Author of Lou Reed Biography Says He Was 'a Monster', The columnist of an accessible crooked adventures of Lou Reed, Notes From The Velvet Underground, says that the allegorical artist was “a monster” who abused women and accidentally acclimated ancestral slurs. According to the Daily Beast, columnist Howard Sounes interviewed “more than 140 of his academy friends, bandmates, girlfriends, and ancestors members” while researching for the book, and came to an animal conclusion.
“I admired his music, but you accept to go area the adventure goes,” Sounes explained to The Daily Beast. “The obituaries were a bit too kind, he was absolutely a actual abhorrent man. A monster really; I anticipate absolutely the chat monster is applicable.”
Sounes quotes Reed as accepting said racists statements about adolescent musicians, adage “I don’t like ni**ers like Donna Summer,” and anecdotic Bob Dylan as a “pretentious kike.”
He goes on to say that it’s “quite bright that he was a available and he did hit women.” His aboriginal wife, Bettye Kronstad, reportedly said, “He would, like, pin you up adjoin a wall. Tussle you. Hit you… agitate you… And again one time he in fact gave me a atramentous eye.”
“I admired his music, but you accept to go area the adventure goes,” Sounes explained to The Daily Beast. “The obituaries were a bit too kind, he was absolutely a actual abhorrent man. A monster really; I anticipate absolutely the chat monster is applicable.”
Sounes quotes Reed as accepting said racists statements about adolescent musicians, adage “I don’t like ni**ers like Donna Summer,” and anecdotic Bob Dylan as a “pretentious kike.”
He goes on to say that it’s “quite bright that he was a available and he did hit women.” His aboriginal wife, Bettye Kronstad, reportedly said, “He would, like, pin you up adjoin a wall. Tussle you. Hit you… agitate you… And again one time he in fact gave me a atramentous eye.”
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