When the news was announced that John Mellencamp would be touring New Zealand in December – for the first time, apparently – it was inevitable that my mind went back to when he first became known here.
It was a small but unforgettable story in Rip It Up, 30 years ago. John Mellencamp was an angry young man. He was 26, his career was going nowhere, he’d had a fight with his manager, and he had a wife, a seven-year-old and a 60-cigarette-a-day habit to support. And they wouldn’t even let him use his own name.
So when the mild-mannered reporter of a fledgling rock paper asked him the wrong question, Cougar - as he was then known - showed his claws. He went all Gordon Ramsay (the printer deleted his expletives), and to many people here, that’s how he was remembered.
Five years later he would have a breakthrough hit, he'd eventually get his own name back, and become the Walmart Springsteen of the cornbelt. But at this stage he hadn’t learnt one of the rules of rock’n’roll: be good to the people you meet on the way up, because you will meet the same people on the way down.
Left: the issue that caused offense, May 1978, and the eventual Cougar issue, September 1978.
What – no cover story?
Cougar pic © Murray Cammick
4 comments:
The printer deleted it? That was very public-spirited of him/her. Hope they didn't bill for the service.
Yes, Putaruru Press. It was a different age. Wanganui Newspapers used to print the student papers at that time, and would often 're-edit' things they regarded as offensive. Still, it was an improvement on the 1951 climate, when even owning a Gestetner brought you under certain "emergency" regulations.
Once a prat, eh? What about his pulling out of the Mission Concert earlier this year because - supposedly - he was being inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame? What a tit. Still, Tom was much better than Johnny-John will ever be.
A quarter century on from his only big hit, Mellencamp always seemed an odd choice for the Mission gig, though it is a captive audience. Tom Jones was a far better bet for the chardonnay chav crowd. At the time the Dom-Post was raving that Mellencamp's original support act Elvis Costello would help sell the tickets, which I thought was coming from the same dream land that saw Costello booked as headliner for the failed Sweetwaters. Sheryl Crow will be pulling more punters in this new double act, I suspect. None of these three could now full a big room here on their own.
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