It was alright.
I was in Greenwich Village in March 2004. We were looking for a place to eat breakfast. We came to one restaurant. I don’t remember its name. I looked into the front window and saw Lou Reed sitting there with Anthony from Anthony and the Johnsons. I said, “We’re eating here.” I just watched him from afar. I was eating breakfast in the same restaurant as the King of New York.
And it was alright.
I cried this morning when I saw that Lou Reed had died. I cried many times. Our heroes are aging. My heroes are aging. None of them are immortal. I learned about words from Lou Reed. I learned about New York. About S & M. About the gift of three chords. I learned you don’t need a perfect voice to sing the perfect song. I learned from Lou Reed first that rock music can be poetry.
This is the first song I ever heard from Lou Reed. It’s called Dirty Boulevard. And it is magic.
And it was alright.
I love you, Lou. Thank you for helping make me me.
