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Rock 'n' Roll Myths: The True Stories Behind the Most Infamous Legends PDF

317 Pages·2012·78.37 MB·English
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Preview Rock 'n' Roll Myths: The True Stories Behind the Most Infamous Legends

GARY GRAFF AND DANIEL DURCHHOLZ INTRODUCTION THE DEVIL INSIDE 1. Did Robert Johnson Sell His Soul at the Crossroads? 2. Did Led Zeppelin Sign a Deal with the Devil? 3. How Did Sabbath Get Their Black On? 4. KISS: Satanic Acronym or Divine Inspiration? 5. Is Slayer Sympathetic to the Reich? 6. Does Marilyn Manson Dance with the Devil? LIVE AND LET DIE 7. Did Alice Cooper Commit Fowl Play? 8. Was Brian Jones’ Death an Accident—or Murder? 9. Why Was Paul McCartney (Temporarily) Dead in 1969? 10. How Did Gram Parsons’ Corpse Come to Burn in the Desert? 11. Is That the Sound of Murder on “Love Rollercoaster”? 12. Did Sid Vicious’ Mum Spill His Ashes? 13. Did Bobby McFerrin Do Himself In? 14. Was Johnny Thunders’ Death More than Just Junkie Business? 15. Who Killed Kurt Cobain? 16. Have You Seen This Man? I WANT YOUR SEX 17. Did John Lennon and Brian Epstein Really . . . You Know . . . ? 18. Were Those Really Sharks That Led Zeppelin Caught in Seattle? 19. Did John Paul Jones Mistake a Transvestite for a Female Groupie? 20. Did Mick Jagger and David Bowie Spend the Night Together? 21. Was Donna Summer Self-Lovin’ in the Studio? 22. Does Sting Hold the Secret to Marathon Sex? 23. Was Ciara Ever “Like a Boy”? 24. Lady Gaga Was Born What Way? I DON’T LIKE THE DRUGS BUT THE DRUGS LIKE ME 25. Was “Puff, the Magic Dragon” One Toke Over the Line? 26. Did the Beatles Get Stoned at Buckingham Palace? 27. Did George Jones Really Drive His Lawnmower to the Liquor Store? 28. Did Hendrix Put LSD in His Headband? 29. Was the Beatles’ “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds” About LSD? 30. What Were Those Chambers in Jerry Garcia’s Guitars Really For? 31. Was America’s “Horse” a Bunch of Junk? 32. Did Stevie Nicks Have a Bump of “Backdoor” Blow? 33. Did Willie Nelson Really Get Baked at the White House? IT’S A FAMILY AFFAIR 34. Was Frank Zappa the Progeny of Children’s TV? 35. Weird Al Yankovic—Who’s His Daddy? 36. What’s the Story with the White Stripes’ “Brother-Sister” Act? 37. Really? Keith Richards Had a Snort of His Dad’s Earthly Remains? EAT TO THE BEAT 38. Did Mick Jagger Eat a Mars Bar Lodged You Know Where? 39. Did Mama Cass Elliot Choke to Death on a Ham Sandwich? 40. Did Frank Zappa Drop a Load on Stage . . . and Then Eat It? 41. Does Ozzy Have a Taste for Things with Wings? 42. What’s Up with Van Halen and M&Ms? DOCTOR, DOCTOR, GIMME THE NEWS 43. Did Keith Richards Really Get the Flush ’n’ Fill? 44. Gene Simmons’ Tongue Bovine-Enhanced? 45. Did Rod Stewart Really Have a Stomach Full of . . . Ewwww! 46. Michael’s Master Manipulations 47. Marilyn Manson’s Spare Rib? ACROSS THE UNIVERSE 48. How Much Time Did Johnny Cash Really Do? 49. Did Charles Manson Ever Monkee Around? 50. Was a Future SNL Alum in Steely Dan? 51. What Was Bob Dylan’s Motorcycle Nightmare? 52. Was Grace Slick’s Daughter Named on Impulse, or Was It Preplanned? 53. How Did Vince Become Alice? 54. Was Pink Floyd Off to See the Wizard? 55. Did Keith Moon Roll That Royce into a Swimming Pool? 56. Did KISS Put a Bit of Themselves (Literally) into Their Comic Book? 57. Did This Alter-Ego Give Prince Extra Starr Power? ACKNOWLEDGMENTS PHOTO CREDITS SOURCES ABOUT THE AUTHORS INDEX D anny & The Juniors once sang that rock ’n’ roll is here to stay, that it will never die. The Philadelphia quartet was right about that—way back in 1958, when rock was still having its diapers changed. But the group could have added that rock ’n’ roll will sometimes lie, too. Oh, there are great truths told in rock and popular music. Think of the songs of Chuck Berry and Bob Dylan and James Brown. The Beatles and the Rolling Stones and Sly and the Family Stone. Bruce Springsteen and U2 and Pearl Jam. And that’s just for starters. But alongside the earnestness and enlightenment of great rock music is the personality of the movement, the larger-than-life dynamism that made and sustains it as a cultural force. It’s a universe unto itself, casting a wider net than just songs on the radio or MP3s in your tablet or on your smart- phone. It’s a lifestyle and a life force, a fluid code that unites generations in thoughts, feelings, and philosophies and even creates ties that bind them to their predecessors in a manner that didn’t happen with popular culture prior to rock. It’s Big, in other words, and when something makes that kind of footprint, it tends to spawn myths. And legends. And tall tales. It spins off stories of varying degrees of truth, from blatant falsehoods and ill-willed lies to kernels of actuality that are twisted and embellished into something better—or at least more provocative. And it doesn’t matter if they’re proven to be complete baloney because the sheer telling gives them a life of their own that exists alongside the “real” part of the story. So there are probably people out there who believe that Robert Johnson and Led Zeppelin really did make deals with the devil. That Rod Stewart really did have his stomach purged of male sexual secretion. That Lady Gaga and Ciara are really part (or all, or formerly) male. That Paul McCartney really is dead and that the near-septuagenarian guy running around scoring ballets and playing Beatles songs in concert is the cosmetically altered stand-in who was put in his place in 1967. Or 1968. Or 1969—depending on which version of the story you believe. While some of these and the other tales related in Rock ’n’ Roll Myths are mean-spirited, there’s a general sense of fun that comes with them as they’re spread through the public. Whether true or not, they knock the artists down a peg or two and mitigate their outsized images with some flesh and blood. And a sly wink. Anyone who gets in the celebrity game, whether they’re musicians, actors, politicians, or athletes, learns they need to have at least a bit of a sense of humor about themselves and embrace the circus and all of the sideshow acts that come with fame. Who’s had more fun with Sting’s reported tantric sexcapades, for instance, than Sting-a-ding- ding himself? And while it likely isn’t the nicest thing to have the world believe that you had a candy bar eaten out of one of your lower orifices, when asked about the tale, Marianne Faithfull has always rolled her eyes with a sense of grace, drollery, and ladylike decorum. The fifty-seven stories in Rock ’n’ Roll Myths cover a wide range of artists and topics—birth and death, sex and murder, drugs and alcohol. There are hundreds more, of course, but we’ve chosen these fifty-seven for a variety of reasons, among them the notoriety of the artists, the sensationalism of the subjects, the depth of their impact, and their durability over time. We’ve also striven to make most of them fit mythic criteria. They are, for the most part, not true but have been spread for so long, and so far, that they continue to pop up and be accepted as fact, even when ample evidence has proven otherwise. Meanwhile, those that are true at their core —such as the fiery fate of Gram Parsons’ corpse, Led Zeppelin’s shark adventure, or Keith Richards snorting his father’s ashes—have grown fantastically fanciful in their retelling, to the point where the mythological aspects are more readily accepted than the facts. Through research and personal contact, we’ve tried to get to the bottom of each story and not only ascertain the truth but explain how these myths came to be and then came to be spread. Some remain mysteries; we’re still not sure if John Lennon and Brian Epstein slept together or if Brian Jones was murdered, and Rod Stewart has never figured out how that rumor about his stomach contents started (nor have we). And those kinds of myths are, in some ways, the most fun. So dive into the haze, purple and otherwise, with us. Hopefully you’ll raise your eyebrows and drop your jaws—or at least get a few laughs. After all, it is only rock ’n’ roll (with a few other genres thrown in), but we like it, like it, yes we do. —Gary Graff and Daniel Durchholz

Description:
It's perhaps the relative modernity of rock 'n' roll that makes the genre a minefield of myths and legends accepted as truth. History hasn't had time to dissect the bunk. Until now.Discover the real stories behind rock's biggest crocks, how they came to be but why they have persisted. Did Cass Ellio
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.