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Showing posts with label rock 'n' roll. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rock 'n' roll. Show all posts

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Thursday Night in Greenwich Village: Jon Ginoli & "Deflowered: My Life in Pansy Division" at Barnes & Noble


From Harlem and hip-hop, we took the A train downtown five stops to Greenwich Village and queercore once we felt reasonably sure our brother was doing okay (although kidney stone surgery sounded horrific - you don't want to hear where they get it out from - and Marc's description of post-operative bladder problems led us to make a pit stop at the Time Warner Center's men's room).

We still made good time and were early for the 7:30 p.m. event at the Barnes & Noble on the corner of Sixth Avenue and Eighth Street - a bookstore we have fond memories of, for when it was B. Dalton back in March 1983, it was the scene of our Zephyr Press publication party and a reading for I Brake for Delmore Schwartz.

We were excited about seeing Jon Ginoli, there to perform and read from and talk about his new memoir, Deflowered: My Life in Pansy Division. Coming out (OK, odd choice of words) at the same time is the definitive gay rock band's seventh CD, That's So Gay, which this week's Newsweek has called "a catchy call to arms for the gays and lesbians who say they want a revolution while their iPods tell a different story."

Jon was already there, walking around in jeans and a red T-shirt, looking very down-to-earth and unpretentious - probably because he is and always was. He sat down in the front row by Glenn Morrow of The Individuals and a couple of other old friends, telling them his book tour "had been a blast most of the time - a couple of duds, but not for a while now."

We apologize for eavesdropping from the row behind them, but we can assure everyone that Jon's appearance tonight was definitely not a dud. If you can catch him at Bluestockings on Friday evening, his acoustic set at Cake Shop on Saturday night, or Sunday's NYC premiere of the Pansy Division documentary Pansy Division: Life In A Gay Rock Band at Monkeytown in our neck of the Williamsburg woods, we can practically guarantee you'll enjoy going.

We have fond memories of discovering Pansy Division while we working as a staff attorney at the Center for Governmental Responsibility at UF in Gainesville in the mid-'90s. One idyllic Friday afternoon we left work early and drove a convertible down I-75 on our way to an Authors Guild dinner at the home of Betty Castor, then president of the University of South Florida. Headed for Tampa on that gorgeous spring day, we listened to tapes (yes, tapes) of Public Enemy's Fear of a Black Planet, Green Day's Dookie, and Pansy Division's Deflowered. It was bliss.

During dinner that evening we ineptly tried to explain our enthusiasm for both hip-hop and punk music to our tablemates, including Kathy Castor (now a Florida congresswoman), novelist Gay Courter and filmmaker Phil Courter.

Realizing we probably express ourselves better on paper than by talking, that night in our motel off Fowler Avenue - nasty because there were no non-smoking rooms left - we began a Pansy Division-inspired story about a queercore band, a story that eventualy became "Boys Club," which appeared in the summer 1998 issue of Blithe House Quarterly and then in our 2000 collection, The Silicon Valley Diet, whose back cover description began: "The bassist in a gay punk band reflects on his troubled relationship with the band's guitarist/singer."

So we were thrilled to be seeing Jon Ginoli. After Kyle, the Barnes & Noble event coordinator introduced Jon (substituting "blankers" for the B-word when he quoted the lyrics "We're the buttfuckers of rock-and-roll, We want to sock it to your hole!"), Jon said he'd start reading from the prologue, which begins with them driving their rental truck out of Madison Square Garden and heading for the Lincoln Tunnel.

He reproduces his thoughts: "How did we get here?" They'd never planned for this, and if they had, it never would have happened. They got to open for Green Day and changed people's lives by being themselves, and the story of Pansy Division seemed to us not merely a collection of resonant anecdotes about the '90s music scene but a reflection of the metamorphosis in how society viewed gay people.

Rock and roll, Jon noted, always had an undercurrent that subverted male heterosexuality even as it normalized it. Think Elvis's moves and makeup, Little Richard's prancing, the Beatles' feminized hair, Mick Jagger's coyness, David Bowie, Prince, Freddy Mercury, Morrissey. But male rock stars were either not gay, wouldn't come out, or once they did, beat a hasty retreat. Jon said that complete gay history of rock is another book's story to tell.

Deflowered is Jon's story and Pansy Division's story, based on the stuff he's been telling his friends - how, coming of age sexually at a time when punk and queer were going mainstream, Jon created something even he almost thought was impossible: a gay rock band. He tried to go out on his own as a performer in San Francisco first, and then found bassist Chris Freeman by putting a classified ad in an alt-weekly.

Pansy Division, Jon said, was probably the least likely of the four bands Chris was in to succeed, but Chris had the nerve to play Jon's songs at a time when gay culture was under a right-wing attack. But Jon felt the '90s would be more joyful than the '80s, and he didn't want to write heavy, angry lyrics. Only after a few months did Chris remark, "Hey, this song can have political meaning," to which Jon responded: "Dude, it took you long enough."

Jon decided early on that he didn't want costumes, wigs, makeup or flamboyance. In San Francisco, Pansy Division probably could have gotten more attention that way, but he said he was from Peoria and Chris from Aberdeen, WA (Kurt Cobain's hometown) and they felt like jeans and T-shirts were more them. Punk meant being "down to earth, get to the point, cut to the chase." What he hoped for was to produce the kind of music he got enthusiastic about when he heard it, the "Ya gotta hear this" kind.

Their first album and tour went pretty well, but the gay press didn't know what to do with them since their worldview was at odds with the gay mainstream (blogger's Freudian slip: before correcting the typo, the last word read "meanstream"). In Chicago, the gay weekly Windy City Press only grudgingly interviewed them once straight newspapers had written about Pansy Division and then the WCP editor killed the piece because he was offended by Jon's criticism of Judy Garland.

As Jon said, he had no beef with Garland, just the way an older generation of gays had fetishized her; he felt it was clinging to the past, a way of seeing ourselves as victims. (As someone who was 18 forty summers ago when Garland died - and who later started hanging out in the Village that summer of the Stonewall riot - we thought she was OK but were mystified at Garland- and later Streisand-worship among gay men. We also recall going to see Boys in the Band in August 1969 and realizing that a part with one of the gay characters imitating Garland had to be changed to make him imitate Ruby Keeler, which wasn't exactly the same thing. . .)

Jon reported other ways the gay establishment dissed Pansy Division, from eye-rolling because the band supposedly wasn't charging enough for their CDs to a well-known book about gay musicians whose author felt Pansy Division weren't important enough to be profiled in the volume - unless, cough cough, they would come up with the money to buy their way in. Needless to say, Pansy Division don't play that game.

In the book are some excerpts from Jon's diary on tour, like a July 11, 1994 entry from their tour opening for Green Day - and throughout, Jon praised Green Day for not just choosing Pansy Division to go on tour with them back then (that's how we learned of the band) but for standing up for them when things got rough. On the tour, the gay band would be heckled. (Sometimes they spotted GOD DIDN'T MAKE ADAM AND STEVE and AIDS KILLS FAGS DEAD T-shirts in the audience - or on the security guards assigned to them.) When audience members shouted, "You suck!" Jon replied cheerfully, "Of course we suck."

Jon wrote about the mosh pit that night in Winnipeg and others on the tour and the high school girls who loved Chris and the sweaty, shirtless boys - all the teens, when they talked to band members, couldn't understand why they didn't watch Saved by the Bell. Generation gap. Jon also reported about a tall, hunky "college kid" who flirted with him outrageously during a Nashville appearance: blowing kisses, vamping, etc. After the show, when they met up, Jon asked him how old he was, the kid brightened and said, "Oh, I just turned 15 two weeks ago!" Jon wrote: "Needless to say, I slept alone that night."

The December 2, 1994 opening for Green Day at Nassau Coliseum provided a great show and great diary entry. (We are humiliated to admit that the first concert we ever saw there was John Denver. Hey, it was the Nixon administration!) Backstage, Jon thought he saw Joey Ramone, but it was Howard Stern ("nice" - and Howard referred to the band favorably on his show). Before a sold out crowd of 14,500, Pansy Division was greeted with cheers and applause and it was the best reception they'd had.

Jon also read an excerpt about the Madison Square Garden concert soon after:
The show was a multi-artist extravaganza: faux-alternative station Z-100’s Christmas bash. The lineup from top to bottom: Green Day, Hole, Weezer, Melissa Etheridge, Bon Jovi (gag, choke, splutter, barf), Sheryl Crow, Toad The Wet Sprocket, the Indigo Girls and us. When Green Day found out Bon Jovi was on the bill, they were fit to be tied. This was everything we had ever fought against. This was an alternative station? Z-100 tried to throw us off the bill, but Green Day said they wouldn’t do the show if we didn’t get to play. We’ll always be grateful for the many times they stood up for us that year.

We got a 10-minute slot at 7 p.m., and it was amazing. We squeezed in four songs. The crowd was still coming in; the place was two-thirds to three-quarters full (about 12,000 people) for our set and it was tremendous, loud applause and loud cheers. It was as short as a breath, though, and then it was over. But we’d never dreamed of playing such a place, and it was an incredible experience. If we’d had the goal of playing such a place, we’d never have done the kind of music we were doing, so being there gave us a special kind of satisfaction.

Jon told us dishier stuff about Bon Jovi, about watching him warm up for the concert by punching the air, Rocky-style; about the women with them, with fake orange tans and unnatural-looking breasts; and about their many bodyguards and entourage that displaced the other bands.

There were other good stories Jon told - searching for a drummer for the band, their later "lowkey" years, surprising bandmate Luis by beating him in a club's "hot butt" contest - and we'll be interested in reading them all. He also took his guitar and sang a few songs, including "Twinkie Twinkie, Little Star" from the new CD That's So Gay (remember, the one Newsweek said great things about).

Jon exuberantly sang other songs, too - old ones, new ones -- from the sweet but not sentimental "Life Lovers," an implicit critique of normalizing monogamy and marriage as the be-all and end-all, and the classic "Bad Boyfriend" to the manic energy of the voice of the high school football player on the hilarious "Pat Me on the Ass."

We've gone to lots of worthwhile readings, but tonight at Barnes & Noble, Jon Ginoli gave us a good show that would have been well worth paying for. He's a terrific raconteur, a great performer and a real mensch. Check out his book, the CDs, and the documentary DVD. Long live Pansy Division!

Friday, August 22, 2008

Thursday Night in Coney Island/ Brighton Beach: Huey Lewis & The News at Asser Levy/Seaside Park


It was 7:40 p.m. when we got out of the F train at the West 8th Street/Aquarium station last night to see Huey Lewis and The News at the last Seaside Summer Concert of this 30th anniversary season. Due to teaching, we were unable to see earlier shows featuring our role model Brian Wilson as well as Liza Minelli (we know a secret about her and Desi Arnaz, Jr. - unless everyone else knows it by now), Peter Frampton (or, as one of our brothers used to call him, God), Smokey Robinson and others, and last Thursday's salsa concert was canceled due to the monsoon.

But we were thrilled to make it back to the old neighborhood. Now we didn't exactly live in Coney Island/Brighton Beach - the venue for the concerts, Asser Levy/Seaside Park, straddles the border between the neighborhoods - but many of our friends and relatives had apartments there, and we spent most of childhood, adolescence and twenties nearby in southeastern Brooklyn and we feel this is "home."

Also, though our seatmates had heavy-duty body art, they were all at least 20 years too old and 40 pounds too heavy to be hipsters. The audience for Huey Lewis was mostly baby boomers, with some Gen Xers and the cooler senior citizens of the Greatest Generation.

People under 30 who were not children were in short supply, and while we don't subscribe to the rule that you should never trust anyone under 30 - we'd had lunch with a 25yo friend at the Hummus Place on MacDougal Street just a few hours before and texted another before leaving Dumbo Books HQ in the evening - sometimes it's nice to leave the kids home.

After all, we're old enough to have known Marty Markowitz when he was a big macher in Brooklyn College student government - way more than the 30 years ago when Marty founded the Seaside Concert Series as little show at Midwood Field (where we suffered yearly humiliation by running last in P.S. 203 Field Day races back in the Kennedy administration) featuring unemployed local musicians (um, we know one who's now a real estate developer).

So we know Marty, in his signature white jacket - is it a sport coat or a dinner jacket? we've never figured that out - would go on for a while, introducing every Brooklyn pol he could, like City Councilmember David Yassky (running for controller along with 43 other Democrats) and State Senator Carl Krueger (again with the kvelling that Marty would make a great mayor, Carl? you must be angling to be sanitation commmish or something) and all the local business people, Seaside Concert sponsors, community activists (some of whom we recall from our days in the Walt Whitman Independent Democratic Club back in the early '70s). And he did.

But eventually - while we decided to spring for the five dollars to get one of the seats (lots were empty; maybe they should charge three dollars and more people would go for it rather than standing along the railing or sitting in benches on Surf or Seabreeze Avenues) - Paul Thorn, the "very special guest" (read: opening act) - came onstage. We could see him from where we were sitting but mostly watched him on the screen.

Paul Thorn, in case you don't know - Kris Kristofferson called him "the best-kept secret in the music business - is a Mississippian son of a Pentecostal preacher who twenty years ago famously fought the newly-middleweight Roberto Duran in Atlantic City and lasted 6 of 10 rounds in what the New York Times called a "keep-busy" match for Duran.

Since then, he's been one of the South's best singer/songwriters, performing music about love, loss, and trailer-park fornication.

Having spent a number of years in North Florida (i.e., Georgia) and months in Arkansas and Louisiana, we were glad to hear a good Southern accent for a change. We first heard Paul on the radio program we used to wake up to in Eureka Springs, the station where the DJ was mournful the morning of September 11: "They were Yankees, but they were our Yankees." (We couldn't quite get the signal for the Fayetteville NPR affiliate.)

So we like his stuff. As Huey Lewis says in this video, there ain't nothing not to like about Paul Thorn.

We were on a long line for the portable toilet during the intermission while Marty, guess what, talked more and introduced what seemed like every resident of Brighton 8th Court, but he wasn't so interminable that we were about to enter the pee-sanctorium when Huey Lewis and The News came on with "Heart of Rock & Roll."

Unlike Marty, our musical tastes didn't end with the Beatles, but we were close to 30 when we became aware of Huey Lewis via MTV, top-40 radio, and of course the classic hits "The Power of Love" and "Back in Time," from Back to the Future, which we saw at the 83rd Street Quad in one of our Upper West Side '80s summers.

As a respite from our endless self-referential rambling, we'd like to quote someone else at the concert, the prolific and perceptive Listmaker, who actually got to meet Huey, and his friend Jim, who took the pic that proves it:
The Coney Island show on Thursday night was great. He ended with a 1-2-3 punch of Back in Time, a slowed down Do You Believe in Love? and a revved up version of Workin' for a Livin'. I was amused to hear that Brooklyn president Marty Markowitz pronounces Huey the same way that Stoone Groove does - You-ey.

When I was a kid, a friend of the family told me that his friend worked backstage at Merriweather Post Pavilion and that Huey was a dick. I remember being quite upset by that for a long time. I'm proud to say 24 years later that that guy had no idea what he was talking about. Huey was as friendly as I had always hoped. Oh Huey.

Jim:This was a truly special night. Huey was much friendlier than I ever would have expected.

I know Mitch is partial to Power of Love, but Heart and Soul was the highlight of the show for me.

Listmaker:heart and soul was indeed pretty fantastic. hit after hit from this man.

i mean - 2 of the first 3 songs were heart of rock and roll and i want a new drug! pineapple express sounded pretty damn good too i thought. oh yeah, and jacob's ladder! what a show.

And our friend Ray Johnson of a blog we subscribe to, Sheepshead Bites, scored an autographed concert program (which you can see on his complete post) after he hung around to see Huey after the show:
I was happy that a few early-to-bedders left before you had a chance to perform your encore, since it let me move up closer to the stage, where I could see from the great shape you're in why 'it's hip to be square'. . . Best of all was when you, the only headline performer to do so this seaside season, came out after your meet and greets backstage, to say 'hi' to your fence-fans. . . It was so nice of you to reassure all the clamoring autograph seekers that you would give each one of us your John Hancock. Even though, you couldn't put my name on the program cover, you did bring your own permanent marker for the autograph -- I really appreciate that. . . I read that you were born in New York city, and your true born-in-New York spirit has shown through, last night. Please tell me that you, too, are from Sheepshead Bay.


It really was a great show and people near us had taken enough of their arthritis meds (we want a new drug) to be really rockin' out. We were very happy to have gotten to this summer's last Seaside concert, though it filled us with nostalgia - not least because we could see, just beyond the stage, the Trump Village apartment building where, at a New Year's Eve party in the last hour of 1970, we first, um, really messed around seriously with a girl as snow enveloped the streets of Coney Island below.

We were in that apartment again at the start of this summer, at an evening shiva call following a morning funeral at a Russian-owned chapel on Coney Island Avenue. Our friends' father, a Greatest Generation World War II vet, was a much-beloved teacher and assistant principal in Williamsburg for many years. He and his late wife were also our snowbird Arizona neighbors. Their three sons and six grandsons were of course sad that night, but he'd had a good life for 90 years.
*
As we waited for the Q train at Ocean Parkway after leaving the concert, we felt elegiac. Another summer is ending and we're all older. It's as simple as that.

Before you know it the kids are all grown
And married off with kids of their own
And it's all in the past
It's as simple as that
You've reached the autumn of your life
And all that's left is you and your wife
And a dog and a cat
It's as simple as that

But simple can be wonderful - even if the money goes so fast it ain't funny.

Friday, July 20, 2007

Thursday Night in Williamsburg: Domenic Priore and "Riot on Sunset Strip" at Spoonbill & Sugartown


This report by Richard Grayson first appeared on Jeff Bryant's blog Syntax of Things (go there for the original links) on Friday, July 20, 2007:

"Rock history is fucked up," says Domenic Priore, author of the terrific Smile: Brian Wilson's Lost Masterpiece and other books, because its standard narrative about the 1960s West Coast scene concentrates on San Francisco's admittedly immense contributions to the virtual exclusion of the energy and innovations found in Los Angeles.

Last evening I walked over to Bedford Avenue here in Williamsburg, which we must never forget is the hipster capital of the known universe, for an appearance by Domenic at Spoonbill & Sugartown, the quirky and eclectic art bookstore. It's got an incredible selection of art, design and architecture stuff. Before the reading, I spent 15 minutes playing with a pop-up architectural history of the world, the perfect gift for the kid who wants to be Frank Gehry or Zaha Hadid.

Domenic Priore's new book is Riot on Sunset Strip: Rock 'n' Roll's Last Stand in Hollywood, which presents a revisionist rock-history view of the years 1965-66 by focusing on L.A.'s vibrant youth culture, centered on Sunset Boulevard clubs -- among them, Pandora's Box, Trip, and It's Boss -- that introduced and nurtured such acts as The Doors, The Byrds, The Turtles, Buffalo Springfield, The Mamas and the Papas, and others.

I was 14 and 15 back then, entranced both by the mod scene and the kids I saw dancing on such TV shows as "Shindig," "Shebang" and "Shivaree." LSD was still legal till October 1966 but life seemed so surrealistic to some teens that chemical enhancement was nice but not necessary.

Eventually the conservative city fathers felt things on the Strip were getting "out of hand" (reefers and race-mixing!) so the LAPD came in and busted young heads, and city supervisors used their zoning powers to basically shut down the clubs and the whole scene. (The clubs got away with having teens there by serving food and ID'ing everyone, stamping underage hands with the purple admonition "NO BOOZE FOR YOU!")

Domenic explained that when Las Vegas became the venue for Sinatra & company, their contracts with Vegas Strip hotels forbade them from continuing to perform regularly at Sunset Boulevard nightclubs like Dino's Lodge, Fred C. Dobbs, The Playboy Club and Ciro's -- which thus were free to morph into places that concentrated on the very different music of a younger generation.

The evening's highlight was a slideshow, with appropriate subtle background music featuring some dreamy favorites of the period, a slide show of Sunset Strip in the 1960s, with photos of the very young Beatles, Sonny & Cher, Mike Nesmith of the Monkees, the Doors, Marvin Gaye, Nico and the Velvet Underground, Turtles, and lots of Buffalo Springfield, along with the luxe exteriors and cool interiors which grew more and more psychedelic until the scene's end, its Griffith Park beads-and-good-vibes love-ins contrasting with the violence of the LAPD raids and the ultimate riots.

My personal favorite slide: a marquee featuring, among others, a group I liked a lot but probably haven't thought about in thirty years: The Peanut Butter Conspiracy.

The producers and movers and shakers behind this short-lived but exciting scene -- which affected fashion, art and design almost as much as music -- went on to take part in Monterey Pop and other seminal events that shaped the soundtracks of more than one generation's lives.

If you're interested in American rock history, Riot on Sunset Strip is an interesting addition to the literature about the 1960s West Coast scene -- at least to one old fart who can't help affecting a cheesy style when he writes about this stuff.

And if you're in Williamsburg and looking for an interesting bookstore, Spoonbill & Sugartown is the best one going on.