Jim Carroll Dead at Age 60
      "Teddy sniffing glue, twelve years old, fell from a roof on east two  
nine, Cathy was eleven when she pulled the plug on 26 reds and a  
bottle of wine, Bobby got leukemia 14 years old, look like 65 when he  
died, he was a friend of mine.
Those are people who died, died!" - Jim Carroll
I suspect that some post punk, alternative, indie, modernist grunge,  
deconstructionist act will kick out a quick "tribute" version of  
"People Who Died" that includes Jim, who died this past week at his  
desk in New York.  Jim was sixty years old and had just completed a  
new novel which the publisher was about to send to print.
Jim Carroll was supposed to be the poet laureate of punk.  He hit the  
writing scene at age thirteen when some of his pieces started  
circulating around the super hip downtown scene.  He caught the  
attention of other New York writers, most notably some of the beats  
like Alan Ginsberg and William Burroughs.  His work reached Jack  
Kerouac, still alive but incredibly down and out living in the Hotel  
Detroit in downtown St. Petersburg, Florida, who wrote that, at 13,  
Carroll's work was better than 90% of professional writers in America.
I was three years old that year so I don't think any of Jim's early  
work made it into my awareness for another decade and a half or so.   
In fact, I do not think I had any exposure to his written work prior  
to his forming the Jim Carroll Band and releasing the very important  
punk LP, "Catholic Boy."
Jim was very much part of the punk scene and hung out at CBGB, Max's  
Kansas City and other of our haunts.  I met him on many occasions but  
I cannot recall having exchanged more than a sentence or two at any of  
these encounters.  I remember that Jim was actually fairly shy, very  
tall and, when I did get to reading his written texts, I realized he  
was also brilliant.
Jim Carroll, back before his band would do readings on stage during  
breaks in a Patti Smith show, she wanted to get him as much exposure  
as possible so as to promote punk poetry and the work of Carroll  
especially as they were close friends.  Jim fell in love with the rush  
of live performance at punk events so he went out and started his own  
band.
Critics almost immediately crowned him as the "Bob Dylan of the Punk  
Era" and the voice of my generation.  While almost all of Jim's  
published work, to me at least, was generated out of genius, he sadly  
leaves us with far fewer published works than one would expect from a  
guy who was recognized by the big time when he was only 13.  Some  
people say it was heroin that kept his productivity poor but he had  
kicked the smack addiction well before the band and the publication of  
his legendary, "Basketball Diaries" work of non-narrative prose (a  
must read even if you saw the movie as they are quite different).
"Too old to rock and roll but too young to die," Jethro Tull
A whole lot of the greats of punk didn't have the grace to check out  
while young (just like Syd, dead at 21).  Some of the people were  
friends of mine, others casual  acquaintances and still others with  
whom my relationship was a nod or quick greeting of recognition as one  
of the regular faces in the crowd.
In 2002 alone, Joey and Dee Dee Ramone and Joe Strummer from the Clash  
would all die and the following year Johnny Ramone joined them.  Like  
the Jethro tull line quoted above, these guys all died young on US  
census data standards but, with our crowd, it, as people might say  
regarding a used car, wasn't the years but, rather, the miles.  Many  
of our miles were off-road and involved smoking, snorting, drinking or  
injecting serious poisons into our systems.  Many of us survivors look  
back and wonder why some are gone and others stumble forward as we all  
shared similar and dangerous behaviors.
It's sad that Jim didn't leave us with more work.  The Ramones, the  
first ever punk band, may have been the most productive act from that  
scene and are survived by an incredible catalogue of songs.  Carroll,  
even while alive, frustrated his fans as every time he came to town to  
do a reading, the event would sell out but he would read the same old  
stuff.  Living up here in Cambridge, I stopped attending his spoken  
word  events and poetry readings when I could no longer wiggle my ass  
onto the guest list.  I think I last heard him read at some club over  
on Lansdown Street (sometimes called Ted Williams Way) about 15 years  
ago.  By then, I was a full time hacker, married and modestly  
respectable.  Many of the early punks whose band, like mine, never  
made it ended up with similar fates.  A few still hang around either  
the periphery of the "what's hot" music scene pretending that being 55  
years old and hanging around with kids who were born after Syd died is  
still cool and a very small number actually made it as executives in  
the recording industry who seem so sleazy when one encounters them.
Of course, a few of the bands made the big time and those who are  
still going and making new music deserve our praise and  
congratulations for keeping the fire alive.
I can't say that I will miss Jim Carroll.  I learned he had died last  
week while on a phone call with my sister who had heard it on the  
radio on the way to her teaching position.  If she had told me that  
Jim had been dead for five years or that he was coming to Harvard  
Square for a reading, I would have believed her.  While I include  
"Catholic Boy" in my "All Punk" playlist on my iPhone, I hadn't spent  
much time thinking about him.  I wondered if we had ever shared  
needles but his obit said he had quit smack well before we would have  
had the chance to meet so I guess the answer is no.
I'm not sure how to end this post.  I really enjoyed Jim Carroll's  
work but can't remember anything beyond a nod of greeting that I had  
actually shared with him.  He was undoubtedly a brilliant writer whose  
body of work, while small, is very worthwhile.  I guess I feel like  
another chip of my misspent youth has been knocked off and my  
attachment to cornerstones of that exciting era is gone.
So, kids, I'm looking forward to the Youtube video of "People Who  
Died" that includes some lines about Jim Carroll as it is probably the  
highest honor we can pay him.
-- End
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