The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, January 9, 1991-- Page 7 Crosstown Traffic: the definitive study by Annette Petruso first of two parts spent 5 years in someone else's life," said Charles Shaar Murray during a phone interview from his home in London. Murray is author of Crosstown Traffic: Jimi Hendrix and the post-war rock 'n' roll rev- olution (or in the U.K., Jimi Hen- drix and post-war pop), one of the most concise, engrossing and well- constructed books on popular music 9 wrjtten in recent memory. 4, Amid lame "biographies" of "artists" like The New Kids on the Block (which, by the way, The New 9York Times Review of Books has listed in the top 10 best selling pa- perback non-fiction books for the past six weeks), one or two readable histories of bands such as the Doors and the Who and a few outstanding : books on Black popular music, Crosstown Traffic raises the stan- dards to which future books on any kind of popular music must aspire. Though this book will probably never be on any best seller list, it is most certainly one of the best writ- ten and most informative books about one of the important influ- ences on music today. Where would 'most heavy metal bands be if Hen- drix not had a hand in bringing to (white) public attention such guitar effects as the wah-wah pedal and a stage show in which he slung his electric guitar around his crotch? 'Probably standing and scratching themselves. Murray didn't do Crosstown for the money; the mention of said New Kids biography elicited this iesponse: "I'm consumed with jealousy. Why the fuck did I write a book about Jimi Hendrix? I should have written a book about New Kids on the Block and made two hundred times as much money. What am I talking about? Two thousand times as much money." Fuck the money. As a music journalist/critic, Murray collected and wrote Crosstown Traffic on a shoe-string budget over a 5-year pe- riod.This limited his options as to the style of the book, but it didn't matter when he figured out what he wanted to do. He explained, "I'm * fascinated by the way artistic tradi- tions intersect and are affected by their times. And I wanted to get dis- 4 cussion of Hendrix away from all this sex and drugs and wild man of rock stuff and focus on the work and see where that took me. The book is not objective in any sense.... Instead, what Murray has done is * RECORDS Continued from page 5 Way as I make my place on the dance floor. Unfortunately, Groovy, Laid- back and Nasty rarely makes you feel like dancing at all. The problem is that Groovy is pretty boring. It's as if Cabaret Voltaire spent the last two years lis- 'tening to house music and said to themselves, "Hey, we can do that!" And that is the main fault with Groovy. Almost every song sounds familiar, like it has been played in clubs and on alternative radio for the last few years. The string and piano stabs, the beeps, soulful singers in the back- ground and those damned house drums are all prevalent throughout the album. All these elements are computerized and "perfect," but these Charles Shaar Murray and the state of the "rock book" explore Hendrix in a musical cultural context. He discusses in depth artists like Robert Johnson and Charlie Christian and music like jazz, soul and the blues to analyze where Hen- drix came from. By doing this, he has given the reader a concise guide to some of the major movements of music in the 20th century. For once, an author talks intelligently about what the music says. Previously the best known work on Hendrix was David Henderson's biography 'Scuse Me While I Kiss the Sky. Unfortunately, it reads like a gossipy, new age kind of thing be- cause Henderson writes constantly about Hendrix's love life and seems to think he successfully invaded Hendrix's consciousness. For example, how do you think Henderson knows what Hendrix felt right before he died? "Jimi turns in bed and tries to get up," Henderson writes. "He feels sick to his stomach.... He feels bile coming into his mouth. It takes a superhuman effort for him to sway his body toward the edge of the bed. A stream of bile comes from his mouth. His cheek rests against the sheet. The sheet absorbs the bile. His retching ceases. Suddenly he does not care any more. He falls quickly back into semi-conscious- ness." Comparatively, Murray has a nimble writing style which matches the book's angle. He also has a sense of humor which is lacking in many quarters of the earth, most no- tably in music journalism. At one point in Crosstown Traffic, he quips, "Frank Marino, the Canadian one-time boy wonder who formed Mahogany Rush after allegedly com- ing down from an acid trip in hospi- tal and discovering he was the rein- carnation of Jimi Hendrix (I type this with a straight face and trust you will read it likewise) ...." While Henderson devoted about 400 pages to telling the life story of Hendrix, Murray lays out "the facts" in one chapter, and Murray's reads much more realistically. The organization, the flow of the chapters and what they say make Crosstown Traffic unique among popular music books. He weaves cultural and musical critique with his opinion of Hendrix's music. Murray said he came up with this style mostly out of necessity. "Quite early in the proceedings, I realized that I didn't want to write a conventional biography and even if I had wanted to, I simply didn't have the budget to do it properly," he said. "So rather than re-plow the... . story of Hendrix's life and try to painstakingly pry previously unprinted anecdotes out of people lines, a profound world-weariness and despair." -But as far as many reviewers are concerned, the chapter which elo- quently summarizes the short careers of famed Delta bluesman Robert Johnson and ground-breaking jazz guitarist Charlie Christian is the most important in the book. It stands out from the rest of the book, like a great guitar solo (maybe one of Hendrix's) that bends the song so much that superficially it seems like the solo has almost nothing to do with the song. Murray said he wanted to relate them to the simi- larly brief life of Hendrix. "Why Robert Johnson and Char- lie Christian are there, especially in a book which had post-war, in its British sub-title anyway, these are both pre-war figures," he said. "They were both young Black innovators who died premature deaths. One was a bluesman who I would submit al- most re-defined the blues and the other was a guitar player who re-de- fined the guitar. They both crammed an awful lot of immortal work into a very short space of time. Both of them were in a sense undone by their own flaws. So to me the spirits of Robert Johnson and Charlie Chris- tian and their personal histories and the actual work that they did strike very resonant chords when thinking about Hendrix. Each one is almost a precursor of a certain aspect of Hen- drix's work and they were, for me, eerie resonances in facts of their lives." Murray elaborates on the theme of the blues, exploring Hendrix as bluesman. Murray discusses the mu- sic itself. One way is to speculate where he thinks Hendrix got certain guitar techniques. His descriptions are just technical enough so that the lay reader can at least get the gist of what he is talking about. Murray also explores the cultural manifesta- tions of the blues, especially in Hendrix's early musical days. Hen- drix "absorbed the culture of the spe- cific strata of Black American life in which the blues held its strongest sway. He lived as an itinerant with a guitar, like the country bluesman of the '30s, and, like them, he played whatever music someone was pre- pared to hear," he said. Murray further explains the tran- sition in relevance from blues to soul succinctly and explores many soul artists in relation to .Hendrix. Bouncing off a quote of Eric Clap- ton's, Murray writes: "Black people had had quite enough of feeling 'quite alone' and without options and alternatives, quite enough of the no- tion of one man or woman (with or without a guitar) against the world. ... And by replacing the romantic individualism of the blues with the community spirit of gospel, his (Ray Charles) music spoke volumes about the leverage black America could exert through collective action. Soul music was about an end to 'divide and rule'; it was - and is - about black America getting itself together." Crosstown implies most of the men who played soul and R&B and hired Hendrix as a sideman never could stand Hendrix's manner. "Most of them were originally from the ru- ral South; even the superflash, su- perbad Wicked Wilson Pickett was raised up in a shack miles from the nearest town, which was the teeming metropolis of Prattsville, Alabama," Murray writes. "They were proud men, and they hadn't fought their way every inch from Dogpatch, Mississippi in the face of every ob- stacle that the Land of the Free could throw at them just so's some drugged-out space-case from Seattle could show up at a gig looking like a street bum and then put on his own show at stage left while they were trying to go to work. That wasn't just an irritation, that was an insult." Crosstown Traffic is thoughtful and arguably Murray's best work thus far. Both Murray and Henderson come across obsessed and excited fans but Murray is able to focus this energy into resplendent writing. Murray said he did it because "I felt that most of the existing writing on Hendrix had concentrated on him as part of the '60s freak show, you know, file under '60s people who died of drugs and '60s people who burnt and smashed guitars and wore funny clothes. I just got the feeling he was being treated as part of the freak show rather than a great Amer- ican artist. And so when nobody emerged with a book like that, I real- ized with mounting horror that I was going to have to climb off my butt, and write the book myself." who knew him, I wanted to try to look for him in his music because I think he was more present in his music than in anything else he did and I also found the music fascinating," he continued. "I wanted to look at the music and the times in which it was created. I mean, there were at the time of publication... five existing Hendrix biographies and I knew that there were going to be more. And I thought, without massive resources, who needs another one?" Murray said he used previous bi- ographies, and many other secondary. sources, in an attempt to change how and what people think about Hendrix. "The existing biographies of Hendrix and a great deal of other stuff I found invaluable," he said. "One reason why I didn't feel too bad about not having the facilities to at- tempt to simply one up the existing biographies is that I felt a lot of the information about Hendrix was al- ready out there and already in the public domain had not been properly analyzed .... I felt that even working from secondary sources, I could still combine and collect the information to come up with some different in- terpretations from the prevailing, ones and to a certain extent I think I've succeeded because a lot of the writing about Hendrix that I've seen in the last year, whether people agree with me or not, have had to ac- knowledge my agenda. To a certain extent, I think I've changed the de- bate...." The chapters reflect these changes and this new style, each with an ob- vious precise goal. For example, in the chapter titled "I'm a Man (At Least I'm Trying to Be): So was Jimi Hendrix a sexist pig or what?," Murray discusses the sexual and the sex god image Hendrix has acquired. It also features one of the best sen- tences in the book: "Post-coital tristesse, is simply another manifes- tation of the existential melancholy which subsumes all but the most overtly celebratory of Hendrix's songs, and 'Manic Depression' sketches out, in comparatively few are things that went out with the '80s. The best dance musicians in Detroit and Chicago have pretty much moved on to other things. One of the only bright spots on the album is the song "Runaway." The drums and bass move this song and the rap by Steel in the middle is good. The only problem is that even this variety seems old. I can almost hear them in the studio now, "Hey, rap is really happening. Let's have this song break into a rap. Who can we get?" Even though it's a bit pre- tentious this is still one of the few songs that seems really new. DIEHARD Cabaret Voltaire fans will buy Groovy, Laidback and Nasty anyway, so the heck with them. But for everyone else, if "Runaway" is released as domestic 12", grab it. Otherwise you'll prob- See RECORDS, Page 8 Save theLP! O Daily Arts IE DOESN'T WRITE FOR ARTS. You can. Call 763-0379. r----- -e------ ._..__._._._....__._..__. .,_. __ .._.__w.. _, "--- -- THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN'S 17TH ANNUAL EXPLORE EMPLOYMENT PPORTUNITIE MEET WITH vISxCUSS CAREER GRADUATE SCHOOL OPTIONS WITH REPRESENTATIVES RECRUITERS MN R T INTERVIEWS . CA ER FOR WEDNESDAY, CONFERENCE JANUARY 23R TUESDAY, JAN. 22nd 7:00-10:00 p.m. PRE-CONFERENCE MICHIGAN UNION WORKSHOPS: ^" wSNEAK PR EVIEW: WEDNESDAY, JAN. 9 LAST MINUTE TIPS FROM AICHIGAN UNION EMPLOYERS -5:10-6:00 p.m. TmII JAv lAN. 10 TUESDAY. JAN. 22nd SANDUSKY, OHIO: Friday, Jan. 4 Cedar Point Park Attractions Office Rehearsal Studios Registration: 1:30 - 4:30 p.m. COLUMBUS, OHIO: Thursday, Jan. 10 Ohio State University Drake Union Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m BEREA, OHIO: Friday, Jan. 11 Baldwin-Wallace College Kulas Musical Arts Building Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN Monday, Jan. 14 University of Michigan Michigan Union - AndersonF Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m MT. PLEASANT, MICHIG Tuesday, Jan. 15 - Central Michigan University Norvall C. Bovee University Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m EAST LANSING, MICHIG Wednesday, Jan. 16 University Inn 1100 Trowbridge Rd. (Rts. 49( Registration: 2:30 -4:30 p.m KALAMAZOO, MICHIGA Thursday, Jan. 17 Western Michigan Universit MUSICIANS PERFORMERS TECHNICIANS DECATUR, ILLINOIS: Tuesday, Jan. 22 Millikin University Richards Treat University Center Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA: Wednesday, Jan. 23 Indiana University Memorial Union - Solarium Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. MUNCIE, INDIANA: Thursday, Jan. 24 Signature Inn Corner of McGalliard & Bethel Rds. . Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. BOWLING GREEN, OHIO: Friday, Jan. 25 Bowling Green State University Room University Union - Ohio Suite 1. Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. AN: PITTSBURGH, PA: Monday, Jan. 28 Point Park College Center Studio #4 . Registration: 3:00 - 6:00 p.m. AN: KENT, OHIO: Tuesday, Jan. 29 Kent State University 6 & 127) Student Center - Third Floor t. Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. N: SANDUSKY, OHIO: Wednesday, Jan. 30 y Cedar Point f Order your college ring NOW JO STENS A M E R I C A S C O L L E G E R N G'I Stop by and see a Jostens representative, January 9, 10,11 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. m 1