Performance-Enhancing Drugs in Rock
By Mr. Moderator on Dec 14, 2007
If you've got a minute to spare between taking that Billy Idol Challenge, let me know what you think about baseball's Mitchell Report as it reports to rock ' roll. Do you think it's time we establish performance-enhancing drug testing in rock? I mean, have you compared Alex Chilton's voice in the Box Tops with his voice just a couple years later in Big Star? The difference is as great as that in Barry Bonds' hat sizes. The guy must have been injecting some kind of anti-HGH! Any other rockers you suspect of having used performance-enhancing drugs? What is your rock performance-enhancing drug of choice, anyhow?
14 comments
Rock stars, like Bonds, are sometimes susceptible to swelled head syndrome. There is no known cure, though declining record sales can be an effective treatment.
That's the equivalent of what we're seeing in this baseball steroid case. What a bunch of bullshit.
Heavy parent moment.
I would be in full support of some kind of Senate commission that was charged with forcing people like Clapton and Aerosmith to go back to – safely, with government oversight assistance, of course – utilizing certain substances.
A couple of Head members were severely limited in the amount of alcohol we were supposed to drink before a show. It was not conducive to our playing and style of music. However, it was once highly recommended that most of us smoke a lot of pot before hitting the stage. That was highly conducive to our playing and style of music. It's a myth, for some people, that smoking pot makes you laid back and feel like jahmmin'.
Not that there was anyone there to notice.
Rock stars, like Bonds, are sometimes susceptible to swelled head syndrome. There is no known cure, though declining record sales can be an effective treatment.
Paradoxically, declining record sales and concert attendance just as frequently result in the head swelling beyond all proportion, as when malnutrition distends the stomach. A has-been can support an enormous head-size for decades.
Baby Flamehead tried to get a little support for our fall of '90 "Robitussin" tour. Just a banner, and some fine scantily-clad ladies to hawk mini-bottles at shows. I kept a bottle on my amp for a month. Just a nip, and you, too, can sing like Caruso.
My stage drug of choice is one, perhaps two, drinks to calm the nerves. I forbid the ingestion of marijuana, particularly by the drummer. It is a nefarious intoxicant that serves no constructive purpose on stage, no matter how gloriously Mr. Mod remembers his stage appearances under its influence. I've never faced any other drug issue in any band I've been in.
The other story Chilton has given about his voice in the Box Tops is that he was doing a conscious imitation of how Dan Penn, their producer and songwriter, sang. Having heard Penn's solo records, that makes more sense to me.
Let's start by reclaiming all those platinum and gold Beatles records and giving them to Van Dyke Parks.
'maudlin, what'd you tell your kid?
I told him we'd never really know as they did what they did. Also that every experience one has becomes part of who they are and what they do.
And then I threw in a couple of "Jimi, Morrison, Moon, Janice, Cobain" stories for good cautionary measure.
You should throw in Kevin Dubrow as well, so he knows that a lot of drug takers weren't cool to begin with.
-db
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