In Cleveland, it’s Michael Stanley. Buffalo has Willie Nile. Pittsburgh has two: Donnie Iris and Joe Grushecky. The workingman towns along the Jersey shore have Southside Johnny. (Detroit’s version, Bob Seger, actually is famous well beyond his hometown, but this makes him the exception that proves the rule and also reinforces the grand scale of Detroit’s Rust Beltedness.)
Stanley has been delivering such messages to a faithful audience for decades. His words strike me now as charmingly extreme, the sort of wishful absolutism that congeals in the mind of a certain type of working-class, Midwestern rock songwriter for whom the anthem is the pinnacle of expression. And a rock anthem, by commercial necessity, cannot afford the weight of ambiguity. Every rose has a fucking thorn, goddamnit, and that’s just the way it is. It must be so. This is how life can make sense.
Love: is like a rock.
This town: is my town.
I was born in a small town: I’m gonna die in a small town.
I rock: therefore I am.
The rise of the regional “heartland rocker” happened, not coincidentally, at the same time as the decline of the industrial revolution, in the 1980s, as factory cities in the East and Midwest began their crises of economy and identity. Our cities embodied a kind of reality-based myth about hard work and simple values and denim-as-metaphor, and so if we were to have bards, we needed them to be the sort that we could sip cold proletarian beer to, and who would reward us with notions of escape (usually via muscle car) and loyalty (my daddy worked in the factory) and romance (bleached video blonde who listens attentively to the guitar solo). Country music did not yet have these markets cornered.
Uniquely, then, and with remarkable conformity, the major cities of this region each manufactured its own golem of the midshelf rock and roller in a fashion that seemed at once organic and prefabricated.
In each instance, the bandleader’s name was the name of his band:
The Michael Stanley Band. Donnie Iris and the Cruisers. Joe Grushecky and the Houserockers (adapted from the name of his first band, one of the best rock-band names ever: the Iron City Houserockers). Willie Nile. Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes.
Each of them has been called, at some point, “the Springsteen of (Your City Here).” The comparison is unavoidable, and the convention is resoundingly consistent: an earnest male, Telecaster-playing, dark-haired Caucasian leading a local bar band that flirted in some way with national fame, never quite made it to the big time, but remained, and remains, a regional icon. As time has passed, each of these figures has come to occupy the territory between the frustration of what might have been and the comfort of knowing they will always be loved and financially supported by the audiences that were pulling for them in the first place. They dress in blue jeans and loose-cut blazers, bravely holding a middle ground between the anxieties of art and unconcerned artlessness. Where once they represented working-class rock and roll, they are now gainfully employed middle-class rockers, with careers that mirror actual careers in plumbing and auto sales; they have a clientele and know the tricks of their trade and are fully vested in their retirement plans.
The proof of a real-life stereotype comes when a fictional version can easily be drawn. Witness then Eddie and the Cruisers, a film (based, it’s worth mentioning, on a novel by an Ohioan, P. F. Kluge) whose basic story is that of any of the musicians mentioned above. Gritty, heartfelt rock band with working-class hopes and dreams flirts with industry success only to hit the skids. The stereotype transcends when the fiction results in a furthering of the founding presumption. Therefore, when the New England bar band John Cafferty and the Beaver Brown Band was enlisted to compose some of the music for the sound track, the group’s saxophone player was such a dead ringer for his scripted counterpart that the director cast him in the film, as the Cruisers’ sax man. There was no way to differentiate between life and art.
So of course Michael Stanley believes that rock and roll will either kill ya or keep you young. It’s his profession of faith, and his faith has delivered the unlikeliest profession.
* * *
Proclamations such as these thrive in the geometric efficiency of the four-chord rock song. Not three (although the three-chord song would not be out of place in this territory). And definitely not five. Too ostentatious. Four is the sweet spot.
The four-chord riff has a distinct place in pop rock, and a subtle yet revealing aesthetic. If you looked at, say, the pop charts of 1982—a galvanizing year for the Industrial Belt and its six-string composers—you could trace the entire scope of the musical culture by measuring the patterns of the main riff:
“Jessie’s Girl” (Rick Springfield, four chords) = the mild complexity of this emotional situation will be defined thusly in the following three verses and intervening choruses, with a satisfying resolution.
“I Love Rock ’n’ Roll” (Joan Jett and the Blackhearts, three chords) = for the following two minutes and fifty-four seconds I will express my strong affinity for rock and roll.
“Should I Stay or Should I Go” (the Clash, two chords) = here we shall parse the dualized horns of a Frostian dilemma, only with Paul Simonon on bass.
“We Got the Beat” (the Go-Go’s, one chord) = we have another one but we’ll be using it in the next song.
“Eminence Front” (the Who, no chords) = not even trying at this point.
As I said, the four-chord rock riff is the sweet spot of the working-class bar anthem, in the way it hits the launching pad of its come-around chord and then leaps into the open arms of the chorus. Think of the great American (okay, Canadian) song of the working life, Bachman-Turner Overdrive’s “Takin’ Care of Business.” If you can think of a more symmetrically satisfying song, please let me know.
A song like this is two parts meat and two parts potato. In the best of them, the chords are palm-muted in the verses, then fired open for the chorus. Middle bridge, guitar (or occasionally sax) solo, and then down the home stretch. It is a can’t-miss approach, and frankly if you can’t feel good hearing a song like that, well, I think that you think too much.
Youngstown is really good to me.
—DONNIE IRIS
So. Michael Stanley. Good-looking fellow, but not movie-star handsome. Beard, average build. Plays a Telecaster. Slightly rough-edged baritone. Emotions are handled with professionalism. Knows how to play to the back row.
You could post his picture next to Wikipedia’s definition of heartland rock: “a predominately romantic genre, celebrating ‘urban backstreets and rooftops,’ [whose] major themes have been listed as including ‘unemployment, small-town decline, disillusionment, limited opportunity and bitter nostalgia,’ as well as alienation and despair.”
From “Midwest Midnight”
Take me back to Midwest midnight
Ten thousand watts of holy light from my radio so clear . . .
The whole lot of them—Stanley, Grushecky, Johnny, Willie, Donnie—came of age in the mid-1970s, peaked commercially in the early 1980s, and then began their real careers with a longevity that seems to be based as much on their local audiences’ unfulfilled need for a winner as any music industry convention. Here is a case where the audience may need the artist even more than the artist needs the audience.
When I was first coming into an understanding of rock music, I just assumed that Michael Stanley and Bruce Springsteen were equally huge rock stars. At that moment, within my provincial limitations, they were. Both of them sold out the big area stadium venues. Both of their tour T-shirts were as ubiquitous around this part of Ohio as Browns jerseys. They coexisted as a sort of Apollo and Zeus of WMMS, the local mainstream FM rock powerhouse.
Bruce Springsteen, of course, was actively becoming the biggest rock icon in the world. But at the same time Springsteen was exploring his interior darkness with the lo-fi Nebraska, the Michael Stanley Band played four consecutive nights at Blossom Music Center,
the big outdoor shed near Cleveland, and drew nearly seventy-five thousand fans. Stanley’s song “My Town,” with its “This town! Is my town!” fist-pump chorus, was the region’s unofficial theme. It was a much bigger deal than “Hungry Heart,” and I doubt even the Boss could have pulled off a four-night, packed-house residency.
But what I didn’t recognize—what I couldn’t recognize because of the way the media was manipulating this information and because I didn’t have access to long-distance transportation and therefore the outer world—was that beyond the borders of greater Cleveland, Michael Stanley was barely on the radar. One song had scratched into the lower reaches of the Billboard Top 40 pop chart, “He Can’t Love You,” reaching No. 33. In Chicago, say, or Denver or Tallahassee, the Michael Stanley Band may as well have been Chilliwack.
But that didn’t matter. As long as he stayed close to home, he would be needed and adored. It becomes a matter of self-fulfillment: as long as the local audience continues to support the musician, the musician appears to be as popular as the audience needs him to be for its own validation.
To this very day, Stanley, who now works as a drive-time DJ on the local classic-rock station and releases albums regularly, has a specific brand of iconic status, and a specific brand of deeply committed loyalty that is as admirable as it is hard to calculate.
In 2012, as I write this, Michael Stanley has recently played four consecutive weekend nights, sold-out shows, at an Akron cabaret-style dinner club called the Tangier. Those are the only concert dates listed on his website.
On a recent visit to Pittsburgh, I saw placards advertising an upcoming appearance by Donnie Iris and the Cruisers at the local Hard Rock Café. All the shows listed on the official Donnie Iris website were in or around Pittsburgh, except two—one in Cleveland and the other in Phoenix—at a “Steeler Fanfest” party the night before a football game between the Arizona Cardinals and the Pittsburgh Steelers. A home away from home.
Joe Grushecky and the Houserockers had thirteen summer concert dates listed on their website in 2012. Twelve were in the Pittsburgh area. The other was at a club on the Jersey shore, but interestingly, in a Freudian slip of a typo, the location was listed as “Asbury Park, PA.”
Southside Johnny, the highest profile of the bunch, does well in Europe, but keeps close to the New Jersey region here in the States—New York, Atlantic City, Asbury Park. (The farthest US concert from home in 2012? Cleveland.)
Rock ’n’ roll should be made by truck drivers from Tupelo, Mississippi.
—SOUTHSIDE JOHNNY
I hated the Michael Stanley Band. I hated Bruce Springsteen. I hated the Doors. I hated Led Zeppelin. I hated this music for the three worst possible reasons:
1.Because I didn’t like the people who liked that music.
2.Because, due to misguided antifashion snobbery, I had never really listened to it.
3.Because of my mother.
That third thing, the mother part, probably stemmed more from Charles Manson than anything else. She was genuinely afraid of hippies, and even though she was of the prime demographic to be a first-generation Beatles fan and therefore provide a proper foundation for my own musical taste, she, for a crucial time in my development, disavowed all rock music. (Sadly, her cultural stance softened just as disco and John Denver were emerging. Those were difficult years.)
So I actually wanted a rock and roll of absolutes—a music that would either kill me or make me young—but that wasn’t possible. If I had just been given the Beatles, I could have found the Stones, and then I’d probably have made it safely to the Stooges. Instead, while I loved rock music, I found it constantly frustrating.
I could find occasional copies of Maximumrocknroll, but I could never find the records that were reviewed there. When I tried guitar, my fingers fell apart half through the two-chord pattern of “You Really Got Me.” The longer my hair got, the less it looked like Tommy Stinson’s. There was an ideal, but I couldn’t find it anywhere I looked. I was getting my information in the wrong order, without context.
The first friend I had who had a car owned just two cassettes: the first Pretenders album and the Tubes’ Completion Backward Principle. With a considerable void to negotiate, we relied mainly on MTV to fill it. It was all random; we had no guide and no evolved sense of quality. Briefly, we believed Lee Ritenour was New Wave because he wore tight, red pants and his video followed one by Split Enz, who we thought were definitely New Wave, but could also maybe have been rockabilly on account of their tremendous pompadours. A friend once admitted that he was sometimes confused about what was punk and what was New Wave—specifically, he thought the song “Rock the Casbah” was definitely New Wave because it included a synthesizer, even though the Clash probably qualified as punk. We made fun of him mainly to deflect the truth: we didn’t have any more of a clue than he did. Then when I did find Springsteen and Zeppelin on my own terms, it was too late for it to be as pure and absolute as it would have been at seventeen.
If rock and roll were simple, life would be so much easier.
TRAPPED IN A WORLD THAT THEY NEVER MADE
I discovered rock and roll in a decommissioned bank building, fiddling with a plastic cup of pale beer, dressed in another man’s bowling shirt, and wishing I had the tricolor, flat-bottomed shoes that would grant me my transcendence.
I sat at a sticky table in the abandoned remains of a once-opulent savings and loan, feeling both inferior and exotic. Above me was a commanding balcony. Behind me was a vault with a big, complicated gold handle that looked like the steering wheel from the Poseidon. Passing by, asking for a light, was a scrawny young man with a Mohawk, whose request was clearly intended as an insult, but one I couldn’t interpret.
We had been coming here for months, a few friends and I, sneaking in underage, although I suppose it isn’t technically sneaking when no one cares. I’d been arriving most nights with my brother Ralph, who was old enough to get in. He would show the doorman his driver’s license and I would follow right behind, flashing Ralph’s college ID. Same picture, same name. A few times through and the doorman didn’t even bother checking anymore.
We’d come this night to see the Generics, a rock band from my high school that was led by my friend John Puglia. The group had originally begun as a gag for a school talent show, Four Neat Guys, dressed in leisure suits and lip-synching to a record by the Tarriers, a B-level, 1950s folk group. Then someone decided to try it with instruments and play Clash and Who covers, even though only one of them could actually play—and he really could play, a trained guitarist who could reproduce Rush and .38 Special songs exactly as they sounded on the radio, impressing us all. Except in the Generics he didn’t play guitar. He was the drummer. So there was a singer who wasn’t a singer, some guitarists who weren’t guitarists, and a drummer who was a guitarist but was not. Together, onstage, despite their real selves.
The Generics were preparing to go on, arranging amplifiers, plugging things in, adjusting pieces of the drum kit. The place was crowded, a mix of our high school friends and the Bank regulars, slightly older, slightly better versed in rock-and-roll convention. They had the right bowling shirts. They had stripes. They had spandex. They had Mohawks.
John had made a brilliant and audacious move toward that direction, having purchased a pair of shiny black leather Beatle boots by mail order from Trash & Vaudeville in Greenwich Village. We all shopped at the thrift stores, looking for such items, but none of us had ever taken such an audacious step as to go directly to the fountainhead and spend that kind of money. Fifty-nine dollars! For a pair of pointy-toed boots! From New York City! John, therefore, had attained a kind of elevated legitimacy. Except that in the brief time since he had begun wearing the boots, the nuances of cool had taken a turn from skinny ties and pointy boots to something less refined, more guttural and torn.
In response, John had covered the boots in aluminum foil and speckled them with spray pain
t. This completed an outfit that consisted of skinny, black jeans with a bandanna tied around the ankle, a sleeveless T-shirt printed with a hyperreal photograph of goldfish, and a porkpie hat. It’s hard to say whether his fashion fit with the rest of the band because each of them looked as if he belonged in a separate group—and not just musical group, but demographic group. The guitar player was wearing a business suit. The bass player was wearing a necktie around his forehead like a kamikaze headband. And the drummer, who was a defensive lineman by day, wore his green football jersey with a chunky 65 across the front.
* * *
The Bank had retained most of the character of its former financial-institution self, such that the liquor was stored behind the ornate, round steel door of the old vault, and the president’s office upstairs still had its mahogany paneling, and that’s where people sometimes smoked pot, which I never quite understood, because I didn’t think illegal things were done in public. But the biggest falsehood of its current incarnation was its size. For a rock club, it was huge. I had no context for this then, but would later understand that local bands simply didn’t play in rooms that large. (In addition to its floor space, the Bank had a two-story-high ceiling, all of which made it a sonic nightmare. Someone had draped a parachute from the ceiling in an attempt to deaden the sound, but it didn’t work. Drummers had to time their beats so they’d be playing off their own rhythm, rather than the echo of themselves, all of which would sound like an overwrought Brian Eno studio technique if it weren’t so woefully unintentional.)
The club was attached to a hotel called the Hotel Anthony Wayne, which used to have a stately velvet lobby and five-star rooms. It had slowly descended into a transient hotel, and now its rooms were rented by the night to gutter drunks and crazy people. Its lit sign malfunctioned so that it looked as if the place were called the Hony Wayne, which seemed about right.
The Hard Way on Purpose Page 11