Posts Tagged ‘vince carlucci’

January 1st, 2012

That Was The Year That Was

In January we got some great photos of The Government (Flat Tire, Hemingway Hated Disco Music);  add Bobbe Besold as yet another of the terrific photographers there were in Toronto back in the mid-seventies.   Our total count so far is 612 photos spread over our four hour movie.

We discovered http://chuckmanothercollection.blogspot.com/ and John Chuckman’s awesome collection of postcards.  Unfortunately, not enough dpi to show on the big screen.

How cool was Yonge Street back in the mid-seventies?!  Note that this was even before the “famous” neon record that Sam the Record Man erected in the late seventies.   As with much of what made Toronto cool, virtually none of the stores in this picture still exist.

The Last Pogo Jumps Again co-filmmaker (along with Kire Paputts) Colin Brunton sketched out this rough map as a guide for Montreal artist (and ex-punker from the band American Devices) Rick Trembles in order to create a slicker full-colour map.

We tried (and failed) to get permission to feature a few seconds of the Bunuel/Dali short masterpiece Un Chien Andalou.  Too bad.  Many people will recall Nash the Slash performing for the first time at Gary Topp’s Original 99 Cent Roxy Theatre his musical accompaniment to the film.  Jaws dropped.  Five years later, Pogo filmmaker Colin Brunton would copy the famous eye-slitting scene for his first film, a short called Bollocks that he made with Liz Aikenhead.   Bollocks was in part shot at Club Davids, the infamous gay bar by night, punk bar by later in the night, and featured performances by The Viletones and The Ugly, and appearances by scene notables Wayne Brown and Mr. Shit.    Brunton purchased a sheep’s eye for the scene, just like Lou and Sal did;  a safety pin was used instead of a razor.  Good times.

A fascination with the 1976 – 1980 punk/new-wave scene in Toronto continued as (excellent) photographer Don Pyle’s photo album Trouble in the Camera Club was released in April 2011.

We got our first draft of the map of Toronto circa 1977 from Montreal artist Rick Trembles.   He also drew up maps of Southern Ontario, the U.S., and Canada, pointing out some of the punk hotspots, i.e. CBGB’s and Max’s Kansas City in NYC, The Smiling Buddha in Vancouver and the cities Toronto, Hamilton and London in Southern Ontario.

In April 2011, co-filmmaker Kire Paputts packed up the equipment and took the bus down to Philadelphia (that’s just how we roll, people) to re-interview Toronto scenesters Freddy Pompeii, guitarist for the original line-up of The Viletones, and later lead singer of The Secrets;  and Margarita Passion, who used to own New Rose, the cool clothing and record store hang-out on Queen Street East back in the day.

Rick Trembles continued to awe us with his comic-strip rendition of the day back in 1977 when Joey Shithead and his band The Skulls (who would soon later morph into D.O.A.) borrowed the stage at the infamous Gasworks Tavern (the name “Gasworks Tavern” now copyright Mike Myers if you can believe it) from the power pop trio Goddo.  Needless to say, neither was impressed with the other.

Shock Theatre impresario, artist, filmmaker, LSD and music fan William “The Count” Cork showed filmmakers Brunton and Paputts the crypt at Mt. Pleasant Cemetary that he and Ugly singer Mike Nightmare slept in for a six month period back in 1978 or so.  Bill told us that a Vietnamese colonel told him that because they slept under the surface of the ground at a cemetary, they were able to become invisible.   Brunton and Paputts then think:  “Intervew of the year.”

In May, sad news:  super fan and collector Imants Krumins passed away.   Later in the year, the Forgotten Rebels would dedicate their live CD to him.  Much beloved in Hamilton and Toronto, we managed to snag an interview with him when we started this project in 2006;  Imants supplied us with tons of handbills and info.  He’s credited as “Lead Archivist” in the credits to our film.

In June 2011 one of the last band interviews was conducted when Brunton and Paputts drove down to the Beaches area of Toronto to speak with Michaele Jordana and Doug Pringle of The Poles.  Noteworthy for the anthemic single C.N. Tower, The Poles were always slightly controversial, but not how they’d like:  there were quite a few punkers in Toronto that didn’t feel that, somehow, they were as genuine, say, as The Viletones, Teenage Head, The Ugly, Scenics, Martha and the Muffins, The Secrets, The Mods, etc. were.   So — the question of validity was asked, feelings were hurt, and months later, after not being able to come to terms for a music license for C.N.Tower (ridiculous, by the way!) the whole segment and any mention of the band whatsoever was dropped from the film.

We found a photographer in NYC with the uber-NYC moniker Nicky L who licensed us some Super-8 footage of The Ramones at the New Yorker, September 1976.  With bootleg audio of the same show from Randy Johnston and Gail Wetton (who also gave us the ticket stub above), we pieced together the exact moment they hit the stage and changed Toronto music oh those three decades ago.  We’re currently trying to negotiate a deal for the music and are actually 3/4 of the way there.  But that last quarter is a bitch.  More on that later.  Ugh.

Cardboard Brains copyright Vince Carlucci.

After several somewhat unsettling emails from Cardboard Brains‘ lead singer and co-founder (along with guitarist Vince Carlucci) John Paul Young, we gave up hope of ever getting permission to use an original Brains song in the movie.  Boo!  We’re currently scratching our heads on how to solve that one, but hey — out of the 50 songs we wanted to license for the movie, we’ve only lost about four (and we’re still continuing to fight for three of those) so if our movie were, like,  The Toronto Blue Jays, and the filmmakers were the fourth and fifth batters?  We’d be knocking it out of the park!

Our very first Skype interview and our very last band interview, was with the lovely and talented Sally Cato, live from her apartment in NYC.  Former lead singer of The Concordes, The Androids, and later, post-Toronto, Smashed Gladys, Sally gave us a great intervew, and some Super-8 footage of The Androids to boot.  Hey-o!

Picked up a remastered live track of Drastic Measures from ex-Measures and ex-Dishes Tony Malone;  found some hilarious Super-8 footage of the Forgotten Rebels.  And in a thrilling coup, received permission to use an old SCTV clip of the Agoraphobic Cowboy, Rick MoranisThanks, SCTV!  Thanks Mr. Moranis!

Nash the Slash, copyright Paul Till.

Photographer Paul Till sent us a few more pictures of Nash the Slash, for the ‘before and after’ style we’ve been using throughout the film with people we’ve interviewd.  Of course with Nash, he looks eerily similar in photos from 1977 as he does in the interview we did with him in 2007.  Nash was actually scheduled to play The Last Pogo in 1978, as, like the rest of the bands that evening (Scenics, Secrets, Cardboard Brains, Mods, Ugly, Viletones, Teenage Head) he was one of promoters The Garys’ favourites, but punched a wall in his loft above The Original 99 Cent Roxy Theatre and broke his hand.  

We had our third interview with Dishes and Drastic Measures songster Tony Malone in September, visiting him and his pit-bull Bella in Toronto’s west end.  We needed to clarify a point about The Dishes, arguably the first band in Toronto who felt New-Wavish, and who clearned a lot of decks on Queen West for OCA bands and others.

In October we recalled the death three years earlier of Teenage Head singer Frankie Venom.   Around the same time, we finally finalized the Teenage Head songs (seven versions of six songs;  hey, we don’t fuck around!) and completed the deal with Gordie Lewis.  In December we found some more footage (beautiful 16mm black and white) of The Original 99 Cent Roxy Theatre through Facebook pal Talis Briedis which we hope to incorporate.

And now we’re just waiting for a handful of release forms to come back to Pogo H.Q.  Once done, we start the sound edit and mix, and then scheme up the release pattern and festival plans.  Our near six year task is almost done.  Which is bittersweet.

Cheers

March 15th, 2011

2000 Feet and Closing: Visibility 1-7

We did one more interview last week with the Cardboard Brains‘ guitarist and co-founder Vince Carlucci.   We’ve got just two more people on our wish list before we finally stop production and focus on post.

October 25th, 2010

I Like Living In Scarborough

Swollen Members at the Shock Theatre;  photo by Paul Till

Big thanks to photographer Paul Till for the photo of Evan Siegel twisting to a Swollen Members tune at the Shock Theatre in 1977, and to Cardboard Brains’ Vince Carlucci for digging up this old newspaper ad.   Yes kids, we made our own handbills without the help of a computer and not everyone looked what you might have thought a “punk” (or in the case of Swollen Members, “Minimalist New Wave”) looked like.  Frankly, there weren’t too many of us who could have afforded a black leather jacket even if we wanted to.

Newspaper ad courtesy Vince Carlucci

Handbill courtesty Vince Carlucci

Another photo by Paul Till;  check out his link on the right.

June 24th, 2010

Between the Buttons

Best punk band ever.

Today co-director Kire Paputts heads up for visit #4 with legendary promoter Gary Topp to shoot buttons and other memorabilia in Topper’s joint.   Meanwhile, Cardboard Brains’ Vince Carlucci’s photo exhibit continues at Oz Studios at 134 Ossington Avenue.  This Friday they’re gonna screen The Last Pogo Jumps Again‘s second-unit director Aldo Erdic’s half-hour doc Circa ’77:  The Diodes along with The Last Pogo, and dvds will be on sale.

Ich bin ein Berliner

And just think of the adventure it might be actually getting to the place, what with snipers on rooftops, 12,000 cops (many of whom are from out of town and can be witnessed gawkin’ at all the big buildings, hyuck hyuck) crazy last-minute re-routing of traffic, and a shitload of protesters in various parts of the city trying to get the attention of the Golly G-20 “leaders” in town for the big photo-op.  (I mean, really.  They couldn’t just set up big-ass monitors at home and Skype the whole thing?)

On another tangent, remember how you might actually get beaten up — or at the least be the victim of snickers and withering stares — dare you play Ramones or Iggy Pop or New York Dolls back in the day?  And how it feels kind of weird and sadly interesting that these days you can’t go to a professional sports event without hearing the familiar Hey Ho Let’s Go as the psyche-em-up music?   Well, it gets better.  The commercial for Major League Baseball’s 2010 All-Star Game features “…a boozy version…” of California Sun by The Dictators.  Brains-behind-the-band Adny Shernoff pointed out on his Facebook page:  “A few weeks ago the world stopped spinning for .34 seconds which allowed a rare vortex to shift space and time ever so slightly.  This extraordinary event allowed the demo that earned The Dictators a record deal many years ago to be surreptitiously inserted into the promotion for this years MLB All Star game…the rock gods are pleased!

June 15th, 2010

No Fun

Courtesy of Aldo Erdic

Today The Last Pogo Jumps Again co-director Kire Paputts (with wing-man Richard Fiander handling second camera) hangs out in Grange Park with some of The Diodes, and An Awesome Friend Of The Project tries to get us a few moments with Godfather Iggy Fucking Pop on Friday, ’cause we need to hear his thoughts on all things punk, and find out what specific type of acid everyone was on when Iggy And The Stooges played the Victory Burlesque back in 1974.

Thanks to either Molten Core or Aldo;  shit, can’t remember.

Make sure to join ten thousand other people at Dundas Square this Saturday to watch still-thriving Iggy play a set in Times Square Jr.  Before you do that, you can catch The Diodes and The New York Fucking Dolls out in Burlington — we’re hoping for a word with Mr. Johansen at that one.

Gary Topp, ’73 or so, courtesy of Gary.

On Thursday, Kire heads out and visits the legendary Gary Fucking Topp for session number three.  We’ll be pouring through Topper’s archive of stuff, and putting a few more pieces of the puzzle together.  The New York Dolls in ’73, Iggy in ’74, Gary Topp at the same time — they are some of the major seeds that were planted and then sprouted into what we now call the Punk Era in Toronto’s history.  You won’t find this stuff out at the Toronto Archives, ladies and germs.

Aldo Erdic by Eddie Smith, copyright etc

That afternoon at 3:00 The Last Pogo Jumps Again second unit director Aldo Erdic is showing off his half-hour film Circa 1977:  The Diodes at the NFB Theatre as part of NXNE.  This premiere screening will be followed by a rare showing of Amos Poe’s 1975 Blank Generation, the film that, in part, inspired Gary Topp to starting bringing NYC bands to Toronto.  It’s all connected, man.

Singer John Paul Young of The Cardboard Brains;  photo copyright Vince Carlucci.

On Sunday Oz Studios, continuing to show ex-Cardboard Brains’ Vince Carlucci‘s awesome collection of photos — Your Pretty Face Is Going To Hell (named after a song by one James Osterberg) is going to have a rare screening of the original 16mm print of The Last Pogo.  DVDS will be on sale:  one for $12.00, two for $20, and 619 for $4333.   Hey-o!

June 9th, 2010

Your pretty face is going to Hell

Cardboard Brains;  photo by Vince Carlucci

Former Cardboard Brains guitar-slinger Vince Carlucci‘s got stuff in a gallery!  “Your Pretty Face Is Going To Hell” is a collection of pretty pics he took from 1977 to 1980.   Artists include Iggy Pop, David Bowie, Lou Reed, Deborah Harry, Patti Smith, John Cale, The Viletones, Teenage Head, The Ugly, Cardboard Brains, The Ramones, Frank Zappa, and The Diodes.  Opening night is Thursday, June 10, from seven ’til eleven, and it runs to June 24.  Oz Studios, 134 Ossington, curated by photographer Joe Fuda.

Classic!

Once you’ve taken a look at some of Vince’s pics, you should not miss Andy (Adny) Shernoff, ex-Dictator and ex-cellent songwriter as he spins tales and plays acoustic guitar at Mitzi’s Sister in Toronto, starts at ten.   Teenage Head’s Gord Lewis opens.  If you can’t catch Adny in Toronto, he’s also doing “When Giants Walked The Earth — A Musical Memoir By Andy Shernoff” at Call the Office in London on June 11th, and  This Ain’t Hollywood in Hamilton on June 12.  Were The Dictators one of the best bands to come out of the U.S. of A?  Absolutely.  Did their roadie turned lead singer name himself after the province and/or state that most resembled a penis?  Sure did.  (Sorry, Florida, you just don’t cut it next to studly Manitoba.)  And did Andy write some of the funniest lyrics ever?  You bet:

Oh Weekend
Bobby is a local punk
Cuttin’ school and getting drunk
Eating at Mcdonald’s for lunch

Oh Weekend
Soon he threw up in the store
But if he does it anymore
I’ll make him eat it off the floor.

The Horseshoe Tavern, June 1978.  So far we’re batting .500 on interviews from this poster.

We’re trying to work out an interview, and dying to ask the question that has been on many a Dictators’ fan’s mind:  Just wtf is a two tub man?  Check out The Andy Shernoff Appreciation Society on Facebook for dates in the States.

Meanwhile, while you’re all out there looking at pictures and listening to stories about growing up with Johnny Thunders and stuff, we’re working people!  Tomorrow night co-director Kire Paputts tracks down The Diodes.  News at eleven.


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

May 14th, 2008

Free beer and meatballs

Joey Ramone and Colin Brunton, 1989.
Photo by Tim Sebert.

We hit the NXNE press conference/launch last night, and ran into Last Pogoers Gordie Lewis from Teenage Head and Vince Carlucci from the Cardboard Brains. Fast Eddie Smith snapped shots as we were deluged by a constant flow of eats and beers, and it was all pretty crammed and jammed. Kudos to Liz Anderson of Flip for doing such a decent job of promotion. Apart from hearing the low-down on the run-down of all the bands ‘n’ stuff, we ran into a few more ghosts from the past including Virginia Kelly of VK and Associates, and filmmaker Bruce McDonald.

We caught word that Hugh Cornwell of The Stranglers is going to be at NXNE to show off his new movie, and so we’re gonna have to try and track him down during the frenzy of the fest; one of the most memorable of the relentlessly awesome shows at the Horseshoe in 1978 was The Stranglers blowing the roof off the joint to an overflow crowd of 500+.

Meanwhile, back at Pogo HQ, co-director Kire Paputts is busily transferring the 150 hours of footage we’ve compiled since we started shooting The Last Pogo Jumps Again back in June 2006. On top of this footage, we’ve got miles (er…kilometres) of archival footage, some never-before-seen footage of The Last Pogo, and a growing pile of photos and handbills. Finally, in sad news, all-round helper-dude Ollie Brunton confessed that he skipped history at his high-school yesterday. We’ll have to see if his grounding affects the shooting we have planned for this weekend. Because no one loads a camera and fiddles with a tripod quite like Ollie.

And just for shits ‘n’ giggles, we dug up the above photo from a cardboard box deep in the catacombs (i.e. basement) of Pogo HQ. For those of you who didn’t have the pleasure of meeting Mr. Ramone he was the proverbial nicest guy you’ll ever meet.

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

Archives

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  2. December 2011
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  11. March 2011
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  14. December 2010
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  57. June 2006

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