Quotes from Cameron Crowe's autobiography The Uncool.

Cameron Crowe has written a brilliant autobiography, The Uncool. I warmly recommend reading the book. I love how he writes about his mom. Here are some choice quotes.
Richard Nixon was the enemy. Ralph Nader, Cesar Chavez, and JFK were the heroes. Rock music, especially the kind that was sexually provocative, was the enemy. The slowness of the American educational system was also an irritant. By the time I arrived, the youngest of three children, my mother had streamlined her teaching approach. She skipped me through kindergarten and put me in first grade when I was just five. “Kindergarten is just babysitting,” she said. “In Europe they don’t even have kindergarten.”
When my school later mistakenly skipped me over fifth grade, she convinced me to stay in sixth. “Nothing happens in the fifth grade,” she confided. “Maybe fractions.” What she didn’t warn me about was that skipping grades in these key adolescent years would create serious land mines in my life, and they weren’t academic. They were physical.
Tending to my menagerie, pretending not to listen to my parents talking in the kitchen late at night, I heard them fretting about my sister’s relationship with Steve. Cindy and Steve Dagnan had already discussed marriage. “If they get married,” my mom said, “she’ll be stuck in the desert forever.” “You can’t tell her not to be involved with him,” my dad parried. “You’ll drive her into his arms even more.” “She doesn’t realize all the world has to offer past Steve Dagnan,” said my mom. Nobody ever just called him Steve. He had a brand name, like James Bond or Paul McCartney. “That’s the power of sex!”
My mom would often blame problems on sex. The sex drive. The corruption of a society that used sex to sell everything. Sex in songs. Sex on television. If there was a problem, sex was never far behind as the cause.
“How do you know they’ve had sex?” my dad said. My mom narrowed her eyes, as if picking up the information from a distant radio tower.
“They’ve had sex,” she said.
“But you don’t know—”
“She needs to see the world,” my mom said. “That’s what I did. And that’s how I met you.”
“Did you enjoy Bob Dylan?” my mom asked as we filed out of the gymnasium.
“It was so good!” My sister agreed.
“Well, someday the Republicans are going to ruin all of this,” my mom said, “for everybody.”
Music was already more than music. It was a door that opened for three minutes. Sometimes way longer. In the forbidden world there was no judgment. Only your own thoughts and secret desires, slashing through the atmosphere. And when the song was over, the door clanged shut again. There was no choice but to scramble back to the beginning. Sometimes I would listen to one song twenty or thirty times in a row. There had to be other people like me. I just hadn’t met them yet.
That night, my schoolteacher mother succumbed to the power of rock and roll. And even when a tie-dyed Romeo in front of us offered her a spoon of cocaine, she chose to ignore it. It was an unforgettable night, if only for what she said quietly as we walked to the car. “I understand your music,” she said. “It’s better than ours.”
Kristofferson was already a master at writing plainspoken, unsentimental songs about sadness. I asked him if he needed to be sad to write a sad song. He sparked to the question.
“I write sad songs when I’m happy.” He laughed a little. “I guess because when I’m sad, I’m too sad to write a good song!”
The depth of the romance between Emmylou and Gram, and what grew from that afternoon, is a tale that belonged to them. As with George and Tammy, or Porter and Dolly, or many of the country stars Parsons loved, there’s more pleasure in the myth. I profiled her for Rolling Stone and visited a recording session for her second album, Pieces of the Sky. A few years back, we crossed paths at a Rufus Wainwright concert. She looked at me like I was a remnant of a life gone by. Though it was only one afternoon, she introduced me to a friend as “a kid who used to follow Gram and me around.”
Jerry Garcia on Spotify, almost:
Garcia sat in a reclining seat in the wood-finished offices located in a San Rafael complex. I asked him about the hippie concept that music should be free and belong to the people. He was immediately gregarious and delightfully prickly. “Fuck people’s music, man,” Garcia said, and laughed. “That kind of thing really irks me.”
This was decades before Napster or Spotify, but Garcia could see it coming in the summer of 1973. The people’s hippie, the guru of the Summer of Love, was already militant about not giving music away for free.
“To get so you can play music,” he continued, “you have to sacrifice a lot of what would have been your normal life. You know what I mean? For lack of a better phrase, you have to pay the dues to get so you can play music. It’s not a thing you just do. If that were so, everybody’d be making their own music and there wouldn’t be professional musicians. There’d be no need for them. For someone to deny the fact that you spent a certain amount of your life working on some sort of discipline and learning how to play … that’s the rip-off. That’s the state versus the individual. Anytime someone comes down on artists and claims their work on any level, I think that’s pure bullshit. There’s been too many great musicians who died poor. People’s music? It just ain’t so.”
Later that night, I made a phone call. It was about one in the morning, Birmingham, Michigan, time. He was still up, of course. I could hear the scratchy sound of the Raspberries in the background. Who listened to the sunny pop of the Raspberries at one in the morning? Only the world’s greatest rock critic. He was probably writing one of those coffee-stained masterpieces on the back of a record company bio. I told him what had happened.
“You made friends with them,” said Lester Bangs. He sighed loudly and coughed. “That was your mistake. They make you feel cool, and I met you. You are not cool.” He pronounced it with playground derision—kewl. He chalked it all up to the pursuit of idol worship, and he thought that I just might have saved my own life by blowing the story. Getting in bed with the corporate pursuits of Rolling Stone was one of the first mistakes we’d both made, he said. Again, he used the word we, which he had to know was a gift I didn’t deserve. I wasn’t in his league, or his universe, and it was clearly an epic belly flop. He considered it a badge of honor.
He left me with a battle cry and a laugh in the middle of the night. “We’re from fucking San Diego,” he said. “We’re uncool!”
David Bowie and too much cocaine, PCP, and/or amphetamines, man.
“The only problem with this house,” he said, “is that Satan lives in that swimming pool.” It was as if he were pointing out a pesky problem with termites. “I’ve seen him!”
Doubts are traitors and make us lose the good we oft might win by fearing to attempt.
—WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
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