Talented Rock Artist You'd Most Like to Give a Wedgie
By Mr. Moderator on Feb 13, 2009
Mention, yesterday, of Jonathan Richman's disregard for the great Modern Lovers album that John Cale produced made me think of this most juvenile thread: What talented rock artist would you most like to give a wedgie? For me it's Richman. Once he ditched the straight-edge VU sound of his early recordings and got into all that cutsie thumb-sucking music, I'm ready to yank up his briefs and see if I can't get the elastic up to his shoulders. How about you? I know most of you are a lot nicer than I am, but what talented rock artist would you most like to give a wedgie? (It's gotta be someone who's produced a record or two that you love and at one time put a lot of stock in - not some band like Journey, unless you ever loved anything by them and are willing to admit that.)
37 comments
Wedgie for any artist that started in the 80's or erlier and then added trip-hop drums in the 1990s (David Bowie, Axl Rose)
I agree that ol' Mr. Hankie kind of personified all the things I HATED about hardcore, & in turn, the trickle down (or was it up, like rising damp) effect that the "jockification" of punk had on male behavior in concert settings. I remember seeing Elvis Costello on the tour for 'Imperial Bedroom', and THE DUDES were MOSHING! This wasn't just when the band played fast numbers, either. It was going on during stuff like "Town Crier". F-ing ridiculous! And I blame Rollins. First for helping to attract sociopathic jocks to the punk scene, but also for how that later came to influence what muscled young dudes perceived as acceptable behavior at any public event. Yes, I would like Rollins to be the centerpiece in the scene where all the smaller kids gang up on the bully and pay him back for his crimes against them.
jungleland, All I can say is that I'm really sorry. To have to go through life actually wanting to hear "Wheel in the Sky" & "Loving, Touching, Squeezing" is a burden I just wouldn't have the intestinal fortitude to take on. In a strange way, I respect you for it, though I would NOT want to be within 50 miles of earshot, when the deal goes down. I'm just not strong enough.
To get back to the original subject, I'll have to pull out that ol' dead horse, Rod Stewart, & flog him some more. I know it's been a subject that's been raked over more times than a front lawn, but Rod just never fails to irk me with his chowder-headed choices in artistic direction, & yes, all together now, "HIS COMPLETE BETRAYAL OF THE TALENT THAT MADE HIM GREAT IN THE FIRST PLACE."
In the late 70s & throughout the 80s, Mod Rod disappointed w/ his degeneration from a great interpreter of contemporary song & the frontman for the best of the Stones-inspired sloppy, carousing rock bands, to a spandex-wrapped parody of a BIG TIME ROCK STAR, complete w/ all the odious trappings I'm sure we're all too familiar with, & which I'd be pained to address once more in this forum.
Then the 90s...Uh,...Hmm? I guess he was playing soccer (sorry, football) or something in the 90s.
And now, in a new century, he comes back as...Tony Bennett? WTF? AND, people seem to be lapping it up. No matter (or perhaps, because of the fact), that most of his song choices have been covered to death already, his reinvention as an American Songbook - covering lounge lizard is, once again, taking the easiest possible way out. Yes, I would honestly like to hoist him up by his jock strap in the locker room after a game of footy, hang him on a towel hook, & shove copies of Every Picture Tells A Story & Ooh La La into his pinkie-ringed mitts.
As for Lou, I don't care much for what I've heard since Magic & Loss, but at least he appears to still be trying, and actually applying his faculties to the projects he's working on. And while the results may not be as satisfying to some of us, I would think it's a good way for a lifer like him to stave off petrification. Also, when he revisits old material, I still find it interesting & entertaining (i.e. the performances of the Berlin album & Metal Machine Music). I'd rather have given him a wedgie back in the mid-eighties, when he kicked Quine out of his band & released a string of mainly inconsequential material until the New York album. This is ALL immaterial though, if you just want to give him the wedgie for his solo career in general. If that's the case...never mind.
So I'll just go for the grandaddy of them all:
I'd want to give Jimmy Page a wedgie. What's he done since Bonham died? One shitty "supergroup," that Honeydrippers thing (which was probably a line of blow, a couple of overdubs, and "seeya!") and twenty-plus years of milking the legend.
In that time, he should've been producing, exploring his own relationship to the guitar in a number of ways that his Zep oeuvre promises...he could have getting back to his roots for awhile, doing more soundtracks...his guest appearances are disappointing....
of all the "genius" types floating around post-psychedelia, when rock became "art to be taken seriously," there was a point in time from 70 to 75 when Zep was not only at its height, but he was flashing the potential to wind up doing all kinds of amazing things. instead, he has basically bowed to the monolith that is zep's 11 year run. he could've done much more.
what a waste.
hey pagey...c'mere...turn around...what's that on your back?....WEDGIE!!!!
My only thought after reading the post was in what bizarro universe did Journey ever do anything that could be loved?
That said, I couldn't agree with you more. Perhaps he just has nothing new to offer.
Brian &, especially, artists to whom he's NOT related. Seems TM has really done HIM a lot of good, the egomaniacal boor. Let's throw in a Purple Nurple for Cousin Mikey!
kilroy, how on earth could my description of Page's involvement in the honeydrippers -- a line of blow and a couple of guitar solos -- make you think I thought the honeydrippers was page's "vehicle?"
the honeydrippers cover of "sea of love" features a page guitar solo. jeff beck played on 'good rockin at midnight' as well.
pincenez pincenez.
I've never loved Springsteen, but ever since his tricky "have it both ways" sleight of hand on "Born in the USA," that guy has needed a wedgie every other day.
It IS starting to seem as though saturn's comments about this thread are dead on, & any artist with longevity is going to be a candidate for wedgie-dom. I suppose it comes with the territory. With that in mind, I'll throw out a more recent performer, one I feel has critics drooling over her every croak; Cat Power, or Chan Marshall, or whatever name she's going by this week.
From her early onstage petulance, to her recent outings as an interpreter of other, more talented artists, I've gotta say that I just never rated her, esp. as a singer! She hardly has a voice at all! Seeing her perform live on ACL once, I was reminded of Marianne Faithfull's disastrous SNL appearance at the height of her '70s junkie-dom. It's mostly a barely audible wheezing croak. So, that coupled with her periodic, hubris driven tantrums, I believe makes an ideal candidate to have her panties pulled up by either side of her hips & hung on her ears. At least most of the other people mentioned above took a few years before they began to believe their own hype. She was full of herself straight out of the gate.
I generally don't like his work since then (except for the first JR&TML album, which I still think is great), but I respect it as something genuine, and it's obvious to me that it's from the same unique mindset that created the music I love.
As to him dissing it, what has he said? I find it really strange that "Pablo Picasso" is the song from that time period he has retained in his live set. The only explanation is that only the novelty song ("Pablo Picasso" is the only disposable song from that time period) fits with who he is now, and whatever stromng emotion and value system created the rest was that of a young man who has since grown into something else. I'd hope that he's still proud of that young man, but life rarely works that way.
Actually it's worse... I like the 80's Jonathan Cain stuff (Faithfully, Separate Ways, Stone In Love)...please don't take away my RTH membership card (or my Journey Escape CD...don't make me choose!)
I'm on board with the Rod Stewart Wedgie...if only 'cause he was SO DAMN GOOD in THREE formats (early Solo, Jeff Beck Group, Faces) and then fell to the depths of hell ("Do you Think I'm Sexy", " Love Touch"), tried to climb back (Unplugged) before turning into Tony Benett (Great American Songbook) and then a 70's yacht-rock cover band (the crap he put out last)
Also, I'm glad someone brought up Aimee Mann. I've hated her ever since I was a spotty teen taking Saturday trips into Boston to buy records. She used to "work" at Newbury Comics, one of my regular stop overs. She acted like a bitch way back then, & her too-good-for-it-all attitude seems to have held up well into adulthood. At least that's how her songs always struck me. Up with her pantaloons, I say!
As far as Stipe goes, I never got what the big deal was with that guy. He too, never fails to make me yawn, but I couldn't muster up the energy to give that guy a wedgie. He's just too innocuous in my eyes.
As far as Sir Paul goes; how DOES one perform an adequate wedgie on briefs spun from pure platinum?
Pince Nez! I believe that is called a Melvin.
I sometimes mix her up in my mind with the character Anne Carlisle played in LIQUID SKY. There's a rock movie for you!
-db
I'd say Liberty Devito, just because he wore that watch around his ankle. And Michael Jackson, but he'd probably like it. And David Sylvian, he just needs to loosen up and have some fun, that guy, and I say that as a fan. And Sly Stone, who should've had a massive wedgie come his way 40 years ago, now it's just too late.
Forgive my considerable ignorance in certain areas, but who is Liberty Devito, Danny's 1st wife?
David Sylvian, from Japan? What'd you really expect outta him? I never expected too much from Japan, in the 1st place, except the urge to get out of earshot.
2. Google.
3. Like I said, I am a fan, but as William Reid of Jesus and Mary Chain said of Thom Yorke, "that guy needs a blowjob and a pizza". Not such a fan of Japan, but Sylvian solo, I do like - but he does take himself way too seriously.
What about Clapton? Aerosmith? Carlos Santana?
He wore a wristwatch around his ankle? Has he no wrists? I would imagine that's quite a disability to overcome whilst striving to become a drummer of any facility. I would say the man deserves kudos for such a feat, not the derision & humiliation of a wedgie.
Not to mention the balance he must have required whenever he was asked, "Do You have the time?".
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