Chicago Sun-Times

A CRITIC RAVES

Steppenwol­f one- man show plays on the passion of Lester Bangs

- HEDY WEISS Follow HedyWeiss on Twitter @ HedyWeissC­ritic Email: hweiss@ suntimes. com

Erik Jensen stars in “How to Be a Rock Critic ( Based on the Writings of Lester Bangs)”) at Steppenwol­f’s 1700 Theatre. | CRAIG SCHWARTZ

In one form or another, music criticism has been around since the 18th century. But while rock ’ n’ roll certainly existed before the arrival of the Beatles and the British Invasion of the early 1960s, it didn’t fully gain journalist­ic legitimacy until then, with New Yorkbased Robert Christgau of the Village Voice often cited as one of the earliest “profession­al” voices in the field.

And then there was Lester Bangs, the wildly passionate ( and wildly self- destructiv­e) journalist and critic who spent most of his brief life ( he died in 1982 at the age of 33) covering the music scene for two magazines— Rolling Stone and Detroit- based Creem— and chroniclin­g the rise of the punk movement in the late ’ 70s.

“How to Be a Rock Critic ( Based on theWriting­s of Lester Bangs),” the one- man show written by the husbandand- wife team of Jessica Blank and Erik Jensen that is now receiving a highwired production at Steppenwol­f’s cabaret- style 1700 Theatre, captures the life andmusical times of the man who saw rock as a profoundly transcende­nt experience, one that all too often became warped by the mega- business that grew up around it. And while the show’s subtitle is accurate, it could easily have been enhanced with a more feverish readout— something like “the agony and ecstasy of a zealous, fiercely opinionate­d fan.”

Blank and Jensen, best known for their formidable docudrama ‘ The Exonerated” ( about the wrongful conviction of six people who were placed on Death Row and later exonerated), have done a radical about- face in terms of tone and content in “How to Be a Rock Critic,” with Jensen in a bravura turn as the dissipated but fervent Bangs thriving on the ideally paced direction by Blank.

Raised in California by a mother who was a devout Jehovah’s Witness ( his father died in a fire when Lester was a child), Bangs was a self- described isolated mama’s boy who early on discovered the writing of the Beat generation ( Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs, Jack Kerouac), penned his own stories ( burned by his mother), combed the bins at record stores, and for a long time sent out unsolicite­d reviews to Rolling Stone before he was finally given a chance as a legit freelancer.

From the start, Bangs possessed a fierce love it- orhate it mentality about the music he listened to, forever seeking a song’s power to create some sort of spiritual ( and sexual) transforma­tion in him— something Jensen brings to life with his inflamed riffs on the Van Morrison album “Astral Weeks” and the song “Give It to Me,” by the British band the Troggs. His other passions ( changeable as they could be) ranged from Lou Reed, Patti Smith and David Bowie to the quintessen­tially mythic Elvis. He dismissed the Beatles and James Taylor. He was entranced by Karen Carpenter’s voice. He championed the punk movement.

Bangs’ own life, not surprising­ly, was a hot mess. The play unfolds in his trash- filled apartment ( cheers for Richard Hoover’s set, Lap Chi Chu’s lighting and David Robbins’ sound design), where his typewriter sits half- buried on a desk and records are strewn amid empty beer cans and food containers alongside the booze, pills and addictive Romilar cough syrup that together would be his undoing. The band he formed to see if he could create his own music quickly failed. His interviews with celebrity bands whose musicians were his heroes often left him profoundly disillusio­ned. But he continued to write.

Jensen, with his gingery hair and beard, expressive face, desperate body language and perfectly conjured unwashed demeanor, takes us wholly inside Bangs’ brain and soul and heart and dissipated existence, giving us a critic who, not to be overly melodramat­ic, on some level died while writing the gospel of rock and seeking its potential for some form of salvation.

NOTE:

Each night of the show’s three- week run will feature a post- show treat of live music. I was lucky enough to catch a set by Bethany Thomas, the Chicagobas­ed singer- actress. Coming up ( July 13- 15) is the Lester BangsMemor­ial tribute band with Jim DeRogatis ( the rock critic who wrote a book about Bangs) and ( July 20- 22) David Singer & the Sweet Science.

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