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  • >> [Music]

  • >> Lou Reed: You know like sometimes, youve got to be in a place.

  • Youre just another guy. You can just blend in.

  • I live out in the wilds of nowhere, out in Jersey.

  • Even there, there’s sometimes problems.

  • College students like journey out there and show up at 11 o’clock at night,

  • on my porch, looking into the door not saying anything.

  • My wife and I are sitting there; it’s really creepy.

  • >> Joe Smith: Are you …? >> Lou Reed: I got out with my shotgun.

  • This is hunting country out there. You better run.

  • >> [Music]

  • >> Joe Smith: Do you ever regret that you were never totally in the mainstream,

  • that you were out there left wing most of the time in your career?

  • >> Lou Reed: No, I started out with that in mind.

  • People didn’t know certain things about me, which

  • I was out of creative writing class in school, Syracuse University; had a B.A. in English

  • and wanted to write the great American novel but I also loved rock and roll.

  • I was in bar bands all through college, playing fraternities and have to know all the songs in the top 10.

  • That kind of thing.

  • >> [Music]

  • >> Joe Smith: What are your recollections of that Velvet Underground time?

  • You guys were avant garde, cutting edge, new stuff.

  • When this record came out; all of a sudden, there’s this kind of recognition?

  • >> Lou Reed: Well there wasn’t any recognition.

  • What there was, was a lot of bad press. I got a little puzzled at how savage the reaction

  • against us was, when we got it, especially when we performed live and left New York.

  • Like you know, “how savage and decadent”, da da da da;

  • look at what these songs are about; ‘Venus in Fursis about all of this.”

  • They didn’t even knowVenus in Furswas a book; I didn’t write it.

  • I just said it would be interesting to take this book

  • and put it in a song. I just wanted to cram everything into a record

  • that these people had ignored, which left you everything.

  • >> [Music: The Velvet UndergroundVenus in Furs”]

  • >> Lou Reed: The other thing that killed me was stuff like this had been in novels so long

  • it was like nothing. I write a song calledHeroin”,

  • you would have thought that I murdered the Pope or something. It should have been,

  • now we can get a lot of people who have talent for writing and everything into rock and roll.”

  • Well all write about really adult stuff.” That was what I wanted to do,

  • is write rock and roll that you could listen to as you got older,

  • and it wouldn’t lose anything; it would be timeless, in the subject matter

  • and the literacy of the lyrics.

  • >> [Music: The Velvet UndergroundHeroin”]

  • >> Lou Reed: We didn’t expect to sell records.

  • That’s not what we were doing. It would have been great. It would have been great.

  • It would have taken a lot of financial pressure off us. It’s not like we had money.

  • What we had was ambition and a goal. That’s the thing you can do when youre really young.

  • >> Joe Smith: What was the ambition and the goal?

  • >> Lou Reed: Oh. To elevate the rock and roll song

  • and take it where it hadn’t been taken before.

  • I’m saying like from my point of view and I know this sounds pretentious

  • but I just thought the other stuff couldn’t even come up to our ankles; not up to my kneecap,

  • not up to my ankles, the level that we were on, compared to everybody else.

  • They were just painfully stupid and pretentious. When they did try to get in quotes: “arty”,

  • it was worse than stupid rock and roll. What I mean by stupid, I mean like The Doors.

  • >> Joe Smith: You never felt Lennon and the Beatles

  • did you feel that they were in a league at all?

  • >> Lou Reed: No. No. I never liked the Beatles. I thought they were garbage.

  • If you said, “who did you like?” I liked nobody.

  • >> [Music]

  • >> Lou Reed: In the old days, the Velvet Underground,

  • we had engineers who would walk out on us. They would say, “It’s too loud"

  • "This is terrible. You know I’m going to turn the tape machine on,"

  • you guys call me when youre finished.” I’ve spent a lot of years since then,

  • trying to figure out a way to be able to do what I did then, without going deaf.

  • I actually went and had my ears tested just to make sure.

  • The guy who was testing me was a fan, which was nice, so he took the test a little further

  • just to assuage any doubts I might have.

  • He said, “no, you have the average high end loss for a New Yorker.”

  • >> Lou Reed: Right; for a New Yorker. It was very funny.

  • >> [Music: Lou ReedPerfect Day”]

  • >> Lou Reed: I had a lot of problems in the studio because of my background with engineer, see.

  • A lot of my records sound like they were recorded completely dry and no one did anything,

  • and that in fact was what it was

  • because they would go to touch a button and I’d go, “what are you doing, man?”

  • I have faith in my own vision, and didn’t want them to tamper with it.

  • I thought my thing coming out badly recorded this way, is better than

  • if these people take my voice and try to make me sound like a 14-year-old. They thin it out.

  • I would tell them it’s like you tell a photographer, “don’t retouch this too much.”

  • These lines, they mean something, I’m an adult, man.

  • Don’t thin my voice out and make it like that high shit.

  • This is the way I sound. Youve got to get people to understand that

  • because they take the nuance and character out that makes the lyric believable.

  • It’s an important thing.

>> [Music]

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