With The Velvet Underground - New York Extravaganza, dive into an immersive, impressionistic and multimedia exhibition told by the eye-witnesses and contributors of the time.
From the sixties to the present, the Velvet Underground鈥檚 career trajectory is one of the most fascinating stories in the history of art, music and popular culture: how did a band who never found success during its brief existence (1965-1970) gradually develop into the rock legend par excellence it is today? Too ahead of its time, too transgressive, too in-your-face, too rebellious, it soon became the go-to model for other movements in the following centuries, from the explosion of punk to the present day. With time and the aid of a few prestigious admirers (David Bowie, Kurt Cobain, 脡tienne Daho, among others), the famous 鈥榖anana album鈥, which is celebrating its fiftieth anniversary this year, established itself as the new matrix for modern rock.
It all started with the improbable encounter between Lou Reed and John Cale, a supremely talented, albeit unlikely, team, in the only city likely to let them grow together: underground New York of the early 60s, a time when it was the artistic elite who decided that 鈥榓nything goes鈥. The poet-rocker and avant-garde musician built a group around them from some of their most fervent supporters 鈥 Sterling Morrison, a literature student and rock鈥檔鈥檙oll fan; Moe Tucker, an androgynous-looking drummer from the suburbs driven by tribal rhythms; and Nico, the blonde iceberg whom Andy Warhol made lead singer of the Velvet Underground.
This exhibition retraces the Velvet Underground鈥檚 journey from the street to the highest echelons of New York society, from the pop music world to that of film, painting and literature. Half a century after the encounter between the founding members, the Velvets are still the most modern and mysterious band in the history of American rock.
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