Lou Reed’s tai chi book to be published a decade after his death
Reed began studying tai chi in the 1980s when he was still heavily into drugs, according to Anderson.
New York: Rock pioneer and poet Lou Reed began writing a book in 2009 on an art at the heart of his lifestyle: tai chi.
But the project went unfinished, remaining a collection of scattered notes when the groundbreaking musical experimentalist died in 2013 aged 71, after complications from a liver transplant.
Those unpublished writings, including conversations with his fellow artists, friends and tai chi practitioners, come out this week, a decade after his death.
"He started it, we wanted to finish it," Laurie Anderson, the composer and artist who was Reed´s longtime partner, told AFP.
"The Art of the Straight Line" features essays and riffs by Reed, a meditation on his three decades as a dedicated tai chi practitioner.
The ancient Chinese tradition helps reduce stress and anxiety and is often described as "meditation in motion," according to the leading medical center Mayo Clinic.
The book offers insight into the gentler facets of the once hard-living Velvet Underground frontman, whose deadpan demeanor and cantankerous interactions with the press meant his testy side occupied a fair amount of the public´s attention.
"Not to get too flowery here but I want more out of life than a gold record and fame," he wrote. "I want to mature like a warrior."
"I want the power and grace I never had a chance to learn. Tai chi puts you in touch with the invisible power of, yes, the universe. Change your energy, change your mind."
Reed fostered a long collaboration with Master Ren Guang Yi, studying for hours most days when he wasn´t touring.
He was so committed to the practice that he took his final breaths while "doing the famous 21 form of tai chi with just his musician´s hands moving through the air," Anderson said at the time of his death.
Reed began studying tai chi in the 1980s when he was still heavily into drugs, according to Anderson.
The prolific artist behind classics including "Walk on the Wild Side" and "Sweet Jane" also penned the frank "Heroin," an agitated depiction of the experience of using.
"Not the greatest time to start, but you know, what´s a bad time to start?" said Anderson, who was married to Reed at the time of his death.
"He was very, very persistent," she said, referring to his tai chi practice. "He managed to keep going for decades and become very, very proficient." (AFP)
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