San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

A ‘Loaded’ oral history of the Velvet Undergroun­d

With insight, opinion and dish, author makes compelling case for band

- By Michael Hill

Before the band became synonymous with downtown cool, the Velvet Undergroun­d played a multiband bill at a suburban New Jersey high school in 1965.

Parents and kids in the crowd were repelled by the “screeching urge of sound” from Lou Reed and his bandmates, a local reviewer wrote, and they retreated in horror after their second song, “Heroin.”

The Velvet Undergroun­d soon found a more appreciati­ve audience when artist Andy Warhol spotted them and set them up at the Factory, his Manhattan studio-and-happening space.

But wide success and fame eluded the Velvet Undergroun­d during their fractious run. They became lionized as edgy musical groundbrea­kers later on — reversing the stereotypi­cal rock band success story by breaking up and then conquering the world.

Veteran journalist and author Dylan Jones tells that unusual story in “Loaded: The Life (and Afterlife) of the Velvet Undergroun­d.” Or more precisely, Jones weaves together an oral history that relies on the voices of friends, Warhol “superstars,” fellow musicians and members of the band.

Jones interviewe­d a bunch of people who were in the

By Dylan Jones (Grand Central Publishing; 400 pages; $30) orbit of Reed, John Cale and the other band members. The author also relies on past interviews from Reed and others who have died.

The staying power of the Velvet Undergroun­d stems from their songs, which could be beautiful, dissonant or hypnotic. But it also revolves around their style, which has been widely copied by rockers ever since.

They wore sunglasses inside. They didn’t care what you thought. They could barely stand each other.

“We hated everybody and everything,” said Cale.

This is largely a story about Reed, who was a restless artist, a canny songwriter and — quite often — a surly jerk. But some of the book’s most compelling passages describe Reed’s difficult and all-toobrief partnershi­p with the equally intense Cale, a classicall­y trained musician from Wales.

The book also tracks the post-Velvet work of Reed, Cale and the singer/songwriter Nico, who was featured on the band’s debut album.

Reed finally began getting his due in 1972 with the release of the “Transforme­r” album, which included the signature song “Walk on the Wild Side.”

Good oral histories hit the right mix of insight, opinion and dish. And Jones mostly delivers.

The off-the-wall stuff is in there, too, like tales of Cale chopping the head off a chicken onstage and Reed slapping around David Bowie at a restaurant.

Jones falls a bit short in his mission of softening the image of Reed, who was notorious for being difficult, especially with journalist­s.

But he convincing­ly makes the case for the band’s historical importance: “Unpack the last 50 years of pop,” Jones writes, “and the broken fragments of the Velvet Undergroun­d are everywhere.”

The off-the-wall stuff is in there, too, like tales of John Cale chopping the head off a chicken onstage and Lou Reed slapping around David Bowie at a restaurant.

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LOADED: THE LIFE (AND AFTERLIFE) OF THE VELVET UNDERGROUN­D

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