Music Blogs

The Music Biz’s Best Rehabbers!

Posted Tue Jul 17, 2007 10:44am PDT by Rob O'Connor in List Of The Day

Sure, Lindsay and Britney get all the glory these days for their "wild and crazy" ways. But they are bush league compared to the pros of the past. In the music business? This is like comparing analog sound to digital. Old time rehabbers have a warmth, an epic grandeur to them that today's kids can never hope to achieve. Not that there aren't advantages to being a modern day rehabber. With all the age-preserving technology out there, they won't ever have to worry about looking like Keith Richards. While we walk solemnly down the checkout aisle reading about these rehab princesses, let us remember those who 12-stepped before them.

 

Eric Clapton: You see him now as a well-tailored gentleman who makes dull blues albums. And he spends enough time on exotic islands that who knows what he's really up to, but Clapton apparently once was quite the indulger. And he once made albums that were very, very loud.

Marianne Faithfull: Before Brit, before Lyn, before Valerie Bertinelli got chubby, Marianne Faithfull watched her teenaged beauty and mutual infatuation with the Rolling Stones (they liked her as much as she liked them) turn into an infatuation with heroin that left her homeless. Then she started making music again. And she was never homeless again.

Metallica: Let's hear it for James Hetfield. He turned alcoholism into a movie, as Some Kind of Monster bears out. And how amazing that Metallica ever get anything done if he's got to end the recording session at 4 in the afternoon. What's he got soccer practice?

David Crosby: Before he started making babies for Melissa Etheridge, David Crosby used to do a lot of drugs. You can read all about it in one of his many books about how he used to do a lot of drugs. Or you can read books about the many people he played with from Stills, Nash and Young to the Byrds to the Grateful Dead, who also seemed to notice that he did a lot of drugs.

Aerosmith: These guys didn't have a career. They were washed up. They knew drugs were an essential part of the creative process. And that's why their career suddenly took off once they got clean in the mid-‘80s? Say what? These guys obviously didn't read the script close enough. I mean, all those bands on Behind The Music who sober up say they're in the best shape of their lives and couldn't be happier with their fortune today, but if that were really true, they wouldn't be doing a Behind The Music now, would they?

1 Comment

1. __A_YAHOO_USER__ -
drugs stink
Leave Your Comment
You must sign in to leave a comment
Select a Blog Posts
And The Winner Is...
by Chris Willman
26
As Heard On...
by Rebecca Harper, Hulu
46
Chart Watch
by Paul Grein
141
Framed
by John Kordosh
119
GetBack
by Shawn Amos
332
Hip-Hop Media Training
by Billy Johnson, Jr.
221
List Of The Day
by Rob O'Connor
332
Maximum Performance
by Lyndsey Parker
167
Musictoob
by Andy Pemberton
181
New This Week
by Dave DiMartino
123
Reality Rocks
by Lyndsey Parker
579
Rock's Backpages
by Philip Norman (1970)
191
Stop The Presses!
by Us Magazine
85
That's Really Week
by Lyndsey Parker
124
The Blender Burner
by Blender Magazine
27
The MOJO Blog
by Bill DeMain
88
The NME Blog
by Luke Lewis
48
The Spin Blog
by David Marchese
77
The Y! Music Playlist Blog
by Robert of the Radish
514
Video Ga Ga
by Lyndsey Parker
70
Viva NashVegas
by Wendy Geller
58

For tenor from Malta, a star-making role?

AP
Thu Nov 26, 2009 12:01am PST

AP - There's something about the honeyed sweetness of Joseph Calleja's voice that seems to evoke memories of a golden age, as if this young tenor carried within his vocal cords a secret passed down from bygone generation… More »

More Music News