My last post on this blog was a tribute to David Bowie upon his passing. It's six months later and another one of my musical Buddha's--Alan Vega of the legendary punk duo Suicide--has passed away. I think I'll always remember 2016 as the year the music died.
But rather than write another tribute post like my last one, I thought I'd share a short story I wrote for a zine a few years back. The story was inspired by "Frankie Teardrop" and other songs from Suicide's 1977 self-titled debut. I could list a thousand artists and albums that I love, but only a handful that changed everything for me. Alan Vega is one such artist, and the first Suicide record is one such album.
Anyway, here's the story:
A Teardrop for Frankie
by Andy Andersen
based upon “Frankie Teardrop”
and other songs by
Suicide
Frankie had
a wife and three kids and a job working all night at the factory. Let’s hear it
for Frankie.
Frankie
couldn’t make enough money for his wife and three kid’s at the factory. Let’s
shed a teardrop for Frankie.
Queue the
soft electric beats of dying industry. This was the beat that followed Frankie
home on the last night he came home from working at the factory from 7 to 5. He
had been laid off that day. He decided he couldn’t make it. He had no job, not
enough food, and he was getting evicted.
Frankie
can’t make enough money. Let’s hear it for Frankie.
Frankie’s
desperation peaked when he reached his apartment, and the sun set and the drum
machines in his head kept drawing from his last day at the factory and spinning
industrial beats that pierced his temples. Then they were slowly but surely
aided by the accompaniment of an electric wheel, spinning out terrible
vibrations and the vibrations omitted evil electronic melodies in Frankie’s
head.
Frankie
gonna kill his wife and kids. Let’s hear it for Frankie.
Frankie
entered his apartment and let out a short scream to break the repetition of the
wheel spinning and the drum machine omitting the factory beats in his head.
Poor little
Frankie.
Frankie
pulled a gun from a hidden compartment behind the top shelf in a kitchen
cabinet. Then he went to the room of his kids and more electric wheels were spinning
drones of synth chords that pulsated in his head. Together they made more and
more horrific melodies.
Frankie
gonna kill his wife and kids. Oh Frankie, Frankie.
Frankie
pointed the gun at his 6-month old kid in the crib. Oooh Frankie.
Frankie let
out another short scream and the electric punk music in his head kept moving.
He left the kids room and went to the couch where his wife had fallen asleep in
front of the record player.
Frankie’s
so desperate. Frankie gonna shoot his wife.
Frankie pointed
the gun at his wife. He tride to hold back bursts of violent whimpering and
mumbling. “Mmm…mmm…ah…mmm….mm..” Frankie pointed the gun at his wife and pulled
the trigger and screamed a horrific, all-encompassing scream. The scream
overcame the musical vibrations of the drum machines and wheels spinning
violent melodies in Frankie’s head, and when Frankie pulled the trigger the
music omitted light and pulses of color from the barrel of the gun and the
light and colors enveloped the room, and then replaced the room ‘till there was
nothing but black and colorful visual representations of electronic punk music
coming from Frankie’s head, and he was alone, still whimpering and mumbling
violently. “Mmm…aahh…mmm…what’veahdone….what’ve….what’veahdone…mmm….”
Frankie
pointed the gun at his head, then he went,
“ah….aahhh….aaaaaaaAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHAAAAAAAAHHHHH!!!!!!” He screamed and his
head was opened and the music was outside him now, more and more wheels and
drum machines pouring out and spinning more melody laughter.
Mmm,
Frankie’s dead.
Frankie
woke up in a hell of his own making. All was black except for the music. Sounds
of children’s play things and winds and cars driving by at top speed on the
desert highway resonated quietly from far away. Carnival noises. Orchestras tuning
up. And at the center of it all was the beat of the drum machines and the
electronic vibrations of the spinning wheels, and now a primitive synthesizer
executed high pitched chords through violent punching of keys, sounds that
burst through the droned wave of every other sound in the darkness.
Frankie
looked toward the distant sound of the desert highway, and saw a ghost rider, a
dead motorcycle hero, riding one of Frankie’s screams all the way to the corner
of Hell closest to the surface of the earth. Frankie shouted after the ghost
rider. “Tell them they’re all Frankies! Tell them they’re all Frankies lying in
hell! Aaahhhh….aaAAAAAAHHHH!!!”
Mmm Frankie’s dead.
Then the ghost rider was out of
sight, and Frankie waited for the right time to interject with the beat of the
drum machine, and spoke with the music.
“You’re all Frankies.” He said.
“You’re all Frankies lying in hell.”
Frankie let out one final scream to
drown out the music, though it didn’t drown out the music even if it was louder
than the music.
Frankie sings in hell, “Rocket
rocket U.S.A. Doomsday, Doomsday.”
Let’s shed a teardrop for Frankie.
Frankie died on November 4th,
2012. Nobody heard his screams in life, and nobody heard his screams in hell,
except for a couple of punks in New York in 1973 who heard Frankie’s call from
the ghost rider. They heard the call and wrote it all down, and one banged on
his synthesizers and drum machines and the other sang, Rocket Rocket U.S.A. Doomsday
doomsday.
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