Music journalist Bessman's closeness
to his subject--he is a good friend of the members of the Ramones--has
both positive and negative effects on his authorized history of this
seminal American band, famous for knowing only three chords and for
playing everything as fast as possible. Bessman has great access to
details such as the Ramones's mistrust of the Talking Heads--"a bunch
of intellectuals"--with whom they toured Europe. But it also means that
he sometimes misses the ironies and inconsistencies in their behavior,
like the fact that members of a band whose lyrics include the infamous
line "Well I'm a Nazi, schatzi, you know, I fight for the fatherland"
claimed that their work had no political content. The "four guys from
Queens" who formed the original group in 1974 seem to have been truly
without pretensions, which makes Bessman's overheated interpretation of
their achingly simple lyrics just silly. Bessman's theory is that the
Ramones were always poised on the brink of stardom but missed out due
to the mistakes of others, i.e., the release of one of their best-known
songs, Rockaway Beach , during the winter and the poor distribution of
their only film, Rock 'n' Roll High School. Photos.