a total of, I dunno, three-and-a-half years. I finally concluded, I mean yeah I’m insane, I’ve got my problems, my sicknesses are fucking me, yeah, I’m sure they both probably helped me, y’know, I know the last guy in New York, it's like everybody I know was totally appalled by my drinking and drugging, well like you, right, and everybody else had the same reaction, y’know, except my shrink. He’d say, ‘No, that's alright.’ I went out to this, he had a country retreat, a whole bunch of us would go out there on weekends. And the first time I went there like I got drunk on Friday night, and Saturday morning I got up and washed down a bottle of Romilar with a bottle of beer while sitting on a slick rock by the stream. I got this great idea for something I wanted to write, I stood up on the rock in boots like these and whoosh, went like that and smashed, see it, the scar on my nose? That's how I got it, smashed my face open.
“And he thought my druggin' and drinkin' was great, y'know? He said, in fact he kind of told me I'd be not as great of a writer if I gave all this stuff up. And I said, 'Yeah, but look at all these people, they rot away, they end up like self- parodies like Kerouac and Burroughs and all that sort of shit.' And he said. 'No. no, not everybody's like that.' I said, How could I someday be 55 years old and have to take a handful of speed to sit down at the typewriter?' Well he said, 'People do it. heh heh heh!' Well both my shrinks, especially this guy, they had real great humanist compassion and empathy and all that, but I know what both of 'em did, and in the long run in essence they were no good for me, because they were getting off on me being there. It’s like they’re so bored, one housewife alter another, 'I don’t love my husband, I don't know why.’ Then they get someone like you or I that's actually interesting, that has ideas, and so it's fun time for 'em. I mean if I hadda follow this guy’s advice I’d be dead, uh, pretty soon.”
Hmm: one effing eery end-of-quote as, alas, all is now dust — reactively acquired caution or no. Possibly possibly possibly, any tonnage of prudence would inevitably have proven insufficient for the autopilot courses he was still, evidently, all too capable of flying. Or, reversing horses and carts, maybe his tortured shell was already jus’ too beat-to-shit, with even a radical lessening in his scale of abuse being too little — archetypally — too late. And then there’s this pharmacological biz about purified cells succumbing to doses they’d have been more than up for when poison was all they knew. (And can we ignore the Wrath of Influenza?)
Even if, to some bitter-enders, his death remains as shrouded in formal “mystery” as those of Eric Dolphy and Warren G. Harding, all-of-the-above can't help but provide a not-unlikely profile of how Lester came to die. Throw in a few more mainline Causalities (cultural: rock-roll glut, esp. coupled w/ too literal an intoxication with Kerouac, Celine, et al; primalpsychological: a childhood more woeful than most, his Jehovah's Witness mom — pushing 50 when she had him — mind-setting, almost singlehandedly. a chronic “inability to cope"; geographic: the Apple, even when it wasn't absolute Edge Central, affording him. given his makeup, scant opportunity for inner peace) and you'd easily have an explanation that 'd hold up in a court of his cronies/cohorts/camp followers.
But if Lester was the pawn, victim, and (indeed) fellow traveler of such easy- Aristotelian a-implies-b, he was also, in those last fitful months, a scatterer of all such shit to the winds, a man who showed his true destiny muscle by throwing all the elements out of on-the-head mythopoetic sync just when they threatened, conspiratorily, to reduce him to merely another Jim Morrison. Jimi Hendrix. Mr. Kerouac. Screamingly, courageously, he committed himself, as wholly (really) as possible, to a counter-causal gameplan which even if flawed — and accidents, y’know, happen — did actually manage to defuse (at least where I live & breathe) the mythic oompah of any time-delayed rat-trap he may subsequently (or previously) have fallen in. If there's anything almost pleasing about the timing, the anti-drama, of Lester's death, it's the monumental Mythic Disjuncture factors he'd set in motion were thereby — implicitly, explicitly — to forever effect.
LESTER’S (WRITERLY) LEGACY — “One of rock’s most colorful characters, Bangs made his reputation as a pugnacious, participatory journalist who was not above picking fights with rock stars in pursuit of a good interview." So wrote one voice of prevailing wisdom, Patrick Goldstein, in the May 9/82 L.A. Times; nothing — latter part — could be farther from the truth. If Lester (the writer) more than once battled Lou Reed into (and beyond) the wee hours of etc., it was not to get a story, it was to live a story: to encounter all the rock-related being his writerly credentials (as a wedge) were able to afford him (as a person)'. Nor was he in any way enthralled by the sickening spectacle of stars being stars; artists, maybe, but stars, fug 'em. When he as mere citizen found himself face-to-face with the pose, pretense, and professional guardedness of such gaudy, extraneous creatures, Lester could not (for the life of him) deal with such crap but to cut right through and speak, directly, to the mere citizen in them, or (failing that) force the situation into functional self-destruct — before the fact of anything so dispassionate as actually “writing it up."
That his eventual write-ups tended to display utter contempt for the entire food chain of music-corporate life, often biting, intentionally, a grimy hand that could not’ve been more willing — his mighty Credentials & all — to feed him, heck, fatten him, was but half the take-no-shit of Lester's essential statement as a writer de rock; forcefeeding the stuff, his stuff, the stuff-as-writ, to the only marginally less corporate (or grimy) running dogs of rockwrite publishing was at least as pugnacious a gesture of this-is-what-I-am/this-is-what-I-do/take-it-or-be-fucked. Since the extent of his success in shoving it down so many otherwise unyielding editorial throats may have had less to do with his willful intent than theirs — camouflage, for inst, for their being life-deep in major-label record company pockets — its significance at this juncture is, at most, merely ironic; the reciprocal influence, in any event, of his ease at getting published upon subsequent moments of raw critical-expressive spew was procedurally nil. In fact, what may most enduringly matter about Lester's approach to his chosen profession, way ahead of dandy journalistic touchstones — "courage," “integrity,” “pride in craft" — that he ate for breakfast like so much broken glass (but which, really, you can still get from Nat Hentoff and Howard Cosell), is the “anti-professional," forcibly non-dehumanized square-one struggle he by design submitted to — and could not. with any kernel of his humanity, avoid - in order to pump out critical prose of any scale of note. (Pugnacity with form; with ritual creative context; even — especially — with roleplaying writerly/critical self.)
That he was ofttimes a great writer/critic, so-called, was but icing on the cake. That scant few others, on the hottest days of their lives, have even approached him — or particularly cared to, considering the requisite gravity and passion of the chore he’d set — probably says as much about their investment in lesser quals of cake as it does about the relative inadequacy of their writerly follow-through. Rockwriting is, and nearly always has been, the trade of simps, wimps, displaced machos, brats and saps; of, in Lester's own words, “ass-kissers of the ruling class”; of fuddy-duddy archivists with cobwebs on their specs; of pathetic idealizers of a lost youth no one has ever (even approximately) experienced or possessed; of sycophantic apologists for chi-chi trends, musical and extramusical alike, without which (so they've always claimed) “rock is dead”; of binary yes/no cheeses with the cognitive wherewithal of vinyl, shrinkwrap, the physical column- inch. Rockwritin' Lester, like anyone else in the trade, was certainly each of these things from time to time, though (probably) none of 'em, singly or in tandem, for longer than the odd off review. Sadly, though his untradelike comportment surely tantalized mere tradefolk while he lived — at least in terms of Style — and even begat a not-half-bad (early-’70s) clone in “Metal Mike" Saunders, his actual abiding sway among such clowns, beyond the occasional liftable riff, was — as it continues to be — infinitesimal.
Finally: the twin silly questions (1) where a still-living Lester might hypothetically've taken it (i.e., beyond the rockwrite fishpond) and (2) what such imaginary newstuff could/would conceivably’ve meant to his basic audience. Second one first. Okay, that Lester's rockstuff generally read so hot as personal testimony is one thing; for it to have been perceived by so many as being eminently, genuinely about something — something rather specific, in fact something "rear’ — is something else. When you get down to it, the gospel of Lester's radical about-ness rested largely on a big hunk of readerly illusion, the illusion of a functional one-on-one between the guy’s fertile imaginings and the psychic infrastructure of rock & roll as dealt; there could be harsh discordance, of course, but as long as a firm relationship could (for whatever readerly vested interest) be consistently inferred between Lester’s mindgames and rock’s g-g-games per se, you at least had the stamp of a viable — if totally simulated — one-on-one. But, really/truly, while Lester’s psychic playground may surely have been one drastically twisted maze, its actual correspondence (sympathetic, hostile, whatever) to rock's own labyrinth, one so airtight and dank as to make his seem like wide open etc., was far too often naught but a matter of readerly convenience. Everyone loves a cipher, a living/ breathing anagram or two. even some — hey — with flaws more rampant than Lester’s, but for the man’s writerly service to’ve been gauged (almost solely) vis-a-vis his reliability as a stand-in cipher-of- x, y’know for readerfolk too lame — or lazy — to suss out x themselves, is the real tragedy of the trip, particularly when the first-&-final glue of most folks’ attachment to his writing was never much more than their own desperate attachment to an x they could, and should, have been accessing more independently (and less desperately) to begin with.
So, anyway, here's the rub. Had Lester lived long enough to both sever his own desperate rock connection — officially, in sheets read by his fuckheaded fans, simply by writing other stuff — and, furthermore, to back it up with an equally official rejection of the Fount of Neurosis from which he'd sung its tune (and they'd listened), it ain't really much of a longshot to imagine him losing a huge percent of the fuckheads — certainly the most gung-ho among 'em — in, well, no time flat. And, c’mon, how much of an immediate, uh, new audience was he likely to yank in writing up (as he insisted he would) such transcendently pivotal mere-humanistic trifles as the dearth of love (as we know it) in scene X or Y . . . how this set of new-age culture jerks uses that set of new-age culture jerks as props in regards to bluh . . . New York editors who pull rank (pshaw!) along collegiate lines [a hard-hitting exposé] . . . or, I dunno, something about shams and follies in clothes and/or grooming?
Plus, well, though, um — (even if) — then again: Aside from loss of ad hominem authority due to the fickle scumbait nature of the pop-world Beast, aside from the fact that many of his generic partisans would prob'ly now be targeted, topically and even personally, in scathing printed-page rants, aside from the limited run such goulash (Sensitive Ties His Laces, w/ Brass Knucks & Footnotes) has ever had — hey — can ever/will ever have . . . aside, aside, aside — the most glaring fact fact is how few times, as of his death, he'd as yet even aspired to the heights (or whats) or non- rock journalism. Four-five-six, some number like that, in the Voice and wherever else, all of ’em still pretty much rockwriterly appendices to the rockwrite “adventure," meaning he had a good ways to go before he'd’ve got the wings/chops/ legs for a total-pulp plunge (or at least a regular shift) at full oldtime capacity (but with newtime thrust and content). Which would’ve been no fall from grace no matter how you scope it — give the boy time (for fuck sake) to stumble and bumble and get it right — but how would any possible Lester have dealt with a (previously amenable) shithook book co. like Delilah telling him not now, sonny when he handed ’em a ream of copy on (let’s imagine) friends who’re fuckups? Personal persona limelight Lester had learned to live without — but writeperson limelight? (It would not’ve been easy.)
Okay, he's dead. All this brand new grief and hardship never befell him; never will. But words on pages remain: What is their lot? Lester's standard fare was so paradigmatically “of the moment" that he was the rockmag shootist. But books of the stuff? Nah; it’s kind of nebulous how even his best mag outings will wear when inevitably (??) anthologized. For someone so public in his orientation, both as input and output, he was — don't laugh or even smirk — one of rock’s more precious and fragile "private moments.” Private moments you can always document — coercively, of course — but try and play ’em back and. well . . . we'll all see, I reckon.
LESTER LEAPS IN — Y’all know all by now how Lester leapt out of New York; lemme just finish with how he leapt in. His first night in town, just a visit, fall "72, he stayed with me and my girlfriend Roni, West Village, 104 Perry St., apt. 4. Arriving semi-direct from JFK, he split pretty quick for the nearest grocer, returning with three six-packs of Colt 45. What he did for the next day and a half — all he did — was wade through 18 big ones, half quarts, as follows: start can, drink fast, get tired; fall out, dropping remainder; awaken following can’s impact with floor; stagger to fridge for fresh one; repeat cycle. What he mumbled or muttered during any of the 18 pre-fallout phases I simply do not recall.
So like hey y’know wo hey hey wo-wo hey, OLD SPORT: love ya, hope I didn’t cramp yer style, g’bye.
--Richard Meltzer, “Lester Bangs Recollected in Tranquility”  Dec. 6, 1984
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pogono · 3 years
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Äntligen i min ägo. En enorm godisburk från Nissens i Norrköping med Olli, Grodan Boll, Kalle Stropp, Plåt-Niklas, Pelle Svanslös, Maja Gräddnos, Jumbo, Jim och Jocke. Och Nissen själv. Nu måste jag nog fylla den med lakrits- och hallonbåtar. https://www.instagram.com/p/CUsI1O6s3iW/?utm_medium=tumblr
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fridamlarssonn · 3 years
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16-17 Juli 2021. Mamma och Jocke på besök i Malmö ☀️
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aioinstagram · 6 years
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Jocke och Jonna Jonna Lundell is Trending on Thursday February 8 2018 http://www.aioinstagram.com/jocke-och-jonna-jonna-lundell-is-trending-on-thursday-february-8-2018/
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Joakim och Jonna Lundell är ett av Sveriges största par på Youtube. I det senaste klippet får man se när Jonna gör ett graviditetstest. – Vi kör, jag är supernervös, säger Joakim i videon. Brister ut i tårar. Paret har inte speciellt höga förväntningar … – Det känns så overkligt efter att ha försökt i fem år, säger Jonna i filmen. Joakim Lundell, 32, och Jonna Lundell, 23, har i flera år berättat om sin längtan efter att få barn. I en ny film på sin Youtube-kanal visar paret nu hur de gör ett
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i sju kategorier på Guldtuben den 3 juni. Läs
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om dem i veckans nummer av
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SvD Junior!
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Foto: Claudio Bresciani/TT på förra årets Guldtuben då Jocke friade till Jonna. #svdjunior #jockeochjonna #youtuber
This Jocke och Jonna’s photo Trending 2 on Instagram, Photo credit to Instagram
Description: Celebert besök av Joakim och Jonna Lundell på invigningen av DN:s utställning Visuell journalistik. Syns här framför sina egna porträtt tillsammans med museidirektör Niklas Cserhalmi #jockiboi #jockeochjonna #arbetetsmuseum #dnfoto #inorrköping
This Jocke och Jonna’s photo Trending 3 on Instagram, Photo credit to Instagram
Description: 10 likes?? @sessano @joakimlundell
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#jockeochjonna #jockeochjonnaärbäst (sorry glömde M (Melle)
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This Jocke och Jonna’s photo Trending 4 on Instagram, Photo credit to Instagram
Description: När man har en kille som älskar spökjakter så var det en självklarhet att ta vägen förbi Ekenäs slott på vägen hem idag! #spökjakt #jockeochjonna #ltgs #laxtonghostsweden #ekenässlott
This Jocke och Jonna’s photo Trending 5 on Instagram, Photo credit to Instagram
Description: Här är Joakim och Jonna Lundells nya drömvilla: ”100 % säkerhet”
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Länk i bion
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This Jocke och Jonna’s photo Trending 6 on Instagram, Photo credit to Instagram
Description: Kärlekshistorien mellan Sveriges största Youtubestjärnor började med en polisanmälan. Nu följer hundratusentals deras relation – många är barn mellan 8 och 12 år. Joakim Lundell och Jonna Lundell berättar för SvD om sin egen svåra barndom och kampen för att växa upp. @svdkultur har träffat dem för en längre intervju. Foto: @neideman #svd #svdkultur #jockeochjonna #youtube @joakimlundell @sessano
This Jocke och Jonna’s photo Trending 7 on Instagram, Photo credit to Instagram
Description: Liv fick träffa sin stora idol i helgen och blev kär
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#jockeochjonna #vadstena #sommarknäppen
This Jocke och Jonna’s photo Trending 8 on Instagram, Photo credit to Instagram
Description: ’s edit Jocke & Jonna är verkligen såå fina tillsammans
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—————————— @sessano @joakimlundell #jockeochjonna
This Jocke och Jonna’s photo Trending 9 on Instagram, Photo credit to Instagram
Description: Asså jag måste ba. Brukar inte va den som e den men gud! Jag har suttit och grinat till det här klippet nu i en halvtimme. Fy fan va fint! Det är sällan man får vara med på ett sånt här ögonblick i någons liv och varje gång jag får det så fylls jag med så mycket känslor och glädje. Ni MÅSTE gå in och se klippet på deras kanal! Och om ni ser detta, tack för att vi fick vara med
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Lycka till och stort stort grattis
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@joakimlundell @sessano #jockeochjonna #joakimlundell #jonnalundell
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