Jun 30, 2009

'Music Man Murray' trades in records for acting career



Thanks to Andy for sending this one along. Originally published in the LA Times.

Murray Gershenz, with a collection of 400,000 records and a shop on Exposition Boulevard in L.A., is looking to sell so he can focus on auditions and shoots.

By Bob Pool, June 26, 2009


Murray Gershenz knows he's setting something of a record by giving a new spin to his career this late in life.

After all, Gershenz has spent most of his 87 years collecting music -- old operas preserved on tube-like Edison cylinders, Big Band-era crooners on brittle 78 rpm discs, emerging rock stars on small 45s and established pop artists on larger LP albums. He owns as many as 400,000 records.

But now, "Music Man Murray" plans to unload his collection so he can become a full-time actor.

"I'm in demand. They like old character actors," he said as he turns down the volume to an operatic piece he's playing at his Exposition Boulevard record shop.

"That's a tenor nobody's heard of," Gershenz explains. "Mario Filippeschi. He recorded this in the '50s. It's Puccini's 'Nessun Dorma,' which means 'nobody's sleeping.' "

Gershenz knows his opera. He also knows his rock, his R&B, his symphonies, his jazz and countless other genres of music crammed onto the shelves of his two-story shop and of a pair of nearby warehouse spaces.

"I started collecting when I was 16 and never stopped," he said of his carefully categorized records. "I never threw anything away. It's very difficult to part with them."

But part with them he must. Gershenz says he can no longer juggle his audition and filming schedule with the day-to-day requirements of running his record store and Internet record sales business.

"I thought my son would take over, but he's got other things to do. My daughter is ill and she can't. But this is a wonderful treasure. This collection shouldn't be busted up."

Gershenz has started shopping around for a museum or a college willing to acquire the collection and keep it intact. His last choice would be to split it up and sell records piecemeal to individual music enthusiasts. It should be accessible to the public -- "people should be able to enjoy it," he said.

The collection boasts multiple copies of some recordings that sell for as little as $8. Others are rare, one-of-a-kind discs. His most valuable is a multicolored record titled "Barbie" by Kenny and the Cadets, predecessors of the Beach Boys. It's worth $5,000, according to Gershenz. He estimates that the whole collection is worth about $3 million.

That ought to be music to the ears of a man for whom music has always been so important. Gershenz sang briefly with the St. Louis Opera and later was a cantor in local synagogues. He went into the used record business in 1962 with a small shop in Hollywood. He moved it to the West Adams district in 1986.

The acting bug has taken a huge bite out of him, however.

He was offered his first role in "Will & Grace" 12 years ago after a talent agent spotted him in a Sunday night improvisational comedy class. His work since then has included television shows, films and commercials.

"I'm in three movies playing right now, 'I Love You, Man,' 'Hangover' and 'Street Dreams,' " he said. "I have a Wal-Mart commercial that's been running almost two years. I shot a movie two weeks ago where I play the husband of a woman who wants to buy a teapot and can't afford it."

Gershenz's son Irv is a professional drummer and artist who runs the shop when his father is auditioning or on a film shoot. Irv Gershenz worked at the store through junior high school and college and has helped out occasionally since then. He doesn't want to operate it permanently, however.

"It kills me to think it's going to be gone. I grew up here on everything from Lionel Hampton to the Beatles. This place has a lot of memories," said Irv Gershenz, 52.

Over the years, dozens of performers have visited the shop to buy copies of their own albums -- B.B. King, Rock Hudson, Louis Armstrong, Nancy Sinatra, Jason Alexander, Duke Ellington and Dick Van Dyke. "A lot of famous people don't keep their own records," Murray Gershenz said.

Herb Alpert turned to Music Man Murray when he was re-issuing Tijuana Brass recordings as CDs and needed a pristine album cover to copy for the CD jewel case, Gershenz said.

More recently, young record producers have prowled the shop, walking past the antique 1946 Rock-Ola jukebox that's loaded with vintage 78s to search the shelves for obscure record riffs to use in new music. Such computerized "sampling" can often be done with recordings from the 1940s and '50s that are in the public domain and do not require royalty payments, he said.

Even as he takes steps to wind down, Music Man Murray sometimes has second thoughts. "If I was 40 years younger I wouldn't even be thinking of this. Record collecting is like a disease. It never goes away," he said.

"I'm still buying people's old collections of vinyl. Isn't that crazy?"

Topper Headon speaks

Thanks to Randy for pointing this one out...here's a great piece on ex-Clash drummer, Topper Headon, on his life since the early 80's when he was fired from the band due to drug abuse, amongst other things.

This was originally published by the Independent a few days ago.

'I forgive you': The Clash's drummer Topper Headon makes peace with the man who sacked him

In the late 1970s, a drummer called Topper Headon joined The Clash, the most exciting rock'n'roll band in the world. There followed five years of non-stop playing, partying and drug-taking...but by 1982, Headon's heroin addiction was out of control, and Clash leader Joe Strummer was forced to sack him. Then things got really bad. Today, reflective and sober, he tells Mark Lucas his remarkable story.


Driver K44 sits in a deep armchair with his Staffordshire bull terrier, Yowsah, lying across his lap. Stroking the dog he recalls the mini-cabbing job he took in west London in the late 1980s to fund his heroin addiction. "I look like death," he tells me. "I'm driving a Talbot Solara with a dodgy starter motor and I pick up this old lady. She goes to get in the car and I say, 'Excuse me,' and I hand her a broom. While I turn the key she has to bash the solenoid. The car starts and I go, 'OK, get in. Here's the A to Z – do you know where you're going?'"

By 1989, when the mini-cabbing work became too much for him, he had taken to the London Underground, busking with a set of bongos. "Every hundred people who passed, there'd be one who'd stop and ask, 'Are you Topper Headon from The Clash?'" He shrugs, "I'd have to say, 'Yeah, this is what I do now.' It was so humiliating."

More than 20 years have passed since I last saw Nick "Topper" Headon; we were fellow drivers at a mini-cab company in Fulham, west London, where I went by the radio call-sign K42. At the time, I thought Headon had taken the state of heroin addiction to a new level; it didn't seem possible that he could drive a car at all, let alone do it for a living. When I came across his name in the press recently, I was surprised to learn that he was still alive.

On a bright spring day, however, as I step out of Dover station, he pulls up in his customised Mini Cooper to collect me. Now 54, Headon is still small and slim. He is dressed in jeans, a striped shirt and trainers, he wears wire-rimmed glasses and his greying, spiky hair is receding. By the time we arrive back at his house, I have had a chance to adjust to how the man I knew all those years ago has been transformed in other ways, too. Where before he had the slack, cadaverous features and reduced conversational ability of the long-term heroin addict, I am now treated to his charming smile, lengthy anecdotes and frank admissions.

As if making up for his lost years, Headon is making an increasing number of appearances in the press: working with local music charities; drumming with various bands; being a spokesman for the Hepatitis C Trust, a virus that he has recently beaten. He is about to donate his beloved Mini Cooper to be raffled by the Strummerville Foundation, a charity for young musicians. To some it may seem ironic that Headon is so involved with the organisation set up in memory of The Clash's frontman, the late Joe Strummer, the man who sacked him from one of the 20th century's most revered rock'n'roll bands. Although already a heavy user, it was to be this event that propelled Headon into taking his heroin addiction to the next level.

"I just stuck needles in my arm, which I'd never done before," he says, explaining how his dismissal became his justification. "Only a junkie can think: 'I'll show you; I'll fuck myself up even more.'" More than 25 years after the event, however, the drummer has had plenty of time to reflect on where the blame really lies. "Joe wouldn't have sacked me if I hadn't been a raving heroin addict, trashing hotel rooms, throwing up, late for rehearsals." What unravels over the next few hours is the route Headon took on his downward, near terminal, journey and his recent recovery.

Topper Headon remains a hugely underrated drummer, so it comes as a surprise to learn that he arrived at the profession by accident. Aged 13, a broken leg put paid to his footballing ambitions and it was a doctor who suggested the drums as a way of venting his frustration. Within six months he was playing for a jazz band in a Dover pub.

When he later moved to London with his new wife Wendy, he was sacked from various drumming jobs for not hitting the drums hard enough, a legacy of these jazz beginnings. Drowning his sorrows at the Rainbow Theatre one night, he met The Clash's guitarist, Mick Jones, who was on the lookout for a replacement drummer.

Headon agreed to an audition but didn't bother going; he'd briefly been in Jones' previous band, the London SS, "but they were all long hair and afghans and stuff". He bought that week's edition of the NME, however, "and who's on the cover, but Mick, Joe and Paul [Simonon, bass player], and it was like... 'Oh, I'll be down in a minute, then!' I went in there and went bang! bang! bang! – I had to relearn my whole drumming style." He ended up with his hands covered in blood blisters but he'd got the job on a wage of £25 a week.

Being part of The Clash meant Headon had to give up his previous existence. Having set off for the audition in casual clothes and with long hair, he returned home dressed in punk gear, his head sporting hacked spikes. His name was changed next; Simonon rechristened him after deciding their new drummer looked like Mickey the Monkey from the children's comic, Topper. "I wondered: am I doing the right thing? I'd only been in the band a week – I'd had to deny I was married. It was quite intimidating, you had to ditch all your mates and be part of the gang."'

There was no room for Headon's marriage, but he bonded with the band through sheer industry and application: life became an endless cycle of touring and rehearsing.

It was some time before his drumming skills were fully appreciated by The Clash. His strength and stamina were obvious but his ability to play jazz, soul and funk weren't needed to begin with. Sandy Pearlman, the producer for the band's 1978 second album Give 'Em Enough Rope, was astonished by Headon, calling him "the human drum machine". "I was really on top of my game then," the musician recalls. "I didn't make mistakes. I really could drum." If Headon was gradually encouraging The Clash to play the sort of music he liked, he was also being introduced to reggae by the rest of the band. "I loved drumming, so I just thought, 'Right, I'm going to learn reggae now.' That's the way I was – I've got an addictive personality. All I ever did was drum, drum, drum. Then I went on the road and discovered booze. All I did was drink, drink, drink. Then Mick turned me onto coke and all I did was coke."

As we discuss the band's 1979 tour of the US, described by one observer as "like going on a commando raid with the Bash Street Kids", the band's former road manager, Johnny Green, arrives and happily joins in with the reminiscing.

The Clash were supported on the road by Bo Diddley. As the late rock'n'roll legend performed his soundcheck one afternoon, Headon leapt on stage and played Diddley's signature beat. For two nights, the drummer, fuelled by cocaine and alcohol, played with both The Clash and Diddley.

The two bonded immediately. As the tour bus crossed America, Strummer, Jones and Simonon would drift off to their bunks, but Headon and Diddley would be together drinking, snorting cocaine and watching the movie Behind the Green Door on the bus's video. "Which was arty porn, you know," Green tells us, straight-faced. "Thank you, Johnny," Headon replies, "I wouldn't have watched just any porn."

Headon loved being on the road but when the other band members were not performing they would retire to their hotel rooms to read or write songs alone. As their punk roots gave way to musicianship, they became more critical of Headon's behaviour. "I could see their logic," he says, "but at the same time I thought, 'Well I can't hang out with you guys because you just come back and go straight to sleep.'" Headon, by contrast, had reached the point where he was taking drugs on-stage to get through a gig. "Every three numbers I used to go... [he mimes a final drum roll] and the lights would go off and my drum roadie would be there with a mirror." Headon would snort a line of cocaine and be ready for the next song.

"The band were getting the hump with me using on stage." He couldn't see what they were getting annoyed about; he had taken drugs with all of them, too. "I'd think we were getting out of it every night," he recalls. "One night Joe would come down and we'd get drunk, the next night Paul would be down and I'd get out of it with him and the next night it would be Mick. I'd be thinking, 'This is great, we're all partying.' I wouldn't realise that only I was there constantly."

Heroin was fast becoming the drug of choice for the road crew and Headon took to it with his usual zeal. Later, he would be summoned to band meetings where his colleagues would tell him that he had to stop hanging out with the roadies. "Why?" he asked. "Because every time there's damage," Strummer told him, "the crew say, 'Well, Topper was with us...'"

Headon became so erratic and self-destructive that when they booked into hotels, Strummer, Jones and Simonon would demand to be put on different floors, but the drummer, oblivious, continued his hell-raising.

The band received an ecstatic reception when they arrived in Japan in 1982, but Headon, fresh from an enforced bout of rehab, was upset to find no drugs. He was dissuaded from his initial reaction of "No drugs, no gig" by the Japanese manager, who offered him oxygen on stage in order to give himself a regular boost. "So we get to the sound check and there's an enormous canister," he recalls, "and a nurse comes up and shows me how to use it." With his muscles re-oxygenated he was able to carry on drumming with renewed vigour.

"But the gig after that, I cut the mask off and now I've got this tube in my mouth." Headon was suddenly tackled off his stool by a Japanese stage-hand and a fight broke out between road-crew and local staff until all was explained in broken English: "Drummer... oxygen... explode!" Headon's cigarette had been dangerously near the canister. "I could've been the first drummer to explode on stage!" Headon says, on his feet acting the events out. Green nods approvingly, "That is self-destruction," he announces, "taken to a pinnacle."

By now, Headon's playing was being terminally hampered by the drugs. Strummer decided to give him a last opportunity at the next gig, which was, unfortunately for the drummer, in Amsterdam. "I don't know I'm being tested, do I? I don't know it's my last chance," he laughs, "and I'm running round trying to score coke. They're all sitting in the dressing-room, combing their hair in the mirror against the wall and I run in and go: 'Can I use the mirror?' His bandmates watched in silence as he placed the mirror on the floor and knelt beside it, chopping out generous lines of cocaine.

The drummer was "suspended" as soon as The Clash returned to London. He made an effort to pull things together but, shortly after, Strummer drunkenly told a journalist that The Clash had sacked Headon for being a junkie.

Months after being in one of the world's biggest rock'n'roll bands, Headon was living in a freezing, windowless squat in Fulham, while The Clash were performing stadium shows in the US in support of the single "Rock the Casbah", a song largely written by Headon and on which he played drums, bass and piano. He made various attempts to continue his musical career. His friendship with Pete Townshend nearly landed him the job of drumming for The Who. At the time, The Clash were supporting the British supergroup at Shea Stadium and Headon admits he would have relished playing for the headlining band, lording it over The Clash. But if drumming for The Who was ever really a possibility, Headon scuppered it in characteristic style. In full stage gear he climbed a 25ft drainpipe, ran across a roof and jumped off the other side, waking up in hospital with a broken leg and a policeman, who charged him with attempted burglary.

"In a bright red suit?" he inquired.

He formed a band with bass player Pete Farndon, recently sacked from the Pretenders for heroin addiction. "We got Rob Stoner – a heroin addict – from Bob Dylan's band and we got Pete Townshend – a heroin addict with one foot in recovery – to produce us. Then we went to Farndon's funeral – it's not funny, but within two months of forming the band the bass player's died. I mean, that was selfish – and Pete [Townshend] comes up to me and says: 'You're next.'"

Soon afterwards, Strummer sacked Jones from The Clash and the guitarist went in search of his former bandmate. He took a roadie to Fulham to "kidnap" Headon and get him back to his flat before putting him into the Priory for treatment. He was then enrolled into Jones' new band Big Audio Dynamite, and it was while they were returning from rehearsals one evening that Jones told Headon the good news: they were each about to receive £200,000 in royalties from The Clash, a sum roughly equivalent to £750,000 today.

"I went: 'See you, Mick!' Who wants to stay clean when you've got £200,000 in the bank?" The money lasted less than 18 months, at which point Headon was declared bankrupt. "My dealer used to come round and say, 'I'll take the rug,' and a big Persian rug would walk out for a gram. When I went to his I thought, 'Fuck me! This is my house!'" Headon was left sitting on the floor of his empty, remortgaged Abbey Road flat watching a black-and-white television.

In 1986 he released the largely ignored album Waking Up, in an attempt to finance his addiction. He also married his second wife, Catherine, who worked in the music industry. Six months after the album's release, however, Headon was arrested on charges of supplying heroin and received a 15-month jail sentence, which he served at Standford Hill open prison in Kent ("Horrible. But on the plus side, easy to get hold of drugs"). His musical career was effectively over: what little energy he had was used in the pursuit of heroin; when we drove together during this period he would only appear for as long as it took him to earn the £25 he needed to buy drugs.

The year 2000 saw the release of Don Letts' Clash documentary Westway to the World. Green, having long since lost touch with Headon, went to see the film, which features interviews with the band. "When Topper came on screen a gasp went up from the audience," he recalls. The driving force behind The Clash was hesitant and his speech was slurred. He weighed seven-and-a-half stone – an appearance emphasised by the oversize shirt that Jones lent him when Headon arrived for the interview in a T-shirt full of cigarette burns.

With his second marriage behind him, Headon found himself in St Mungo's hostel for the homeless just yards from the Westway, the elevated west London road The Clash had claimed as part of their urban identity, living on cans of Special Brew supplemented by twice-daily visits to soup kitchens.

He pauses. He's been trying to make light of this time, but as his story has got darker so has the mood in the room. Until this moment, I have had the feeling that Headon is finding it cathartic telling his story, but this is a period of his life that, even now, he is having difficulty coming to terms with. "I've been laughing," he tells us, shaking his head, "but this was..." he stops, searching for the right word but failing to find anything that goes far enough, "...horrendous."

He returned to Dover, becoming the local drunk, cornering people in pubs and shouting at cars in the street until his doctor told him that his liver was "waving the white flag". Some time during the 1980s Headon had – not uncommonly among intravenous drug users – contracted hepatitis C, which can cause cirrhosis: "It was the least of my worries," Headon says. He returned to heroin, before his doctor stepped in again, convincing him to move in with his parents before going back into the Priory. He has been through rehab 13 times, but this time it worked. Why? "I don't know. Something happened. I started feeling part of life again. I've been clean ever since."

He launched a Narcotics Anonymous group in Dover and set up a hepatitis C support group. Last year, he briefly appeared on stage with Mick Jones' band Carbon:Silicon for a couple of Clash numbers.

As for the break up of The Clash, he knows that Strummer was unhappy with the band The Clash had become; playing stadium concerts was the antithesis of Strummer's view of what The Clash should be. "Joe was sacking everyone else rather than just leave himself," says Headon, who bears Strummer no malice for the manner in which he was dismissed. "He had no choice," he explains. "I was in a state. We were kids," he shrugs. "Who cares?"

Strummer certainly did. He blamed himself for The Clash's demise, admitting that the band "never played a good gig after Topper left". With hindsight, however, Headon is glad it ended when it did. "It was the best thing that could have happened. We made all that fantastic music and then imploded at the top." He concedes, however, that what was best for the band was not necessarily best for the band members.

In 2002, Strummer made the only serious attempt to reform The Clash, to play at their induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame the following year. Jones and Headon were ready, Simonon was against the idea "but Joe had lined up another bass player. And then he died."

Today, Headon feels that he is finally over the five years he spent in The Clash. He has borne the brunt of the blame for the band's break up, compounding the problem by making the widely misunderstood statement in Westway to the World that if he had his time over, he would do it all again. "I was trying to explain that when you're a heroin addict you don't choose to fuck your life up, it's inevitable." At one point, as we discuss Strummer, Headon interrupts. "By rights," he says with conviction, "it should have been me that died."

In fact, the drummer looks remarkably well. He keeps fit and his kitchen cabinets are crammed with health supplements. When it is time to leave he drives me to the station, stopping en route at Dover harbour where we watch the ferries heading out to France. "I'm just a middle-aged man by the sea," he muses. Later, I repeat this remark to Green. The Clash's former road manager is dismissive. "Rock stars are like Catholics," he tells me. "They may lapse, but they're still rock stars."

Topper Headon's Mini Cooper is being raffled online at www.strummerville.com with all proceeds going to charity. The winning ticket will be drawn on 13 July.

Jun 28, 2009

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Jun 27, 2009

The Rolling Stones in Brooklyn



Found over at the Hound Blog in the 17th edition of Gillian's Found Photos. These are just too amazing to be true, but they are - the Rolling Stones appear on the bill of Murray the K's holiday show at the Fox Theater in Brooklyn, NY, circa 1964. Check the height of that proscenium!

If you missed 'em, check out the Shangri-Las in the previous edition of Gillian's Found Photos.

Falling and Laughing - the Restoration of Edwyn Collins



Enough fucking death already...lets check out a story about making it! Surviving! A feel good story.

I'm surprised I haven't heard a little more buzz about this, but here we are. I'm more than a little excited to read Falling & Laughing: The Restoration of Edwyn Collins, a brand new book about Edwyn Collins and his recent bout of surviving a stroke, brain haemorrhages, and MRSA to top it all off. Unbelievable. Spoiler alert: he lives! He thrives! The book was written by Grace Maxwell, Edwyn's longtime partner & manager, and will be out in the UK on July 9. This story is why I flew over to London in November 2007 for a long weekend specifically to see Edwyn play. It was a miracle that he was even close to a stage.

No news yet on a US edition, here's the description from Amazon UK:

Product Description

In February 2005, Edwyn Collins suffered two devastating brain haemorrhages. He should have died. Doctors advised that if he did survive, there would be little of him left. If that wasn't enough, he went on to contract MRSA as a result of an operation to his skull and spent six months in hospital. Initially, Edwyn couldn't speak, read, write, walk, sit up or feed himself. He had lost all movement in his right side and was suffering from aphasia - an inability to use or understand language. When he initially recovered consciousness the only words he could say were 'Grace', 'Maxwell', 'yes' and 'no'. But with the help of his partner Grace and their 18-year-old son Will, Edwyn fought back. Slowly, and with monumental effort, he began to teach his brain to read and speak all over again - with some areas of his mind it was if he had been a slate wiped utterly clean. Through a long and arduous road of therapy he began to re-inhabit his body until he could walk again. Grace's story is an intimate and inspiring account of what you do to survive when your husband is all but taken away without warning by a stroke.

About the Author

Grace Maxwell was born in Lanarkshire. She moved to London in 1980, where she met Edwyn Collins. Since 1984 she has been his manager and partner. Together they have an 18-year-old son, Will. They live in London and East Sutherland. Edwyn Collins sold his stamp collection at the age of 16 to buy a guitar and never looked back. In the early 80s his band, Orange Juice were the first act on the now legendary Postcard Records label. His wonderful songs, dandy looks and cultured wit made him an idol of the burgeoning indie scene. With Orange Juice and as a solo artist he has released a total of nine albums including Gorgeous George, that contained the worldwide hit 'A Girl Like You', and most recently Home Again.

Jun 26, 2009

Jim Fouratt on the Colbert Report

Just in case you missed it, or don't feel like watching the entire episode over at ComedyCentral.com (although you should - lots of funny gay jokes), here is Jim Fouratt's appearance for last night's Colbert Report. I'm proud to say I know him...

Michael Jackson etc etc

To be honest, I'm not horribly saddened by the death of Michael Jackson. I mean, no more so than anyone who passes away. Especially at an age like 50. Yes, I'm old enough to remember hearing the Jacksons on the radio...top 40 AM radio...I'm even old enough to remember the Saturday morning cartoon. Anyway, I just figured I didn't really need to mention anything on this blog about any of this. I've never been huge fan.

However, given the scope of his & his family's influence & popularity, a couple of friends have written some wonderful nostalgic remembrances that have as much to do with growing up, memories, and the influence & love of music, as they do with the death of the so called king of pop.

Read "Stop! The love you save may be your own" over at Magical Life.

Read "Ben, the two of us need look no more" over at the Jukebox Graduate.

That, to me, is what's interesting. The moments that this music connected, and continues to connect, us to. I think that's what it's all about. Michael Jackson RIP. There...I said it.

TV Smith (Adverts) show juggling

This just in from TV Smith's booking agent:

"Sorry to tell you this but TV suffered a major snag in being able to get his visa sorted out and as a result, he had to cancel the first leg of his tour - including the Mercury Lounge show on July 1st.

His Visa was approved however, the interview he needed to get his passport sorted was erroneously scheduled for 5 days after the tour started and nothing could be done to turn this around. That said, his flight has been rebooked and the rest of the tour is back on.

Please show your support and come to the show at The Music Hall of Williamsburg on July 2nd and show your support!"

So...as originally mentioned here...no July 1 show. Go see him on the 2nd instead!

Jun 25, 2009

Farrah Fawcett RIP



Farrah Fawcett - RIP

The London Nobody Sings - new blog alert

Our friend, Kevin, who writes the wonderful Your Heart Out, has launched a new blog today. Entitled The London Nobody Sings, it's basically a blog dedicated to songs about London.

"This blog is dedicated to the type of person who has been concerned for over 30 years about which subway, which tube line Billy was singing about. Was it the subway at Elephant & Castle? That's on the Bakerloo line after all ..."

One of my favorite things about visiting the UK has always been riding the tube. Looking at the map can be a lesson in pop culture history if you look closely enough. I'm sure The London Nobody Sings will help bring things into focus.

Sky Saxon RIP



Sky Saxon - RIP



Thanks, Lindsay.

Steven Wells RIP



Steven Wells - RIP. Read his final column here.

Jim Fouratt on Colbert tonight!

Congratulations to Jim Fouratt are in order as he'll be the guest on the Colbert Report tonight at 11:30 PM EST on Comedy Central. For many years, Jim has been extremely active on the front for the fight for gay rights, as well as working in the music business. To put it mildly, the New York club scene of the 70's & 80's would not have been the same without him. Neither would gay civil rights. You can read about his activist history here. You can also read a more general history on his myspace page.

Jim Fouratt before:


And after:

Jun 24, 2009

Just Because - Club 57


Club 57, New York, ca. 1980

Back row from left: Katy K., Keith Haring, Carmel Johnson Schmidt, John Sex, Bruno Schmidt, Samantha McEwen, Juan Dubose, Dan Friedman.
Front row from left: Kenny Scharf, Tereza Scharf, Min Thometz Sanchez, Tseng Kwong Chi.

Photo courtesy of Artnet. What a wonderful picture!

Borscht music on myspace



For those interested in the old hardcore stylings of a few creative suburban New York kids visit the Borscht myspace page. I was finally able to get some more tracks up there for a total of six. With any luck, I'll post the remaining four sometime soon. We hope you like them.

Jun 22, 2009

Just Because - Jon Langford & Lester Bangs



Jon (right) & Lester (left) working on the liner notes for the Mekons Story sometime in 1980.

TV Smith (Adverts) at Mercury Lounge July 1



Its not often that one can see a show by an original UK punk musician where they have lost nothing over the years. July 1st is such an opportunity. UK '77 punk legend TV SMITH (x-Adverts) returns to NYC for the first time since his 2005 tour with the Midnight Creeps. This is an EARLY SHOW with 8.00 PM doors, and TV hits the stage at 8:30.

Visit www.tvsmith.com or www.myspace.com/tvsmith

TV SMITH first came into prominence in 1976 – at the very beginning of British punk rock’s first wave – as the founder, lead singer and chief songwriter for the Adverts. The band – favorites at London's infamous punk ground zero, the Roxy club – signed a one-off deal with Stiff records at their second-ever gig and quickly released the “One Chord Wonders” single to rave reviews. Within months, the group toured with both the Damned and the Clash as co-headliners. The group’s second single, “Gary Gilmore’s Eyes” – dubbed no. 12 on MOJO magazine’s top 100 punk singles of all time – was a massive smash and thrust the band into national prominence, earning the band headlining tours of their own and television appearances on both Top of the Pops and Old Grey Whistle Test programs. The Adverts’ two albums – Crossing the Red Sea (Bright, 1978) and Cast of Thousands (RCA, 1979) – are now considered timeless classics of any era in rock.

Sadly, the band disintegrated in 1979, leaving Smith to embark on a solo career that’s now entering its fourth decade. Now an incendiary solo acoustic performer, he’s toured the world-over playing hit-filled sets that often span two to three hours in length. Occasionally, he performs with a like-minded band, playing Adverts songs to generations of old and new fans. The Valentines (Italy), Suzy & Los Quatro (Spain), Punk Lurex OK (Finland), Midnight Creeps (USA) and Die Toten Hosen (Germany) have all served. Smith’s latest CD, the critically acclaimed, In the Arms of My Enemy (Boss Tuneage, 2008), is considered to be the most accomplished record of his career and shows him at the peak of his songwriting powers. Recorded with his long-time studio band – guitarist, Tim Renwick (Elton John/Roger Waters/Alan Parsons), keyboardist, Tom Cross (Adverts/Mike Oldfield) and drummer Vom Ritchie (Zodiac Mindwarp/Die Toten Hosen/the Boys) – his latest effort is at once an incendiary and sublime affair that puts him in the same class as Billy Bragg and Bob Dylan. Where so many of his generation have either sold out, retired or passed away, Smith remains a vital figure whose best work is yet to come.

Here are the Adverts as they appeared on Top of the Tops in August 1977:

Jun 19, 2009

The Shangri-Las take the stage...



...motorcycle and all. For more shots and some dating tips from Mary Weiss, visit the Hound Blog, and read the 16th edition of Gillian's Found Photos.

The hippies dig some punk

Things got pleasantly all punk rock this week over at Wolfgang's Vault...Here's a preview, including cuts from the Nuns & the Avengers when they opened for the Sex Pistols at their last show in San Francisco in January 1978. Everything is kicked off, fittingly enough, by the MC5's spiritual advisor, Brother J.C. Crawford.

MC5 at the Grande Ballroom 10/30/1968:


The Avengers & the Nuns at Winterland 1/14/1978 opening for the Sex Pistols:




The Sex Pistols at Winterland 1/14/1978:


The Runaways at the Palladium (NYC) 1/7/1978:


X at L'Amour (Brooklyn) 11/26/1983:

Jun 18, 2009

Treasure the ghosts

Hat tip to EV Grieve for posting a trailer for this neat looking documentary, The Lower East Side—An Endangered Place, by director MA Shumin. Gee, I wonder how this one ends?



The full film will be shown as part of a program at the Asian American International Film Festival, which begins July 23.

In jazz, everybody, the beat's the thing, you know...



The eighth issue of Your Heart Out is out & about...download it, as well as the previous seven issues, right here.

The extremely elegant new issue of Your Heart Out is a special edition called The Historical Romance. It was inspired by seeing a film about the jazz singer Jackie Paris, which prompted all sorts of thoughts about fate and fortune.

The Historical Romance is a bit of an odyssey that takes in Jackie Cain & Roy Kral, Billy Vera & Judy Clay, Red Krayola & Clinic, Johnny Thunders & Patti Palladin, Freda Payne & Pennies From Heaven, plus much, much more ...

The cover star is Jackie Paris himself, and just in case you've not caught up with the film that kick-started this then here's a rather cool trailer ...

Jun 17, 2009

Slack Slack Music by Gareth Sager

This one is for fans of the Pop Group, and folks interested in the Scottish post punk stylings of Gareth Sager. Upon a couple of listens, I can definitely recommend it:

NEW ALBUM – ‘SLACK SLACK MUSIC’ RELEASED ON CREEPING BENT – 15TH JUNE 2009

“I strolled into town in my crushed velvet strides…”

Founder member of The Pop Group, Gareth Sager releases his long-awaited debut solo album via the Creeping Bent Organisation on the 29th of June 2009. The album is preceded by a single, Not Since The Accident (released 15th June).

‘Slack Slack Music’ features twelve brand new tracks and was produced by Howard Grey, who has worked with Van Morrison, Tom Verlaine and Scritti Politti. The new album encompasses, to great effect, raw elements of most of Sager’s back catalogue, from The Pop Group through Rip Rig & Panic up to his most recent project, C.C. Sager, who released ‘The Last Second of Normal Time’ album on Creeping Bent in 2001.

Gareth Sager sings and plays most of the instruments on ‘Slack Slack Music’ together with Ian Holford (The Nectarine No9 / Sexual Objects) on drums, while Fire Engines frontman Davy Henderson takes lead vocals on three tracks; ‘Her Saucepan Is Rouge’, ‘Dollar Hungry’ and ‘Not Since The Accident’.

Gareth Sager set off on a musical path on April the 7th 1977 with the purchase of his first baby blue Burns electrical guitar and the following year he formed Bristol’s The Pop Group, who for many were the first and the last après - punk band. After two seminal albums ‘Y’ and ‘For How Much Longer Must We Tolerate Mass Murder’ the group split in 1981 and Sager formed the critically claimed and influential Rip Rig and Panic. Since then he has formed bands such as Head, Pregnant, C.C. Sager, had a brief stint in The Nectarine No.9 and recorded an album with the legendary Jock Scot entitled ‘The Caledonian Blues’.


Visit the following link for a preview of the album with the single "Not Since the Accident":
- Not Since the Accident (single, MP3)

The album is available digitally at iTunes, eMusic, and other digital stores.

Looking at Music: Side Two (part two)

Just got back from MOMA and the Looking At Music: Side Two exhibit. While I'm glad for some of the folks I know who have stuff in the show, I have to say I was disappointed. Considering the venue, I expected more.

The show is much smaller than I would have guessed - corner of the second floor that isn't much bigger than my apartment. If you go, and I'm not suggesting that you don't, be prepared to check out some of the other exhibits going on just so you get your moneys-worth. Without trying to sound too cynical, it almost felt more like a marketing ploy by MOMA...by putting up some album covers, and displaying some rare magazines, they figure to attract a demographic that hasn't been visiting lately. There was a definite lack of depth to the whole thing. Been there, done that.

Previous shows of the same subject matter were much better - the Downtown Show in 2006, and the New Museum's East Village USA show back at the end of '04.

Peppermint Lounge July '82



Ephemeral New York posted
the above bit of lovely today. It's an ad for the Peppermint Lounge, appeared in the Village Voice, and dates back to July 1982. It's just the sort of thing that really got my 16 year old mind racing.

Christie's Pop Culture auctions - US & UK

As mentioned last week, Christies will be having another major Pop Culture/Music auction in the UK on July 1. And now preceding that here in NYC, they will have an additional auction of the same sort of stuff on June 23, with viewings June 19-22. The items can be viewed here and an ecatalog of everything can be viewed here. Below are what I found to be some of the more interesting items available.


The Who crew tour bag circa 1970's


The Who 1965


Velvet Underground 1966


Velvet Underground 1966


Television & Blondie UK tour 1977


Sex Pistols official 'zine 1977


Sex Pistols, Manchester UK 1977


Sex Pistols promo poster 1977


Little Richard et al 1957


John Lee Hooker 1975


James Brown 1966


The Jam 1977


The Factory Club repro 2003 (Peter Saville)


The Factory Club 1978/79


The Clash Manchester UK 1977


Can 1971


Buzzcocks 1977 (Linder)


Bo Diddley 1955


Studio 54 opening night invite 1977

New books! We got 'em!

I wanted to mention a couple of new books to keep an eye out for that I'm pretty excited about. But first off, I have to send out a huge congratulations to friend & writer Michael Patrick MacDonald whose All Souls: A Family Story from Southie has just been named as (lucky) number 13 in the top 100 essential New England books by the Boston Globe. See the list here. The Globe says, "A gut-wrenching memoir about the author’s anguished, tragedy-filled childhood in the housing projects of South Boston. McDonald’s simply-crafted story, as good a rendering of the Irish-American experience as anything ever written, achieves a haunting, lyrical grace through the unadorned way it depicts the tragedies of drug abuse, alcoholism, loss, survival and, ultimately, redemption" As Michael mentioned to me, behind Thoreau, and in front of heavy hitter classics. That's pretty heady company!

Now, as for the new books:

First up is a new one from Jon Savage, England's Dreaming Tapes, so far only available in the UK. In the spirit of Simon Reynolds follow up to Rip It Up & Start Again, entitled Totally Wired (and not available in US stores yet either), this new Savage collection ties together a lot of loose ends, and includes the full versions of many of the interviews Savage did in the late 80's while doing research for his monstrous history of punk, England's Dreaming, Revised Edition: Anarchy, Sex Pistols, Punk Rock, and Beyond.

As Savage himself says on his blog: "This month (June 2009) sees the publication of The England’s Dreaming Tapes by Faber and Faber. This book collects 58 of the interviews that I conducted during 1988 and 1989 for the research of England’s Dreaming. Comparatively little of each interview was used in the original book – in some cases, only 20% or so – and so there is plenty of extra material. The transcripts are not chopped up, as in many oral histories, but run in full – giving in some cases a sense of each interviewee and their story. It was not possible to include all the interviews in the new book for reasons of space, and so I will be running some of them on this site. Ed Kuepper, Edwyn Collins and Claude Bessy are already up, and to coincide with publication there are new interviews with Ben Westwood, Bob Gruen and Adele Bertei. More will follow in the future."

I would highly suggest subscribing to Savage's RSS feed to keep abreast of any added content.

Second up is Richie Unterberger's White Light/White Heat: The Velvet Underground Day by Day. I've just ordered my copy, but had already seen one in a store, and it looks pretty exhaustive.

The press release says: "Richie Unterberger' s "White Light/White Heat: The Velvet Underground Day-By-Day" is by far the most comprehensive book on the Velvet Underground ever published. The 368-page, 8 1/2" X 11"-sized book
covers the group's recording sessions, record releases, concerts, press reviews, and other major events shaping their career with both thorough detail and critical insight. Drawing on about 100 interviews and exhaustive research through documents and recordings rarely or never accessed, it unearths stories that have seldom been told, and eyewitness accounts that have seldom seen print, from figures ranging from band members to managers, producers, record executives, journalists, concert promoters, and fans. The July issue of MOJO magazine hails it as "an impressive means to reflect on the conundrum of what could be the ultimate cult band...detailed and anecdote-packed. "

Though "White Light/White Heat: The Velvet Underground Day-By-Day" has plenty of information about what happened when, it's not just a reference book. This chronologically sequenced overview of the band's life and times also offers weaves a wealth of passionate analysis and musical description into the research. The result is not just a document of their perpetually fascinating performances, hirings, and firings, but also insight into the creation of their music-the aspect of the Velvet Underground' s legacy, after all, that's by far the most enduring.

"White Light/White Heat: The Velvet Underground Day-By-Day" includes not only basic nuts-and-bolts facts, but also many behind-the-scenes stories as to how their songs were written and recorded; how their strikingly original stage shows were devised; how the band were perceived by reviewers at the time of their 1965-70 heyday, not just in
retrospect; and how the group as a whole underwent a most improbable, incessantly unpredictable evolution from the most avant-garde of bohemian origins into a highly accessible, yet still boldly creative, rock band by the time Lou Reed left the group he'd co-founded with John Cale in early 1965.

While the bulk of "White Light/White Heat: The Velvet Underground Day-By-Day" documents the period from 1965 to 1970 in which Lou Reed was the group's chief singer and songwriter, it also offers in-depth coverage of the individual members' surprisingly extensive (if mightily obscure) pre-1965 activities; the solo or non-VU projects in which they were involved between 1965 and 1970, which were numerous and often quite intimately related to what the group themselves were doing; and the ways in which the band's legacy was both influential and expanded upon after 1970, not only via the numerous releases of unissued Velvets material, but also through how the stature of their achievements grew and grew with a wealth of posthumous honors and tributes. Along the way, many unreleased concert and studio recordings are vividly
described; many obscure and unlikely concerts delineated; and many myths that have grown up around this most legendary of all cult bands untangled and dissected.

"White Light/White Heat: The Velvet Underground Day-By-Day" also features more than 100 illustrations, including reproductions of rarely or never seen photos, concert posters, letters, and other assorted documents and memorabilia. It's the ultimate history of the band that did more than any other to break down barriers between rock music and the avant-garde, incorporating electronic innovations, experimental
instrumentation and improvisation, and lyrics detailing the realities of sex, drugs, and rock'n'roll with greater skill and daring than anyone else.

Visit Richie Unterberger's website to view sample excerpts of chapters from the book; lists and commentary of
interest to Velvet Underground fans; and updates on his current and future projects."


Jonathan Richman presciently charts the status of the Velvet Underground in a 1967 issue of Boston music mag, Vibrations. Read his article here.

Jun 16, 2009

Randy goes to concerts

My friend Randy recently checked in with a couple of new concert photo sets. First up is long time garage faves, the Mummies, who have been off of the live circuit for quite some time. They are back now and packed them in at Southpaw in Brooklyn on June 10.

Randy says, "Outside of playing a festival in Spain last year, San Mateo's kings of "No Budget" garage rock, THE MUMMIES, haven't gigged together regularly since '92. Performing in front of a rowdy sold-out crowd at Southpaw in Brooklyn, these groovy ghoulies brought down the house with a potent mixture of their 7" singles and album tracks." See the full photo set here.

On June 8, he was at Prospect Park to witness the latest David Byrne extravaganza in full force.

Randy says, "David Byrne ushered in the 2009 "Celebrate Brooklyn!" summer festival at Prospect Park this past Monday, June 8th. The theme for the evening was Byrne's many collaborations with Brian Eno, most recently bearing fruit with last year's "Everything That Happens Will Happen Today" album. Most of the setlist was pulled from the legendary Talking Heads albums "Fear of Music" and "Remain In Light." The crowd was especially delighted to hear "Take Me To The River" and "Burning Down The House" during the encores. I personally was thrilled to hear "Air." As you'll see from these photos, age is agreeing with Mr. Byrne.

Don't miss the photos at the end of the set of Byrne in a tutu!"
See the whole photo set here.

Jun 15, 2009

God Save the Village Green by Keith Cullen

God Save the Village Green God Save the Village Green by Keith Cullen


My review



An exercise in downbeat nostalgia, familial troubles and societal repression, this debut novel tells the story of an Irish family in London, spanning the generations from the 1960's to the 1980's. A dysfunctional, but realistic, snapshot of that moment in time. Domestic violence, heavy drinking, alienation and isolation all have their place here. Despite its predictability, this is a powerful account of a family at war with itself and others. There is an unapologetic tone in this novel for life in the doldrums yet it is all the better for it.


View all my reviews.
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