The Velvet Underground was
an American experimental rock band
formed in New York
City, New York
. First active from 1965 to 1973, their
best-known members were
Lou Reed and
John Cale, who both went on to find
success as solo artists. Although never commercially successful
while together, the band is often cited by many critics as one of
the most important and influential groups of their era and to many
future musicians.
The Velvet
Underground first gained a degree of fame and notoriety in New York City
in 1966 when they were selected
as the house band for Andy Warhol's
Factory and his Exploding Plastic Inevitable
events. The band's music and lyrics challenged conventional
societal standards of the time, and broke ground for other
musicians to do the same. The band favored experimentation, and
also introduced a
nihilistic outlook
through some of their music. Their outsider attitude and
experimentation has since been cited as pivotal to the rise of
punk rock and, later,
alternative rock.
Their
1967 debut album, titled
The Velvet
Underground & Nico (which featured German singer
Nico, with whom the band collaborated) was
named the 13th
Greatest Album of All
Time, and the "most prophetic rock album ever made" by
Rolling Stone in 2003.
History
Pre-career (1964–1965)
The foundations for what would become the Velvet Underground were
laid in late 1964. Singer/guitarist
Lou
Reed had performed with a few short-lived
garage bands and had worked as a songwriter for
Pickwick Records (Reed described
his tenure there as being "a poor man's
Carole King").
Reed met John
Cale, a Welshman
who had
moved to the United States to study classical music. Cale had
worked with experimental composers
John
Cage and
La Monte Young but was
also interested in rock music. Young’s use of extended
drones would be a profound influence on the
early Velvets’ sound. Cale was pleasantly surprised to discover
Reed’s experimentalist tendencies were similar to his own: Reed
sometimes used alternative guitar tunings to create a droning
sound. The pair rehearsed and performed together, and their
partnership and shared interests steered the early direction of
what would become the Velvet Underground.
Reed’s first group with Cale was The Primitives, a short-lived
group assembled to support a Reed-penned single, "The Ostrich".
Reed and Cale recruited
Sterling
Morrison—a college classmate of Reed’s who had already played
with him a few times—to play guitar, and
Angus MacLise joined on percussion. This
quartet was first called The Warlocks, then The Falling
Spikes.
The Velvet
Underground was a book about the secret sexual subculture
of the early '60s by Michael Leigh that Cale's friend
Tony Conrad showed to the group. Reed and
Morrison have reported the group liked the name, considering it
evocative of "underground
cinema", and fitting,
as Reed had already written "
Venus
in Furs", a song inspired by
Leopold von Sacher-Masoch's
book of the same name, dealing with
masochism. The band immediately and unanimously adopted the book's
title for its new name.
Early stages (1965–1966)
The newly named Velvet Underground rehearsed and performed in New
York City. Their music was generally much more relaxed than it
would later become: Cale described this era as reminiscent of
beat poetry, with MacLise playing
gentle “pitter and patter rhythms behind the drone.”
In July
1965, Reed, Cale and Morrison recorded a demo tape at their Ludlow Street
loft. When he briefly returned to Britain
, Cale gave a copy of the tape to Marianne Faithfull, hoping she’d pass it
on to Mick Jagger. Nothing ever
came of the demo, but it was eventually released on the 1995
box set Peel Slowly and See.
Manager
and music journalist Al Aronowitz
arranged for the group's first paying gig - $75 to play at Summit High
School
, in Summit
, New
Jersey
. When the group decided to take the gig,
MacLise left the group, protesting what he considered a
sellout. “Angus was in it for
art,” Morrison reported.
MacLise was replaced by
Maureen “Moe”
Tucker, the younger sister of Morrison's friend Jim Tucker.
Tucker’s abbreviated
drum kit was rather
unusual: she generally played on
tom
toms and an upturned
bass drum, using
mallets as often as
drumsticks, and she rarely used
cymbals. (The band having asked her to do something
unusual, she turned her bass drum on its side and played standing
up. When her drums were stolen from one club, she replaced them
with garbage cans, brought in from outside.) Her rhythms, at once
simple and exotic (influenced by the likes of
Babatunde Olatunji and
Bo Diddley records), became a vital part of the
group’s music. The group earned a regular paying gig at a club and
gained an early reputation as a promising ensemble.
Andy Warhol and the Exploding Plastic Inevitable
(1966–1967)
Andy Warhol became the band's manager in
1965 and suggested they feature the German-born singer
Nico on several songs. Warhol's reputation helped the
band gain a higher profile. Warhol helped the band secure a coveted
recording contract with MGM's
Verve Records, with himself as nominal
"producer", and gave the Velvets free rein over the sound they
created.
During their stay with Andy Warhol, the band became part of his
multimedia roadshow,
Exploding Plastic Inevitable,
for which they provided the music. They played shows for several
months in New York City, then traveled throughout the United States
and Canada until its last installment in May 1967. The show
included 16 mm film projections and colors by Warhol.
In 1966 MacLise temporarily rejoined the Velvet Underground for a
few EPI shows when Reed was suffering from
hepatitis and unable to perform. For these
appearances, Cale sang and played
organ and Tucker switched to
bass guitar. Also at these appearances, the band
often played an extended jam they had dubbed "Booker T", after
musician
Booker T. Jones; the jam later became the music for
"
The Gift" on
White Light/White
Heat. Some of these performances have been released as a
bootleg; they remain the only
record of MacLise with the Velvet Underground. MacLise was said to
be eager to rejoin the group now that they'd found some fame, but
Reed specifically prohibited this.
In December 1966, Warhol and
David
Dalton designed Issue 3 of the multimedia
Aspen. Included in this issue of
the "magazine", which retailed at $4 per copy and was packaged in a
hinged box designed to look like
Fab
laundry detergent, were various leaflets and booklets, one of which
was a commentary on rock and roll by Lou Reed, another an EPI
promotional newspaper. Also enclosed was a 2-sided
flexi disk, side one produced by
Peter Walker, a musical associate of
Timothy Leary, and side two titled "
Loop", credited to the Velvet
Underground but actually recorded by Cale alone. "Loop", a
recording solely of pulsating
audio
feedback culminating in a
locked
groove, was "a precursor to [Reed's]
Metal Machine Music", say Velvets
archivists
M.C. Kostek and
Phil
Milstein in the book
The Velvet Underground Companion.
Indeed, "Loop" predates Reed's almost identical concept (
Metal
Machine Music being a double album, obviously with different
feedback, also concluding side four with a locked groove) by nearly
ten years ("Loop" also predates much
industrial music as well). More
significantly, from a retail standpoint, "Loop" was the group's
first commercially available recording as the Velvet
Underground.
The Velvet Underground & Nico (1967)
At Warhol's insistence,
Nico sang with the band
on three songs of their debut album,
The Velvet Underground &
Nico. The album was recorded primarily in Scepter Studios
in New York City during April 1966. (Some songs were re-recorded,
along with the new song "
Sunday
Morning", later in the year with
Tom Wilson producing.) It was released
by
Verve Records in March 1967.
The album cover is famous for its Warhol design: a yellow
banana with “Peel slowly and see” printed near a
perforated tab. Those who did remove the banana skin found a pink,
peeled banana beneath. This gimmick would later be repeated on the
cover of one of several Velvet Underground boxed sets, also titled
Peel Slowly and See,
released in 1995.
Eleven songs showcased their dynamic range, veering from the
pounding attacks of "
I’m Waiting
for the Man" and "
Run
Run Run," the droning "
Venus in
Furs" and "
Heroin", the chiming
and celestial "
Sunday Morning"
to the quiet "
Femme Fatale" and
the tender "
I’ll Be Your
Mirror," as well as Warhol's own favorite song of the group,
"
All Tomorrow's
Parties."
The overall sound was propelled by Reed’s deadpan vocals, Cale's
droning
viola, Nico's equally deadpan vocals,
Morrison's often
rhythm and blues–
or
country-influenced guitar, and
Tucker’s simple but steady beat.
The album was released on March 12, 1967, peaking at #171 on
Billboard magazine's Top
200 charts. The promising commercial debut of the album was
dampened somewhat by legal complications: the album’s back cover
featured a photo of the group playing live with another image
projected behind them; the projected image was a still from a
Warhol
motion picture,
Chelsea Girls. The film’s
cinematographer, Eric Emerson, had been
arrested for drug possession and, desperate for money, claimed the
still had been included on the album without his permission (in the
image his face appears quite big, but upside down). MGM Records
pulled all copies of the album until the legal problems were
settled (by which time the record had lost its modest commercial
momentum), and the still was airbrushed out.
White Light/White Heat (1968)
Nico moved on after the band severed its relationship with Andy
Warhol, however recording began on their second album in September
1967,
White Light/White Heat, with
Tom Wilson as producer.
The Velvet Underground performed live often, and their performances
became louder, harsher and often featured extended
improvisations. Cale reports that at
about this time the Velvet Underground was one of the first groups
to receive an endorsement from
Vox. The company pioneered a number
of special effects, which the Velvet Underground utilized on the
album.
Sterling Morrison offered the
following input regarding the recording:
There was fantastic leakage cause everyone was playing
so loud and we had so much electronic junk with us in the
studio—all these fuzzers and compressors. Gary Kellgren, who is
ultra-competent, told us repeatedly: "You can't do it—all the
needles are on red." and we reacted as we always reacted: "Look, we
don't know what goes on in there and we don't want to hear about
it. Just do the best you can." And so the album is fuzzy, there's
all that white noise.... we wanted to do something electronic and
energetic. We had the energy and the electronics, but we didn't
know it couldn't be recorded.... what we were trying to do was
really fry the tracks.
The recording was raw and oversaturated. Cale has stated that while
the debut had some moments of fragility and beauty,
White
Light/White Heat was "consciously anti-beauty." The title
track and first song starts things off with John Cale pounding on
the
piano like
Jerry Lee Lewis. The eerie,
hallucinatory "
Lady
Godiva’s Operation" remains Reed’s favorite track on the album
. Despite the dominance of noisefests like "
Sister Ray" and "
I Heard Her Call My Name," there
was room for the darkly comic "
The Gift," a
short story written by Reed and narrated by Cale
in his
deadpan Welsh accent. The meditative
"Here She Comes Now" was later covered by
Galaxie 500,
R.E.M.,
Cabaret Voltaire, and
Nirvana.
The album was released on January 30, 1968, entering the
Billboard Top 200
chart for two weeks, at number 199.
However, tensions were growing: the group was tired of receiving
little recognition for its work, and Reed and Cale were pulling the
Velvet Underground in different directions. The differences showed
in the last recording session the band had with John Cale in
February 1968: two
pop-like songs in
Reed’s direction ("Temptation Inside Your Heart" and "Stephanie
Says") and a viola-driven drone in Cale’s direction ("Hey Mr.
Rain"). (None of these songs were released until they were included
on the
VU and
Another View compilation albums.) Further, some songs
the band had performed with Cale in concert, or that he had
co-written, were not recorded until after he had left the group
(such as "Walk It and Talk It," "Guess I’m Falling in Love," "Ride
into the Sun," and "Countess from Hong Kong").
The Velvet Underground (1969)
Before work on their third album started, Cale was eased out of the
band and was replaced by
Doug Yule of
Boston group the Grass Menagerie, who had opened several VU shows.
The Velvet
Underground was recorded in late 1968 (released in March
1969). The cover photograph was taken by
Billy Name. The LP sleeve was designed by Dick
Smith, then a staff artist at MGM/Verve. Released on March 12,
1969, the album failed to make
Billboard’s Top 200 album
chart.
It has often been reported that the early edition of the Velvet
Underground was a struggle between Reed and Cale's creative
impulses: Reed's rather conventional approach contrasted with
Cale's experimentalist tendencies. According to Tim Mitchell,
however, Morrison reported that there was creative tension between
Reed and Cale but that its impact has been exaggerated over the
years.
In any case, the harsh, abrasive tendencies on the first two
records were almost entirely absent on their third platter,
The
Velvet Underground. This resulted in a gentler sound
influenced by
folk music, prescient of
the songwriting style that would form Reed's solo career. Another
factor in the change of sound was the band's
Vox
amplifiers and assorted fuzzboxes being stolen from an airport
while they were on tour; they obtained replacements by signing a
new endorsement deal with Sunn. In addition, Reed and Morrison had
purchased matching
Fender 12-string
electric guitars. Doug Yule plays down the influence of the new
equipment, however.
Morrison's ringing guitar parts and Yule's melodic
bass guitar and harmony vocals are featured
prominently on the album. Reed's songs and singing are subdued and
confessional, and he shared lead vocals with Yule, particularly
when his own voice would fail under stress. Doug Yule sang the lead
vocal on "Candy Says" (about the
Warhol
superstar Candy Darling), which
opens the LP, and a rare Maureen Tucker vocal is featured on "After
Hours," a song that Reed said was so innocent and pure he couldn't
possibly sing it himself. The album's influence can be heard in
many later
indie rock and
lo-fi recordings.
Year on the road and the "lost" fourth album (1969)
The Velvet Underground spent much of 1969 on the road, feeling they
were not accepted in their hometown of New York City and not making
much headway commercially. The live album
1969: The Velvet Underground
Live was recorded in October 1969 and released in 1974 on
Mercury Records at the urging of
rock critic
Paul Nelson, who
worked in
A&R for Mercury at the time.
Nelson asked
singer-songwriter
Elliott Murphy to write liner notes
for the double album which began, “I wish it was a hundred years
from today….”
During the same year, the band recorded on and off in the studio,
creating a lot of material that was never officially released due
to disputes with their record label. What many consider the prime
of these sessions was released many years later as
VU. This album has a transitional sound
between the whisper-soft third album and the pop-rock songs of
their final record,
Loaded.
The rest of the recordings, as well as some alternate takes, were
bundled on
Another View. After
Reed’s departure, he later reworked a number of these songs for his
solo records (“Stephanie Says,” “Ocean,” “I Can’t Stand It,” “Lisa
Says,” “She’s My Best Friend”). Indeed, most of Reed’s early solo
career’s more successful hits were reworked Velvet Underground
tracks (albeit, the ones he wrote), released for the first time in
their original version on
VU,
Another View, and
later on
Peel Slowly and See.
Loaded (1970)
By 1969 the MGM and Verve record labels had been losing money for
several years. A new president,
Mike Curb,
was hired. Curb decided to purge the labels of their many
controversial and unprofitable acts. The
drug or
hippie-related bands were released from MGM, and the
Velvets were on his list, along with
Eric Burdon and the Animals and
Frank Zappa’s
Mothers of Invention. Nonetheless MGM
insisted on retaining ownership of all master tapes of their
recordings.
Atlantic Records signed the Velvet
Underground for what would be its final studio album with Lou Reed:
Loaded, released
on Atlantic’s subsidiary label
Cotillion. The album’s title refers to
Atlantic’s request that the band produce an album “loaded with
hits”. Though the record was not the smash hit the company had
anticipated, it contains the most accessible
pop the VU had performed, and several of Reed’s
best-known songs, including "Sweet Jane” and “Rock and Roll.”
Though Tucker had temporarily retired from the group due to her
pregnancy, she received a performance
credit on
Loaded. Except on a few songs, drums were
actually played by several people, including Yule, engineer Adrian
Barber, session musician Tommy Castanaro, and Doug Yule’s brother
Billy, who was still in high
school.
Disillusioned with the lack of progress the band was making and
pressured by manager
Steve Sesnick,
Reed decided to quit the band in August 1970. The band essentially
dissolved while recording the album, and Reed walked off just
before it was finished. Lou Reed has often said he was completely
surprised when he saw
Loaded in stores. He also said,
bitterly, “I left them to their album full of hits that I
made.”
However, Reed was particularly bitter about a verse being edited
from the
Loaded version of “
Sweet
Jane.” “
New
Age” was changed as well: as originally recorded, its closing
line (“It’s the beginning of a new age”) was repeated many more
times. A brief interlude in “Rock and Roll” was also removed.
(Almost three decades later, the album would be reissued as "Fully
Loaded" with the edits restored and all versions included.) On the
other hand, Yule has pointed out that the album was to all intents
and purposes finished when Reed left the band and that Reed had
been aware of most, if not all, of the edits. The few weeks between
Reed’s departure in late August and
Loaded’s arrival in
the shops in September of the same year also would have left little
room for the whole process of editing, reviewing, mastering and
pressing.
The Doug Yule years (1970-1973)
Even though
Loaded’s spin-off single “Who Loves the Sun”
had little success, “Sweet Jane” and “Rock and Roll” became U.S.
radio favorites , and the band, featuring
Walter Powers on bass, with Doug Yule taking
over lead vocals and guitar, went on the road once more, playing
the U.S. East Coast and Europe.
By that time, however, Sterling Morrison had
obtained a B.A. degree in English,
and left the group to pursue a Ph.D. in medieval literature at the
University of
Texas at Austin
. His replacement was singer/keyboard player
Willie Alexander. The band played
shows in England, Wales, and the Netherlands, some of which are
collected on the 2001 box set
Final
V.U..
In 1972 Atlantic released
Live at Max's Kansas City, a
live
bootleg of the Velvet
Underground’s final performance with Reed, recorded by fan
Brigid Polk on August 23, 1970. Meanwhile, the
Doug Yule-fronted edition of the band was touring the United
Kingdom when Sesnick managed to secure a recording contract with
Polydor Records in England. He then
allegedly sent Tucker, Powers and Alexander back to the US
(effectively ending their tenures with the group) while Yule
recorded the album
Squeeze under the
Velvet Underground name virtually by himself, with only the
assistance of
Deep Purple drummer
Ian Paice and a few other session
musicians.
Prior to the release of
Squeeze, a new Velvet Underground
lineup was assembled to tour the UK to promote the upcoming album.
This version of The Velvet Underground consisted of Yule, Rob
Norris (guitar), George Kay (bass guitar) and
Mark Nauseef (drums). Sesnick left the band
shortly before the tour started, and Yule left when the brief tour
ended in December 1972.
Squeeze was released a few months later in February 1973,
in Europe only. The album is a controversial item among Velvet
fans, generally held in low regard by fans and critics:
Stephen Thomas Erlewine notes that
the album received “uniformly terrible reviews” upon initial
release, and was often "deleted" from official V.U.
discographies.
Although Yule had theoretically put an end to The Velvet
Underground in late 1972, in the spring of 1973 a covers band
featuring Doug Yule (vocal guitar), Billy Yule (drums), George Kay
(bass) and Don Silverman (guitar) played the New England bar
circuit, and was billed as The Velvet Underground by the tour's
manager. (The Yule brothers and Kay had all previously played in
various Velvet Underground incarnations.) The band members objected
to the billing, and in late May 1973, the band and the tour manager
parted ways.
Post-VU developments (1972–1990)
Reed, Cale and Nico teamed up at the beginning of 1972 to play two
concerts in London and Paris.
The Paris concert performed at the Bataclan club
was bootlegged, finally receiving an official
release as Le Bataclan '72
in 2003.
In 1973, Yule undertook a short tour leading a group that was
billed as The Velvet Underground despite Reed's protests. From the
beginning, attendance was poor. Yule fired the manager, and the
tour dissolved after only a few performances.
Reed and Cale, in the meantime, developed solo careers. Nico had
also begun a solo career with Cale producing a majority of her
albums.
Sterling Morrison was a professor for some
time, teaching Medieval Literature at the University of
Texas at Austin
, then became a tugboat
captain for several years. Maureen Tucker raised a family
before returning to small-scale gigging and recording in the 1980s;
Morrison was in a number of touring bands, among others with
Tucker’s band.
In 1985 Polydor released the album
VU, which collected unreleased recordings
that might have constituted the band's fourth album for MGM in 1969
but had never been released. Some of the songs had been recorded
when Cale was still in the band. More unreleased recordings of the
band, some of them demos and unfinished tracks, were released in
1986 as
Another View.
On July 18, 1988, Nico, the German-born singer and early associate
of The Velvet Underground, died of a cerebral hemorrhage following
a bicycle accident.
Czech
dissident
playwright Václav Havel was a fan
of the Velvet Underground, ultimately becoming a friend of Lou Reed. Though some attribute the name of the
1989 “Velvet Revolution,” which
ended more than 40 years of Communist rule in Czechoslovakia
, to the band, Reed points out that in fact the name
Velvet Revolution derives from its peaceful
nature—that no one was physically killed (“hurt”) during those
events. After Havel’s election as president, first
of Czechoslovakia and then the Czech Republic, Reed visited him in
Prague
.
On
September 16, 1998, at Havel’s request, Reed performed in the
White
House
at a state dinner in
Havel’s honor hosted by President Bill
Clinton.
Reunions (1990-1996)
In 1990, Reed and Cale released
Songs for Drella, dedicated to the
recently deceased
Andy Warhol. (“Drella”
was a nickname Warhol had been given, a combination of “Dracula”
and “Cinderella”.) Though Morrison and Tucker had each worked with
Reed and Cale since the V.U. broke up,
Songs for Drella
was the first time the pair had worked together in decades, and
rumors of a reunion began to circulate, fueled by the one-off
appearance by Reed, Cale, Morrison and Tucker to play "Heroin" as
the encore to a brief
Songs for Drella set in
Jouy-en-Josas, France.
The
Reed–Cale–Morrison–Tucker lineup officially reunited as "The Velvet
Underground" in 1992, commencing activities with a European tour
beginning in Edinburgh
on June 1, 1993, and featuring a performance at
Glastonbury which garnered an NME front
cover. Cale sang most of the songs Nico had originally
performed. As well as headlining, the Velvets performed as
supporting act for five dates of
U2’s
Zoo TV Tour.
Given the success of The Velvet Underground's European reunion
tour, a series of US tour dates were proposed, as was an
MTV Unplugged broadcast, and
possibly even some new studio recordings. However, before any of
this could come to fruition, Cale and Reed fell out again, breaking
up the band once more.
On August 30, 1995, Sterling Morrison died of
non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.
When the
band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
in 1996, Lou Reed and John Cale reformed the Velvet
Underground for the last time, with Maureen Tucker in tow.
Doug Yule was absent. At the ceremony, the band was inducted by
singer/poet
Patti Smith, and the band
performed "Last Night I Said Goodbye to My Friend", written in
tribute to Morrison.
The Velvet Underground continues to exist as a New York–based
partnership managing the financial and back catalog aspects for the
band members, but no performances will be forthcoming. The April
15, 2004 issue of
Rolling
Stone ranked the band #19 on its list of the "100 Greatest
Artists of All Time".
Lineups
| Year |
Band |
Recordings |
Vocals,
guitar |
Multiple instruments,
vocals |
Guitar |
Percussion |
| April–November 1965 |
Lou Reed |
John Cale |
Sterling Morrison |
Angus MacLise |
Disc 1 of Peel Slowly and
See (1995; minus MacLise) |
| December 1965–September 1968 |
Lou Reed |
John Cale |
Sterling Morrison |
Maureen Tucker |
The Velvet
Underground & Nico (1967), White Light/White Heat (1968),
two tracks on VU (1985), three
tracks on Another View (1986),
discs 2–3 of Peel Slowly and See (1995) |
| September 1968–August 1970 |
Lou Reed |
Doug Yule |
Sterling Morrison |
Maureen Tucker |
The Velvet
Underground (1969), Loaded (1970;
minus Tucker), Live at
Max's Kansas City (1972; minus Tucker), 1969: The Velvet Underground
Live (1974), eight tracks on VU (1985), six tracks on Another View (1986), discs 4–5 of Peel
Slowly and See (1995), Bootleg Series Volume
1: The Quine Tapes (2001) |
| |
Vocals, guitar |
Bass guitar |
Guitar |
Drums |
|
| November 1970–August 1971 |
Doug Yule |
Walter Powers |
Sterling Morrison |
Maureen Tucker |
Studio demo of two songs, "She'll Make You Cry" and "Friends"
(as yet unreleased) |
| |
Vocals, guitar |
Bass guitar |
Keyboards, vocals |
Drums |
|
| October 1971–December 1971 |
Doug Yule |
Walter Powers |
Willie Alexander |
Maureen Tucker |
Discs 1–2 and part of disc 4 of Final V.U. 1971-1973 (2001) |
| |
Vocals, multiple instruments |
|
|
|
|
| January 1972–February 1973 |
Doug Yule |
--- |
--- |
--- |
Squeeze (1973),
discs 3–4 of Final V.U. (2001; both with hired hands) |
| |
Vocals, guitar |
Multiple instruments, vocals |
Guitar |
Percussion |
|
| June 1990; November 1992–July 1993 |
Lou Reed |
John Cale |
Sterling Morrison |
Maureen Tucker |
Live MCMXCIII (1993) |
| 1996 |
Lou Reed |
John Cale |
|
Maureen Tucker |
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony |
Temporary, live and studio members
- Angus MacLise — sat in on percussion with Tucker switching to
bass guitar and Cale and Morrison to lead vocals during a Chicago
engagement when Reed was taken ill with hepatitis, June–July
1966.
- Nico — collaborator on vocals with the band
on four tracks off The Velvet Underground & Nico and
several Exploding Plastic
Inevitable engagements, 1966–1967. In addition, about half of
the tracks on Nico's 1967 debut LP, Chelsea Girl, feature songs
written by and/or featuring Reed, Cale and Morrison. These tracks
are generally considered Velvet Underground songs, to the extent
that some songs are included on compilations like the Peel
Slowly and See box set and the Gold 2-CD set.
- Billy Yule — stand-in on drums for a pregnant Tucker on three tracks off
Loaded and at the Max's Kansas City 1970 engagement,
including Live at Max's
Kansas City; and the 1973 Boston engagement.
- Tommy Castanaro — stand-in on
drums for a pregnant Tucker on two tracks off Loaded.
- Adrian Barber — stand-in on drums
for a pregnant Tucker on a number of tracks off
Loaded.
- Larry Estridge — tour stand-in
(bass guitar) for Walter Powers, June 1971.
- Rob Norris — tour member (guitar) for
the 1972 UK Squeeze tour.
- George Kay — tour member
(bass guitar) for the 1972 UK Squeeze tour and the 1973
Boston engagement.
- Don Silverman — tour member
(guitar) for the 1972 UK Squeeze tour.
- Mark Nauseef — tour member (drums)
for the 1972 UK Squeeze tour.
- Ian Paice — session musician (drums)
for Squeeze (1973).
Discography
References
- Richie Unterberger, "The Velvet Underground", Allmusic, accessed April 29,
2007.
- RS 500 Greatest Albums November 18, 2003.
- 13) The Velvet Underground and Nico Rolling
Stone, 1 November 2003
- David
Fricke, liner
notes for the Peel Slowly and See box set (Polydor, 1995).
- Quoted by David Fricke in his liner notes for the Peel Slowly and
See box set
(Polydor, 1995).
- Aspen no. 3: The Pop Art issue
- Amazon.com: The Velvet Underground Companion: Four Decades
of Commentary (The Schirmer Companion Series , No 8): Albin, Iii
Zak, Albin Zak: Books
- Tim Mitchell, Sedition and Alchemy : A Biography of
John Cale
(2003; London: Peter Owen Publishers, 2004); ISBN 0720611326 (10);
ISBN 978-0720611328 (13); cf. Press release, rpt. xsall.nl (March
2004).
- Stephen Thomas Erlewine in the
Allmusic
website article on Squeeze
- Lou Reed, Havel at Columbia interview: "7: The
Velvet Revolution and The Velvet Underground", accessed April
29, 2007. (See table of contents for "Chapters".)
- Lou Reed, Havel at Columbia interview: "4: 1990
visit to Prague and the challenges faced by Havel", accessed
April 29, 2007. (See table of contents for "Chapters".)
- Lou Reed, Havel at Columbia interview: "8: 1998
White House benefit concert", accessed April 30, 2007 (See
table of contents for "Chapters"); cf. "The President and Mrs. Clinton Honor His
Excellency V(á)clav Havel, President of the Czech Republic and Mrs.
Havlov(á)", September 16, 1998, accessed April 30, 2007;
Transcript of President's Clinton's remarks,
findarticles.com September 16, 1998, accessed April 30,
2007.
- Julian Casablancas, "The Velvet Underground" (No. 19), in "The Immortals: The First Fifty",
Rolling
Stone, No. 946 (April 15, 2004), accessed April 29,
2007.
External links