Friday, July 31, 2009

Blondie on the Road!

debbie triptych

So - this weekend I'm going to see Blondie!! They're on tour right now with Pat Benatar, and I'm going to Memphis to see them... dragging one of my fave Memphis musicians along for the ride.

debbie starwood 3 small

If you want to see if Blondie is coming through your town - check their website's tour schedule page!.

Pretty damn coll that The Donnas are opening this show. This is a girl power show, if ever!



If you like this image, you can own it --- click here to buy it... time is tight... only a few of these prints left...

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Princess Diana, Stiv Bators, Dave Parsons, Michael Monroe & Me

wanderers & jim carroll
Punk Rock Royalty: Dave Treganna, Dave Parsons, Jim Carroll and Stiv Bators, 1981, NYC

It was on this date in 1981, July 29 - that Lady Diana Spencer married the world's most eligible bachelor, Prince Charles, to become the Princess Diana. Their wedding was televised. This was a huge gigantic deal in the world theatre - not just for Royals watchers, but Anglophiles and people in general... after all, how often do fairy tales come true? This wedding was such a big deal that you could watch it on airplanes if you were flying at the time of the wedding, for back in 1981, there was that technology.

I know, because I watched the wedding on the television sets in JFK Airport in NY while I waited for a stand-by flight with Dave Parsons, of Sham 69 and The Wanderers. I don't believe Dave caught this wedding. He was snoozing.

dave parsons in the airport
Dave Parsons at the airport

July 29 was the day that we departed a sojourn in NYC after a brief US tour with The Wanderers that began in LA with the initial rehearsal session at my apartment at 1140 North Clark St. in West Hollywood. I'd just like to keep stressing that I lived there before Motley Crue moved in and made the address infamous before they themselves became bold face names... and yes, we lived there during the same period of time and YES... Stiv Bators and members of the Wanderers did indeed cross paths with the Crue...

wanderers rehearsal 1-96
The Wanderers - essentially Sham 69 - minus Jimmy Pursey, plus Stiv Bators


Wanderers rehearsals did move on to a proper rehearsal facility. And from there, we flew to San Francisco, arriving on the date in June of the Gay Pride Parade, where Stiv and I "inadvertently" led the Daves through the parade, making a short cut from where ever we were to our hotel in Union Square.


stiv x






There was a stop in Cleveland, Ohio - Stiv's former Dead Boys stomping grounds and then on to New York City and gigs with The Ramones and socializing with the likes of Jim Carroll, Johnny Thunders and a hero of ours, Jan Berry of the 1960s surf-themed vocal duo, Jan & Dean


Jan Berry Meets Punks

The gig opening for The Ramones at the Palladium was not the final show of the tour... there was one in Trenton, New Jersey a couple days later, but we stayed in the City and made ourselves at home.



After the final gig, most of the band went back home to the UK, but Dave Parsons and I stayed on longer. Checking out of the Gramercy Park Hotel, it was on to crashing at a friend's loft around the corner and when they returned from their honeymoon holiday, Dave decided he wanted a little California sun to see some of his LA friends once more before returning to London, hence the stand-by flight. I think we were probably awake for days on end, and once we knew our chances of getting on a plane were pretty secure, Dave finally rested. Not me...so I watched the wedding of Lady Diana to Prince Charles in the personal television monitors that were attached to chairs at JFK.. kind of a weird set up, but that was my personal royal wedding memory.

Stiv was living in London during the 1980s, and I spent a great deal of time in London as well, working for Island Records, and later reprising my role as Stiv's hall monitor/minder/gal Friday. He had started working with and eventually shared apartments with Hanoi Rocks singer, Michael Monroe.

monroe
Hanoi Rocks frontman, Michael Monroe in my room at the Portbello Hotel, London, 1985

We had a running joke, Stiv and I did -- about the Royal Family's love of his music. It was well known that Diana liked pop music, and Prince Charles had the Prince's Trust, which raised money by presenting major pop concerts. While riding home in taxis, we'd always ask to cut through the Park so as to pass by Buckingham Palace and we'd point at Diana's window and joke to one or the other that she was watching for Michael to pass by. On a middle 8 break before Michael's saxophone solo on a song Stiv was recording with him, Stiv interjected the line "Oh Diana" from the 1957 hit by Paul Anka. We took the joke that far! She was, after all, The People's Princess.

A few years later, on July 23, 1986 for Prince Andrew's wedding to Sarah Ferguson, I got to more properly enjoy a fairy tale wedding; my girlfriends and I threw a tea party bridal shower in Sarah's honor, so that we'd have an excuse to make tea sandwiches, cakes and scones and watch TV all day long...like princesses of the Sunset Strip, or something.

In 2007, also around this time of year, I caught up with Dave Parsons in LA. Sham 69 were playing a gig at the House of Blues, and we reminisced about all this silliness. Sad to think that since then, the young Princess died in Paris in the back of her crashed chauffeur-driven car, and Stiv, too died in Paris as the result of a run-in with a motor vehicle. Perhaps Stiv is entertaining Diana now... singing that Paul Anka song...

Dave Parsons, 2007
Dave Parsons, Los Angeles, 2007

Monday, July 27, 2009

DEVO.... and my lack thereof due to Dics...

Yeah yeah yeah... just like all of the LA punk rockers back in the day... I did see Devo on Halloween at the Starwood. It was THE show to see that night. Word of mouth about Devo after their previous Starwood stand that year (July 25 and 26, 1977) brought the art schoolers from Ohio bigger crowds with each gig. And Halloween is always a punk rocker's dream night to play! So, yeah, I was there. I even took a bunch of photos that night, but 100% of them were of the band that opened: Mumps.

Lance Loud - Halloween
Lance Loud of Mumps, if you look closely, his shirt's got a jack-o-lantern design!

If you are a regular reader of this blog, you know just how much I loved and continue to love Mumps music.. the punk the pop the glam the cleverness factor...

All those factors were, whether or I knew it or not, the criteria I had for any band in any genre. One could argue that Devo had that criteria in spades but I didn't back then and still don't get it. Intellectually I do, but they never ever appealed to me. Good for a passing laugh. Too obvious for me, perhaps.

So where was I that mid-July Summer of '77 when Devo debuted? I was trying to understand The Dictators. It took me a long, long time to understand them.

andy shernoff

Andy Shernoff is as clever and as rock n roll as they get. But in the 70s, I was a 20-something young woman and the whole dude-ness of their identity didn't resonate with my identity. But all my guy friends really dug the Dics and I kept going back to see what it was all about.

gtrBros14
Dicators Top Ten/Scott Kempner and Ross the Boss

The twin guitar thing is something I really love. And in punk rock, most of the bands I was into had but one guitar player -- Ramones, Sex Pistols, Jam, Avengers, Dils, Damned ... the list goes on. Punk rock was just the basic elements, after all - nothing more and nothing less than you needed to make that noise. An additional guitar was ok though - all that much more noise to make - and a keyboard... all the more cool, crazy and creepy noises you could make... like Mumps did...

xtian serenades lance

So - in the end...30+ years later - I still love Mumps, I still am indifferent leaning towards dismissive of Devo and I finally understand this comic book dude thing that is The Dictators. After all, Handsome Dick Manitoba is the King of All Men!

Denise & the Handsome One

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Birthday Greetings to the Survivor of the Sunset Strip

Kim Fowley

Kim Fowley has seen it all - been there, done that - twice or maybe even nine times! He's been in the music biz longer than many of you dear readers have been alive. Today marks another anniversary of the occasion of his birth.

Ben & Kim
With a Dirtbombs drummer, Ben Blackwell, circa 2004

And as seen in the CD booklet for the Dirtbombs double CD set, If You Don't Already Have a Look, (my vote for best album title and concept EVER)

Mick & Kim
Mick Collins and Kim Fowley

Now Kim can add "filmmaker" to his many accomplishments.

Kim Fowley as Satan of Silverlake
As "Satan of Silverlake," in 2007

Doll Boy In Bondage
As "Dollboy" in bondage, in 2007

Monday, July 20, 2009

Man On The Moon



40 years ago, two American men walked on the Moon. One small step for a man... opened the floodgates for pop culture references ad infinitum.

The New York Times has an overview of these flights of fancy that you can read here.

What else was happening on July 20?
  • 1944 - before we thought of walking on the Moon - Adolf Hitler survives an assassination attempt (known as the July 20 plot) led by German Army Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg.
  • 1976 – The Viking 1 lander successfully lands on Mars. How's that for an outer space follow up?
  • It must have been good vibes from Mars in 1976 – Hank Aaron hits his 755th home run, the final home run of his career.
  • 1977 – The Central Intelligence Agency releases documents under the Freedom of Information Act revealing it had engaged in mind control experiments, vindicating conspiracy theorists the world over and likely inspiring that Julia Roberts/Mel Gibson movie entitled Conspiracy Theory
  • 1969, Future Sex Pistols drummer Paul Cook celebrates his 13th birthday.

    London Punks in Los Angeles

    If you believe they put a man on the Moon, you might enjoy watching indie-turned-superstar REM perform their song Man on the Moon with super duper star Bruce Springsteen

  • Sunday, July 19, 2009

    LA Explosion at 30

    The Last

    I remember taking this picture of The Last in the little bedroom photo studio I had in my apartment at 1140 North Clark Street (Apartment 306) in West Hollywood. That apartment building was made infamous by one of Motley Crue's memoirs... but before those guys moved in, it was kind of like the after party / dorm complex of the Whisky A Go Go. North Clark Street is really San Vicente, or vice versa. Clark is what San Vicente is called north of Sunset Blvd., and the northwest corner of Sunset / San Vicente and/or Clark is 8901 Sunset - address of the Whisky A Go Go... where I worked, and one of the cocktail waitresses who worked at the Whisky also lived at 1140 and Joan Jett lived on San Vicente and more often than, after show parties went from Joan's place to mine and back again... but back to The Last.

    I lived at Clark from 1979 through 1982, and that's the window during which this photo was taken, though I'm guessing its 79/80. This photo ran (as you can clearly see) in the erstwhile LA Reader when The Last had a gig deemed a Critic's Pick.

    All their shows were critically great... if a columnist picked it or not. They were a power pop band that could play well with punk and hardcore bands... being from San Pedro helped I guess. They occupied that space that the Alley Cats also did. Nice people, great music, and could fit on any bill.



    Last man, Joe Nolte announces in an email an LA gig to celebrate 30 years of LA Explosion... I lift boldy from said email:

    Come join us to celebrate and/or throw things in Long Beach on July 20...

    It has been 30 years since the "L.A. Explosion" album was released, so how about...

    THE LAST, featuring

    Joe Nolte
    Vitus Matare
    Mike Nolte
    David Nolte
    Bill Stevenson

    Live at


    Alex's Bar
    2913 E. Anaheim St.
    (Next to the Auto Zone, entrance in the back)
    Long Beach, CA 90804
    562-434-8292

    Monday July 20th, with Scott Reynolds (All, Pavers) before us and Jr. Juggernaut after us...

    Yep, it's the real LAX lineup, with Bill from the descendents providing drummage! (First time BIll and David will have shared a stage since, I think, that Pedro shwo with the Reactionaries)

    I know that technically the actual anniversary isn't until August, but this is as close as we could cut it. We should go on around 10 pm.

    If you check Alex's website (http://www.alexsbar.com/calendar.php) you will notice they still think it's just me and Mike.

    Won't they be surprised - heh heh heh...


    I can't be there, but all you LA people... you should try to make it.

    Thursday, July 16, 2009

    To the MOON!
    Post #1000



    On July 16, 1969 - 40 years ago today, NASA launched Apollo 11, which would land on our Moon in 4 days' time. Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin were the first Americans - the first humans in fact, to walk on the Moon. Of the 7 Apollo missions (11 - 17), astronauts from 6 of them (remember the fate of Apollo 13? deemed a successful failure by NASA) involved Moon landings.

    We learned the Moon is not made of green cheese; we took rocks and dirt from its surface and brought them back to Earth for analysis. We conspired that no one landed on the Moon at all and that it was all faked.

    Some things hold true, regardless of what one believes about the Moon and whether we really walked on it... we gaze at the Moon... it illuminates the night when its full and it is the source of inspiration for songs, poetry, painting, photography and other acts of madness...(like say, sustaining a blog about punk rock for 1,000 posts?)


    Vincent van Gogh's Starry Night... madness? the moon and stars...

    I don't know how to begin to quantify how many songs about the Moon have been written; how many albums name-checked the Moon... The Killing Moon (Echo & the Bunnymen), Blue Moon of Kentucky (Bill Monroe's version is my fave, Patsy Cline a close second), Blue Moon, Dark Side of the Moon, MoonAge Daydream, Havana Moon, Mr Moonlight, Moonlight Sonata, and on and on and on...

    iggy pop 77

    Iggy Pop has a song called Moonlight Lady.
    you can buy an 11x14 Metallic Paper print of this image! click here



    also on sale:


    and you can buy that here until July 31 only

    Tuesday, July 14, 2009

    Post #999 - This Machine Kills Fascists
    Happy Birthday Woody Guthrie

    This is not my photo; I don't know to whom the photo credit belongs, but this is WOODY GUTHRIE. Today is his birthday. He would be 97 years old had he lived, but his message and his music live on.

    Pop culture as agitprop wasn't born with Woody, but he was one the phenomenon's greatest instigators. Many of my favorite artists took a page from his performance art - Bob Dylan, The Clash, Billy Bragg, to name but a few.

    The sticker on Woody's guitar reads: This Machine Kills Fascists.

    Its a slogan that keeps on giving and for me, lived through the Clash and Billy Bragg. If I had that sticker, I'd put it on the back of my camera.

    PictureNY.org
    this is what i mean...

    July 14 is most famously celebrated as Bastille Day, and that is a fitting coincidence - the birth of the French Revolution back in 1789 denounced the feudal way of life in France and brought the power of Hope to the common people.

    Its something to sing about.... People have the power!

    Patti, Dark & Light
    Patti Smith sang "People Have the Power

    Woody Guthrie wasn't the first protest singer, nor will he be the last. He was however, one of the most compelling. Maybe my socialist roots were planted during the primary school sing alongs of "This Land is Your Land." I certainly took that message seriously! I respect the musicians who carry Woody's torch.

    On another somewhat related note, this is Post #999. This blog has been around since February 2005. Thanks for sticking with me.

    In a salute to the number, here's the English Oi band - 999

    999 2 frames

    Saturday, July 11, 2009

    Congress Dems Go Punk!!
    TAX THE RICH

    dils chip jumping
    The Dils

    The Dils just might be thrilled at one of today's headlines in the paper of record, The New York Times. Leaders in House Seek to Tax Rich for Health Plan." Click on the post title to be transported by the magic of the innerwebs to the New York Times to read all about it. With songs like Class War and I Hate the Rich, Chip and Tony Kinman as well as their San Francisco punk compadres The Avengers promulgated what seemed like a socialist agenda... but they were just forward-thinkers in my opinion.

    made in mexico

    This manhole cover I photographed on the corner of Sunset and Fountain in the Silverlake section of Los Angeles really does say it all - City of Los Angeles, Made in Mexico... California's largest city, the second largest city in the USA, was built on the cheap, near slave labor of immigrants doing the kind of work US born citizens didn't want to do, and by so doing, you have the ages old story of the brown people building the palaces of gold for the white people... or the poor building up the rich.

    avengers BW
    The Avengers


    Here's the lede:
    WASHINGTON — House Democrats will ask the wealthiest Americans to help pay for overhauling the health care system with a $550 billion income tax increase, the chairman of the tax-writing Ways and Means Committee said Friday.

    The proposal calls for a surtax on individuals earning at least $280,000 in adjusted gross income and couples earning more than $350,000, said the chairman, Representative Charles B. Rangel of New York.


    now go read the rest while you listen to Class War. For us aged and aging punk rockers... time has come!

    Thursday, July 09, 2009

    Casting the Runaways Movie.... and now as The Ramones...

    Dee Dee Ramone
    Dee Dee Ramone

    I guess everyone who cares knows that there is a motion picture feature about The Runaways in the making... I wondered who would be cast as whom... the one thing I had known for a long while that it was going to be directed and written for the screen by Floria Sigismondi, who is best known for her photography and for directing a ton of high profile music videos (Bowie, Marilyn Manson, White Stripes, The Cure, Raconteurs, Jon Spencer Blues Explosion and more). She's a good 5 - 10 years younger than the median age of the 70s punk rock era people, so I have also always wondered how this age gap would work in terms of her being able to translate my particular "coming of age" period (and I'm 8 years older than she is) in a cultural milieu that my generation made safe for hers. It all remains to be seen, of course, but news comes from the PR machine about the casting of The Ramones in this story.

    Johnny 2
    Johnny Ramone

    Here's the actual press release.

    New York, NY, July 8 – St. Louis garage rockers Living Things are about to appear as one of their hero bands, the Ramones in the now-filming The Runaways, the biopic about the groundbreaking 70’s all-girl hard rock group led by Joan Jett. Kristen Stewart of Twilight fame plays Jett, with Dakota Fanning as Cherie Currie and Academy Award-nominated actor Michael Shannon as the band’s “Svengali” Kim Fowley.

    Kim Fowley
    Kim Fowley svengali-ing it up in 2004

    In the scene, which is shooting this month, the Ramones are playing at Rodney Bingenheimer’s notorious English Disco nightclub in Los Angeles circa 1975. Living Things have already recorded a cover of "We're A Happy Family" for the scene.

    rodney pretty baby
    Rodney Bingenheimer on Sunset Blvd., not far from the location of his club - which was at 7561 Sunset. Rodney's English Disco closed in 1975

    In addition to having a useful resemblance in attitude to the punk progenitors, the band has a direct line into the production – singer Lillian Berlin is the husband of the film’s writer and director Floria Sigismondi.

    “I love Joey Ramone,” said Berlin. “He is like the Elvis of punk. It's a mystical, exotic vacation to step into his shoes for a moment.”


    Joey 1

    If you are curious about this band cast to play The Ramones, the Living Things are currently on the road in support of their latest album Habeas Corpus. They will be appearing at Lollapalooza in Chicago’s Grant Park on August 8th.

    The Runaways is scheduled to hit theaters in 2010.

    You won't see anything like this (below) however. The movie is based on the few months leading up to the band getting signed.

    the whole joan billy party

    By the time this photo was taken, in 1978, the 20-year old Joan Jett was already a high-profile musician... Billy Idol was thrilled to meet her and her friends, also seen in this photo: Darby Crash and Lorna Doom of The Germs.

    Thursday, July 02, 2009

    Bon Voyage Gories and Oblivians!

    Sometimes, you DO have to leave home to make a dent in your milieu. When the Gories and Oblivians were active new bands back in the 80s and 90s, respectively, they each had a fan base in Europe. That fan base grew and has never stopped growing over the past decade and a half. 

    Back in the day, at home, the Gories were voted "worst band in Detroit," their home town, despite a niche fan base that has stayed loyal over the years.  The Oblivians also felt more love across the pond (where I saw them in 1997) than back home, although I think they benefitted from a sort of Gories halo-effect, since they filled the void left by the Detroit crew and were able to make headway on the primal road Mick Collins, Dan Kroha and Peggy O'Neill started to pave.

    quintron & greg
    Mr Quintron & Greg Oblivian... my fave Oblivians album is Play 9 Songs with Mr Quintron

    Maybe its because the music lovers in Europe appreciate the American music that both these garage/punk bands grew up in -- blues, soul and bonafide American roots rock n roll. After all, it was Detroit and Memphis that birthed soul and rock as we know them today. I can't help but reiterate that which we all know... the phenomenon that made the British Invasion possible... American audiences somehow need the pre-approval of European fans before they embrace their home-grown musicians.

    If the Beatles and the Rolling Stones had not covered songs by the likes of Carl Perkins and the inventor of rock n roll itself, Chuck Berry, these legends would have remained critic's faves while white-washed pop singers like Pat Boone made money off the songs of Little Richard. I mean... where would Paul McCartney be without Little Richard? And by extension, where would The White Stripes or Black Keys be without the Gories and Oblivians throwing out the first primitive punches of their generation in the New Wave 80s (with all due respect to the Cramps of course) and of the 90s.

    Recently, someone sent me a comment here (that I didn't publish) calling me a moron for referring to the Gories and Oblivians as punk. That reader/writer called them garage, of course and also indie. The label "grunge" was in there too. Well, like I care about marketing labels? And further like I care what any one thinks of my opinion? But for those of you who come here to look at the pictures (and let's face it... that's what this blog is about... 30+ years of pictures of the punk and punk-influenced bands I've photographed)... let me tell you what I think is punk about the Gories and the Oblivians.

    jack on the ferris wheel

    It is the primitivism, the exalted amateurism that eventually becomes expert and it is definitely the DIY spirit: Its the "let's start a label since no one will release our stuff" attitude...

    But all of that goes back to Francois Rabelais, the French Renaissance overachiever who wrote clever, ribald tales about two giants, a father and son - Gargantua and Pantagruel, in a series of five books. Maybe you've not heard of him but a few folks more well-read than you have - such as Jonathan Swift (Gulliver's Travels), Aleister Crowley and James Joyce, and have been influenced by his works. In the dead center of the first book, which explains how Gargantua built an Abbey at Thelema, Rabelais writes that the rule the Thelemites were to live by was simply: Do What Thou Wilt. Rabelais espoused utopianism but Aleister Crowley took this ball and ran with it, scoring a kind of black magic touchdown, as many modern day people believe that the Abbey at Thelema and "do what thou wilt" are Crowely-isms and instead of a utopia, they've followed a chaos (one needs only to look at the tragic side of Led Zeppelin).

    The Cramps Crystal Gazing
    Voodoo is cool when its a prop and it informs your music... 
    and what better model for primitive voodoo psychobilly 
    than the seminal no-bass band: The Cramps!

    So let's fast forward to the 70s musical movement in England that immediately precedes punk rock: pub rock (some of its main players are important figures in punk - Stiff Records, Jake Riviera, Nick Lowe and Elvis Costello to name a few). Eddie & the Hot Rods, a pub rock band embraced by punks released a single entitled, Do Anything You Wanna Do, which was a pub/pop anthem and harbinger of punk and other 70s independent-minded musical subcultures and their ethos. All my punk rock anti-heroes lived that sentiment.

    And one more thing... No Reason to Live, the furious punk rock song by Greg Oblivian is in my personal pantheon of punk rock anthems, tied neck and neck with the Dead Boys and Sonic Reducer.

    stiv whisky a go go
    Stiv Bators, Dead Boys front man.
    Sonic Reducer = one of the greatest punk songs.
    EVER



    Now - as for the Gories and Oblivians. They've left this continent and gone to another. Let's wish them well and safe travels. I've no doubt that many of the following shows have been sold out for months.

    Here are the tour dates:

    *July, 3 2009
    @ Sala El Sol (Oblivians / Gories) Madrid, Spain

    *July, 4 2009
    @ Kafe Antzokia (Oblivians / Gories) Bilbao, Spain

    *July, 5 2009
    @ Sala BeCool (Oblivians / Gories) Barcelona, Spain

    *July, 6 2009
    @ BT59 (Oblivians / Gories) Bordeaux, France

    *Jul 7 2009 8:00P
    @ Maroquineri (Oblivians / Gories) Paris, France

    *July, 8 2009
    @ Vera (Oblivians / Gories) Groningen, Netherlands

    *July, 10 2009
    @ Blast Off Festival! Nottingham, United Kingdom (Oblivians / Gories)
    http://www.blastoff-festival.co.uk/

    *July, 11 2009
    @ Paradiso (Oblivians / Gories) Amsterdam, Netherlands

    *July, 12 2009
    @ Sjock Fest (Oblivians / Gories) Gierle, Belgium

    *July, 13 2009
    @ t.b.a. in Belgium (Oblivians / Gories)

    *July, 14 2009
    @ Gleis 22 (Oblivians / Gories) Munster, Germany

    *July, 15 2009
    @ Festsaal Kreuzberg (Oblivians / Gories) Berlijn, Germany

    *July, 16 2009
    @ 59:1 (Oblivians / Gories) Munchen, Germany

    *Jul 17 2009 8:00P
    @ Hana-Bi (Oblivians / Gories) Ravenna, Itlay

    *July, 18 2009
    @ Spaziale Festival (Oblivians / Gories) Torino, Itlay


    In the photos above, from the top - Mick Collins - co-founder of the Gories, photographed in 2005 with the Dirtbombs; Quintron and Greg Oblivian, photographed in 2005; Eric Oblivian, photographed in 2005; Jack Oblivian, photographed in 2006; The Cramps, photographed in 1978; Stiv Bators, photographed in 1979