As well as The Who book reviewed yesterday, this
was the other one that Just Backdated read while on holiday in Spain.
With over a dozen
albums under his belt, gigs that include opening slots for Springsteen and
R.E.M., not to mention three full length works of fiction, Wesley Stace – aka the
singer/songwriter John Wesley Harding – is better placed than most to write a
novel set inside the rock world. It shows too, for Wonderkid – a sort of rise and fall of a curiously whimsical English
rock hero – is chock full of references that could only have come from the mind
of a writer with inside knowledge, not just of the nuts and bolts of the music
industry but also one with a keen knowledge of rock history, an anorak who can
tell you the B-sides of all the Stones’ early singles (in chronological order),
the string gauges of George Harrison’s guitars (Gretsch and 12-string Rickenbacker) and where Bob Dylan bought the sun
glasses he was never seen without in Dont
Look Back (without, of course, an apostrophe).
In truth, there is no precedent
for Blake Lear and his group The Wonderkids. They are British and include
Blake’s brother Jack and two others who are jettisoned, along with their first
manager, when they get to America and come under the influence of a US major
label that markets them as ‘rock for kids’ with a foxy girl bassist and a benign
but dreadlocked black drummer. Blake, though, has other ideas and as the novel
progresses he gradually subverts the label’s plans by behaving in a manner that
upsets just about everyone around him until the whole charade explodes with an
almighty bang and he… well, I don’t want to spoil things but there is a neat
twist in the tail, a phrase that sounds remarkably like the sort of songs he
writes, the lyrics of which are helpfully included in an appendix and some of
which Wes has recorded.
Droll allusions to actual rock
events will bring forth a knowing smile from veterans like me and, cleverly,
each chapter is named after a genuine rock quote from a well-known live album. Along
the way there are plenty of laughs but in amongst the humour and set-pieces are
home truths about the fickleness of fame, finely wrought character studies of
American music biz professionals – a fairly odious bunch of course – and the
temptations on offer to offset the tediousness of the road. The problems arise
because The Wonderkids are adults but they’re playing to pre-teens, not so much
in a cheesy Osmonds-like fashion but as a kind of junior Monkees-style group,
sold as ‘Your First Rock Band’ – like ‘Your First Construction Kit’ – and they
are instantly popular, especially the singer whose lyrical inspiration comes
from the literary figures whose surnames he adopts, William Blake and Edward
Lear.
The story is told from the point
of view of Blake’s adopted son, the circumstances of his adoption as implausible
as the difference in their ages, who joins the adventure to sell merchandise at
concerts; merch, as it is now universally known. Wide eyed and often legless,
Sweet, as he is christened, becomes Blake’s amanuensis, noting the shenanigans,
the petty indignities and discomforts that the Wonderkids endure. He’s also a
party to the incident that jams the wheels on their supercharged flight, though
he somehow manages to escape the fall out and emerges a wiser but sadder man.
Blake himself is difficult to pin
down. He’s quirky in a rather fey, Technicolor dream kind of a way, a sort of
cross between pre-casualty Syd Barrett and pre-obese Jim Morrison, but
immensely likeable all the same, the perfect androgynous front man. Brother
Jack, on the other hand, is from the tougher end of the rock spectrum, well
into his vintage guitars, shagging the mothers of the group’s young fans, and necking
all the drugs he can get his hands on, so I don’t need to draw comparisons with
the real world (and might get sued if I do). Some of the minor characters are
well drawn too, especially the group’s final replacement bassist, a non-smoking,
teetotal, vegan lady with a penchant for God, and the label-appointed US tour
manager, all rapid fire efficiency and that extraordinary ability to fix
anything, absolutely anything.
The book comes with an impressive
collection of accolades on its reverse cover. Peter Buck, no less, states: “There
were times reading this book that I could actually smell the dank dressing
rooms, or feel the bus rolling down the highway to the next gig,” and he’s not
far wrong, and similar comments come from Dan Zanes and Roseanne Cash, among
others. I wouldn’t go as far as that – I found the concept of a rock band aimed
at pre-teens a bit far-fetched – but there is still plenty to enjoy in Wes’
book. What’s more it’s made me want to read his other, non-music related,
novels.
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