Tag Archives: Lou Reed

Velvet Underground’s Moe Tucker on Lou Reed

Moe Tucker of the Velvet Underground wrote a piece about Lou Reed, which ran yesterday in The Observer.

Tucker wrote:

I first met Lou when he came by one day to see my brother. They were friends from college and he came by to pick up my brother around Thanksgiving or maybe Christmas. That was in the early 60s. A long time ago. A different time. A different world. I think we said hello, and I knew from my brother that he was into music, but he didn’t make that big an impression.

Lou and Sterling [Morrison] met through my brother. They were all at Syracuse together, and that’s when the two of them started to play together. I got involved in their group almost by accident because the original drummer left just before a gig in New York in 1965 and they needed a new drummer real fast. Sterling said, “Oh, Tucker’s sister plays drums.” I lived way out on Long Island and they came out there from the city to see if I could keep a beat. That’s how it happened.

I was working as a data puncher for IBM and playing drums at night in a band that a brother of one of my girlfriends had formed. I was a pop fan, the Beatles and the Stones and all that 60s stuff, and suddenly I was playing this really avant-garde stuff in a group called the Velvet Underground. I had no grounding in the experimental stuff that John [Cale] loved, so it was quite a leap.

“There She Goes Again”:

The first gig I played was the first gig as the Velvet Underground. [Summit high school New Jersey, 11 December 1965] We played three songs [There She Goes Again, Venus in Furs and Heroin]. A lot of people were bewildered. A lot of people left. I think Lou kind of liked that. Then we played Cafe Bizarre in New York and the guy who owned it didn’t want the drums as they were too loud, so I played tambourine. I like the sound of the tambourine so that was fine. That’s where Barbara Rubin introduced us to Andy (Warhol).

“Heroin”:

It was a whole different world to the one I knew, especially at the Factory with the Warhol crowd, but it was really exciting and a lot of fun. I wasn’t scared or overwhelmed, I was just excited. Sterling was a kind of comforting presence. I’d known him since I was 11. John and Lou were just so full of ideas. I was super-impressed – the drones, the lyrics, the noise, the whole way they approached music was just new and exciting, and there was a pop imagination in there, too.

“Venus In Furs”:

To read the rest, head to The Observer.

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Listen: Alternative Version of Velvet Underground’s “I’m Beginning To See The Light”

Another previously unreleased Velvet Underground track from the multi-disc White Light/ White Heat due out next Tuesday.

Thanks Rolling Stone.

— A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post —

Listen: Previously Unheard 19-Minute Version of Velvet Underground’s “Sister Ray”

On December 10 the Velvert Underground’s White Light/ White Heat will be released as a multi-disc set with lots of previously unreleased material. Here’s a 19-minute live version of “Sister Ray” recorded at the Gymnasium in New York City on April 30, 1967.

— A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post —

Listen: Lou Reed Talks About Bob Dylan

In February 2012 Lou Reed appeared at the Kelly Writers House at the University of Pennsylvania and was interviewed by Rolling Stone’s Anthony deCurtis.

It’s short but interesting, particularly the end where Reed talks about the difference between Dylan’s songwriting and his own. Use the “more” link on the player for other clips including Reed talking about Andy Warhol and Laurie Anderson.

— A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post —

Listen: Unreleased Velvet Underground Track Sees The Light, “I’m Not a Young Man Anymore”

A heretofore unreleased Velvet Underground recording, “I’m Not a Young Man Anymore,” went online today.

The song features a blistering guitar solo from Lou Reed.

It will appear on the expanded three-disc edition of 1968’s White Light/White Heat that will be released December 3, 2013. The album, co-curated by John Cale and Lou Reed before Reed’s death in late October, will include mono and stereo mixes of the entire album plus alternate and unreleased outtakes such as John Cale’s creep “The Gift.”

“I’m Not a Young Man Anymore”:

— A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post —

Watch: Eddie Vedder Covers The Velvet Underground’s “After Hours”

At the L.A. Memorial Sports Arena last night Eddie Vedder did a solo rendition of “After Hours” as a tribute to Lou Reed.

— A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post —

Watch: U2 Cover Daft Punk, Lou Reed & Bowie at RED AIDS Benefit

Check out these videos of U2 at the RED Auction in NYC last night, where they were raising money to fight against AIDS.

— A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post —

Watch & Listen: Lou Reed, Leonard Cohen Part of 92nd Street Y Online Archive

92nd Street Y has recordings of over 10,000 events going back to 1949. This Thursday they will start letting people watch or stream audio of over 1000 of them, and right now there’s an audio stream of Leonard Cohen performing “The Stranger Song” from 1966, and an interview with Lou Reed from 2006 that you can check out.

Lou Reed:

Leonard Cohen reads two poems – “For E.J.P” and “You Have the Lovers” – and performs “The Stranger Song.”

Listen: Lou Reed, DJ — Check out his 1979 WPIX Radio Show

Photo via Aquarium Drunkard.

Lou Reed always loved radio — if it was playing the right songs.

At one point he made sure it was playing the right songs — Reed was a DJ, and you can listen to one of the shows he did on WPIX in 1979.

Head here to download the show.

Thanks Aquarium Drunkard!

Hundreds Turn Out For Lou Reed Memorial in New York

Photo of memorial via Rolling Stone, by Jessica Lehrman.

It was billed as a gathering in which Lou Reeds music would be played, and that’s just what it was. Hundreds of Lou Reed fans came together for the event, which was held at at the Paul Milstein Pool and Terrace at Lincoln Center.

It began with the loud electric guitar and pounding of drums from the title track of Reed’s 1982 album The Blue Mask. Other songs that filled the air: “Sally Can’t Dance,” “Femme Fatale,” “Heroin,” “I’m Waiting for the Man,” “Waves of Fear,” “Sunday Morning,” “I Love You, Suzanne,” “Pale Blue Eyes,” “Dirty Blvd.” and “Sweet Jane,” “Sister Ray,” “Think It Over,” “Walk on the Wild Side,” “All Tomorrow’s Parties” and “Set the Twilight Reeling.”




Here’s some video: