It would have made a great reality show: The Rolling Stones Go for a Physical.
Unfortunately, or perhaps mercifully, we'll never really know what that
trip to the doctor's office would have looked like, but I'll give you a
moment to shudder in horror at the mental picture anyway.
There you go.
After
starting with a February 2009 news report that Ronnie Wood has been
warned to stop boozing by the band, the show goes something like this.
To get tour insurance, the Stones have to pass a medical exam. They
don't think Ronnie Wood is going to cut it. He failed in 2002, quit the
sauce, then passed. As fate would have it, the seven-time rehab veteran
has since relapsed hard and repeatedly, to the point that his stretches
of sobriety probably look a lot like what most people would call sleep.
Keith
Richards gives the 61-year-old wet-brain the
ultimatum: quit drinking or you're out of the band. Then Keith goes
drinking. Just the mention of quitting something is enough to require
the immediate topping-up of his irony tank. Actually, what's surprising
is that the word “quit” is even in his vocabulary, or, given his
legendary gibbering Keith-speak, the word “vocabulary”, for that matter.
Wood
passes the physical and ends up in the “not currently drinking” file.
And that's just shaky enough to restore my faith in rock 'n' roll—if
not the Stones.
With Sir Mick hanging out at garden
parties, admiring the ice sculptures with Elton John, and Charlie Watts
no longer piggybacking a junk monkey, it seems that only Richards still
has a solid grip on being an unrepentant fuck-up. Wood might not quite
have the party chops to keep up, but come on—at least he's trying.
That's
all we can ask. Though long since irrelevant musically, these crusty
old reptile delinquents are nevertheless making everybody else look
bad, rock 'n' rollers decades their junior bobbing about in their
greasy wake like so many empty lite-beer cans. A glance at today's
big-league rockers finds little more than a shameful roster of poseurs,
quitters, and unabashed yoga enthusiasts. And I bet that not one of
them has snorted his dad.
Is the out-of-control rock star a
vanishing archetype? Is Pete Doherty the best we have? Am I going to
have to look him up one of these days and find out who the hell he is?
He certainly looks like shit on those tabloid covers. At least Shane
McGowan kicked plenty of musical buttock before turning into a puddle
of puke. Next to the old pros, Doherty looks like a naughty kid who got
into daddy's liquor cabinet and maybe mom's cocaine hutch.
Historically,
most hard-partying bands seem more an example of protracted adolescence
than anything. Why not? You're in a band, you're young, famous, and
probably stupid. It's a great combination. Go nuts. But don't let us
down. Don't get all Mötley Crüe on us and make a career out of bragging
about your shenanigans. Besides, who says you need to be in a band to
go the perma-teen route? I could do that. Ahem.
Of course,
there's always death, the true measure of whether you can cut it or
not. Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison, Brian Jones, Johnny Thunders, Kurt
Cobain—lightweights. The trick, really, is to somehow look dead while
not actually being dead. Kind of like the Stones, or at least the two
Stones who are still out there stumbling about like crazy rock stars.
Richards and Wood remain the standard-bearers, the textbook-writers,
and with every year survived, with every freaky new face crease and
every inevitable relapse, they are boldly charting wild and untamed
territory. Somebody's gotta do it—and I bet it's thirsty work. Not to
mention what would inarguably be must-see TV.
________________________
Pop Eye - The Georgia Straight.