Isn’t Time Lovely? Annivyrsary 1976

ISSUE #329

For some reason, in 1976, everyone was trying to break into Graceland. In April, Springsteen was escorted off the grounds after trying to jump the wall to see his idol during a tour stop in Memphis. In November, Jerry Lee Lewis was arrested, drunk, with a pistol outside at 3 a.m. He loudly demanded to see the King. Elvis would die nine months later.

These two incidents have been somersaulting through my head for weeks, to my surprise. I couldn’t stop coming back to them; they were uniquely present, even when I tried to take breaks. “Why,” I would ask when I was trying to watch Fight Club or whatever, “was everyone trying to get to Elvis?” What bizarre meaning did the 50s have to the 70s? And was it what all generations go through 20 years out?

By the time the 70s were 20 years old, when I came to consciousness, people knew Elvis was straight-up racist and the Dude was open about hating the fucking Eagles. By then, half the popular music of ’76 was some of the worst shit in history. The other half was beamed straight from heaven (Station to Station, Plantasia) or built from the dirt without permission (Modern Lovers, Ramones).

The Graceland incidents were going through my mind as I went to see the Fight Club 4K remaster in theaters today, a deeply punk movie that’s 20-ish years old (give or take). I couldn’t help but think of the Ramones, the trailblazers of punk, who nevertheless had a Fincher-esque sheen—poppy as the Beach Boys, shabby yet pristine as a billboard ad. Culturally speaking, I realized, Fight Club and the Ramones are buzzsaw cousins, so stylistically new that the dust they left was too radioactive for the mainstream—the rarified air of Public Enemy, of Aphex Twin; of Lopatin, of SOPHIE.

The best I can wrap my head around it, inside 1976 are two hoary, frazzled wolves. One was sycophantic, establishment, its fur patchy and falling out: Kansas, Queen, Rush, Hotel California. The other—the younger, scrappier sibling—was resentfully tearing the truth out of visions of the future: Stevie Wonder. “Roadrunner.” Bowie with his paranoid, addict’s pain.

The 60s were dead. The squares had won too many battles after another. For every Sesame Street we fought to get on TV, there were twice as many game shows. The prevailing wisdom for the new generations? Time twists all hope into evil. Carrie always gets covered in blood. Elvis will never leave the building.


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It Never Goes Out: Annivyrsary 1986

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Exit 8 (Years of Earwyrms)