Australian Guitar

LOU REED AND STERLING MORRISON

THE PROTOTYPE FOR ALT-ROCK GUITAR TANDEMS

-

Many guitarists will decry The Velvet Undergroun­d’s lack of guitar expertise, but there is no avoiding the group’s impact on alternativ­e rock or its guitarists. Perhaps no album of theirs is as important in this regard as their first and most influentia­l, 1967’s The Velvet Undergroun­d & Nico. Beyond its music and anti-establishm­ent production, the disc gave us the band’s guitar tandem of Lou Reed and Sterling Morrison.

As players go, they couldn’t be further apart. Reed was the bombastic one, drawing shrieks, squawks and drones from his guitar and creating at times a dense ambience of noise that could be an agitated precursor to the haunting drone of shoegaze. Check out his jagged lead work on ‘Run, Run,

Run’, the exotic drones on ‘All Tomorrow’s Parties’ or the cacophonou­s sonic cloud that engulfs ‘European Son’, all three from that remarkable debut.

Morrison, less celebrated, played the more traditiona­l single-note lines and ringing arpeggiati­ons on songs like ‘Femme Fatale’ and ‘Pale Blue Eyes’ from 1969’s The Velvet Undergroun­d. That’s him picking the bluesy sliding lead guitar line that loops hypnotical­ly, and patiently, through ‘I’m Waiting For The Man’. Those sliding notes are a hallmark of Morrison’s style, heard on later recordings, like ‘Pale Blue Eyes’ and the Velvet Undergroun­d outtakes ‘Foggy Notion’ and ‘Lisa Says’.

Bassist Doug Yule, who joined the group following the departure of founding member John Cale in 1968, offered up this first-hand analysis of Reed and Morrison’s interplay in a 1997 interview. “Sterling always wound up with the more organised breaks while Lou favoured the longer, louder, raunchier ones,” he said. “He had a brilliant sense of melody but an imperfect instrument. Sterling seemed to be just the opposite, more a process of technique that lacked a soaring vision.”

It was together that they helped each other excel. Their interplay on ‘Heroin’ is remarkable, Morrison’s strumming pushing Reed into ever-more frenzied soloing. On ‘Sister Ray’, their guitars, initially distinguis­hable by each player’s style, merge over its 17-plus minutes, until it’s impossible to tell who’s doing what.

On their own, either would be easy to dismiss – Reed too provocativ­e, Morrison too traditiona­l, and both lacking technique – but as a tandem, they did their most revolution­ary work. Significan­tly, their interplay establishe­d the template for many future alt-rock groups that featured a guitar duo, one player holding down the floor while the other lifts the music higher.

TOP TRACK: ‘WAITING FOR THE MAN’

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia