Tuesday, May 15, 2012

ALICE COOPER: SHARING THE NIGHTMARE,
BY STEVE LUDWIG

College graduations. Pretty soon, inhabitants of high schools and elementary schools will be singing the song that's been sung since 1972: "SCHOOL'S OUT" !!!
It's almost certainly Alice Cooper's best-known song, and I've been a die-hard fan of his ever since the SCHOOL'S OUT album came out during my senior year at North Bergen High School, in New Jersey.
I've followed "The Coop" fervently ever since. He had released a few albums before that (which I've since gotten into), but for me, Alice Cooper started with SCHOOL'S OUT.
I would guess that the non-fan who's heard of Cooper, but isn't familiar with much more than "School's Out" and perhaps "(I'm) Eighteen," thinks of Alice as merely a novelty act, whose stage show consists of a pet boa constrictor, a lot of blood (some of it even fake---muahahaha!!!!!!!), and either a guillotine or a noose, depending on which method of death the "bad Alice" succumbs to in that particular show.
But Alice offers so much more to those who can find the time to listen.
His lyrics are among the most clever in all of music. Bob Dylan referred to Alice as "...an underrated songwriter." You can say that again, Bob-O.
Aside from a couple stints in rehab for alcohol abuse, Cooper hasn't stopped making music. In September of last year, he released a follow-up (albeit over 35 years later) to his 1975 masterpiece WELCOME TO MY NIGHTMARE (featuring special guest, Vincent Price) with WELCOME 2 MY NIGHTMARE.
I'd like to share with you some of my favorite Coop lyrics...
Never heavy-handed about his born-again Christianity, Alice nonetheless allows this part of his life to seep into a few of his songs. Feeling that it may be time for the Big G's son to return to save us from the continuing brutality of our planet, Cooper sings:

                                   Here's where we keep the armies
                                   Here's where we write their names
                                   Here's where the money god is
                                   Here's our famous hall of shame
                                   Here's where we starve the hungry
                                   Here's where we cheat the poor
                                   Here's where we beat the children
                                   Here is where we pay the whore

                                   Why don't you come down to...
                                    It's such a brutal planet!
                                    It's such an ugly world
                                   Why don't you come down to...
                                                                                    ["Brutal Planet"]

After his first trip to rehab for his overindulgence in alcohol (some reports place him, at his worst, drinking 2 cases of beer and a bottle of whiskey each day),
Alice recorded the FROM THE INSIDE album, a semi-autobiographical tale of his experiences in rehab. One of more beautiful ballads (and you may be surprised at all the ballads that Alice has sung throughout his career) comes from the album. Cooper's character, just before being released from rehab, writes a letter to his loved one, who waits at home. Will she still love him? Will he be able to deal with her in his new sobriety?

                                       Dear darlin', surprised to hear from me?
                                       Bet you're sittin' drinkin' coffee, 
                                       Yawning sleepily
                                       Just to let you know 
                                       I'm gonna be home soon
                                       I'm kinda awkward and afraid
                                       Time has changed your point of view

                                       How you gonna see me now?
                                       Please don't see me ugly, babe
                                       'Cause I know I've let you down
                                       In, oh, so many ways
                                       How you gonna see me now
                                       Since we've been on our own?
                                       Are you gonna love the man
                                       When the man gets home?
                                                                               ["How You Gonna See Me Now?"]


One of Alice's biggest strengths, for me, is his humor. He uses it to make clever observations about our sometimes wacky society. Does he feel that some of today's youth may occasionally take it too easy, and expect too much for nothing? See what you think, as he sings the voice of a teenager:

                                      I can't get a girl 'cause I ain't got a car
                                      I can't get a car 'cause I ain't got a job
                                      I can't get a job 'cause I ain't got a car
                                      So I'm looking for a girl with a job and a car

                                      Don't you know where you are?
                                      You're lost in America
                                                                               ["Lost in America"]


Ever wonder if Elvis made it to heaven? Well, Alice did. He sings this song as the late, great Presley might have:

                                      I had a lot of girls
                                      I had a lot of guns
                                     When they found me dead
                                     The whole world was stunned
                                     Went to the pearly gates
                                     Said, "I'm the hippest thing."
                                     And Peter said, "Well, son,
                                     We already got ourselves a King."
                                                                                          ["Disgraceland"]

After twenty-five studio albums (as well as seven live albums), Alice has written some truly imaginative lyrics; I hardly scraped the surface with the four songs I excerpted here.
A couple of years ago, I had the extreme pleasure of meeting Alice Cooper at a convention. It was a thrill; it really was.
As I waited on the long line to have my picture taken with him, I noticed how Alice would "play up" his image with those fans that expected him to be "Alice Cooper," providing an occasional choke hold on his victims. To others like me who approached him calmly, he was simply "Alice." He read his fans well.
"Hi, Alice, I'm Steve."
"Hi, Steve."
We shook hands. I had planned to tell Alice how I had visited his sports bar, "CoopersTown" (cool name, huh?), while in Arizona a few years ago, and how I especially got a kick out of how all the waiters and waitresses wore the famous Alice Cooper eye makeup.
But seeing I was pressed for time, with no end in sight to that long line of people behind me, we posed for the picture; I wanted to be sure to mention one thing to him. I mentioned to Alice that I haven't had a drop of alcohol since 1985, and that his FROM THE INSIDE album held a special musical place in my heart.
"Since '82 for me, " Alice said of his sobriety.
"Yup, I know," I told him. "Well, good health to you, Alice."
"You, too," he said, and then finished with, "We've never felt so good, right?"
"Yup."
And with that, the next person in line was making her way up to Alice.
I left with a good feeling; one of my favorite musical artists was a regular guy, and a pretty darn nice one at that.

No nightmares for me!



Did you know I have a radio show? It's called STEVE LUDWIG'S CLASSIC POP CULTURE at www.PlanetLudwig.com. Thanks!

                                         



SO, HEY, IF YOU ENJOYED READING MY BLOG, WOULD YOU KINDLY CONSIDER BUYING MY BOOK? IT'S CALLED SEE YOU IN CCU: A LIGHTHEARTED TALE OF MY OPEN-HEART SURGERY.
YOU CAN READ ABOUT IT, CHECK OUT SOME OF THE REVIEWS, AND PURCHASE IT IF YOU'D LIKE, AT CCUBOOK.COM

                                                                    

As always, thanks so much for reading!
Steve





                                        

                                      
         





                                    



2 comments:

  1. Steve - Good recollection. I met Alice in a jewelry store in Old Scottsdale. He was thinking of buying a vintage Rolex and he asked me how it looked on his wrist. I thought it was too big for his so thin arm and told him so and showed him my slender wrist so he wouldn't feel insulted. I also tried on the watch while faking interest as it was some thousands of dollars above my pay scale. Chit-chat followed. He didn't buy it and left and he forgot his leather jacket. I went outside with the jacket, but he was gone. I went back into the jewelry store and asked my sister-in-law to put the jacket on for a photo and she said something along the lines of, "I'm not putting that piece of shit on me!" It was quite ragged and God only knows where it had been. The jeweler said he'd call Alice and bring it to him the next time he went to Alice's house. The jeweler goes there once a month or so to wind all of Cooper's thousands of vintage watches. Cool!

    Steve, send me your email address as I have my review of your book with references to "Beowulf" and Chaucer.

    Bob Brunner

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  2. Cool story, Inspector Brunner. When are you gonna start YOUR blog? Email me at sludwig@nj.rr.com...When I read your review, I'll have a cup of tea so I can have a cup and Chaucer. Um, anyway...

    ReplyDelete