Posts Tagged ‘cardboard brains’

December 15th, 2008

More photos from The Last Pogo 30th B-day bash

All photos in today’s blog by Edie Steiner…

VInce Carlucci, Cardboard Brains

Sandy MacFadeyen, Cardboard Brains

Andy Meyers, The Scenics

Ken Badger, The Scenics

Mickey de Sadist, Forgotten Rebels

Greg Trinier, The Mods

The B-Girls

Alex Topp, Steven Leckie and The Solutions!

Steven Leckie, Steven Leckie and The Solutions!

Alex Topp, Steven Leckie and The Solutions! Aldo Erdic, The Last Pogo Jumps Again

Kire Paputts, The Last Pogo Jumps Again

Greg Dick, The Ugly

Steve Koch, The Ugly

Sam Ferrara, The Ugly

Tony Torcher, Sam Ferrara, The Ugly

December 10th, 2008

Jack Rabid of The Big Takeover says…

While we toil away at Pogo Post Production, assembling our footage, scanning documents and buttons, securing rights and correcting wrongs, puzzling through the piles of video tape and film — we continue to get press for the first movie we did, THE LAST POGO, out on DVD around the world.

The latest kudos come from Jack Rabid of The Big Takeover magazine, the densely packed twice-yearly publication out of NYC.   We managed to make Jack’s Top Forty (alas, we were number 39, but still…)  Here’s the entire review:

“Wow!  I’ve been hearing about this 25-minute movie for 29 years, and it’s amazing to view it now!  What a window to a time that was rarely documented:  the pre-hardcore, original punk era when it was astonishingly fresh, creative, rule-busting, and shot full of newborn energy/excitement.  It’s Toronto, December 1, 1978, a three-camera, good sounding film (not video) of seven bands (one song each) playing at a farewell concert of premier punk club The Horseshoe Tavern.  The stars are Teenage Head and The Viletones, known from collectible singles — but not footage.  Lesser know openers prove equally supercharged, fascinating, and varied.  The Scenics open like a Canadian Velvet Underground;  Cardboard Brains are more The Weirdos vein;  The Secrets add a taste of R&B/Skulls/Vibrators/U.K. Subs groove;  The Ugly ripsnort through a Dead Boys/Ramones dirty shockwave; and The Mods are Jam clones to a t (or a suit and skinny tie!), but they’re excellent, fierce, and tight;  Nazi Dog‘s Viletones make magically menacing three-chord rock, and, in the one song they were allowed before the cops stopped the show and punters rioted, Teenage Head cooks a classic rock ‘n’ roll infested chaos.   Beyond that, is how vivid this film is, of a scene and underground moment it captures.  It’s not just the dancing and pogoing creatively dressed, jazzed, skinny people — no idiot slam-dancing and sneers — or the notorious sweaty buzz the crowd gets from seven wired, wiry bands, or the pleasant sight of punk’s front row ringed with women — led by impossibly cute punkette co-host Margarita Passion.   It’s that this was an art-meets-music lightning flash the likes of which has never been replicated.  Short but absolutely essential history comes alive!

December 7th, 2008

The Last Pogo available Canada, U.S., Spain, Japan and France.

Nat Records, Tokyo, Japan

Sorry, no time to chat!  Busy looking over a few hundred hours of footage, thinking about the missing pieces of the puzzle that was the punk rock scene in Toronto1976 – 1978, and starting to put together our feature doc THE LAST POGO JUMPS AGAIN, schedule to be completed in 2009.   There’s a million details.

———-

The Last Pogo (1978) is available at indie record stores in North America, Spain, and Japan — or on-line here.  Just click on the “Store” page, click in PayPal or write a money order (for only $12.00, cheap!), and a uniformed government worker will hand deliver your own copy of The Last Pogo:  The original 25 minute 1978 movie featuring Teenage Head, Viletones, Ugly, Mods, Secrets, Cardboard Brains and The Scenics;  a scorching 20 minute set by The Scenics in 1978;  a 30 minute commentary by Chris Haight of The Viletones and Secrets;  and a couple of hidden features.

Canada: Toronto: CIRCUS BOOKS & MUSIC 866 Danforth Avenue at Jones, 416-925-6116 CRIMINAL RECORDS 493 Queen Street West Toronto, ON M5V 2B4, Canada (416) 364-5380 ROTATE THIS 801 Queen Street West Toronto, ON M6J 1G1, Canada (416) 504-8447 HITS ‘N’ MISSES 860 Bloor Street West Toronto, ON M6G 1M2, Canada (416) 535-7817 FRANTIC CITY (formerly BABEL)  123 Ossington Ave, Toronto ON M6J 2Z2 (416)533-9138 SOUNDSCAPES 572 College Street Toronto, ON M6G 1B3, Canada (416) 537-1620 PAGES BOOKS 256 Queen St W, Toronto, ON M5V 1Z8 : 416-598-1447 WILD EAST 360 Danforth Avenue Toronto, ON M4K 1N8, Canada(416) 469-8371 SUNRISE RECORDS across Canada SUSPECT VIDEO, Markham Street, Toronto TUNEOLOGY, Main south of Gerrard, Toronto THIS AIN’T THE ROSEDALE LIBRARY, Kensington Market, Toronto.  Waterloo: Orange Monkey, 5 Princess St. W., 519-886-0939  Ottawa: CROSSTOWN TRAFFIC, 593-C Bank St  Ottawa Ontario  K1S 3T4 Oshawa: STAR RECORDS, 148 Simcoe Street South, Oshawa, ON L1H 4G9 (905) 723-0040 Hamilton, Ontario CHEAPIES RECORDS, 67 King St E., Hamilton ON, L8N 1A5, Phone #: 905-523-0296 DR. DISC, 20 Wilson Street, Hamilton, Ontario. CANADA L8R 1C5 Phone #: 905-523-1010 London, Ontario: GROOVES, 353 Clarence Street, London, Ontario, N6A 3M4, 519-640-6714, SPEED CITY, 299 Springbank Drive, 519-858-2680 Victoria, B.C.: Ditch Records, 635 Johnson Street, 250-386-5870 Vancouver, B.C.: ZULU RECORDS, 1972 W 4th Avenue, Vancouver, B.C. (604) 738-3232 SCRATCH RECORDS, 726 Richards Street, Vancouver, B.C. (604) 687-6355 HMV MEGASTORE, 788 Burrard Street, Vancouver, B.C. (604) 669-2289 Nanaimo, B.C.: FASCINATING RHYTHM, 51 Commercial Street, Nanaimo, B.C. (250) 716-9997 Edmonton: Megatunes, 10355 Whyte Ave, 780-434-6342, Freecloud, 10764 101 St., 780-429-1476 Calgary: Melodiya, 2523A 17 Ave SW, 403-246-8916, Sloth Records, 1508 4 St. SW 403-265-6585 Saskatoon: Vinyl Diner, 628 Broadway Ave., 306-525-4040  Winnipeg: Music Trader, 97 Osborne St., 204-475-0077 Regina: X-Ray, 2323 11th Avenue, 306-525-4040 Kingston: Jungle, 123 Princess St 613-547-1544, Montreal: Sonik, 4050 Berri  Fredericton: Backstreet 506-458-8832  St. John: Backstreet 506-693-9425,  Halifax: Divorce 2687 Fuller Terrace

US. COBRASIDE DISTRIBUTION, Glendale,  Calfornia, Phone (818) 548-9001 CARGO RECORDS AMERICA INC., 1525 West Horner Street Chicago, Illinois (888) 508-5265   INTERPUNK at www.interpunk.com,

Spain: BOWERY, C/ Luna, 18, Madrid, Spain. Phone 91-532-8360

Japan: ITA/NAT RECORDS, Tokyo, Japan;  RECORD SHOP ANSWER, Hase BLD NO. 2 NAKA-KU NAGOYA-City Aichi 460-0011 Japan, 052-241-0667

France:  SUGAR & SPICE, Paris, France, sugarandspice.fr

November 30th, 2008

The Second Last Pogo

Stage manager Nip Kicks;  photo by Jean Trivett

After two and a half years of shooting, we finally finished principal photography on THE LAST POGO JUMPS AGAIN by taking our swat-team of a shooting crew down to our old haunt, The Horseshoe Tavern, and shooting The Last Pogo 30th Anniversary Bash.

We’ve still got some interviews we need to do — you know who you are! — but we’re finally moving into post-production on our feature film.   There’s so many people to thank for all their devotion and hard work, that we’d rather wait for another to day to thank them all, because we know some are going to slip our mind.   But this thing would never have happened without the support and encouragement of all the kids from back in the day, and we never would’ve gotten anything shot without the tireless devotion of co-directors Aldo Erdic and Kire Paputts;  the backbone and smarts and heart of David Quinton Steinberg and Gary Topp;  and the support of everyone who’ve given us jpgs and film-clips and interviews and shared thier stories;  who’ve connected the dots, dotted their i’s and croosed their t’s.   We’ll save the credits for the movie.

Photo by Katrin Clark-Citroen

The Last Pogo 30th Anniversary Bash was great fun and a non-stop party.  There’s not too many shows we can recall where you announce a nine o’clock start time — and there’s 450 people waiting in line at 9:00.   When the doors opened, the place was packed, and our 16mm camera caught the first couple of hundred faces, both familiar and fresh, as they filed into the old haunt.

Each band stuck to the strict twenty-minute set, and it was truly without flaws — except for Moog Audio on Queen West who completely dropped the ball by neglecting to drop off the turntables and mixer for D.J. OPP.   After some desperate phone calls to other, more reliable businesses, Gary Topp called daughter (and member of Steven Leckie and the Solutions!) Alex, and she dug around Garys home office and sent down some mix CDs that were used to fill the gaps between bands.  Mixes by Topp can’t be topped.

Gary Topp;  photo by Jack Skellington

Ever since the Original 99 Cent Roxy Theatre, Gary has created tapes specifically for each show, whether it be a night of movies or a line-up of bands.  At the The Original 99 Cent Roxy, and later the New Yorker Theatre, the music before movies was played at the right volume, which usually meant “loud” but not always cranked up to eleven.   On the rare occasion (a couple of times a month) someone complained about the volume, it was “Sorry, you can have your money back if you want, but we like to play our music loud.”   “But I can’t even have a conversation!” they’d protest.    “Well…maybe you should go to another movie theatre then.”    After spending the last week planning out his evening, and rounding up over a 100 vintage 45s, Hits ‘n’ Misses owner DJ OPP realized it just wasn’t gonna happen, so he cabbed it back to his store, stashed his prize 45s, and came back to the Horseshoe where he vented his frustration in an interview in the men’s room.

Kire Paputts;  Toronto Star

While the bands were playing, Directors Brunton and Paputts were either outside getting shots, or down around the dressing room, luring people into the Men’s Can (quiet, nice light, interesting ambience) for impromptu interviews.   Caught with their pants down were:  The Ugly’s Tony Torture, DJ OPP, The Mods’ Greg Trinier, The Cardboard Brains’ Vince Carlucci, The Screwed’s John Borra, The Scenics’ Mike Young, and the Forgotten Rebels’ Mickey de Sadist — who we coerced into apologizing to everyone he dissed on camera in the original Last Pogo movie — and various others, including an impromptu “Everyone get outa here!” rant by The Wads’ and Dick Duck and the Dorks’ Paul Ecknes.  And we shot the gradual evolution of the towel machine throughout the night (starts intact; then bunching up on floor;  then completely on floor, in pool of mystery fluid.)

Colin Brunton;  photo by Jack Skellington

The bulk of the shooting at Last Pogo Jumps Again was handled by director Aldo Erdic and his three other shooters, covering the bands’ performances.   A generation in-between co-directors Kire Paputts and Colin Brunton, Aldo’s company To Be Scene has shot literally hundreds of hours in the past few years for a ton of bands — and a truckload of goodies for The Last Pogo Jumps Again.

Aldo Erdic;  photo tobescene.com

For all you film/tv techno geeks out there, we had four small Sony HD cameras covering the bands’ performances; a sound guy hooked into the sound board;  ambient sound from audience cameras;  for old-times’ sake, a 16mm Bolex camera worth about twenty minutes of Kodak Vision 2 footage; the workhorse Panasonic DVX 100A  MiniDV; a Sennehauser Wireless mike;   125 Watt Pocket Par portable light, with a chimera, filters, and three commando-style battery belts.  Total cooperation and buckets of sweat.  Three people shooting interviews, four people shooting the bands (not to mention the footage we’ve already been offered by audience), and lots of friends in the audience who would’ve helped out if called upon for duty.  There’s a lot of punks in TV and film.

Vince Carlucci and Sandy MacFadyen of Cardboard Brains;  photo Kevin Lamb

Zero of ZR04 opened the show with an upbeat and “lets get to it” intro to the show by dedicating it to Teenage Head’s Frankie Venom, The Ugly’s Mike Nightmare, ZR0$’s Tony Brighton, and Ruby Teases and opening band Cardboard Brains.  Guitarist Vince Carlucci gave a shout-out to M.I.A. lead singer John Paul Young, and fill-in singer Sandy MacFadyen did just swell (and a 360 degree flip from his performance at the original Last Pogo where as an audience member he yelled good-natured obscenities at Cardboard Brains.  (Vince is back in the hunt searching for JP.)   Sandy was in ]the 1977 band Swollen Members who’s lead singer, Evan Siegel, is featured in one of the “hidden features” in The Last Pogo DVD.  (WhaaAAA?!  You didn’t know there were “Easter Eggs” in the Special Features menu?)

Wayne Brown and Paul Eckness;  photo by Jean Trivett

Around 9:30 the Gothic Cowboy, ex-Fifth Column and Thee Immaculate Hearts (and original Last Pogo attendee) singer Wayne Brown walked into the club with Paul Eckness from The Wads, who walked into the club at a unique, tilting east.   A bouncer went after him, bemoaning his task, but determined to obey strict liquor laws (the Man) and came back empty-handed;  Paul had given him the slip.  “Man, you can smell the weed in there already.”    His partner shook his head in disgust and sighed.  “Maybe we’ll get Paul later.”  It was going to be a long night.

The Garys, Topp and Cormier;  photo by Jack Skellington

Mickey de Sadist was dressed to the nines, and amongst other gems, told the audience:  “Some of you girls look familiar, but not too familiar.  I think i mighta f*#ked your mother thirty years ago.”   The Forgotten Rebels ended their tight twenty-minute set with their classic “Surfin’ on Heroin” just as original Rebel and Hate-Filled Man Chris Houston, co-writer of “Surfin’” showed up with a flair for synchronicity and did some biz for the camera out front with Rojer Moxie Streets aka Roger Dirtbag aka Roger Fucking Streets.

Roger asked:  “Is The Last Pogo Jumps Again going to be the Chinese Democracy of punk films?”    For the record, we’re aiming to have the movie completed in 2009.

Mickey de Sadist;  photo by Kevin Lamb

Trouble in the dressing room! For some reason everyone kept blaming Cardboard Brain Vince Carlucci for taking off with the key to the dressing room, and as the Scenics waited around to get in the room so they could get ready to go on the stage, Pogo director Brunton make a feeble attempt to pick the lock, and finally barkeep and ex BopCat Teddy Fury fished it out from under the bar, the Scenics got settled in, and a few minutes later took their turn on the stage, blasting through a tight set after spending a week in Toronto laying down tracks for a new album, and ending the set with their last-minute version of “I Heard Her Call My Name”.   Drummer Mark Perkells’ 82-year-old mother drank beer at the front of the stage and watched her son keep the beat, while Andy Meyers jumped for joy.

Andy Meyers of The Scenics;  photo by Kevin Lamb

2008 audience; photo by Jack Skellington1978 audience, The Last Pogo

Former B-Girl (and now bass-player for the punky NYC-based New York Junk) Cynthia Ross flew in from the Big Apple to introduce The Mods, and in the twenty minute break between the Scenics and The Mods, ran into a couple of other B-Girls in the basement:  Xenia, there just for kicks, and Lucasta, getting ready to introduce Steven Leckie and the Solutions!

Sam Ferrara lends Cynthia Ross a prized bass;  photo by Kevin Lamb

Meanwhile, original Viletone and The Best Commentary Reader Ever (watch his stuff on The Last Pogo DVD) Chris Haight forgot his ticket at home, and drummer and man-about-town Cleave Anderson had to open the back door of the Horseshoe to sneak him in.  Yes, security was that tight.  In a perfect world, of course, Chris would’ve been on the guest list or better, up on stage playing, but just having him there was pretty cool.   Cleave, under the influence of beers and perhaps something else, with no intention of doing anything but having a good time, was quickly snagged by the B-Girls as their plot developed, and Ugly guitar-player (and –okay, this is confusing — Viletone in an interview portion of The Last Pogo movie, but not on stage at the time, go figger) Steve Koch was lured into the surprise attack that they were planning.

Cynthia introduced The Mods, the only band there that night featuring all of the original members, and without saying word one performed a crowd-rousing, tight, fast set of hits.  Dressed exactly the same as they did thirty years ago.   “That drummer is a maniac!”, said audience member Casey Sebert.  Well, Casey, if ya didn’t know, he’s also a highly respected lawyer and the main guy for getting this whole show happening.  It was a little odd to see David at the end of the night, still dripping sweat, carefully doing the accounting for the bands’ payday.  In true punk fashion, the box-office was split equally amongts all musicians, and everyone walked away with a couple of hundred thousand dollars.  Whoops, I mean pennies.  Or tenths of pennies.  Hey — it wasn’t about the money anyways!

Steven Leckie;  photo by Kevin Lamb

With much anticipation, Steven Leckie and the Solutions! were up next, and Leckie surprised everyone by ignoring his classics from the era for a few cover tunes, including a great version of Lou Reed’s Caroline Says, then a spoken word piece that mostly extolled the talents and importance to Toronto’s culture of The Garys Cormier and Topp, and then a couple of more tunes.   “The Solutions!” were Jim Masyck, the late Handsome Ned’s brother, on guitar, and keyboards and programmes by Alex Topp.  It was a nice touch for Alex to use glitter letters to spell out “Solutions, The” on the front of her keyboards.

Alex Topp of Steven Leckie and the Solutions!; photo Edie Steiner

The surprise of the evening was a couple of tunes by The B-Girls, who shoulda been at the first Last Pogo, but were in NYC at the time.  Joined by Ugly guitar-slinger Steve Koch and a very loosened-up Cleave Anderson, the girls belted out a few tunes and looked great.

Xenia and Lucasta of The B-Girls; photo by Kevin Lamb

The show went out with The Ugly with ex-Dream Dates Greg Dick replacing the late Mike Nightmare (“He’s good,” said drummer Tony Torture, “But he can’t do 100 push-ups like Mike could.”  They squeezed in an encore, and ended the evening with bassist Sam Ferrara inviting some friends on stage to join them.

David Quinton of The Mods with Greg Dick of The Ugly; photo by Kevin Lamb

Greg Dick serenades an audience member, while another has an epileptic fit; photo Kevin Lamb

June 6th, 2008

The terrible twos

As of June 6th, it’s been two years since we started shooting THE LAST POGO JUMPS AGAIN. Yup, that’s correct: we started shooting this opus on 6/6/6. Weird. Since then, shooting every weekend or so, with lots of help from other filmmakers, we’ve compiled around 150 hours of footage, discovered never-before-seen super-8 footage of The Last Pogo concert, heard never-before-heard tapes of the evening, re-connected with lots of old pals, made up with old flames, visited too many grave-yards, watched young Ollie Brunton turn from a boy into a man, had lots of laughs, and have been gifted with tons of photos, handbills, high-school essays, buttons, stories, lies, rumours and gossip and more.

As we get set to show THE LAST POGO for the first time in almost 30 years (at NXNE; Sunday June 15th, 5:30) we rediscovered those pesky things called “self-imposed deadlines”, and looking over a calendar, made a real adult decision: we’re now going to aim to have the new film completed early 2009, just in time for the Hot Docs festival. In the meantime, back at the ranch, we’ll be putting out a fairly awesome DVD of The Last Pogo and some surprises just in time for Christmas. We’re going to add on a couple of other shorts by filmmaker Colin Brunton: The Mysterious Moon Men of Canada, with soundtrack by Shadowy Men on a Shadowy Planet, and A Trip Around Lake Ontario, with soundtrack by Nash the Slash.

We’ve just got too much footage to go through and analyze and dissect and mess around with, and there’s still a ton of people we wanna talk to so we’re gonna do it right.

We’ve chatted with members of all the bands that were there that night — Scenics, Cardboard Brains, Secrets, Mods, Ugly, Viletones and Teenage Head — and lots of the irregulars that were such a part of the scene — Tank, Wayne Brown, Zero, Roger T-Bag, Margarita Passion, Gary Topp, Don Pyle, Tony Malone, Nash the Slash, Cleave Anderson, Blair Richard Martin, Barrie Farrell, Edie Steiner, and on and on. We’ve been slowly trying to catch up with some of the international bands that made their way through Toronto during those heady daze: so far Cheetah Chrome from The Dead Boys (interviewed in a grave-yard, natch), and Tommy Ramone from The Ramones (in front of the Pogo Mobile), and if you’re reading this, we hope to snag Hugh Cornwell from The Stranglers while he’s in town for NXNE. (Hugh? ARE you reading this? C’mon, Hugh, pleeeese! 15 minutes, that’s all we need!).

When we were at CFNY last week, ex-Mod, ex-Dead Boy and current kewl lawyer David Quinton and d.j. Bookie were talking up a big Last Pogo 30th bash this December, and we thought, “Hey…wait a minute…if we’re doing a feature film about the punk scene in Toronto circa 1976 – 1978…and it’s built around The Last Pogo concert…I got an idea! Maybe we should shoot this big party”. Like, duh!

And hey, dear reader, if you’ve got any cool stuff from that era we could film, or if you’ve got a story or gossip or rumours or whatever, drop us a line, and we’ll try and catch up to ya.

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Links

  1. Teenage Head
  2. Ugly
  3. Scenics
  4. Cardboard Brains
  5. B Girls
  6. Nash the Slash
  7. Gary Topp
  8. David Quinton
  9. Aldo Erdic
  10. Diodes
  11. Bob Segarini
  12. Ramones
  13. Dead Boys
  14. Cheetah Chrome
  15. Screwed
  16. Don Pyle
  17. Edie Steiner
  18. Blair Richard Martin
  19. Roger Fuckin Streets
  20. Tibor Takacs
  21. Stephen Zoller
  22. Suicide
  23. Kire Paputts
  24. Mag Wheel Records
  25. Mickey DeSadist Show
  26. Gothic Cowboy
  27. Fast Eddie Photography
  28. Zro4
  29. Molten Core
  30. John Cale
  31. Equalizing Distort
  32. Uncle Monk
  33. Haircuts & T-Shirts
  34. Tristan Orchard
  35. Dave Howard Singers
  36. Mongrel Zine
  37. Velvet Underground
  38. Punknews.org
  39. Joe Sutherland Rentals
  40. Demics
  41. Hugh Cornwell
  42. This Ain't Hollywood
  43. Sudden Death Records
  44. D.O.A.
  45. Allowed Sound Radio Show
  46. Billy Jamieson
  47. Mick Rock
  48. John Nikolai
  49. Rue Morgue Magazine
  50. Punk Globe
  51. Mods
  52. Model Citizen Zero Discipline
  53. Bryon Zammit
  54. Trouser Press
  55. Goddo
  56. Dream Tower Records
  57. Zippy the Pinhead
  58. Punk Turns Thirty
  59. City Lights Bookstore
  60. Patrick Cummins
  61. Dents
  62. Kinetic Ideals
  63. Andy Summers
  64. Andrew J. Paterson
  65. Martha and The Muffins
  66. Picks and Sticks Music
  67. Maximum Rock 'n' Roll
  68. Punk Haiku
  69. Marsden Global
  70. Richard Hell
  71. Bloodied but Unbowed
  72. Super-8 Porter
  73. Don Letts on BBC
  74. Dictators
  75. Warren Ellis
  76. Sphinx Productions/Ron Mann
  77. Paul Till Photography
  78. John Chuckman postcards
  79. Rick Trembles
  80. Johnny & The G-Rays
  81. Rodney Bowes
  82. Forgotten Rebels
  83. Dishes
  84. Tony Malone
  85. Gary Pig Gold
  86. New York Waste
  87. Viletones
  88. Strummerville
  89. Iconic Life
  90. Unison Benevolent Fund

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