The Velvet Underground Peeled
The definitive story of one of the most influential groups in rock "n" rolll history includes exclusive input from John Cale, Moe Tucker, and Doug Yule, and the first ever interview with Sterling Morrison’s widow Perhaps no other band can claim such scant chart success and so enduring a musical legacy as The Velvet Underground. Artists including David Bowie, the Sex Pistols, Joy Division, Roxy Music, Nirvana, U2, R.E.M., and dissident Czech playwright and eventual president, Vaclav Havel have cited the Velvets as a major influence. Yet only two of their albums even scraped Billboard"s Top 200. Formed by the mercurial Lou Reed and classically-trained Welshman John Cale, the band first achieved notoriety after being adopted by Andy Warhol, who set himself up as manager and producer and included the Velvets in his Exploding Plastic Inevitable multimedia roadshow. The freedom Warhol"s patronage brought enabled the group to chart hitherto unexplored regions of the rock n" roll soundscape, producing unforgettable and unsettling music that veered from droning, avant-garde experimentalism to folk-infused pop, taking in taboo-busting tales of drug addiction, prostitution, and sexual deviance along the way. Creative tensions and frustrated ambition eventually saw both Cale and Reed leave the band, with Doug Yule taking over on lead vocals before an entirely unoriginal lineup came to an ignominious end in Europe. In the decades since and several abortive reunions later, VU"s music has attained classic status, revered alongside The Beatles and The Beach Boys as one of the wellsprings of modern pop. Now Rob Jovanovic peels back the mystique to tell the story of one of the most important bands in rock history.