Itâs all about this heavy metal band who go on tour in America but I wonât go on any more because Iâll just end up talking about it for hours and reciting loads of catchphrases that youâve never heard of. But the thing is, that thing with Ashcroft, it really reminded me of a scene in the film where the band get lost backstage and canât find their way to the stage.â
âUh. Sounds cool.â
âSo whatâs next for Goat Hero?â
âI dunno. Weâre rehearsing next Wednesday.â
âIâd love to hear some stuff.â
âIâm not sure youâd like it.â
âI might. I like some of the stuff you like. We both like AC/DC.â
âYeah. But not many of my friends like AC/DC.â
âWhat about the girl whose dadâs a TV chef? Whatshername? Does she like them?â
âSally? Donât talk about her. She thought, like, Darius was cool until about two and a half minutes ago, when she suddenly decided to like nu-metal.â
âIs that because of you?â
âI dunno. Donât care.â
âWhy? Is she not attractive?â
âSheâs just kind of immature. There was this girl she used to hang around with, Hannah? And they just used to go round poking people in the ribs at breaktime. I mean, she was in year eight at the time.â
âYear eight? So whatâs that in old-fashioned terms. Second year? Used toââ
âNot sure.â
ââbe different when I was at school.â
âOh, right.â
âSo â poking people? What was that all about? Was that a flirting thing?â
âNo. I dunno. It was just, like, really sad. Just poking people! They used to wear their hair in pigtails, too.â
âNot very goth?â
âNeh.â
âAnd now she likes Staind?â
âSays she does, yeah. And anyway, theyâre just sooo not the best nu-metal band. Raf and me hate them. Theyâre kind of seriously fake.â
âSo there are different degrees of quality in nu-metal? I never realised that. I thought all those bands sounded phoney and corporate.â
âNo. No way.â
âOh, right.â
âWhatâs psychedelia?â
âWhy?â
âI just wondered. Whatâs the definition of it? âCos youâre always going on about it. And all your mates and everyone seemed to be talking about it tonight.â
VARIOUS ARTISTS â NUGGETS: ORIGINAL ARTYFACTS FROM THE FIRST PSYCHEDELIC ERA (RHINO BOX SET, 1999)
TOM : â IN MODERN rock music, six years represents an evolutionary microsecond: enough time for Elastica, My Bloody Valentine and The Stereo MCs to record an album (if they all formed one supergroup, put in overtime and cut down on fag breaks). But by 1972, 1966 â the bloom year of Americaâs garage punk movement â was a period rendered indistinct by at least a couple of aeonsâ worth of musical revolutions. If you even remembered it, you were a card-carrying historian.
âLenny Kaye, a rock critic who moonlighted as a guitarist for Patti Smith, was such a historian. Disenchanted with rockâs tendency for pomposity in the early Seventies, Kaye masterminded the original
Nuggets
album from his own singles collection â picking twenty-seven low-budget fleeting classics recorded in the suburban garages and cheapo recording studios of America between 1965 and 1968. Was he aware that he was sewing the seeds of punk? Doubtful. But trace a line back from the Kingâs Road in 1977, via theEast Village in 1974, and youâll end up here, cradling the genreâs raw, overenthusiastic genesis.
âBy 1972, most of
Nuggets
â DIY John Townshends and Pete Lennons had long since swallowed their dreams of stardom for jobs at post offices and insurance companies; only the odd few grew into internationally famous pop innovators (Nazzâs Todd Rundgren) and squirrel-shooting metal
Reshonda Tate Billingsley
Joseph Nassise
Isabella Alan
Karen Charlton
Richard Cox
J. S. Cooper, Helen Cooper
Angela Castle
Chris Pavone
Gina Cresse
Cupboard Kisses