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    Give the Anarchist a Cigarette

    Page 50
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      Epilogue

      The Piaf Summation

      ‘Don’t you regret any of the things you did back then. I mean, all the drugs and stuff.’

      Every so often some idiot feels the need to ask. I usually snarl. I don’t like the question, since it seems to imply that I should assume some unwarranted responsibility. At a minimum it’s like we had a bloody great party and never bothered to clean up afterwards. My answer is unequivocal. ‘Not a fucking thing.’

      If I really feel irritated, I elaborate and inform the questioner how it would not surprise me, if I were a kid today – with access to the dot.com and automatic weapons – if I slipped into my black Rommel overcoat and went off to machine-gun the high school. (Remember, us English lads had . . . If long before the Trenchcoat Mafia watched Matrix and The Crow.) In my youth such was the level of my rage, but, fortunately for the rest of you, I didn’t have the technology or firepower. The world is still in need of considerable improvement. Indeed, if the human race doesn’t evolve a whole new set of protocols for taking care of business, it will be lucky to survive extinction. Question is: do we deserve to survive extinction?

      ‘I am an angry youth who never managed to grow up, so get the fuck out of my way.’

      ‘Don’t you think rather a lot of yourself? The hero of your own epic?’

      ‘Sometimes you have to think like a hero just to behave like a decent human being.’

      ‘But how do you justify the drugs . . .?’

      ‘Justify? Do me a favour? Here in 2001 the entire developed world is out of its tree on everything from endorphins to Gincoba. Cell phones are frying its brains, as it chokes on the rapidly warming atmosphere.’

      ‘But you don’t regret the drugs you took yourself?’

      ‘I was an idiot clown with an emotionally dangerous job. It went with the territory of the apprentice Holy Fool. Days have come and gone when the only way to stay sane was to see the humorous side of nuclear annihilation. In a word, no, I don’t.’

      ‘You said you had a “dangerous job”?’

      ‘I was questing into the unknown. Danger lies within the territory.’

      ‘Danger for whom?’

      ‘That’s a moot point.’

      ‘You didn’t ever weigh the consequences?’

      ‘St Brendan hardly weighed the consequences when he set out to discover America in a leather boat, and you can hardly blame him for Shiloh, Wounded Knee or Charlie’s Angels. The adventurer doesn’t tabulate all the possible negative options. He or she just goes. Imagine how it felt to be the very first guy to eat an oyster. What trust that slime-in-a-rock was food.’

      ‘No hints of doubt?’

      During the writing of this book, strange dreams struggled up from the subconscious that proved both disturbing and, now and again, problem-solving. ‘The human soul does not come with a built-in firewall.’

      ‘Huh?’

      Bibliography and Discography

      FICTION

      The Texts of Festival

      The Quest of the DNA Cowboys

      The Neutral Atrocity

      The Synaptic Manhunt

      Protectorate

      Phaid the Gambler

      Citizen Phaid

      Their Masters’ War

      The Long Orbit

      The Armageddon Crazy

      The Last Stand of the DNA Cowboys

      Mars – The Red Planet

      The Feelies

      Necrom

      The Time of Feasting

      Darklost

      Jim Morrison’s Adventures in the Afterlife

      NON-FICTION

      Watch Out Kids

      Get on Down

      The Black Leather Jacket

      Elvis and the Colonel

      The Hitchhiker’s Guide to Elvis

      The CIA Files

      Conspiracies, Lies, and Hidden Agendas

      POETRY

      The Lonesome Death of Gene Vincent

      The Road to Armageddon is Best Travelled by Cadillac

      PLAYS

      The Last Words of Dutch Schultz

      A Criminal Sorority

      South of the Border

      RECORDINGS

      Ptooff! (The Deviants)

      Disposable (The Deviants)

      Deviants #3 (The Deviants)

      Mona (Mick Farren)

      Play with Fire (Mick Farren)

      Screwed Up (Mick Farren and The Deviants)

      Vampires Stole My Lunch Money (Mick Farren)

      Human Garbage (The Deviants)

      Who Shot You Dutch? (with Wayne Kramer and Don Was)

      Partial Recall (Mick Farren and The Deviants)

      Fragments of Broken Probes (Mick Farren and The Deviants)

      Death Tongue (with Wayne Kramer and John Collins)

      Gringo Madness (Tijuana Bible)

      The Death Ray Tapes (with Jack Lancaster)

      Eating Jello with a Heated Fork (Deviants ixvi)

      The Deviants Have Left the Planet (Mick Farren and The Deviants)

      Barbarian Princes – Live in Japan (The Deviants)

      This CD is Condemned (Mick Farren and The Deviants)

      A more detailed listing of these works can be found at the Funtopia website: http://www.thanatosoft.freeserve.co.uk/index.htm

      Index

      The page references in this index correspond to the printed edition from which this ebook was created. To find a specific word or phrase from the index, please use the search feature of your ebook reader.

      Abrams, Steve 143, 290

      acid 81, 97, 142, 263–6, 336–7

      Acme Chewing Gum case 312

      Adams, Richard 349, 355

      Adderley, Cannonball 15

      Advert, Gaye 356

      advertising 10

      Adverts, The 356

      Alexandra Palace 116–22

      Ali, Muhammad 122

      Ali, Tariq 176, 178, 185

      Allen, Daevid 118, 328

      Allen, Wally 196

      Allman, Greg 248

      Altamont 234, 283

      amphetamine sulphate 186, 361

      Anderson, Mrs 335

      Anger, Kenneth 119, 343

      Angry Brigade 298, 299–300, 308

      Antonioni, Michelangelo 272

      aphasia 24–5

      Apocalypse Now 343

      Arista Records 405

      Artaud, Antonin 125

      Artesian Well pub 34, 37–8, 48, 51

      Asher, Jane 86

      Asher, Peter 86

      Atlantic 275

      Attfield, Tony 16

      Avalon Ballroom, San Francisco 78, 81, 82

      Bacon, Francis 403

      Baez, Joan 46

      Baker, Ginger 17, 220, 245

      Bakewell, Joan 99

      Balin, Marty 193

      Ballard, J. G. 352, 357

      Band of Joy 172

      Band, The 45

      Bangs, Lester 305, 332, 339, 378–9

      Barker, Edward: and IT 244, 292–7, 304, 305, 306; character 244–5; and Phun City 280, 284, 285; and IT’s prosecution 304, 305, 306; and the trial 310–11, 315; and NME 341

      Barrett, Syd 387: beauty of 91; at Alexandra Palace 118

      Basquiat, Jean-Michel 362

      Bateson, Gregory 102, 103

      Bators, Stiv 377–8

      Beale, Dana 379

      Beatles, The 12, 44, 46: Sgt Pepper 122, 160

      Beck, Henry 377

      Beck, Jeff 92, 96, 152

      Bell, Marc 380–1

      Bell, Max 340, 342

      Benny (drummer) 93, 95

      Berry, Chuck 17, 35, 397

      Biba’s: Rainbow Room 308

      Bidwell, Vivienne 223

      Big Three 253

      Biggenheimer, Rodney 345

      Bilk, Acker 18

      Bird, John 208

      Bishop, Sid 153, 154, 166–7, 170: at Essex University 173; song-writing 187; geographical problems 209; getting rid of from Deviants 209–10, 211, 213

      Black Panthers 68

      Blackheath 52, 54

      Blackheath Foot and Death Men 279


      Blackhill Enterprises 90, 217, 222

      Blarney Club 80, 151

      Blake, Peter 12

      Block, Judge 128, 129, 130

      Blockheads 361

      Blondie 376

      Bloom, William 309, 330, 333

      Bobbie 26–7

      boggies 269

      Bolan, Marc 361: and John Peel 90; and Alexandra Palace 117

      Bonham, John 172, 173

      Bowie, David 67, 136, 202, 222, 303, 306–7, 377: ‘The Laughing Gnome’ 122; ‘Jean Genie’ 161; fascism 348, and Ziggy Stardust 222

      Boyd, Joe 51, 80, 105, 111, 125, 127, 128: opposed to moving UFO 133; acts booked by 152–3; and closing UFO 152; Witchseason 159

      Boyle, Mark 135

      Braceland, Jack 135

      Branca, Glenn 356

      Brando, Marlon 12

      Brighton 42–3, 261, 372

      Brilleaux, Lee 360

      British Lion Outside Broadcast unit 279

      British Union of Fascists 50

      British White Panther Party 3, 285

      Brody, Dr 186

      Bron, Eleanor 208

      Broonzy, Big Bill 211

      Brothers Grim 51

      Brown, Arthur 118

      Brown, James 194, 360

      Brown, Joe 372

      Bruce, Lenny 84–5, 317

      Bruno 248

      Buckley, Lord 85

      Buckmaster, Paul 253–4

      Buell, Bebe 246

      Bug 397

      Bukowski, Charlie 334, 335

      Bumpers 304, 306

      Bunch Books 27

      Burchill, Julie 64, 341, 368–70, 375

      Burdon, Eric 82, 135

      Burgess, Anthony 357

      Burroughs, Edgar Rice 19

      Burroughs, William 253: Naked Lunch 14; and Trocchi 31, 32; pillaged by Dylan 36; Towers Open Fire 59; CIA and 81; Junkie 84

      Byrds 196

      Caby Hall 29

      cannabis see marijuana

      Capt Trip Records 214

      Captain Beefheart 84

      Carmichael, Stokely 103

      Carol 154–5, 210

      Carr, Robert 298

      Carroll, Jim 380

      CBS Records 128

      Centre 42, 72, 151

      Charles, Madame 307

      Chaykin, Howard 343

      Chelsea College 197

      Cher 341

      CIA (Central Intelligence Agency) 19, 81–2, 112

      cinema 342–3

      Clapton, Eric 245, 348, 357

      Clarke, Andy 136

      Clash, The 87, 324, 361, 367, 375–6

      Cleave, Maureen 45

      Cliff, Jimmy 105

      clothes 66–70

      Club 82, 377

      CND 20, 88

      cocaine 138, 362

      Cochran, Eddie 11, 34, 35, 255, 366, 374

      Cohen, Phil 240

      Collins, John 377

      Collins, Judy 257

      Colquhoun, Andy 330, 335, 382, 385, 386

      Colquhoun, Helga 406

      Coltrane, John: Giant Steps 10

      Connolly, Billy 343

      Cook, Peter 208

      Cooper, Alice 228, 307, 377

      Cooper, Jackie 377

      Copeland, Stewart 206, 386

      Corso, Gregory 58, 59

      Costello, Elvis 383, 384

      Country, Blue Grass, Blues and Other Music

      For Uplifting Gormandisers 376–82

      Country Club 262

      Cox, Alex 366

      Cox, Gez 266–7, 269, 270, 272–3, 276, 280, 283, 295, 296

      Crash 352

      Cream 159

      Creamcheese, Suzy 122, 125, 134, 152

      Creation, The 94

      Creem 331–2, 339

      Cresswell-Evans, Phoebe 69

      Crick, Bernard 317

      Crisp, Quentin 66

      Crowley, Aleister 83–4, 343, 370: ‘Do what thou wilt’ 117, 143

      Cuba 33, 68, 178

      Cuban Missile Crisis 19

      Currie, Mad Dog Pete 268, 279, 284, 285, 288

      Curtis, Jackie 308

      Curved Air 206, 386

      Daley, Mayor 188

      Daltrey, Roger 214, 360

      Damned, The 367

      Darling, Candy 308

      Davies, Chalkie 378

      Davies, Clive 405

      Davies, Ray 387

      Davis, Miles 15, 27, 159

      de Freitas, Michael 31–2 see also Malik, Michael Abdul and Michael X

      De Ville, Willy 377, 379

      Dead Boys 377

      Dean, James 12

      Decca Records 251

      DeGrimston, Kathy 144

      DeGrimston, Robert 143, 144

      Dellar, Fred 117

      Dempsey, Michael 351, 352, 354–5, 356, 357

      Dennis, Felix: and Farren’s departure from UK 2; Bunch Books 27; and Poutain 182; and Disposable 188; and magazines 243; and Richard Neville 292; and OZ trial 304; psychedelia collection 355; and Elvis’s death 392–3

      Dennis Publishing 243

      Denny, Sandy 257

      Des Barres, Pamela 247

      Detroit 394, 395, 396–8

      Deviants see Social Deviants Dexedrine 73, 97

      Dialectics of Liberation Conference 102–3, 142

      Diddley, Bo: ‘Mona’ 254

      Dingwalls Dancehall 249–50, 357–61, 382–4

      Disc 331

      Divers, Shirley 295, 347

      dole 29

      Donovan (Leitch): ‘Sunny Goodge Street’ 27

      Don’t Look Back 36

      Doors, The 79, 190–1, 192–5, 283

      Dr Feelgood 359, 360

      Drabble, Margaret 272

      Drynamyl 42

      Dunbar, Ian 206

      Dunbar, John 86

      Durden-Smith, Jo 193

      Dury, Ian 46, 361, 372

      Dylan, Bob: in Madhouse on Castle Street 6; voice 13; one step ahead 35–6; ‘Ballad of Hollis Brown’ 39–40; Royal Albert Hall concerts 44–7, 60–3; going electric 45, 61; ‘Times They Are A-Changing’ 45; ‘Like a Rolling Stone’ 47; called ‘traitor’ 61; ‘Visions of Joanna’ 61; ‘Ballad of a Thin Man’ 62; at Isle of Wight 283; ‘Desolation Row’ 365

      Eagles, The 365

      Eaton, Shirley 59

      EC horror comics 12

      Edgar Broughton Band 215, 222, 224, 225, 278–9

      Edmunds, Ben 332

      Elektra Records 275

      Eliot, T. S. 334

      Elliot, Tony 293

      Ellison, Harlan 84, 85, 357

      English, Mick 123

      Eno, Brian 308, 326

      Entire Sioux Nation 266

      Entwhistle, John 219

      Errigo, Angie 340

      Erskine, Pete 342

      Essen, Ingrid von 267–8, 271, 272, 292, 298, 319, 330, 335–6, 353, 405

      Essex University 169–71

      Essoldo, Brighton 261

      Exploding Galaxy 82, 307

      Fabian, Jenny 191, 209, 247

      Faces, The 308

      Fainlight, Harry 60, 112–13

      Fairport Convention 136

      Faithful, Marianne 46, 74, 86, 143, 276, 390

      Fame, Georgie 26

      Family Dog 81

      Fanon, Frantz 67

      Farr, Ricky 276, 283, 286–7, 288–9

      Farren, Eric 114

      Farren, Mick: at House of the Chinese Landlord 3, 5–13; selling clockwork jumping dogs 5; and graphic design 7–8; education 10–11, 16; anger 11–13; childhood 11; exemption from rules 15–16; accent 16; and authority 16; at St Martin’s17; diet 17; odd jobs 29–30; adopted by Australian lesbian couple 30; in band at art school 34; as guitar player 34; performs at Artesian Well 34, 37–8; Watch Out, Kids 43–4; sees Dylan at RAH 44–7, 60–3; begins relationship with Joy 52; moves to Princelet Road 54; appearance 65–6, 67–8; transvestite gunfighter period 65; running door at UFO 77–83, 84; and IT 88–9, 105–6, 108, 244–5, 290–1; at Marquee to see Hendrix 96–9; meets Jimmy Hendrix 97–8; oral sex at Roundhouse 100–1, 103; first disillusionment with underground 111–12; and demonstratio
    n against Stones’ jail sentences 130–1; police work over 134; and flower power 137–8; Shaftsbury Avenue apartment 138–40, 200–7; and acid 140–1; marriage shaky 140, 146; sacked from IT 145–7; and Carol 154–5; on the road 164–74; and Vietnam War 177; and Grosvenor Square demonstration 178–85; song-writing 187; marriage with Joy cools 202; bronchial asthma sufferer 206; obtains marijuana by prescription 206–7; at Royal Festival Hall 208; Hyde Park concert 215, 221–6; solo album Mona 215, 252–5, 259, 263–4; in Cornwall with band 216–17; and Germaine Greer 218–21; in Canada 226–33; out of the Deviants 226; and Chesterton Road flat 235–8, 259, 260, 267, 271, 335; political views 241–2; snobbishness of 241; and Elvis 253; getting band together for solo album 253–4, 259–60; in hospital 255–8; bad trip 263–6; resolves never to play rock again 266; and Phun City 268, 272–81; Clifton Gardens flat 271, 298, 330; buckles down to serious writing 272; and Special Branch 297–300; preparations for legal engagement 304; and IT trial 310–19; Great Nitrous Oxide Heist 320–2; in Paris 322–8; moves back to the Grove 330; and NME 332, 338–44; ready for novel writing 333; in Los Angeles 345–6; first novel, Texts of Festival 351 Tale of Willy’s Rats 352; Mo the Roller 353; Quest of the DNA Cowboys 353–4, 403; Neural Atrocity 354; Synaptic Manhunt 354; Get On Down 355–6; Feelies, The 356; at Dingwalls 357–61, 382–4; affair with Julie Burchill 368–70; in New York 376–82; cuts tracks in New York 379–82; ‘Lost Johnny’ 381, 382; playing at Dingwall’s 382–4; Bionic Gold 384; recording for Stiff 384–5; Vampires Stole My Lunch Money 386–9; and Elvis’s death 389–93; in America 394–8; and Wayne Kramer 394, 395; opts for America 403–6; in love with Betsy 405; Song of Phaid the Gambler, The 405; ‘Broken Statue’ 406; song-writing with Lemmy and Colquhoun 406; attitude to drugs 407–8; lack of regrets 407 see also Social Deviants

      FBI 19

      Federal Bureau of Narcotics (USA) 298

      Feld, Mark 159 see also Bolan, Marc

      Fenton, John 324, 325, 326

      Ferguson, Tony 202

      Ferlinghetti, Lawrence 58, 59

     


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