A FAN’S NOTES
Some Old Loves Are So Hard to Shake
Google Analytics paints pretty pictures for me. Graphs and pie charts. Dispatches from the Crooked 9’s readership oscillates between 20,000 and 40,000 pairs of eyeballs per month. I’ve learned that eyeballs don’t buy my books. They tend to read other ones. Before or after I dropped my university microeconomics course, I should’ve dropped one in statistics too. I believed my last couple of titles were good enough to sell more than a few hundred copies. But what do I know about absolutely irrational numbers and logic?
If you’re a regular visitor here, yeah, you with the dusty credit card, Welcome back! You will never scan or scroll alone. And you know by now my marginal propensity to go on a bit about the Rolling Stones. I’ve never contemplated the opportunity cost of my fanaticism. I’m too old, weathered and well-seasoned to be embarrassed by anything anymore. Confidentially, strictly on the hush-hush, I was more sweet 16 than cynical 66 when I lapped up Foreign Tongues on its July 10 release day. I bought the double green vinyl “indie” record store version in support of Blackbyrd, my primary music destination in Edmonton. I bought the workaday CD too because a new Stones album always takes three or four listens to get a handle on. The singles are usually tangential from the guts.
Carbon dating the Stones corporate ascension into irrelevancy is an amusing parlour game. Like discussing old time baseball and hockey in a pub where whiteheads are invisible to an indifferent and poorly trained staff. At some unfixable quantum point in my life the pop culture force that was rock ebbed into a sociological footnote; a fuddy-duddy sub-genre in an upended popular music industry. I read somewhere recently that hip-hop is a dead art form now. Somehow, the Stones – or the ones still alive beneath their banner, the partners too committed to quit – are still standing in the aftermath beside the merchandise tent.
How many tongues can a pair of Nike high-heeled sneakers have? I don’t know, I passed on the fashionable footwear. There must be more tie-ups and tie-ins available in their Carnaby Street department store. The sleeve art of Foreign Tongues is a collage of caricatures by an artist so hip that only Mick has heard of him. It’s not a selling point. My alternatives were FIFA World Cup-themed covers or Marvel Comics superheroes. No surprise though because Hackney Diamonds, their shockingly good studio “comeback” of a few years back, could be had in a dizzying assortment of Major League Baseball sleeves. A sheepish confession: Had they resurrected the Montreal Expos I would’ve given the pigeon gouge some consideration.
I heard my mother shout at me from her Montreal grave last Friday. “TURN IT DOWN!” I spun the CD on the stereo, the amplifier set to my usual preferred volume. A stray cat in a wind tunnel; my ears were pinned like Keith’s pupils in the 70s and what’s left of my hair blew away. Producer Andrew Watt (apt surname) has engineered a sonic boom that punches through iPod docks and whatever subsequent audio technology that rendered them archaic.
Watt is a presence on nearly all of the album’s 14 songs. Mainly guitar, curious for a band with a couple of infamous experts. Watt’s also graced with two co-writing credits (Stones touring party alum, keyboardist Matt Clifford, racks up one). Poor Ronnie Wood, still the new guy after 50 years and still seeking his elusive fourth or fifth hyphen after Jagger-Richards.
The charm of Hackney Diamonds was its undiluted 70s length, about 40 minutes. Foreign Tongues runs for over an hour. It’s no Exile. More A Bigger Bang, an album begging to be pared down to the decent single disc lurking somewhere amid the dross: The moon is yellow/Your tits like Jell-O – ‘nuff said. And it’s a big, nostalgic and certainly foolish cri de coeur to demand that three golden agers – survivors of rock’s golden age – define yet another amphetamine era in western progress when nothing’s making sense to nobody. Expertise is left to influencers and geopolitics to a few old men all whom are just titch younger than Mick and Keith.
Foreign Tongues is Hackney Diamonds on repeat with less oomph. Formulaic, the new paradigm. Its feel is Mick and Friends (and employees). Not a capital crime because his Wandering Spirit is the second-best non-Stones Stones album out there after Keith’s Talk Is Cheap. Just five keepers on Foreign Tongues for a fanatic like me who now clearly sees the end of the line. “Jealous Lover” may’ve charted 40 years ago, but that was then. My love train’s left the station with blue lights on behind.
Christ. If there’s another Stones album, dregs from the can, I’ll buy it. They can’t leave me. I’ve no solid memories of my life without them in it. Value is an abstract in an artificial market.
Dispatches from the Crooked 9 is your most unreliable, unbalanced and inaccurate alternative source of everything meaningless. No AI and little intelligence of any sort since 2013! Visit my companion site www.megeoff.com to buy my last couple of books. You can also listen to songs I’ve co-written with The Muster Point Project before scooting over to its YouTube channel.
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