Sunday, September 27, 2009

Happy Birthday North Fork Sound!


North Fork Sound is 3 years old today.

The best way to wish them a Happy Birthday is to LISTEN! Easiest way to listen is to visit their site and click on the PLAY icon while you read the playlists and what not.

Where else can you hear Social Distortion and all things Lemmy on the same playlist?

This is free form radio the way it ought to be.

Happy Birthday North Fork Sound!

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Punk Turns 30 Archive Restoration Fund

On September 14, there was an URGENT message in my email from awesome rock chick, Jahna Rain, telling me of a flood in the basement storage area of a warehouse where a big chunk of the Punk Turns 30 photo archive has been stashed.

There was significant flooding and the landlord wanted all the stuff out immediately (ostensibly to clean, restore and repair his property), so I sent out a global 911 to everyone in my email address book. Maybe you received it. I have to say that I'm rather touched by the replies I received from folks on MOG who read my post there.

DAMAGE

That's pretty gross looking stuff, isn't it?

David Landis, a graphic designer friend of a friend who happens to live in the general area where my archive was stored, was kind enough to drop what he was doing the following morning and schlep my waterlogged boxes of photos, slides and negatives to his house, where they were carefully transferred to new, clean, dry storage boxes and bins.

While some of my archive sustained that kind of damage, most of it merely got wet and I can fix it. I have the skill set but I need your help!

I've got two big things to do:

1) Get my stuff out of David's way and out of his house, and
2) Repair and restore everything.

Luckily, only about 20% of the loot seems to be damaged beyond repair. The rest can definitely be restored.

I need help now, in the form of any kind of contribution - via this nifty ChipIn widget below.

I live in Tennessee and my stuff is in New Jersey. I need help paying for packing and shipping between NJ and TN, and for purchasing the solvents and solutions I need to clean my films.

Every penny helps and counts.

Thanks for your help. And remember - if you don't have two cents, if you have two friends to whom you can send this post as a link (or send this: http://restorepunkturns30.chipin.com/archive-restoration-project), or if you have a website, myspace or facebook page - and can embed my widget (just click on it!) you have indeed helped!

Monday, September 14, 2009

Jim Carroll, RIP

wanderers & jim carroll
Dave Treganna, Dave Parsons, Jim Carroll and Stiv Bators, NYC, 1981

He whose most well-known song was "People Who Died" has died. Poet, singer/songwriter, spokesman for a generation, Jim Carroll passed away in his home while working (writing). A heart attack took him from us on Friday, September 11, 2009. He was 60 years old.

Just about a year ago, my good friend, Dave Parsons, of Sham 69 forwarded to me that photo above, of himself, former Sham bassist, Dave Treganna, and Stiv Bators with Jim Carroll, whom we all met in NYC when the Daves and Stiv toured as The Wanderers. I took at photo backstage at the Palladium, when the Wanderers opened for the Ramones there in 1981.

You can read more about our Wandering Into Jim Carroll here on punkturns30... the link is to last year's post and memories of how Jim Carroll taught Stiv and me how to maneuver the night life in Manhattan.

We all knew who Jim Carroll was back then... The Basketball Diaries, the til-then culmination of a young life's worth of living and writing about it landed his name and his works on the mind-sets of anyone with taste who paid attention to music and literature in 1978. I had the great opportunity to see him do his first rock n roll performance that same year at the California Theatre in San Diego, CA. He opened for Patti Smith and he read from The Basketball Diaries and Patti joined him on stage, guitar in hand. Afterwards, Patti introduced me and my friends to Jim and I have a a most cherished photo (unscanned, but hanging up safe and sound in my house in California) of Patti, Jim and me together from that night.

Since then, it seemed that I'd run into Jim every 3 years or so, and he was always working on something new. Most recently, it was a winter in New York City about five years ago, we met in a book shop in NYC's Chelsea neighborhood and talked about Jack Kerouac. We talked about the new music we were listening to, talked about the state of culture, and just plain gossiped about current times. Jim Carroll was a man whose opinion took no prisoners... he was direct and lyrical at once. Just a week before talking with Jim about Kerouac, I had tea with Patti Smith and we too talked about Kerouac (it was the occasion of his birth and the two poets contributed testimonials which I recorded for a radio program). Full circle.

It was Patti Smith whose work inspired me to stick to my guns, and it was Patti Smith who encouraged Jim Carroll in his poetry and music.

Patti, Dark & Light

But it was always Jim Carroll who, for me, helped me understand the balance of dreams and reality... not just in his work - his words written for all to read, but in his words spoken directly to me.

The world has lost a unique voice - RIP, Jim Carroll.

NY Times Obit

NY Times Memoir