Read Up-Tight: The Velvet Underground Story Online
Authors: Victor Bockris and Gerard Malanga
HENRY GELDZAHLER:
“As far as I can remember the presentation was thrilling but the music was to me much more romantic and melodic.
Andy Warhol, Up-Tight
was explosive and abrasive but I kept finding the traditional, almost folk substructure of The Velvets music. I was more impressed with the music than with the other effects, but it was enhanced by the combination.”
Lou began to sing ‘Heroin’. Gerard slowly unwound, came to rest on the floor of the stage, and proceeded to light a candle and, in a kneeling position, slightly bent over, undid his belt. He pulled out a spoon from his back pocket, rolled
up his sleeve, heated the spoon over the flame of the candle, touched the spoon with what appeared to be a hypodermic needle (actually a lead pencil), wrapped the belt around his arm tightly, and began to flex his arm in a sweeping up-and-down motion. Then he pressed the “needle” into his arm, slowly rose and began to whirl frantically around the stage. Lou was in the high-pitched middle instrumental segment of the song. Behind the projector in the audience Paul Morrissey was explaining to a reporter that this is “a completely different kind of rock’n’roll”. Behind the other projector in the projection booth Andy Warhol was explaining the simultaneous showing of the movies to another reporter: “On the one screen you have a movie that takes an hour and a half. On the other screen you have a movie that takes an hour anda half. Except that … it takes longer than an hour anda half.” Below them, Gerard was lying full length on the stage staring blankly up at Lou Reed.
This was the beginning of a one-and-a-half-year collaboration between Warhol and The Velvet Underground that would shortly result in
The Exploding Plastic Inevitable, a
twelve person group (or team, as they saw themselves) that toured the States from 1966 halfway through 1967 changing the way people saw, heard and felt rock’n’roll in the US and subsequently the world. This first half of our book
Andy Warhol, Up-Tight
is the story of the formation of
The Exploding Plastic Inevitable
, which introduced The Velvet Underground in the States, and constituted Warhol’s major contribution to rock’n’roll. Before delineating its details, let’s step back and take a look at where the different members of the group came from and how they got together, since what each brought to the project puts the overall effect of the team into perspective.
In the winter of 1965 Andy Warhol was working very fast and accurately through a series of changes that had made him into a media superstar. There wasn’t a week that went by that the newspapers or magazines didn’t carry a story about him.
Already famous for his pop paintings and his revolutionary movies, he was reaching a watershed in his highly successful collaboration with Edie Sedgwick. They had made eight movies together and Edie was the envy of every girl in town, but the pressures of the life she was leading weighed heavily upon her exotically unstable character. A growing involvement with Bob Dylan’s circle, where the manipulative use of acid and amphetamine did little to bolster her ego, was further debilitating her, and Warhol was finding it hard to continue the collaboration, even though he wanted to. Jonas Mekas had offered him a week at the Cinematheque and they’d decided to do an Edie Sedgwick Retrospective. Meanwhile Andy had temporarily stopped painting and was looking for new sources of income to support the movies which weren’t making any money yet. Paul Morrissey, who had just joined the factory, worked the sound and lights.
PAUL MORRISSEY:
“Do you remember the details of why The Velvet Underground was brought to the Factory and we bought them amplifiers? For the record, a famous Broadway producer called Michael Myerberg, who’d just done
Waiting For Godot
, invited Andy and I over to Sardi’s one night to make a deal. He was going to open up the first discotheque with an enormous dance floor in an airplane hangar in Queens. And he said he would pay Andy to come out there every night, with as many people like Edie Sedgwick as he wanted, to bring it publicity. I immediately said, ‘I have a better suggestion. There’s no real reason to just come out and sit there and get paid.’ (It wasn’t much money anyway.) ‘The only reason Andy will go is if he could be like Brian Epstein and present a group he managed.’
“Myerberg liked this idea and said if we did that he might even use Andy’s name in the title of the discotheque. It turned out he was bullshitting us but he seemed sincere at the time and Andy said, ‘Why don’t we call it Andy Warhol’s Up.’ And I said, ‘Not only will Andy’s presence be justified because his group is there, but behind the group we’ll be
projecting two or three images of film footage,’ because we were making all these movies that we’d been showing at the Cinematheque that had no commercial value, and I thought this would be a good way to have them generate some money too. This was agreed upon and I was set to go out and find a rock’n’roll group. I didn’t know what group it was going to be.”
As Morrissey began his search, Barbara Rubin, a boyishly attractive, precocious 21-year-old art groupie, came to the factory and invited Gerard Malanga, who was Andy’s Prime Minister without portfolio, to go with her to see a group called The Velvet Underground. Malanga had been a dancer on
Alan Freed’s Big Beat
TV show when Freed got busted in a payola scandal (that also affected, among others, Dick Clark) and the show got closed down. Rubin was an intimate of, among others, Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs, Bob Dylan, Jonas Mekas and Andrei Voznesenskv, who had, according to Ginsberg, “dedicated her life to introducing geniuses to each other in the hope that they would collaborate to make great art that would change the world”. It was the middle of December 1965.
GERARD MALANGA:
“She asked me to bring my whip and suggested I dance while the group performed, as Barbara knew how much I enjoyed it, having already seen me dance to Martha and The Vandellas in Andy’s film
Vinyl. On the
following day, Barbara and I entered Cafe Bizarre to the glaring sounds of what appeared to be a rock’n’roll group, but there all resemblance ended. The stage was level with the rest of the floor, so the group was right up against the tables and chairs. I waited for about 20 minutes before getting up to dance. I was tentative at first because no one else was on the dance floor at the time and I thought my participating would be an intrusion since the musicians were in such close proximity to the audience. I did, finally, make my way to the front of the audience – a few scattered customers – and was joined minutes later by a young girl who quickly retreated
back to her seat. During the intermission Barbara introduced me to Lou Reed and John Cale. Lou said how much he enjoyed my getting up to dance to the music. I told him I felt a little self-conscious because I was intruding, but he assured me I wasn’t, and both he and John said I should come back and dance again. They really wanted people to dance to the music and not just to sit and listen to it. The music was very intimidating.”
MORRISSEY:
“The next day you told me The Velvets were interesting, you and Barbara wanted to film some footage of them, and you asked me to come along to help with the lighting. I thought they were fascinating. The first thing that registered to me, and I think to Andy later, was the drummer Maureen, because you could not tell whether she was a boy or a girl. This was a first within rock’n’roll because The Beatles all looked like little girls but you knew they were boys. You had no idea what Maureen’s gender was. The second thing was John Cale’s electric viola. And the third thing was they sang a song called ‘Heroin’. For some reason when I’m looking for something the first thing I see always works out for me. When I take an apartment it’s always the first one. And usually casting actors in movies I always cast the first one that comes in front of my mind and I say that’s right. I never fool around and change a person. I never saw any other rock’n’roll groups. They were a unique group and they were called The Underground. That’s another reason I went down because you told me the name of the group. And this was the term always connected with Andy, too. I didn’t say anything at the time, but the next day I said, ‘Andy, I found the group to play at Michael Myerberg’s UP.’ So Andy came down the very next night.”
The Cafe Bizarre was a long narrow room with sawdust on the floor and a number of tables with fish-net lamps ranged along the walls. The Warhol party, including Sedgwick, Morrissey, Malanga and Rubin, sat at a couple of tables against the wall in front of and to the left of the band. It was a
Thursday night. Nobody paid any attention to their arrival. The art and rock worlds were still quite separate and the ten or fifteen people scattered among the tables didn’t recognize the new arrivals. The silver-haired man in dark glasses and a black leather jacket with his chin resting on an elegantly slim hand listened to the animated conversation of his companions, occasionally interrupting with a short, playful comment but remained for the most part silent. As soon as The Velvet Underground started to play however, Andy became quite animated, because he immediately recognized he could work with this band. The music was so loud it was impossible to talk while they were playing, but in a break between songs he asked Edie what she thought about having the band play in front of the movies during her upcoming retrospective. She was understandably unenthusiastic about a suggestion that would clearly have drawn a good deal of attention away from her starring role and got uptight. But when Gerard got up and danced in black leather pants with his whip, eerily mirroring The Velvets’ style with his sinuous, mesmeric movements, which resembled a cross between the Frug and an Egyptian belly dance, Andy saw Gerard become a part of The Velvets and had even more reason to feel that here was a rock band with whom he could really connect. The Velvet Underground was little known outside their small circle but active on the same level of the underground movie scene that Andy was championing. Working more in tune with his own artistic approach than any other rock group he’d seen, they refused to accept any form of pre-conditioned order or restraint.
LOU REED:
“That was a very funny period with a very funny group of people. Everybody in a certain section was doing almost exactly the same thing without anyone knowing anybody else.”
After the set Barbara brought The Velvets over to Andy’s table. They were all in their early twenties and dressed from head to foot in black. John Cale’s sonorous accent and
dreamy deportment bespoke his Welsh background and classical music training. Curly haired Lou Reed’s shy gum-chewing smile identified him most closely with Andy, with whom he shared a similar temperament. They sat next to each other and immediately hit it off. Sterling Morrison and Maureen Tucker were quiet at this first meeting, but the vibes were good. They were all aware of who Andy was and gratified by his interest and compliments.
MORRISSEY:
“On the night Andy came to the Bizarre Gerard had invited Nico, who had just come to town, and that’s when I met her. I think Gerard had already brought the record ‘I’ll Keep It With Mine’ up to the Factory. I felt that the one thing The Velvets didn’t have was a solo singer, because I just didn’t think that Lou had the personality to standin front of the group and sing. The group needed something beautiful to counteract the kind of screeching ugliness they were trying to sell, and the combination of a really beautiful girl standing in front of all this decadence was what was needed. That very night, right away I said, ‘Nico, you’re a singer. You need somebody to play in back of you. You can maybe sing with this group, if they want to work with us and go in this club and be managed.’”
ANDY WARHOL:
“The Pop idea, after all, was that anybody could do anything, so naturally we were all trying to do it all. Nobody wanted to stay in one category, we all wanted to branch out into every creative thing we could. That’s why when we met The Velvet Underground at the end of ’65, we were all for getting into the music scene, too.”
Before leaving Andy invited The Velvets and Nico to come up to the Factory whenever they felt like it. He left before the second set, but at dinner afterwards kept saying to his friends, “We have to think of something to do with The Velvets. What can we do? What could it be?
WE HAVE TO THINK OF SOMETHING!”
He had always been interested in
rock music. The great ‘Sally Goes Round The Roses’ by The Jaynettes was his favourite song, he played it non-stop. He was excited about the possibilities of combining The Velvets’ musical with his visual sensibility.
JOHN CALE
: “I had a classical education in classical music playing the viola in youth orchestras. I heard rock’n’roll on the radio in the Alan Freed days, and it was exciting, but I never thought of playing.”
John Cale was born on December 5, 1940 in Crynant, South Wales where he went to school until he was seventeen. According to Nico, Cale’s “father is totally deaf and his mother is totally mute”.
John studied at London University Goldsmiths’ College from 1960–1963. “When I was studying composition I was completely oblivious to the fact that The Rolling Stones were playing in some nearby club.” At Goldsmiths he spent his time ostensibly working on a musicological dissertation, but was not oblivious to the latest trends in avant-garde classical music and performance art. He got involved with electronic music and performances with the British composer Humphrey Searle. One of his teachers, Cornelius Cardew, was an important booster of John Cage, LaMonte Young and other avant-garde American composers. John Cage was the first major influence on John Cale.
CALE:
“Most classical musicians are really insecure about self-expression. The conductor always tells you how to play a piece. Then Cage comes along and gives you a sheet with dots and diagrams, and gives you the freedom to play what
you’d like and most people goof off.
“Cage’s music can sound like anything – Mozart, Beethoven, Bach – anyone. It can sound like what any one individual wants it to sound like. You can find your own riff and do exactly what you want. Classical musicians however are not given this freedom in the system they play.”