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ROKY ERICKSON, Sunday Times, March 14, 1999 Things started to go wrong for Thirteenth Floor Elevators frontman Roky Erickson when he was arrested for possession of six marijuana joints in 1969. Faced with statutory imprisonment by the State of Texas, Roky cunningly pleaded insanity on the basis of having taken 300 LSD trips, and so spent three years in Rusk State Hospital for the Criminally Insane on electric shock therapy and Thorazine. In a 1975 interview, he confessed, "I was such a good actor. If you put your mind to it you can really convince people, so you gotta be careful. At the end of three years...I said, 'I lied, man', and they said, 'Yeah, sure you lied'." Today Roky lives in a rundown shack behind an adult video store in a crack neighbourhood of Austin, Texas, and last month Emperor Jones Records released Never Say Goodbye, a collection of lost solo recordings, with all profits going to his trust fund. Never
Say Goodbye isn't the first benefit album for Roky Erickson. A decade
ago Where The Pyramid Meets the Eye (Sire Records) saw ZZ Top, REM,
Primal Scream, Julian Cope, T-Bone Burnett and the Butthole Surfers
come together to cover songs by the man all regarded as an influence
and an inspiration, and once you are acquainted with Roky you will
hear his echoes everywhere. Roky's utterly sublime I Have Always
Been Here Before prefigures Michael Stipe's plaintive vocals on
REM's Nightswimming or The Wrong Child, and the infant Echo and
the Bunnymen stole the Elevators' sound effects and guitar licks.
Television's live album mysteriously re-titles an uncredited version
of the Elevators' Fire Engine as The Blow Up, and Julian Cope cites
their Bull of the Woods album as the greatest record of all time.
But Roky
Erickson was born Roger Kynard Erickson in Dallas in 1947, entering
the Top 100 at 17 fronting the Spades with You're Gonna Miss Me.
In 1966 he formed the Thirteenth Floor Elevators, the world's first
psychedelic band, with beatnik undergraduate Tommy Hall, who Judged
sane and released in 1972, Roky's subsequent solo career has been
derailed by his erratic working methods, his 1982 decision to legally
declare himself a Martian, and his 1990 diagnosis of paranoid schizophrenia
and organic brain damage. Sympathisers see the Rusk The
14 murky tracks on Never Say Goodbye, six of which were taped by
Evelyn Erickson in Rusk in 1971, are fossil imprints of how Roky
might have evolved. In contrast, "lost" albums such as
Nick Drake's Tamworth in Arden sessions and Syd Barrett's Opel sound
as if they Attempting
to get Roky to elaborate on the story behind the songs is not easy.
In 1995, Rolling Stone's Don McLeese found Roky in his shack with
30 or so TV sets and radios all tuned in simultaneously to "a
rock station, a gospel station, a police scanner, a CB radio, a But,
amazingly, Roky's brother Eric was only a few websites away. "Your
timing is great," he wrote, agreeing to answer some simple
questions via e-mail. "Roky and my mother came to the house
for lunch today, and Roky was in the mood to respond." And
so, here are the Roky is happy with Never Say Goodbye. He remembers his mom making recordings at Rusk "by mutual choice", forgets if he ever performed any of the songs with the Missing Links, a band he formed inside with fellow inmates, but recalls them playing once in the hospital and once in Rusk city. Today Roky has no pets, apart from "Chug Bugs, the kind that like to stare at you when you eat", and his preferred viewing is Funday Times cartoon favourite Pinkie and The Brain. He cites Scottish rockers Primal Scream's radical retooling of Slip Inside This House as his favourite among many covers of his songs. Primal
Scream frontman Bobby Gillespie is moved to an uncharacteristically
animated state by the news. "Really? That's the greatest. Unbelievable!
The Thirteenth Floor Elevators doing Slip Roky
Erickson, Never Say Goodbye, Emperor Jones, ej26cd; |
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