In one of them, he wrote a lengthy obituary for Sterling Morrison, who had died in 1995.
Sterling Morrison offered the following input regarding the recording:
When they accepted their award, the Velvets' members were mourning the death of Sterling Morrison, the band's rhythm guitarist, who died last August.
The definitive end to the band's checkered career came when Sterling Morrison died of cancer in 1995.
Sterling Morrison described the ordeal in an interview:
Lou Reed and Sterling Morrison's friend, filmmaker Tony Conrad, found a copy lying in the street.
Sterling Morrison described Warhol as the album's producer "in the sense of producing a film."
Sterling Morrison said, "We were all pulling in the same direction.
Sterling Morrison, guitarist for the 1960s rock band The Velvet Underground, lived in Poughkeepsie.
The band's latest breakup proved final when Sterling Morrison died in the summer of 1995.