| Funtopia Review |
Mick Farren has never been scared to wear
his influences on his sleeve, and, over the years, a tribute poster
and several books on Elvis Presley, and, more recently, a fictional
work called Jim
Morrison’s Adventures In The Afterlife bear testimony to
this. He also interviewed Gene Vincent for underground newspaper
International
Times in 1970, and had written a retrospective on him called
“Po’ White Punk From The Pool Hall” during his stint as a journalist
in the 1970s for New Musical Express. Therefore it comes
as no surprise that he should finally produce a more comprehensive
homage to the “skinny white sailor”. What is surprising is that
it didn’t come much earlier.
Although
by no means a fully extensive biography of Vincent – it clocks in
at just 189 pages, and, is by Farren’s own description, a small
format, monogram. As for sources, Farren acknowledges Britt Hagarty’s
The Day The World Turned Blue biography and Steve Aynsley
and Roger Nunn’s liner notes from Gene the EMI box set,
but he also draws widely on his own 1970 interview with Vincent,
as well as numerous anecdotes collected over the years, particularly
from the late Tony Secunda. By placing the narrative firmly in the
context of the post war teen explosion and the subsequent development
of youth culture, combined with the use of the aforementioned anecdotes
and Farren’s own reminiscences he ensures that it is more than just
a standard rehash of the Gene Vincent story, and tells it in his
own inimitable style.
Mick Farren has long acknowledged Gene Vincent as being one of his
all-time idols, and Farren’s debt – not to mention countless others
of his generation - is obvious, a point on which Farren is at pains
to labour throughout the book. As well as using it as a subtitle
for the book itself, as one example, Farren uses a line from Ian
Dury’s own tribute to emphasise this ‘[Sweet Gene Vincent] “there’s
one in every town”,
meaning that every
community had its quasi-
romantic outcast:
the kid with the motorcycle;
the punk in the
pool hall who has studied so
carefully exactly
how to lean on his cue,…the
kid with the girlfriend
with too much lipstick
who fell pregnant
before her time. Gene
Vincent became
their personal representative
in the rock pantheon,
and was able to make
them feel that
he was singing his songs
exclusively for
them.’
Vincent’s influence over ensuing generations should not be underestimated
either, and as Farren says, ‘without him, there would have been
no Jim Morrison, no Sid (Vicious), no Marilyn Manson, and even Elvis
would have struggled’. After all, isn’t it said that imitation is
the most sincere form of flattery? Conversely, Farren also points
out that many of ‘rock’s wannabe philosopher desperadoes and pretend
warrior poets’ who have aped Vincent’s trademark style over the
years probably don’t even realise it, and think they are copying
the likes of Jim Morrison or Johnny Rotten etc. However, such is
the potency of the Gene Vincent image that ‘his leather clothes
have been copied so many times down the years that they are one
of rock’s visual clichés’, thus ensuring the Gene Vincent
image eternal iconic status regardless of whether or not Vincent
is recognised as the true originator of this style.
In addition to the main story, Farren has included a fully exhaustive
list of Gene Vincent’s recording sessions and discography compiled
by Wayne ‘Dang’ Dooley, which should provide more than enough information
for any would be Gene Vincent completist to track down his back
catalogue. Another interesting addition is the four page epilogue
in which Farren’s poetic tribute “The Lonesome Death Of Gene Vincent”,
first published in 1995, is reproduced. On the whole, Gene Vincent:
There’s One In Every Town is a well balanced piece of work
by a genuine enthusiast whose admiration of Vincent is obvious,
but who is equally able to recognise the late man’s flaws too. Undoubtedly
then, aside from various articles here and there, this is Mick Farren’s
own long overdue tribute and celebration of Gene Vincent in book
form, and a very welcome one at that too!
RD August 2004
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