Sunday, April 26, 2026

Review: A Fast Ride Out of Here: Confessions of Rock's Most Dangerous Man

A Fast Ride Out of Here: Confessions of Rock's Most Dangerous Man A Fast Ride Out of Here: Confessions of Rock's Most Dangerous Man by Pete Way
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Maybe I am missing something or it is just not for me, but while an avid music enthusiast, I never became a UFO fan. I did go to an arena concert in Detroit, Michigan in the 1980s. I was there for someone else (Ozzy? Maiden?) and didn't know for Waysted but distinctly remember "Women In Chains" song being played but no concert setlist matches that... Maybe that song was played over the PA and not performed live?

Way explains his plans with Waysted:
I decided to call the band Waysted. What it boiled down to was that I wanted to make a grittier, harder kind of rock music than I had been doing with UFO and to get out there and play again.


Well, this book didn't clear up that part of my memory while it does underscore the variations of memory as many Way colleagues, family, and contacts offer their own version of event, often contradicting Way's.

Way's extensive drug experiences in the retelling involve some name-dropping
Rick sold coke to Marlon Brandon, a who’s who of other ‘A’ list Hollywood stars and most of the top music executives in the city.

...

Drugs, of course, were a by-product of being on the road, but I also saw first-hand just how detrimental they could be. I came across many people of undoubted talent, but it was obvious they had been fucked up by cocaine, or else heroin. Touring Obsession, we did quite a few shows with Aerosmith, who were the biggest band in America at the time. I expected them to be a devastating live band, but they were so out of it by then that songs would virtually grind to a halt and the crowd would go quiet. That happened at every show.


Way's substance abuse as with other becomes isolating.
I don’t believe I ever wrecked a hotel room myself. But then, you don’t when you’ve got drugs in the room. Hotel security guards were generally off-duty cops, so the last thing I’d want would be to alert them to anything untoward. For the same reason, I kept my music reasonably quiet. Anything so there wouldn’t be a knock on the door in the middle of the night when I’d got half an ounce of coke on the bedside table. Fans would also sleep on the floor outside of our rooms. That started to get a bit daunting – stepping out of the room and having people literally lying in wait for you. After several months of that, there was nothing I craved more than a bit of peace and quiet. By the end of the Lights Out tour, I had also started to use heroin. As I said, I’d tried it when I was thirteen, but I took to it much slower than to cocaine. It was reintroduced to me by a dealer – but it could as well have been by anybody around us at that time – to be used as part of a speedball with cocaine. To be honest, by then I would try anything that was put in front of me. But the way it was explained, it made perfect sense to me to take heroin like that. Coke allowed me to talk all night and appear interesting, but the trouble was that I would be wired for hours at a time. The heroin in a speedball took the edge off the cocaine high and allowed me to come down.


Calling out Joe Elliott of Def Leppard for being a cheapskate is namedropping that is itself contradicted.
Joe Elliott: I’m sure Pete has said that I always forgot my credit card; wouldn’t expect anything less. The truth is that I didn’t have any money when the two of us first got together, and by 1984 when our Pyromania album had taken off, he’d be round at my house emptying the bar. He is a pathological liar, but in the funniest sense. I’ve often told him as much. Ultimately, I’m a huge Pete Way fan, but like most people he’s flawed and massively so.


I didn't know of Way's production work for Twisted Sister and the Cockney Rejects.
I also got a second offer to produce a new album for a London punk band, the Cockney Rejects. It was the Rejects’ fourth record and they wanted to move towards more of a hard-rock sound, which of course was fine by me. However, the title of the album, The Wild Ones, turned out to be all too apt, since the Rejects were like nothing so much as a gang of football hooligans. When the four of them weren’t drinking, they were fine – pussycats, really. But if anyone so much as looked at one or the other of them after they’d sunk a few beers, all hell would break loose. They would all want to start a fight, and the Rejects’ idea of diplomacy was to hit first and ask questions later. I found being around them very testing. If we went to the pub together, there would be a lot of, ‘Here, that geezer over there’s a cunt’, and, ‘Oi, what the fuck is he staring at?’ I could do no wrong in their eyes and we managed to make a decent-enough album, but I spent a ridiculous amount of time trying to stop them from smacking other people at a moment’s notice.


There is the tale of the deterioration of Fastway and brief touring with his party-partner Ozzy
‘Fast’ Eddie Clarke: Next thing I knew, Pete had popped up in Ozzy’s band and Sharon-fucking-Osbourne had poached him from me. She had known Pete was in a right state over the business with Chrysalis and behaved like a total cunt. And then what happened? She and Ozzy went and shat all over Pete. He was supposed to do the whole world tour, but they kicked him into touch after just a handful of British shows. Apparently, Tommy Aldridge told them he wouldn’t play with Pete. It was a crying shame, because Pete and I had a great thing going together, we really did, and I missed him. The trouble with Pete is that he’s his own worst enemy. He never called me after walking out on Fastway, not even once out of courtesy. I know that he’s let other people down and suffered because of it, but he broke my heart. I get torn up from thinking about it even now. Four, five years later, I ran into him again on the road outside his house. It was good to see him after all that time and he invited me in for a cup of tea. I asked him: ‘Now, what the fuck did you do that for, piss off without so much as a by your leave?’ He couldn’t give me an honest answer even then. That’s Pete for you. We were good mates and he pulled a disappearing act like that on me.


There are also personal life details, such as Way's marriages. One was an unfortunately convenient marriage to a doctor with access to drugs.
The other substance we began to use was the anesthetic that Michael Jackson was on when he died – Propofol. It’s a white, creamy, quite thick liquid used in hospitals for surgical operations. Joanna had access to a ready supply of it, because she would use it when she performed liposuction.


A quote to end on a high note pulled from one of those praising way professionally and personally.
Mike Clink: With most of the bands that I work with there’s always one person who makes a big impression on me and ends up being a lifelong friend, not just a business relationship. That’s who Pete is for me. To meet him is to fall in love with him. I love his sense of humour and he’s vulnerable too. The persona that people see is sex, drugs and rock and roll, but there’s more to him than that. There’s a whole other side which is genuinely warm, funny and caring. He’s also extremely talented. Whenever I do a session these days and mention that I’m working with Pete again, I’m still surprised at how many individuals have been influenced by him. Nikki Sixx told me the reason that he plays his particular style of Gibson bass is because of Pete...


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Saturday, April 25, 2026

Review: Red November: Inside the Secret U.S.-Soviet Submarine War

Red November: Inside the Secret U.S.-Soviet Submarine War Red November: Inside the Secret U.S.-Soviet Submarine War by W. Craig Reed
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This is an overview of secret sub actions during the Cold War interleaved with military fiction in creating fictive, imagined conversations and motivations. I can do without the fiction. For one thing, the author has the worst metaphors, such as a face like a "dirty dishrag" or something and other things that would be better left out. But, assuming I am correctly drawing out the nonfiction history, a few things are fascinating, if true:

* multiple Cuba missile crisis subs came near to launching nuke "purple-tipped" torpedoes

* The U.S. Navy radio specialist John Anthony Walker Jr. spy ring gave the USSR the key codes to combine with equipment taken from the USS Pueblo. This allowed them to know conclusively something that made them vengeful, possibly around realities of a collision of USS Swordfish with K-129. (Here, that Soviet sub deemed intentional and not rogue.)

* In 1981, USS Drum collided with the Victor III-class submarine K-324 while attempting to photograph the odd pod on the back. The event was covered up by the Reagan Administration and never made public, though it nearly cost the lives of the sailors on USS Drum. The collision occurred in Peter the Great Bay, not far from Vladivostok. The incident was declassified and disclosed by the Clinton Administration in February 1993. This is one of multiple incidents described around tapping of Soviet navy undersea cables.

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Friday, April 24, 2026

Review: Clandestines: The Pirate Journals of an Irish Exile

Clandestines: The Pirate Journals of an Irish Exile Clandestines: The Pirate Journals of an Irish Exile by Ramor Ryan
My rating: 3 of 5 stars



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Review: The Heroin Diaries: A Year In The Life Of A Shattered Rock Star

The Heroin Diaries: A Year In The Life Of A Shattered Rock Star The Heroin Diaries: A Year In The Life Of A Shattered Rock Star by Nikki Sixx
My rating: 4 of 5 stars



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Review: Seizure of State Power

Seizure of State Power Seizure of State Power by Michael Velli
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Supposing with voice transitioning to a tone consistent with historical events which I wish were being referenced.
thought experiment gedanken https://share.google/aimode/d4ej90TMU...
We might structure the scene around a large electronics plant which, from the standpoint of the revolutionary organization, was in the vanguard of the struggle from the earliest days of the insurrection. Let us suppose that on the first day of the general strike the assembled workers of this plant took decisions which corresponded, down to the last letter, to the organization's definition of the most urgent tasks of the day. For example, after deciding to put the plant's technology at the service of all striking workers, the assembled electronics workers formed a Workers' Council and democratically elected a Council Committee as well as a President of the Council Committee. Let us further suppose that the President of the Council Committee, unlike the militants described in earlier scenes, is not a professional organizer unfamiliar with the technical processes of the plant; on the contrary, she is a worker who had been employed in the electronics plant and had been a member of the revolutionary organization long before the popular uprising. And let us furthermore suppose that ...

... guided by its President, the electronics plant put its entire labor force and all its technology at the service of the revolutionary struggle freely distributed to the population; these devices helped coordinate on the barricades and in the streets. Two-way walkie-talkies were the struggles at different barricades, and enabled reinforcements

...workers personally participated in various struggles, and most of to come to the rescue of isolated neighborhoods. All the plant's them returned to the plant in order to design and produce two-way radio sets, 'barricade television' sets, and other electronic devices particularly suitable to the conditions of the popular insurrection. Furthermore, the Committee, and the plant's President as well, encouraged people who had not previously worked in the plant to participate directly in the production of devices...


A theory of creativity as necessary catalyst to revolutionary change.
Independent creative activity can in fact lead to the death of the old social order.²¹ A mighty burst of creative enthusiasm, 22 a revolutionary situation, is a historical possibility. Classical theory assumed that such a situation was the necessary condition for the seizure of power by a revolutionary organization.

...a mighty burst of creative enthusiasm stems from the people.


Aim
The aim of the revolution is not, as before, to transfer the bureaucratic-military machine from one hand to another, but to smash it. ...

A revolutionary situation as described by classical revolutionary theory smashes the dominant social order along with all of its bureaucrats.


Leninism?
https://share.google/0c8Xe2iS6vscmzKa6
The unique historical feat of V.I. Lenin was not to seize State power; this had been done before. Lenin's historical feat was to describe his seizure of State power with the language of a socialist movement determined to destroy the State. The application of Lenin's ideas to Lenin's practice is the foundation for modern revolutionary ideology. For aspiring leaders armed with revolutionary ideas, the revolutionary ideology provides a vision of the social power historically achieved by leaders armed with revolutionary ideas.


Sham?
https://share.google/aimode/BllDnMkwp...
...populations who struggle for independent creative activity by self-governed producers achieve a socialist society governed by a dictatorship of the proletariat led by the Workers' Party which follows a unitary ideology composed exclusively of the ideas of the party secretary-general based on the creative application of Marxism-Leninism. 170 As a result of the seizure of State power, the leader personifies all the resources, all the productive forces and all the activity of the society. Personifications of social activity animate the world. Estranged power of community-the State-is experienced as the only real community. Estranged productive power-Capital is experienced as the only real productive agent. The leader personifies the entirety of social Capital. Whatever we have, all we have built, is entirely owing to the correct leadership of comrade party secretary general. The Premier's ideas form the basis for what we call the unitary ideology espoused by the Workers' Party. Unitary ideology means there are no contending ideologies. The unitary ideology of the system of the party means the adoption, as the sole guiding principle, of the revolutionary ideas of comrade party secretary general, founder and leader of the party and great leader of the revolution. The leader founds and leads the party which is the vanguard of the working class and the general staff of the revolution. He is the supreme brain of the class and the heart of the party who puts forward the guiding ideas of the party as well as the strategy and tactics of the revolution. He is the center of the unity and solidarity of the working class and the entire revolutionary masses. There is no center except him.


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Sunday, April 19, 2026

Review: The Aspirin Age: 1919-1941: The essential events of American Life in the chaotic years between the two World Wars

The Aspirin Age: 1919-1941: The essential events of American Life in the chaotic years between the two World Wars The Aspirin Age: 1919-1941: The essential events of American Life in the chaotic years between the two World Wars by Isabel Leighton
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

1919

Contents

The Forgotten Men of Versailles HARRY HANSEN

1920

The Noble Experiment of Izzie and Moe HERBERT ASBURY

1921

Aimee Semple McPherson: "Sunlight in My Soul" CAREY MCWILLIAMS

1923

The Timely Death of President Harding SAMUEL HOPKINS ADAMS

1923

Konklave in Kokomo ROBERT Coughlan

1924

Calvin Coolidge: A Study in Inertia IRVING STONE

1926

My Fights with Jack Dempsey GENE TUNNEY

1927

The Last Days of Sacco and Vanzetti PHIL STONG

1927

The Lindbergh Legends JOHN LARDNER

1929

The Crash-and What It Meant THURMAN ARNOLD

1930

The Radio Priest and His Flock WALLACE STEGNER

1931

The Mysterious Death of Starr Faithfull MORRIS MARKEY

1933

The First Hundred Days of the New Deal ARTHUR M. SCHLESINGER, JR.

1934

Full House: My Life with the Dionnes KEITH MUNRO

1934

The Peculiar Fate of the Morro Castle WILLIAM MCFEE

1935

Huey Long: American Dictator HODDING CARTER

1936

"The King and the Girl from Baltimore MARGARET CASE HARRIMAN

1937

An Occurrence at Republic Steel HOWARD FAST

1938

The Man on the Ledge

JOEL SAYRE

1938

The Night the Martians Came CHARLES JACKSON

1940

Wendell Willkie: A Study in Courage ROSCOE DRUMMOND

1941

Pearl Harbor Sunday: The End of an Era JONATHAN DANIELS

Madge Oberholtzer who brought down D.C. Stephenson and the Ku Klux Klan. Newsman Harold C. Feightner wrote about her saying, “Few deaths of comparatively inconspicuous people have had the far-flung effects that hers did”. Her passing marked the beginning of the end of the Ku Klux Klan in Indiana; it resulted in the indictment of several political figures and the complete change in the capital cities’ administration, and it nearly wrecked a political party.

------------------------

Source: The Irish Times https://share.google/aL2vtNRCw7wR8Ey7C
It is not likely that Father Coughlin or any of his American imitators can ever again be more than public nuisances, vermin in the national woodwork. But let conditions again become as bad as they did in the deep thirties, and the vermin will reappear.

On the other hand, there will be thousands of Americans, burned by this one experience with fascism under an American and Christian label, who will be warier when the next demagogue arises. The last ironic act of Ben Levin's real-life drama was symbolic, and like the death of his son it had almost too pat a moral. When the contents of his dead son's pockets were sent him by the War Department, he donated the money not to any golden-tongued radio orator or any leader with a panacea, but to a Good Neighbor Association formed to resist the racial hatreds that the leader had brought on.


https://share.google/aimode/kxIq6DDLX...
Letters poured in. Some wanted to know, as correspondents wanted to know for the next twelve years, what a priest was doing talking on such subjects. Others cheered and wanted more. Taken together, that flood of mail meant that people would listen to anyone who sounded as if he knew answers. Father Coughlin's trial balloon had proved what people wanted to hear, and had shown him how to spread the walls of the Shrine of the Little Flower and bring into one audience thousands upon thousands of listeners. Most of those listeners were angry at the bankers; many were afraid of Communists. Though he added other scapegoats later, Father Coughlin really built his structure on those two. By a miracle of illogic, he eventually combined them.

By the end of 1930 the priest had organized his unseen listeners into the Radio League of the Little Flower, dedicated to the unraveling of the tangled economic web, and was pulling in letters in quantities that amazed WJR and may have amazed Coughlin. Other demagogues in the American tradition have been hay-wagon orators, shirt-sleeve spell-binders from park bandstands and town-hall platforms. But Father Coughlin was the first to discover how he could do the whole job by remote control, be free of hecklers, be just as sure of taking up the collection, and in addition have documentary proof by letter of what his audiences wanted.


From 1919 "The forgotten men of Versailles" by Harry Hansen
The day after the Jewish representatives made their plea for Palestine, a remarkable letter, filled with the spirit of good will, was sent by the Emir Feisal to Felix Frankfurter. In it he spoke of the deep sympathy with which the Arabs, "especially the educated among us,” looked upon the Zionist movement, and said the Arab deputation considered the Zionist proposals both "modern and proper." "We will do our best," he continued, "in so far as we are concerned, to help them through; we will wish the Jews a most hearty welcome home.... The Jewish movement is national and not imperialist; our movement is national and not imperialist; there is room in Syria for us both."


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Saturday, April 18, 2026

Review: Six Days of War: June 1967 and the Making of the Modern Middle East

Six Days of War: June 1967 and the Making of the Modern Middle East Six Days of War: June 1967 and the Making of the Modern Middle East by Michael B. Oren
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

From 1919 "The forgotten men of Versailles" by Harry Hansen anthologized in The Aspirin Age: 1919-1941
The day after the Jewish representatives made their plea for Palestine, a remarkable letter, filled with the spirit of good will, was sent by the Emir Feisal to Felix Frankfurter. In it he spoke of the deep sympathy with which the Arabs, "especially the educated among us,” looked upon the Zionist movement, and said the Arab deputation considered the Zionist proposals both "modern and proper." "We will do our best," he continued, "in so far as we are concerned, to help them through; we will wish the Jews a most hearty welcome home.... The Jewish movement is national and not imperialist; our movement is national and not imperialist; there is room in Syria for us both."


Was there a better way this could have gone?

Maybe, I don't know...

I do know that once the fighting started, but this history is a rather thrilling tale of underdog success as Israel triumphs over the distrusting and non-cooperative Arab nations. Israel captured and occupied the West Bank (including East Jerusalem) from Jordan, the Gaza Strip and the Sinai Peninsula from Egypt, and the Golan Heights from Syria. I wasn't aware of the Jerusalem reunification under de facto Israeli rule as an outcome of this conflict.

The story told brings in roots from the Mandate era and later.

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Review: A Fast Ride Out of Here: Confessions of Rock's Most Dangerous Man

A Fast Ride Out of Here: Confessions of Rock's Most Dangerous Man by Pete Way My rating: 4 of 5 stars ...