Tag Archives: John Taylor

Shaken, Not Stirred: 50 Years of James Bond

DSC00595 (2) (720x1280)

It’s crazy to think that super spy extraordinaire, 007, has been shaking and stirring things up since Ian Flemming created his James Bond character back in 1953.  My mom has been a long time fan of Mr. Bond and I remember when my parents brought home “The Connery Classics” 007 video collection (part of it is pictured above).  I believe the very first Bond movie I watched was either From Russia With Love or Goldfinger, but I’ll have to admit that I only really started paying attention when the theme music started to include artists that I knew like “For Your Eyes Only” as performed by Sheena Easton and of course “A View To a Kill” by Duran Duran.  It was very interesting to read in John Taylor’s book In the Pleasure Groove how Duran Duran got involved with doing the theme for A View To A Kill:

I went with Janine [one of John Taylor’s ex-girlfriends] to a party Michael Caine was having at Langan’s in honor of that year’s Wimbledon tennis final, and I recognized Cubby Broccoli, the producer of the James Bond films, sitting at a table.

Janine introduced me and we got to chatting.

I said, “When are you going to have a decent theme song again?”

He said, “Well, do you want to write the next one?”

I said, “Absolutely.”

When I got home, I called the guys, told them “I think we have a crack at the next Bond film.”

– From the chapter “Megalomania At The Wheel”

I was just looking at the list of Bond movie theme songs and honestly, I completely forgot that A-Ha did the “The Living Daylights” theme (I’ll have to go back and listen to that).  I will have to say that other than “A View To A Kill”, Adele’s “Skyfall” is my favorite Bond theme. She was amazing on the Oscars.

DSC00598 (2) (1280x1280)

I’ve been thinking about “the spy who loved me” recently because of the 50th anniversary, and I just realized that my husband and I have seen the last three James Bond movies together.  We have really taken a shine to Skyfall, which we saw in the theaters last November (he loved it so much that he brought home the DVD, pictured below).  What I enjoyed about Skyfall is that it felt more like the old James Bond movies in that it had a bit of cheekiness to it.  Casino Royale and Quantum of Solace felt very heavy and dramatic compared to any of the ones with Pierce Brosnan just prior.  Skyfall had a touch of that cheekiness, mainly due in part to the interaction between Daniel Craig and Naomi Harris.  It made me finally believe that Daniel Craig was James Bond.

Cheers to James Bond and his adventures in the last 50 years and those to come.  I’m raising my martini in your honor 007!

(This post was written in collaboration with Veronica Stone.)

Getting Into the Pleasure Groove

DSC00573 (2) (1280x1280)

Before Depeche Mode, I loved Duran Duran.  If Depeche Mode is my musical Omega, then Duran Duran was the Alpha.  The only collection that rivals my Depeche Mode one is the one I have of Duran Duran.  I was only 12 when my friends and I began the obsession, and it lasted for most of my years in junior high.  I’ve also said in a previous post that I’ve learned nothing about style from Depeche Mode (see post here), but the exact opposite is true for Duran Duran: I learned that it was okay to be flamboyant, but to do it with taste and class.  Imagine my excitement when I found out that bassist and co-founder, John Taylor was married to Gela Nash, half of the creative genius behind Juicy Couture!

DSC00582 (2) (1280x1279)

When I bought this shirt, I simply thought that someone at Juicy Couture really liked Duran Duran (I Don’t Want Your Love is a song from the Big Thing album).  I wore this shirt to the Red Carpet Massacre concert.

I recently picked up a couple of copies of In The Pleasure Groove: Love, Death & Duran Duran by John Taylor.  The reason I have two is because I ordered the hard copy hoping for a chance to meet John Taylor during another book signing (I missed the one in Los Angeles last October).  When I ordered the hard copy, I got so eager to read it that I couldn’t wait and I downloaded the eBook immediately (ah, technology these days).  Once I started reading the book, I found myself hooked.  Looking back from my forties, I realized just how little I knew about Duran Duran and their actual beginnings when I was in my early teens.  I also realized that my love for Duran Duran was mostly due to aesthetics:  extremely pretty boys with very catchy tunes.

DSC00567 (2) (1280x1280)

Part of my Duran Duran ticket stub collection (sadly, I’m missing three).

I read In The Pleasure Groove with eyes wide open, and yet all of the nostalgic feelings came flooding back, along with tons of new insight into John’s life and the highs and lows of being in one of the most successful bands of their time.  I’ve read reviews that some people felt that it was slow getting through all of John’s early years, from a young lad in school named Nigel, to right when Duran Duran had started their rise in the very early 80’s.  He came from such humble beginnings as an only child from a Catholic family who lived in a suburb in Birmingham and grew up wearing glasses, to becoming a pop star and teen idol, adored by thousands of girls (and I knew several of them personally, including myself).  But I felt those chapters were important as they were written because it provided great insight into why John fell into addiction.

I am trying to live away from home, live on the road, live out of suitcases and tour buses and hotel rooms and not die of loneliness.

I missed home.

I missed Mom and Dad.

I didn’t know that then.  It’s taken me years and many therapist-dollars to figure it out.  In my self-centered fear and loneliness, I just cracked.  I never gave one thought to the consequences.

– From the chapter “Coffin Sex”

DSC00577 (2) (1280x1280)

My t-shirt from the capsule collection by Punk Masters (by Patty Palazzo, who also designed the cover for In The Pleasure Groove).  This is one of my favorite t-shirts in my collection.

In between chapters, I would think about what I was doing during each of the periods of time described in the book.  I would recall where I was in my fandom in accordance to where John was in Duran Duran’s history.  I realized how naive I was and imagined how it would feel to be where John was.  What was I doing in 1984 when I saw Duran Duran in concert to support the Seven and the Ragged Tiger album?  I was living at home, going to school, and hanging out with my friends.  Could I even imagine going from the safe confines of anonymity in my little comfortable suburban haven to hundreds of girls jumping on my car beating the windows in, chasing me down the road and sitting outside my house?  Even worse, once you are used to the adulation and the constant affirmation that you are someone important, what happens once it starts to fade, how do you feel then?  It’s an emotional roller coaster, and John lacked the skills for coping with the feelings that came with the ebbs and flows of stardom.  His coping mechanism came in the form of drugs and alcohol because he didn’t know how to do it any other way.  I truly empathise with John and his journey because I felt like I was there for part of the way, no matter how remote.  As I was photographing my memorabilia for this post, I tripped back and forth back into my teen years, wishing that I could have gone to meet John at his signing in Los Angeles so that I could tell him how real this book felt to me.  As I write this, I’m finishing up Unknown Pleasures: Inside Joy Division, and even though I’m enjoying reading the book from Peter Hook’s point of view, it doesn’t affect me as much as In the Pleasure Groove did because I was aware of the events that happened in Duran Duran’s history.  I would feel the same way if Dave Gahan of Depeche Mode wrote something similar.

DSC00571 (2) (1280x852)

My only criticism would be that I wish the end didn’t seem so hurried.  I was happy with the pacing of the book in achieving why John lived his life the way he did in the celebrity of being a part of Duran Duran.  But I felt like everything after he met Gela was a bit rushed to get to the conclusion of the book.  I felt a bit short-changed because my sister and I went to one of the first reunion concerts back in 2003 at the Orange County Fair, prior to Astronaut being released, and I was a bit surprised that there was no mention of those concerts.  We got to hear Reach Out For the Sunrise live before it was on Astronaut, and then saw two shows on that tour as well (one with my sister and one with my mom).  Andy was still a part of the band during that time, and I felt I was left hanging with the explanation that he left due to “differences”.  The last time I saw Duran Duran was during their Red Carpet Massacre tour, on my birthday on May 8, 2008.  I hope that isn’t the last time I see them live.

Maybe the end was written the way it was because there really isn’t an end yet.  John Taylor and the boys are still writing their history as we speak, still playing live, still writing songs, still being Duran Duran.  Whatever stage you are in your Duran Duran fandom, In The Pleasure Groove is a must read.  I highly recommend listening to their albums while reading this book because you will be instantly transported directly back in time.

DSC00576 (2) (1280x1280)

Thank you endlessly to my cousin Regi for scoring me this fantastic autographed poster when she met Duran Duran during the Astronaut tour. 

(All photos are of items from my personal collection)

Holiday Movie Guilty Pleasure: A Diva’s Christmas Carol

I’m going to admit right here and now that I watch “A Diva’s Christmas Carol” every year right around Christmas.  It’s not the best version of Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol”, but I think it’s one of the more fun versions.

If you haven’t seen it, I think it’s worth a viewing.  It solidifies the fact that Vanessa Williams makes a great diva (as further evidenced by her  “Ugly Betty” character Wilhemina Slater).  Let’s face it, she’s good at being bitchy, and there is plenty of that for most of the made for TV movie.

Williams plays Ebony Scrooge, a famous pop-singer who started out in a trio called Desire.  But she ended up more successful as a solo artist, stepping on practically everyone she cared about along the way to diva-ville.  Because of her wicked ways, she is warned by the ghost of one of her former band mates (played by Chilli from TLC) that she will be visited by 3 spirits in the hopes that she can mend her diva ways.  Hilarity ensues, you get the picture.

My favorite parts of this movie come in the form of those spirits:  Kathy Griffin is the awesomely snarky ghost of Christmas past;  John Taylor of Duran Duran is the ghost of Christmas present (who plays a has-been rock star spirit with and exaggerated cockney accent); and finally, a “Behind the Music” VH1 special featuring Brian McKnight and Niles Rogers is the ghost of Christmas future. 

I don’t care what anyone says, I love John Taylor’s rendition of the ghost of Christmas present.  It looked like he had a lot of fun playing that part, and I’m glad they cast him.  Just by the premise of the movie, this wasn’t going to be a Golden Globe or Emmy winner, so I’m taking it all for what it is.  It’s also not the most clever part (those all go to Kathy Griffin), but my inner Duran Duran fan goes all a flutter when I see him on the screen. 

This has now become a holiday tradition for me and my sister, who called me last night to inform me that it was on TV so that I could be sure to catch it again.  Yes, there are much better versions of this classic Dickens tale, but the holidays are all about happiness and good cheer, and this movie always gives me a good dose of both.