Title: Cured: The Tale
of Two Imaginary Boys
Author: Lol
Tolhurst
Publisher: De Capo Press (US), Quercus (UK)
Year: 2016
Publisher: De Capo Press (US), Quercus (UK)
Year: 2016
[US cover.]
Rock star memoirs
appear to be in vogue these days. It seems like any musician that
wants to get taken seriously has to write one, and getting contracts
must not be very difficult. In the world of musicians I follow, this
trend started to pick up steam with Neil Young's Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream
(2012) and Peter Hook's
The Haçienda: How Not to Run a Club
(2009). Then there was the
inevitable stir caused by
Morrissey's
Autobiography (2013).
Tellingly, each of those
artists has written subsequent books. We've
come far enough now that it isn't just the frontpeople of famous
bands writing these memoirs.
We've got David J's Who Killed Mister Moonlight?
(2014), Johnny Marr's Set the Boy Free
(2016), and now a book from Lol Tolhurst of The Cure.
Tolhurst
has some notoriety in The
Cure's history. He was a cofounder that lasted right up to the
release of their (arguably) most famed album, Disintegration
(1989). He was known to have contributed next to nothing to said
album due to being an alcoholic mess. He was originally a drummer but
moved to keyboards. He was briefly the only
member of the band besides Robert Smith. He was credited as cowriter
on almost every song published during his tenure. He sued the band
after his dismissal for co-ownership of the name and lost. He
eventually made amends with Robert Smith and briefly appeared on
stage with the band in 2011 for some nostalgia concerts.
It's not hard to make a
case that Tolhurst has a unique story to tell. Considering
that Smith has not yet written a memoir, the opportunity was perfect
for another Cure
insider to do so. Lol is well-suited for the job: he knew Smith since
they were both five, he was there through it all for the band's rise
to fame, and he's currently on good terms with Smith. Even
I was curious what the most notoriously estranged member of The Cure
would have to say.
While
the book certainly suffices as a narrative of the friendship between
two bandmates, the burden of that perspective actually serves to
detract from the book. Tolhurst never once speaks ill of Smith and
goes out of his way to contextualize any questionable decisions he
made. The same largely goes for the other members of The Cure,
although they are mentioned to a considerably lesser degree. Tolhurst
details his role as a moderator and go-between for the various
members of the band in the early years, but he rarely explains what
the disputes and misunderstandings actually revolved around. He
hardly provides any explanation for the departure of the other
founding member, bassist Michael Dempsey. He glosses over the details
of the (temporary) split between Smith and the band's longest-serving
bassist, Simon Gallup. Any rifts between himself and Smith are
described with even less detail.
Tolhurst
doesn't even seem to be upset that Smith kicked him out of the band.
By that point in the narrative, it has become clear that Tolhurst was
an unhealthy person, and that he has since recognized it. In fact, it
slowly dawns on the reader that much of the book is oriented around
Tolhurst acknowledging his own failures, owning up to them, and
trying to make amends. While stories of drunken revelry and dangerous
behavior rarely interest me in literary form, personal redemption of
this variety is at least somewhat more interesting.
About
a third of the text is devoted to Tolhurst's youth and the earliest
days of The
Cure leading up to their debut album, Three Imaginary Boys
(1979). The descriptions of Tolhurst, Smith, and Dempsey (and
on-again, off-again member Porl Thompson, who designed the cover) as
childhood friends is actually rather endearing. Tolhurst presents
them as outsiders in a bland, boring town that they all longed to
escape. Imagining Smith throwing bottles at skinheads and fending
off ruffians is hard to
believe but yet quite amusing.
Initially,
I was anxious to get to the more exciting periods of The Cure's
creative and popular peaks, but in retrospect, Tolhurst doesn't have
much to offer on those eras that hasn't been said before, and the
stories of the early days are imbued with a deeper personal insight.
Tolhurst views the beginnings, when they still had to prove
themselves, as something special and magical. Perhaps it felt more
like a tight group of friends trying to do something different rather
than a commercial enterprise. It may also be that Tolhurst's
addiction hadn't yet consumed him and he had more to contribute to
the band in those days.
Anyone reading the book
with an expectation of learning something about The Head on the
Door that they didn't already
know will be let down. Anyone who isn't already a fan probably
wouldn't become one by reading it. But if you are looking for the
story of a rock star that fell from grace and perhaps has learned
from his mistakes, this might be it. Tolhurst's story is rather sad
and occasionally frustrating, but at least you could
read this and learn something about recovery from alcoholism and
where to go from there.
[UK cover.]
Score: B-
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