Thursday 29 January 2009

Bill Hicks' axed Letterman set is aired tonight

"But [...] always behind the shock is thought. And that's what makes him important.”
Liverpool University Gazette

ONE of the many psychological wounds which afflicted the legendary comedian Bill Hicks in the final months of his life in 1993/94 was the decision of the Letterman Show producers to axe his 12th and final appearance on America’s premier chat show.

This wrong, which deeply hurt Hicks, is to be righted tonight (Friday, January 30) as Letterman premiers the axed routine, heavy in criticisms of Christian fundamentalism. Letterman will also interview Hicks' mum Mary in the run-up to the 15th anniversary of Bill’s death in February.

Hicks’ set, recorded on October 1, 1993, took aim at America’s Christian right and in particular Pro-Lifers, saying they should take their argument to its logical conclusion: “If you're so pro-life, do me a favour - don't lock arms and block medical clinics. If you're so pro-life, lock arms and block cemeteries.”

Letterman and the show’s producer Robert Morton took the decision to censor the set (due to fears of alienating key advertisers) without consulting Hicks, who was understandably incensed – a grievance which manifested itself in a legendary 39 page hand written protest letter to the New Yorker’s London correspondent John Lahr.

Hicks died of pancreatic cancer nearly five months later at the age of 32 on February 24, 1994.

Letterman has since admitted his deep regret at the incident and how he and Morton handled it, most revealingly on the superb 1994 documentary Totally Bill Hicks.

Always lionised more in Britain and Ireland during the final years of his life, Hicks' legend has grown since his death and his satiric attacks on the George Bush Snr invasion of Iraq in 1991 took on an eerily prescient echo when Dubya Jnr repeated the feat in 2003. Many a journalist with a copy of the live video Revelations rehashed some of Hicks’ key set pieces – ‘How do we know Iraq has weapons? We saw the receipts’ was a favourite plagiarism by the hacks.

Much of the anger which drove Hicks in his final six months of life can be heard on the posthumously issued album Rant in E Minor in which he lambasts the full spectrum of fundamentalists, brain dead celebrities and deficiencies in US foreign policy. Left behind by the mainstream American comedy industry yet feted in the UK, Hicks’ sense of disillusionment with the US is manifest. His attack on the TV shows American Gladiators, Cops and his former friend Jay Leno are works of deep, dark genius.

Rant... also contains some wonderful attacks on hecklers, the savage like of which many a stand-up can only dream of getting away with in Jongleurs of a drunken Saturday late show.

Knowing he was dying, Hicks set out to settle all the scores that he had borne stoically until then. Rant... is an album of rare comic brutality and political clarity. It also epitomises his description of himself as “Chomsky with dick jokes.”

In its bleakest section (and that’s saying something), he says: “What do you say we, uh, lighten things up and talk about abortion? You know, I feel like I'm losing some of you here and I wanna win all of you back with this one. Let's talk about abortion. Let's talk about child-killing, and see if we can't get some chuckles rippling through the room here. Let's talk about mass murder of young, unborn children, see if we can't coalesce into one big healthy gut-laugh. Ha ha ha ha ha ha!”

* Get the Letterman Show on Youtube.com from tomorrow, no doubt
* A transcript of the show is available from http://www.sacredcow.com/articles/newyorker.html



What are your favourite Hickisms?

‘We are a virus with shoes...’


"Oh, childbirth is such a miracle. It's such a miracle." Wrong! No more a miracle than eating food and a turd coming out of your ass. You know what a miracle is? A miracle's raising a kid who doesn't talk in a movie theatre.”


"America is the bully of the world, we're like Jack Palance in the movie Shane..."

Tuesday 27 January 2009

For hip hop lovers out there

French hip-hop has long been the chief rival to the US, this podcast and blog is superb - perhaps the best right-click and save target as you'll do for a long time.
http://www.yolala.org/

Great slogans


What are the other great and unheralded slogans out there? This one from a chicken merchant.

The wrong things to say about music

When the latest uber cool sounds are are being bigged-up from Billboard to the posh papers, it's vitally important not to be seen to be falling off the bandwagon. But, inspired by The Word magazine's Rob Fitzpatrick's pitch perfect dissection of the latest critically lauded but definitively lousy Kanye West long player 808s & Heartbreak, here's a guide to saying the exactly the wrong things to zeitgeist-riding trendsters.

1. See that Burial - I think he sounds a bit like a Moby demo doesn't he...
2. I reckon Elton John would do a great version of Hallelujah...
3. There's nothing intrinsically wrong with liking Bon Jovi...
4. Is it just me or does Amy Winehouse sound like a seal?
5. Doesn't UB40's production sound great on Lily Allen records?
6. Hasn't someone noticed the Hoosier's first single is Mr Blue Sky and the second is Lovecats?
7. Franz Ferdinand may be clever, but they get away with murder... just like Talking Heads did.
8. Dizzee Rascal production sounds like there's a small mammal running amok in a synth...
9. Accompanied by a theatrical look over the shoulder for a hidden candid camera, "The White Stripes... what? Really."
10. "I have spent the last 36 years quite happily without seeing (delete where applicable) Gang of Four/Magazine/Zeppelin/The Eagles/The Doors, and I'm not paying £150 just so I can tick them off a cuntin' Mojo magazine Must See Before Death list."
11. What is it about Scousers and sea shanties?