Keith Moon: The Real Me
monodrama by Mick Berry
3Below Theaters
Frankly, the whole “insane genius” thing pisses me off.
History holds far too many great sane artists to support this idea that lunacy
somehow opens the gates to creativity. That said, I can see how mentally ill
artists make better stories, and therefore get better “press” when it comes to
furthering their legacies.
Keith Moon, the addiction-crippled, mentally unbalanced
drummer for The Who, certainly fits the bill, especially in the
late-‘60s/early-‘70s Golden Age of rock, when destructive energy matched up
with an unstable world to create nihilistic music.
Mick Berry’s wildly energetic one-man biodrama wrestles with
this myth in a couple of ways. One, our host, Moon the Loon himself, pulls no
punches, blaming himself for courting insanity, at the cost of his family and
(in one truly horrific chapter) the life of his driver. Two, Berry’s
performance actually addresses the music,
the true reason for Moon’s genius, and the manic art of playing drums.
I’ll admit a certain bias. As a semi-pro drummer and singer,
I demand a certain level of technical know-how when it comes to my musical
novels, and find it infuriating that most music-based stories (Ann Patchett’s
supposed opera novel Bel Canto, and
just about every article ever published in The Rolling Stone) are about image
and nothing else.
The way Berry addresses this problem is to play an
impressively large drum kit to several Who songs during his performance. This
is difficult enough (a recording has none of the give-and-take of a live band),
but he also continues to talk during the
songs, which, considering Moon’s highly involved style of play, is a horribly difficult thing to do.
What we learn about Moon’s approach is deliciously, geekily
satisfying. Founded in lessons from rock drummer Carlo Little (who once turned
down a gig from an unknown band called The Rolling Stones), Moon learned to
depend on a heavy bass beat, freeing himself from the standard 2-and-4 snare
backbeat and allowing the production of cascading fills on toms and cymbals,
riffing back and forth with Pete Townshend in an almost jazz sensibility. After
seeing this show, you’ll better understand how Moon’s thundering, ever-talking
presence led to the sense that The Who was simply bigger and louder than all
the other bands.
The most impressive passage comes near the end of the
evening, as Berry narrates what goes through a drummer’s mind during a song, in
this case “Won’t Get Fooled Again.” Having been on that throne, I can tell you
it really rings true. By performance time, a drummer has worked out all the
technical stuff and goes about “feeling”
the song in a much more visceral fashion. Berry leads us through the sections
with phrases like “lay out,” “build the tension,” “lead into the second verse,”
“Oh God, I’m playing the same damn beat over and over, I’ve run out of ideas.
No! How about this?”
The speaking side of Berry’s show provides quite a few entertaining
tidbits about the band: the guitar smashing, groupies, booze, pills – how they
made Tommy all about pinball mostly to make sure it got a good review from London’s
most powerful rock critic, who was really into pinball. And some of the
elaborate jokes Moon plays on strangers are worthy of Candid Camera’s best. But
it’s this incredibly demanding combination of simultaneous acting and drumming
that makes The Real Me such a treat,
especially if you’re a fan of The Who.
Through June 25, 3Below Theaters, 288 S. Second Street, San
Jose, 408/404-7711, 3belowtheaters.com.
Michael J. Vaughn is the author of twenty novels, including
the rock novel Slow Children, and the drummer for San Francisco’s Exit
Wonderland.
After research a couple of of the weblog posts on your web site now, and I really like your approach of blogging. I bookmarked it to my bookmark web site listing and shall be checking again soon. Pls take a look at my website online as properly and let me know what you think. online casino games
ReplyDelete