Today's Scripture Reading (April 17, 2026): Hosea 13 & 14
Alice Cooper
admits there is a period in his career that is basically a black hole; he
simply doesn't remember it. In a 2009 interview, Cooper made this comment.
Well, there's
three albums that were basically my blackout albums – Zipper Catches Skin, DaDa and Special Forces. I
wrote them, recorded them and toured them and I don't remember much of any of
that (Alice Cooper, The Quietus, 2009).
A year
earlier, he actually added a fourth album to that list: Flush the Fashion. All
of the four recordings were made between 1980 and 1983.
You've heard of
lost weekends—well, those were my lost years. I ambled through those albums and
tours in a foggy haze. By the summer of 1983, I was drinking hard, rail thin,
malnourished, and knocking on death's door. Again (Alice Cooper, Golf Monster,
2008).
Cooper at
least recognized his problem, worked hard to get clean, and is still rocking
his audiences forty years later. But if he hadn't recognized his problem, he
might have never made it out of the 80s.
There is
a song in the Alice Cooper catalog that has been called a bit of a historical
curiosity. The song tells the story of a singer who is listening to his own
music and doesn't remember ever writing it. It is a song that perfectly
describes the lost years of Alice Cooper. The song is "I Never Wrote Those
Songs." The opening words of the song say this:
My tape recorder, it must be lyin'
'Cause this I just can't believe
I hear a voice that's cryin'
That's not me
The wheel goes round, I hear a sound
It's comin' out all wrong
And I swear to you
I never wrote that song
The
historical problem? The song was included on Cooper's "Lace and Whiskey"
album and was written in 1977, before Cooper's black hole. It is almost as if
Cooper knew where his life was leading him before the black hole that convinced
him he needed to take a different path.
I have to
admit that "I Never Wrote Those Songs" has long been one of my
favorite Cooper compositions. And it is a good reminder that our actions have
consequences. And it is not just politicians who sometimes want to distance
themselves from the past; we often want to do the same thing.
God has
made the argument that Israel has suffered because of their sin and the things
they have done in the past. Now, he offers the solution. Return to me. James
would sum up this concept for all of us.
Submit
yourselves, then, to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you. Come near to God and he will come near to you. Wash your
hands, you sinners, and purify your hearts, you double-minded. Grieve, mourn and wail. Change your laughter to mourning and your
joy to gloom. Humble yourselves before the Lord,
and he will lift you up (James 4:7-10).
Tomorrow's
Scripture Reading: 2 Chronicles 27