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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:06,000 --> 00:00:12,074 Advertise your product or brand here contact www.OpenSubtitles.org today 2 00:00:53,018 --> 00:00:56,365 The first record that I ever bought, I believe, 3 00:00:56,366 --> 00:00:59,023 was Stampede, by the Doobie Brothers. 4 00:00:59,024 --> 00:01:02,647 The first record I bought was a 45 by David Bowie, 5 00:01:02,648 --> 00:01:04,339 was Space Oddity. 6 00:01:04,340 --> 00:01:06,617 The first record I ever bought, with my parents' money 7 00:01:06,618 --> 00:01:10,518 of course, was this 1973 Famous Monsters Speak. 8 00:01:12,865 --> 00:01:15,212 I think I bought my first record at age eight. 9 00:01:15,213 --> 00:01:16,454 It's the Monster Mash. 10 00:01:16,455 --> 00:01:20,493 The first record that I owned was a present, 11 00:01:20,494 --> 00:01:22,322 it was a Christmas present, and it was 12 00:01:22,323 --> 00:01:23,737 the Partridge Family Album. 13 00:01:23,738 --> 00:01:25,739 We Sold Our Soul for Rock and Roll, 14 00:01:25,740 --> 00:01:27,810 The double Black Sabbath album, 15 00:01:27,811 --> 00:01:29,778 my parents got it for me for Christmas, 16 00:01:29,779 --> 00:01:31,331 which is completely unlike my parents. 17 00:01:31,332 --> 00:01:32,953 They're not really churchgoing, 18 00:01:32,954 --> 00:01:34,507 but they consider themselves Christian. 19 00:01:34,508 --> 00:01:36,716 So, my aunt Marlene said, I will get you 20 00:01:36,717 --> 00:01:38,580 any record you want, for, I think 21 00:01:38,581 --> 00:01:40,616 it was Hanukkah, or something like that. 22 00:01:40,617 --> 00:01:45,104 Great. Please get me Blizzard of Ozz by Ozzy Osbourne. 23 00:01:45,105 --> 00:01:47,416 The first record I owned was given to me 24 00:01:47,417 --> 00:01:50,626 by my grandparents, they actually gave me two. 25 00:01:50,627 --> 00:01:53,077 Chuck Berry's Golden Hits, and the other was 26 00:01:53,078 --> 00:01:55,598 a Mozart Ein Kleine Nachtmusik. 27 00:01:57,186 --> 00:01:59,256 My grandma took me to buy my first record, 28 00:01:59,257 --> 00:02:02,259 and I picked out three records, I picked out The Cars, 29 00:02:02,260 --> 00:02:06,228 Blondie, and the one that really hit me the most, 30 00:02:06,229 --> 00:02:09,231 The Ramones, and it was in the third, 31 00:02:09,232 --> 00:02:11,095 I think it was Rocket to Russia. 32 00:02:11,096 --> 00:02:13,201 The Hotter Than Hell, probably asked mom for 33 00:02:13,202 --> 00:02:17,551 some money and went to Tumbleweed records in P-town. 34 00:02:19,035 --> 00:02:21,692 Me and my friend didn't have any money, but we had 35 00:02:21,693 --> 00:02:23,901 like, a dollar each, so we went in together, 36 00:02:23,902 --> 00:02:26,179 and bought Hotter Than Hell. 37 00:02:26,180 --> 00:02:28,423 I think the first record I ever owned, 38 00:02:28,424 --> 00:02:31,115 that I got my own, I think I shoplifted 39 00:02:31,116 --> 00:02:32,910 Summertime Blues by The Who. 40 00:02:32,911 --> 00:02:35,084 Who's Next, that was the first album 41 00:02:35,085 --> 00:02:36,983 I really remember buying on my own. 42 00:02:36,984 --> 00:02:39,296 Hey Jude, with Revolution on the back. 43 00:02:39,297 --> 00:02:43,369 The Beatles Blue and Red compilation records. 44 00:02:43,370 --> 00:02:46,441 With my own money, birthday money, I went to 45 00:02:46,442 --> 00:02:50,445 the record store and bought Led Zeppelin II, 46 00:02:50,446 --> 00:02:53,586 and Sergeant Pepper, same day. 47 00:02:53,587 --> 00:02:57,659 I rode my bike to the mall, and went to Corvette's, 48 00:02:57,660 --> 00:03:00,040 and I bought Led Zeppelin III. 49 00:03:00,041 --> 00:03:02,974 Believe it or not, it was a Seals and Crofts record, 50 00:03:02,975 --> 00:03:06,323 and I was like, you know, I was like, what the fuck is this? 51 00:03:06,324 --> 00:03:10,913 ♪ Darling, if you want me to be, closer to you ♪ 52 00:03:10,914 --> 00:03:12,846 Right, that's them, and I was like, 53 00:03:12,847 --> 00:03:15,194 this sucks, I fucking, they got my money! 54 00:03:15,195 --> 00:03:17,575 December's Children by the Stones. 55 00:03:17,576 --> 00:03:20,854 Had the dark cover, you know, it was just menacing. 56 00:03:20,855 --> 00:03:22,925 I bought a band called Think, 57 00:03:22,926 --> 00:03:24,651 it was called Once You Understand. 58 00:03:24,652 --> 00:03:26,964 A lot of these are one hit wonders, and the only way 59 00:03:26,965 --> 00:03:28,793 you knew about them was listening 60 00:03:28,794 --> 00:03:30,795 to these records on the radio. 61 00:03:30,796 --> 00:03:32,521 American Graffiti. 62 00:03:32,522 --> 00:03:36,422 The album that I came out, I think it came out 63 00:03:36,423 --> 00:03:39,218 in '75, and this is the actual album I bought. 64 00:03:39,219 --> 00:03:40,668 Looking at, nice! 65 00:03:42,912 --> 00:03:45,879 The record that I was like, I must have this record, 66 00:03:45,880 --> 00:03:49,331 is the soundtrack from Star Wars, definitely. 67 00:03:49,332 --> 00:03:52,507 My first record that I owned was actually 68 00:03:52,508 --> 00:03:56,235 a comedy record, it was George Carlin's AM and FM. 69 00:03:56,236 --> 00:03:58,237 First record I actually went out and bought, 70 00:03:58,238 --> 00:04:02,068 not sure, but it would've been a single. 71 00:04:02,069 --> 00:04:06,141 I remember, they were like, think they were 70 cents. 72 00:04:06,142 --> 00:04:08,039 And there was a music store near my house 73 00:04:08,040 --> 00:04:11,491 called Giant Music, and I think it would've been, 74 00:04:11,492 --> 00:04:15,669 I think it was the Lemon Pipers, Green Tambourine. 75 00:04:23,401 --> 00:04:27,611 My favorite song as a child, was Taxman. 76 00:04:27,612 --> 00:04:31,097 Off of Revolver, and it was a great package deal 77 00:04:31,098 --> 00:04:34,307 because Revolver was so powerful, A, to look at, 78 00:04:34,308 --> 00:04:38,104 the cover was insane, Taxman, first song on the record, 79 00:04:38,105 --> 00:04:39,795 and has the distorted guitar. 80 00:04:39,796 --> 00:04:41,797 It's just incredibly powerful, but I think 81 00:04:41,798 --> 00:04:45,318 it's a combination of the cover and that Taxman 82 00:04:45,319 --> 00:04:47,665 guitar solo, and it kind of, this is one of the first things 83 00:04:47,666 --> 00:04:49,529 that made me wanna play guitar. 84 00:04:49,530 --> 00:04:51,428 My favorite record as a child, as a young child, 85 00:04:51,429 --> 00:04:54,879 it probably would've been Endless Summer by the Beach Boys. 86 00:04:54,880 --> 00:04:58,124 It's like a double album, it was in my parents' collection, 87 00:04:58,125 --> 00:04:58,953 and... 88 00:05:00,161 --> 00:05:02,162 And you know, every single song is good. 89 00:05:02,163 --> 00:05:03,302 I think one of my favorite records 90 00:05:03,303 --> 00:05:06,408 as a child would have to be Jackson 5. 91 00:05:06,409 --> 00:05:10,412 Being grown up, you know, in that era, and 92 00:05:10,413 --> 00:05:13,415 just all around, I mean, I remember there was even 93 00:05:13,416 --> 00:05:15,452 a cartoon to the Jackson 5s, and it was, 94 00:05:15,453 --> 00:05:19,904 all, it was just, and as a kid, living in the hood 95 00:05:19,905 --> 00:05:22,493 and the ghettos, you know, and I just 96 00:05:22,494 --> 00:05:24,323 could relate all the way, you know. 97 00:05:24,324 --> 00:05:27,843 Best cartoon theme song ever, to this day, 98 00:05:27,844 --> 00:05:32,849 it's the punk rock lead guitar, is the Flintstones theme. 99 00:05:34,023 --> 00:05:36,680 Flintstones theme was so fast, and just so 100 00:05:36,681 --> 00:05:40,787 abnormal to hear a song like that on TV, 101 00:05:40,788 --> 00:05:42,237 you just wanted to run around the room. 102 00:05:42,238 --> 00:05:44,757 With the shows back then, you can't help 103 00:05:44,758 --> 00:05:46,724 but thinking, Gilligan's Island, 'cause that 104 00:05:46,725 --> 00:05:51,004 was one song that was gonna be on, immediately made 105 00:05:51,005 --> 00:05:52,937 you happy, you're just like, fuck school, 106 00:05:52,938 --> 00:05:54,353 I wanna watch Gilligan's Island. 107 00:05:54,354 --> 00:05:56,907 And the Flintstones for the theme. 108 00:05:56,908 --> 00:06:00,151 Probably the Banana Splits theme, or any song 109 00:06:00,152 --> 00:06:01,221 by the Monkeys. 110 00:06:01,222 --> 00:06:03,396 Free to be You and Me. 111 00:06:03,397 --> 00:06:05,433 Probably the earliest thing. 112 00:06:05,434 --> 00:06:09,610 Kind of just like, every American kid being raised 113 00:06:10,508 --> 00:06:11,371 by a... 114 00:06:13,442 --> 00:06:18,136 Early 70s liberals, I just knew, and I loved Free to Be, 115 00:06:19,551 --> 00:06:21,897 and I loved all the songs on Sesame Street. 116 00:06:21,898 --> 00:06:23,761 Jungle Boogie by Cool and the Gang. 117 00:06:23,762 --> 00:06:25,868 I saw them on Soul Train. 118 00:06:27,352 --> 00:06:31,770 I must've been 12, and I was like, holy, can I curse? 119 00:06:32,633 --> 00:06:35,117 Holy fucking shit... 120 00:06:35,118 --> 00:06:38,086 Definitely Roger K, with Leaders of the Pack, 121 00:06:38,087 --> 00:06:41,779 and I remember, the first record I bought, 122 00:06:41,780 --> 00:06:44,195 it was a compilation thing. 123 00:06:44,196 --> 00:06:46,405 Like, with all these other songs, and that was 124 00:06:46,406 --> 00:06:47,716 the only song I ever listened to. 125 00:06:47,717 --> 00:06:49,615 'Cause it had the motorcycle in the end. 126 00:06:49,616 --> 00:06:52,997 And the revs and stuff like that, and I just loved that, 127 00:06:52,998 --> 00:06:54,896 even when I was a little kid, I loved the dramatic. 128 00:06:56,899 --> 00:06:59,763 My mother had decided we needed to learn to play 129 00:06:59,764 --> 00:07:02,869 the organ in our house, we had this electric organ, 130 00:07:02,870 --> 00:07:06,114 three keyboards and a pedal board, I actually got 131 00:07:06,115 --> 00:07:07,391 pretty good at it. 132 00:07:07,392 --> 00:07:10,463 But in the organ was a cassette tape player, 133 00:07:10,464 --> 00:07:13,639 and my sister, who was five years older than me, 134 00:07:13,640 --> 00:07:16,815 got a cassette tape with the song Tush 135 00:07:18,196 --> 00:07:22,614 by ZZ Top on it, and I played that song over and over 136 00:07:24,098 --> 00:07:28,447 and over and I was probably eight, maybe nine years old. 137 00:07:28,448 --> 00:07:31,726 And it was my very favorite song, in the entire world. 138 00:07:31,727 --> 00:07:35,039 I don't know why, I don't know what happened, 139 00:07:35,040 --> 00:07:38,387 but something about the electric organ and the cassette 140 00:07:38,388 --> 00:07:41,908 tape of Tush super muffled on this terrible speaker, 141 00:07:41,909 --> 00:07:44,808 was the best thing in my whole entire life. 142 00:07:44,809 --> 00:07:47,466 I loved the Electric Prunes, I Had Too Much To Dream 143 00:07:47,467 --> 00:07:50,227 Last Night, the Blues Magoos, and this was like stuff 144 00:07:50,228 --> 00:07:51,539 I'd never heard, it was something 145 00:07:51,540 --> 00:07:53,851 that really stuck in my ear and all that. 146 00:07:53,852 --> 00:07:58,131 Jesse Colin Young and the Yonugbloods get together. 147 00:07:58,132 --> 00:08:01,998 That song, when I was six, maybe younger, five, 148 00:08:03,966 --> 00:08:05,967 like, can you play that song again? 149 00:08:05,968 --> 00:08:07,347 I think it was the cover art. 150 00:08:07,348 --> 00:08:10,489 It was vaguely psychedelic, is my recollection 151 00:08:10,490 --> 00:08:14,700 and mysterious like Fantasia or something. 152 00:08:14,701 --> 00:08:16,874 It had that great guitar part 153 00:08:16,875 --> 00:08:19,809 and sort of Beatles-like harmonies. 154 00:08:21,639 --> 00:08:24,364 I had a real response to that. 155 00:08:24,365 --> 00:08:28,058 Puff the Magic Dragon, I think it was the Brothers Four. 156 00:08:28,059 --> 00:08:31,475 I vaguely remember the art work, I think it was 157 00:08:31,476 --> 00:08:34,616 four guys in cardigan sweaters on the cover 158 00:08:34,617 --> 00:08:37,688 with beautifully coiffed hair. 159 00:08:37,689 --> 00:08:39,828 Kind of stashed in with my mom's records, 160 00:08:39,829 --> 00:08:44,178 kind of deep into it so I probably wouldn't find it, 161 00:08:45,386 --> 00:08:47,836 was a record called 'Have a Marijuana' 162 00:08:47,837 --> 00:08:50,390 by David Peel and the Lower East Side. 163 00:08:50,391 --> 00:08:52,634 I discovered it when I was about eight or nine years old 164 00:08:52,635 --> 00:08:55,464 and I knew what pot was, I knew what marijuana was. 165 00:08:55,465 --> 00:08:59,608 On the record cover it had a giant marijuana leaf. 166 00:09:02,749 --> 00:09:06,096 You know it was probably around 1972 or something like that 167 00:09:06,097 --> 00:09:09,202 and the symbolism of the marijuana leaf, 168 00:09:09,203 --> 00:09:11,722 older kids that I knew had them 169 00:09:11,723 --> 00:09:13,724 on their jean jackets and shit. 170 00:09:13,725 --> 00:09:15,968 There was something really cool about that 171 00:09:15,969 --> 00:09:17,970 and iconic about that record cover. 172 00:09:17,971 --> 00:09:20,179 In kindergarten, we had them. 173 00:09:20,180 --> 00:09:23,527 The teacher would have us singing. 174 00:09:23,528 --> 00:09:25,840 She played piano and we would sing, 175 00:09:25,841 --> 00:09:30,466 we did Home on the Range and she taught us the harmony. 176 00:09:32,951 --> 00:09:35,263 It was as if my brain exploded and poured out 177 00:09:35,264 --> 00:09:37,299 of my ears when I heard the harmony. 178 00:09:37,300 --> 00:09:41,994 I couldn't stop thinking about the harmony of that song. 179 00:09:41,995 --> 00:09:43,582 That was a pretty important song for me. 180 00:09:43,583 --> 00:09:46,861 Without a doubt, Jim Croce's Bad, Bad, Leroy Brown. 181 00:09:46,862 --> 00:09:51,486 Now if you think, and I was probably eight years old 182 00:09:51,487 --> 00:09:56,111 at the time, I didn't realize what the soft spoken Mr. Croce 183 00:09:56,112 --> 00:09:59,011 was really kind of, the themes he was dealing with. 184 00:09:59,012 --> 00:10:01,703 Who was this bad, bad Leroy Brown? 185 00:10:01,704 --> 00:10:04,016 Apparently he was badder than King Kong 186 00:10:04,017 --> 00:10:05,534 and meaner than a junkyard dog. 187 00:10:05,535 --> 00:10:09,090 What I didn't quite realize was this was sort of 188 00:10:09,091 --> 00:10:11,540 a folk song about a Chicago drug lord. 189 00:10:11,541 --> 00:10:14,889 He's the El Chapo of 70s folk rock. 190 00:10:14,890 --> 00:10:16,994 My father despised rock music 191 00:10:16,995 --> 00:10:19,514 and he didn't allow it in the house. 192 00:10:19,515 --> 00:10:23,518 The only record that I could play as a kid was 193 00:10:23,519 --> 00:10:26,763 a Carpenter's record was Close to You. 194 00:10:26,764 --> 00:10:29,075 It's still one of my favorite records for 195 00:10:29,076 --> 00:10:32,597 the record cover and for the actual music. 196 00:10:37,050 --> 00:10:40,260 That's absolutely, just it is gorgeous. 197 00:10:42,676 --> 00:10:45,333 When you don't have a video and all you have is artwork, 198 00:10:45,334 --> 00:10:47,818 you really start digging into what's there 199 00:10:47,819 --> 00:10:49,682 and just staring at it while you're listening to the record. 200 00:10:49,683 --> 00:10:53,410 Visually it was a great sounding board, 201 00:10:53,411 --> 00:10:56,033 you'd just look at this, right, but musically 202 00:10:56,034 --> 00:10:59,588 this record is by far my favorite KISS record. 203 00:10:59,589 --> 00:11:04,248 Overall I'd have to say Mott from Mott the Hoople. 204 00:11:04,249 --> 00:11:05,664 I liked all the songs on it. 205 00:11:05,665 --> 00:11:08,425 Number one it was an album album, 206 00:11:08,426 --> 00:11:12,499 you know before album albums was just a hit song. 207 00:11:14,674 --> 00:11:17,606 The first song on side A and the first song on side B 208 00:11:17,607 --> 00:11:21,163 were the hits and then the rest was filler. 209 00:11:22,405 --> 00:11:24,096 But this was an album album. 210 00:11:24,097 --> 00:11:26,754 The first song that really got me going as a kid 211 00:11:26,755 --> 00:11:29,791 and that I kind of played over and over again 212 00:11:29,792 --> 00:11:32,000 and danced around to was probably 213 00:11:32,001 --> 00:11:35,763 Jumping Jack Flash by The Rolling Stones. 214 00:11:35,764 --> 00:11:37,488 I wish I could pick something more esoteric 215 00:11:37,489 --> 00:11:39,111 but that's what it was. 216 00:11:39,112 --> 00:11:42,321 Grew up in a group house, so we had a bunch 217 00:11:42,322 --> 00:11:44,564 of different record collections and at some point 218 00:11:44,565 --> 00:11:46,739 around when I was five or six they all lived in 219 00:11:46,740 --> 00:11:48,499 the living room with the stereo. 220 00:11:48,500 --> 00:11:52,158 So I used to take out the triple gate fold Tommy album, 221 00:11:52,159 --> 00:11:54,920 there was three copies of it in the house. 222 00:11:54,921 --> 00:11:57,370 I'd set up all three copies and build a little fort 223 00:11:57,371 --> 00:12:00,857 and then sit in there, dance around in it, 224 00:12:00,858 --> 00:12:02,928 try to analyze the record and figure out 225 00:12:02,929 --> 00:12:06,552 what everything meant in it and identified with it. 226 00:12:06,553 --> 00:12:08,416 So I'd say Tommy was my first record 227 00:12:08,417 --> 00:12:11,730 that I was really focused on and earliest 228 00:12:11,731 --> 00:12:14,180 remember being really into that one. 229 00:12:14,181 --> 00:12:17,218 It was probably a tie between Ironman and Crocodile Rock 230 00:12:17,219 --> 00:12:19,323 which was the seven inch that I remember having. 231 00:12:19,324 --> 00:12:23,224 But it was totally, we're talking like little kid 232 00:12:23,225 --> 00:12:27,193 logic so the connection being, I used to have reptiles 233 00:12:27,194 --> 00:12:30,749 and oh Crocodile Rock, that's my song. 234 00:12:30,750 --> 00:12:33,130 It's probably that or Iron Man because 235 00:12:33,131 --> 00:12:35,755 it was such a little mini epic. 236 00:12:36,859 --> 00:12:38,515 The one that sticks out in my head was 237 00:12:38,516 --> 00:12:42,346 Trini Lopez and for some reason I used to 238 00:12:42,347 --> 00:12:45,074 always sing that song Lemon Tree. 239 00:12:46,593 --> 00:12:47,938 That would be the one. 240 00:12:47,939 --> 00:12:51,735 The Hey Jude album by The Beatles. 241 00:12:51,736 --> 00:12:55,290 I just listened to this and stared at the cover 242 00:12:55,291 --> 00:12:58,260 of them on the back and on the front 243 00:13:00,296 --> 00:13:03,920 and listened to the record over and over and over 244 00:13:03,921 --> 00:13:07,613 again until I don't know if I wore it out. 245 00:13:07,614 --> 00:13:10,271 I probably couldn't hear the difference 246 00:13:10,272 --> 00:13:13,101 on that piece of crap I was listening to it on. 247 00:13:13,102 --> 00:13:14,793 But I really liked that. 248 00:13:14,794 --> 00:13:16,311 Whatever the song from 249 00:13:16,312 --> 00:13:17,830 The Grinch that Stole Christmas was. 250 00:13:17,831 --> 00:13:22,629 ♪ Wahoo Forest, wahoo Doris, wahoo Christmas, Christmas Day ♪ 251 00:13:25,874 --> 00:13:27,391 Whatever the one that was called. I forget. 252 00:13:27,392 --> 00:13:29,808 That was my favorite song as a child. 253 00:13:29,809 --> 00:13:32,534 I would sing it on May day, Earth day, 254 00:13:32,535 --> 00:13:35,262 my mother's birthday, everything. 255 00:13:36,160 --> 00:13:37,643 Go ahead, next question. 256 00:13:47,827 --> 00:13:49,966 My mom brought home a few Beatles albums. 257 00:13:49,967 --> 00:13:53,487 She brought home Help and Meet the Beatles 258 00:13:54,523 --> 00:13:56,455 and maybe one other. 259 00:13:56,456 --> 00:14:00,080 I really liked it but a spark wasn't ignited 260 00:14:02,117 --> 00:14:06,742 until my grandfather bought me the Woodstock soundtrack 261 00:14:08,399 --> 00:14:10,918 and I heard Jimi Hendrix on there. 262 00:14:10,919 --> 00:14:14,128 Now you have to understand, I'm maybe 10 263 00:14:14,129 --> 00:14:17,131 or 11 years old and I'm listening to this 264 00:14:17,132 --> 00:14:20,134 and listening to the Hendrix on that, 265 00:14:20,135 --> 00:14:22,584 I'm seeing God on that. 266 00:14:22,585 --> 00:14:25,415 I'd never seen Jimi Hendrix. 267 00:14:25,416 --> 00:14:29,108 I didn't know what a Jimi Hendrix was or anything. 268 00:14:29,109 --> 00:14:32,387 I just saw his name on the record, Jimi Hendrix. 269 00:14:32,388 --> 00:14:35,528 From what I heard there, I thought he was maybe 270 00:14:35,529 --> 00:14:38,877 a 75 year old, gray haired man, 271 00:14:38,878 --> 00:14:42,053 sitting on a stool playing this music. 272 00:14:43,779 --> 00:14:46,851 I had no idea that he was who he was. 273 00:14:50,337 --> 00:14:52,995 But that was the 'Ah ha' moment. 274 00:14:54,410 --> 00:14:55,859 We went to visit a friend of 275 00:14:55,860 --> 00:14:58,758 my parents who lived in Lyland, way out, 276 00:14:58,759 --> 00:15:02,522 and he had a copy of Jimi Hendrix, Smash Hits. 277 00:15:05,145 --> 00:15:07,871 That's the first time I remember hearing Hendrix. 278 00:15:07,872 --> 00:15:11,047 I just kept listening to Hey Joe over and over and again. 279 00:15:11,048 --> 00:15:12,876 Cadet also just blew my mind. 280 00:15:12,877 --> 00:15:16,190 I couldn't understand what was happening. 281 00:15:16,191 --> 00:15:18,226 Of course The Beatles were so central 282 00:15:18,227 --> 00:15:21,990 at that time in my life, I loved The Beatles. 283 00:15:24,475 --> 00:15:27,615 The Beatles cartoon was on so we used to watch that. 284 00:15:27,616 --> 00:15:30,756 Also The Monkees cartoon or TV show was on. 285 00:15:30,757 --> 00:15:33,414 I was very interested in rock and roll early on. 286 00:15:33,415 --> 00:15:36,520 Hendrix was really, that was sort of scary. 287 00:15:36,521 --> 00:15:38,212 That was a different kind of music. 288 00:15:38,213 --> 00:15:41,077 Then Janis Joplin, who was also really significant. 289 00:15:41,078 --> 00:15:44,183 I have two older brothers and they were both into 290 00:15:44,184 --> 00:15:47,842 different kinds of music, but one love they shared 291 00:15:47,843 --> 00:15:51,225 was The Beatles and I have a distinct memory 292 00:15:51,226 --> 00:15:54,573 in my very early childhood of always hearing that first 293 00:15:54,574 --> 00:15:58,025 chord in A Hard Day's Night on the record player 294 00:15:58,026 --> 00:16:00,165 and it always grabbed my attention 295 00:16:00,166 --> 00:16:04,721 and then I'd start dancing around and then as soon as 296 00:16:04,722 --> 00:16:06,688 they allowed me to touch their Beatles records 297 00:16:06,689 --> 00:16:08,656 I started touching them and looking at them 298 00:16:08,657 --> 00:16:11,486 and smelling them and listening to them under 299 00:16:11,487 --> 00:16:13,454 their supervision so I wouldn't scratch them. 300 00:16:13,455 --> 00:16:17,320 It was that first chord in A Hard Day's Night for sure. 301 00:16:17,321 --> 00:16:20,254 I mean I don't have just one story, but just like you, 302 00:16:20,255 --> 00:16:23,464 my father is involved with my music foundation. 303 00:16:23,465 --> 00:16:27,987 He managed rock bands in the 60s and so the first band 304 00:16:30,092 --> 00:16:34,614 he put out would be 1966, so I was like eight or nine. 305 00:16:35,925 --> 00:16:39,031 I started going with him to shows and stuff. 306 00:16:39,032 --> 00:16:41,033 It's about the same time I saw The Beatles 307 00:16:41,034 --> 00:16:43,001 on The Ed Sullivan Show, which I remember 308 00:16:43,002 --> 00:16:45,451 me and my brother sitting in front and watching that 309 00:16:45,452 --> 00:16:49,180 and going back in our room and acting it out. 310 00:16:50,664 --> 00:16:55,083 I think I was the drummer on an ottoman with some kind of 311 00:16:56,532 --> 00:16:58,016 pieces of wood or something and then we just pretended 312 00:16:58,017 --> 00:17:01,053 to play, like we were The Beatles or something! 313 00:17:01,054 --> 00:17:05,852 Fourth of July, 1977 and we were lighting off sparklers 314 00:17:07,750 --> 00:17:10,857 and I had never lit a sparkler before 315 00:17:12,031 --> 00:17:14,929 and so I decided that it would be interesting 316 00:17:14,930 --> 00:17:18,139 to see what it felt like if I touched the sparkly part, 317 00:17:18,140 --> 00:17:21,763 and so I touched it and burnt my finger. 318 00:17:21,764 --> 00:17:24,559 I remember just getting a piece of ice 319 00:17:24,560 --> 00:17:27,631 and putting it on my finger and going into my friend's house 320 00:17:27,632 --> 00:17:31,878 for the ice and on television was Yellow Submarine. 321 00:17:33,914 --> 00:17:36,916 I'd maybe heard of The Beatles, 322 00:17:36,917 --> 00:17:39,367 but the cartoon Yellow Submarine was on television 323 00:17:39,368 --> 00:17:41,473 and I had this piece of ice on my finger 324 00:17:41,474 --> 00:17:44,959 watching Yellow Submarine and it just being whoa. 325 00:17:44,960 --> 00:17:46,547 When I was growing up my parents 326 00:17:46,548 --> 00:17:49,620 bought us this horrible, huge plastic 327 00:17:50,966 --> 00:17:54,417 I guess jukebox, it looked like a jukebox 328 00:17:54,418 --> 00:17:56,143 but it was just a big piece of plastic 329 00:17:56,144 --> 00:17:58,317 that was empty and it had speakers 330 00:17:58,318 --> 00:18:00,699 and just a really bad little turn table 331 00:18:00,700 --> 00:18:03,184 and it sounded horrible, but they bought us that. 332 00:18:03,185 --> 00:18:06,774 I think at a yard sale, just grabbed a box of 45s. 333 00:18:06,775 --> 00:18:09,190 I remember this seven inch, which was 334 00:18:09,191 --> 00:18:13,437 The Beatles, Help and on the back side is I'm Down. 335 00:18:15,439 --> 00:18:19,098 My parents came home with the White album. 336 00:18:20,340 --> 00:18:23,791 It might not have been right when it came out. 337 00:18:23,792 --> 00:18:27,035 But I was maybe three or four years old 338 00:18:27,036 --> 00:18:31,523 and I think why that hit me was because everything about it. 339 00:18:31,524 --> 00:18:33,076 If you're a little kid and you're just kind of 340 00:18:33,077 --> 00:18:35,043 opening up and it's this white cover, 341 00:18:35,044 --> 00:18:37,701 it's a gate fold, it's a couple of records. 342 00:18:37,702 --> 00:18:40,635 There's a song on it that's not really music, 343 00:18:40,636 --> 00:18:43,811 like Revolution Nine and all of this 344 00:18:43,812 --> 00:18:45,778 and I just remember that's a big one for me 345 00:18:45,779 --> 00:18:48,229 and that's one of the first things 346 00:18:48,230 --> 00:18:50,438 that was like, "Whoa. What's going on? 347 00:18:50,439 --> 00:18:52,785 "What are these other records that they have in the house?" 348 00:18:52,786 --> 00:18:55,962 When I was four, five, six I thought 349 00:18:58,240 --> 00:19:03,002 liking music was girly, it was something girls did. 350 00:19:03,003 --> 00:19:07,041 I had this weird twisted, masculine sort of 351 00:19:07,042 --> 00:19:10,320 thing attached to it, it was so weird. 352 00:19:10,321 --> 00:19:15,015 But secretly, I remember melodies going through my head. 353 00:19:16,396 --> 00:19:19,640 Things I would hear on the radio, this was the early 60s. 354 00:19:24,887 --> 00:19:26,612 You know, these goofy pop songs. 355 00:19:26,613 --> 00:19:29,513 The first time that I just couldn't 356 00:19:30,790 --> 00:19:32,756 resist anymore was The Beatles. 357 00:19:32,757 --> 00:19:35,138 The Beatles, I mean, you couldn't have been around 358 00:19:35,139 --> 00:19:39,626 in '63, '64 and not have been impacted by The Beatles. 359 00:19:41,352 --> 00:19:44,665 When they were on Ed Sullivan, it was like 360 00:19:44,666 --> 00:19:48,255 the man landing on the moon, it was as big as 361 00:19:48,256 --> 00:19:51,431 the assassination of JFK in some ways. 362 00:19:53,019 --> 00:19:55,503 I mean it was monumental. 363 00:19:55,504 --> 00:20:00,094 Riding in my dad's car, '63 Buick if I remember, 364 00:20:00,095 --> 00:20:04,755 and back then it was just a regular AM station blasting. 365 00:20:06,101 --> 00:20:08,102 Ah, my dad's listening to music. 366 00:20:08,103 --> 00:20:10,173 I'm in the back with him, whatever. 367 00:20:10,174 --> 00:20:15,179 Hearing The Beatles Revolution come on, that guitar, 368 00:20:16,560 --> 00:20:18,423 I was like what the hell is that? 369 00:20:18,424 --> 00:20:22,254 Kind of shook me up. What the fuck is this? You know? 370 00:20:22,255 --> 00:20:24,877 I was like wow, man. Listen to that. 371 00:20:24,878 --> 00:20:27,086 And it just dropped, duh duh duh 372 00:20:27,087 --> 00:20:28,674 ♪ Do you want a revolution 373 00:20:28,675 --> 00:20:32,230 Back then, lyrics didn't really mean much to me, you know? 374 00:20:32,231 --> 00:20:34,335 It was just like the music just 375 00:20:34,336 --> 00:20:36,441 hit me like wow, this is amazing! 376 00:20:36,442 --> 00:20:37,787 When I was four or five years old 377 00:20:37,788 --> 00:20:39,823 I had a little transistor radio 378 00:20:39,824 --> 00:20:42,792 and I'd listen to the AM station, WMEX 379 00:20:42,793 --> 00:20:45,381 and they played the rock and roll of the day 380 00:20:45,382 --> 00:20:48,176 like The Stones and Beatles and all that. 381 00:20:48,177 --> 00:20:50,800 I started listening to these songs 382 00:20:50,801 --> 00:20:53,492 and I'd tell my parents later, 383 00:20:53,493 --> 00:20:55,149 "Hey, I heard this song on the radio 384 00:20:55,150 --> 00:20:56,909 can you get me the record, is that okay?" 385 00:20:56,910 --> 00:21:00,119 They started getting me records and I remember having 386 00:21:00,120 --> 00:21:04,400 Beatles stuff in the house, mostly singles and mostly 45s. 387 00:21:04,401 --> 00:21:05,953 I was a carsick kid and I was in 388 00:21:05,954 --> 00:21:07,437 the back of the station wagon. 389 00:21:07,438 --> 00:21:09,715 My brother and sister were in the seat behind mom and dad 390 00:21:09,716 --> 00:21:12,718 and I was in the very back, trying to keep from puking and 391 00:21:12,719 --> 00:21:16,412 the song A Horse with No Name came on the radio by America. 392 00:21:16,413 --> 00:21:19,138 In retrospect it's kind of a moment I can point to 393 00:21:19,139 --> 00:21:22,626 that sort of shaped me or I realized later 394 00:21:24,973 --> 00:21:29,528 it kind of steered me in the direction that I went in, 395 00:21:29,529 --> 00:21:33,809 to be a musician as a career or life as a musician. 396 00:21:34,983 --> 00:21:36,880 That song cured me from being carsick. 397 00:21:36,881 --> 00:21:38,330 That's kind of miraculous. 398 00:21:38,331 --> 00:21:41,057 My grandparents had this old radio 399 00:21:41,058 --> 00:21:45,683 and I used to listen to it, they played a lot of oldies. 400 00:21:47,029 --> 00:21:50,204 I guess they weren't that old at the time 401 00:21:50,205 --> 00:21:52,310 but they were still old enough. 402 00:21:52,311 --> 00:21:56,936 They were late 50s as opposed to like 60s, which it was. 403 00:22:00,974 --> 00:22:04,908 The song came on, La Bamba, and I thought, 404 00:22:04,909 --> 00:22:07,532 "Wow this is a really cool song." 405 00:22:07,533 --> 00:22:09,188 I just thought that riff was just amazing. 406 00:22:12,469 --> 00:22:14,884 I think when I was an infant the radio was on constantly. 407 00:22:14,885 --> 00:22:18,992 My dad's always playing his swing big band music. 408 00:22:20,580 --> 00:22:24,928 Songs that kind of stuck in my head from that time 409 00:22:24,929 --> 00:22:28,656 are probably Three Little Fishies, ever heard that song? 410 00:22:28,657 --> 00:22:31,107 Ever heard that song? 411 00:22:31,108 --> 00:22:34,352 Growing up in Boston, the radio station was called WRKO. 412 00:22:34,353 --> 00:22:36,769 It was an AM station. 68 RKO. 413 00:22:38,253 --> 00:22:41,981 They would play what we call one hit wonders. 414 00:22:45,053 --> 00:22:47,641 I head The Surfaris and that was the one song 415 00:22:47,642 --> 00:22:49,608 I just said, "This is cool as hell." 416 00:22:49,609 --> 00:22:52,680 I went out and walked about one and a half miles 417 00:22:52,681 --> 00:22:54,855 to the only record store in my town, 418 00:22:54,856 --> 00:22:58,859 right outside of Boston, to buy this record. 419 00:22:58,860 --> 00:23:02,483 It was like 75 cents brand new and it was Wipe Out, 420 00:23:02,484 --> 00:23:05,417 Surfaris on one side and Surfer Joe on the other. 421 00:23:05,418 --> 00:23:07,626 What I thought was really cool, was Wipe Out 422 00:23:07,627 --> 00:23:10,353 didn't have any vocals and Surfer Joe did. 423 00:23:10,354 --> 00:23:11,837 It was all about California. 424 00:23:11,838 --> 00:23:14,875 That actually drew interest in me to go to California. 425 00:23:14,876 --> 00:23:19,121 I found an AM radio in the garbage and it worked. 426 00:23:21,227 --> 00:23:24,574 Then I went and I bought a little head phone 427 00:23:24,575 --> 00:23:28,958 and it was like no matter what me and my two brothers 428 00:23:28,959 --> 00:23:30,718 were going through in a foster home, 429 00:23:30,719 --> 00:23:33,583 which it got closed down by the state. 430 00:23:33,584 --> 00:23:36,104 It was a pretty abusive place. 431 00:23:37,277 --> 00:23:39,589 But no matter what I was going through, 432 00:23:39,590 --> 00:23:42,834 every night when my brothers fell asleep, 433 00:23:42,835 --> 00:23:46,182 I would be under the blanket with that head phone in 434 00:23:46,183 --> 00:23:51,188 listening to all the music on AM radio which was soul music. 435 00:23:53,086 --> 00:23:57,366 Sly and the Family Stone and the emotion coming off 436 00:23:58,540 --> 00:24:01,060 that stuff... you know, Sam Cooke, 437 00:24:02,475 --> 00:24:06,029 just all the old school stuff really helped me get through 438 00:24:06,030 --> 00:24:08,584 a lot of that stuff I was dealing with. 439 00:24:08,585 --> 00:24:10,620 Music made all the pain of the other 440 00:24:10,621 --> 00:24:13,278 stuff subside for a little while. 441 00:24:13,279 --> 00:24:15,763 It was as much visual as it was auditory. 442 00:24:15,764 --> 00:24:18,732 Literally it was a matter of like going 443 00:24:18,733 --> 00:24:22,943 and buying comic books in the local record store 444 00:24:22,944 --> 00:24:26,947 slash head shop, I'm looking up at the walls 445 00:24:26,948 --> 00:24:31,296 and going, "Oh look at that Boston record! 446 00:24:31,297 --> 00:24:32,953 "Look at that Beatles record! 447 00:24:32,954 --> 00:24:34,679 "Look at that Stones record! 448 00:24:34,680 --> 00:24:35,921 "Look at that Zeppelin record!" 449 00:24:35,922 --> 00:24:38,959 How badass and cool are these images? 450 00:24:38,960 --> 00:24:43,204 Think about an eight year old mind looking at a Roger Dean, 451 00:24:43,205 --> 00:24:47,277 Yes cover going, "What the hell is that?!" 452 00:24:47,278 --> 00:24:49,004 My mind is expanding! 453 00:24:50,247 --> 00:24:53,007 There was a record store on the Cape 454 00:24:53,008 --> 00:24:55,320 that I would walk into and you'd see 455 00:24:55,321 --> 00:24:58,772 the shelves of vinyl up against the walls. 456 00:24:58,773 --> 00:25:01,706 Okay that looks cool, like even Meat Loaf. 457 00:25:01,707 --> 00:25:03,949 That first Meat Loaf record it was like, 458 00:25:03,950 --> 00:25:05,468 "Wow! Look at that record cover!" 459 00:25:05,469 --> 00:25:07,608 I bought the record, I was like this fucking sucks. 460 00:25:07,609 --> 00:25:11,716 But at the time, it wasn't like you could just 461 00:25:11,717 --> 00:25:13,441 take the records out and put them on 462 00:25:13,442 --> 00:25:14,995 and listen to them at the time. 463 00:25:14,996 --> 00:25:16,237 That wasn't a thing. 464 00:25:16,238 --> 00:25:18,170 They'd have them on maybe in the store 465 00:25:18,171 --> 00:25:21,898 and you'd hear something, but a lot of times back then 466 00:25:21,899 --> 00:25:25,247 you went by, gosh this cover is awesome. 467 00:25:27,215 --> 00:25:30,976 Maybe you could find Cream magazine or Circus, 468 00:25:30,977 --> 00:25:35,222 sort of get an idea of what a group might be like. 469 00:25:35,223 --> 00:25:40,228 My first real personal experience with music was from TV. 470 00:25:41,229 --> 00:25:43,300 I know it's embarrassing, but true. 471 00:25:44,681 --> 00:25:47,268 My first record that I asked my mother to buy for me 472 00:25:47,269 --> 00:25:50,548 was Bobby Sherman, not Sean Cassidy. 473 00:25:50,549 --> 00:25:53,654 Sean Cassidy's wings were a little too wingy. 474 00:25:53,655 --> 00:25:55,863 He was too soft for me, Bobby Sherman 475 00:25:55,864 --> 00:25:57,520 had a little more umph to him. 476 00:25:57,521 --> 00:26:00,799 There was a fold out and I hung it on my wall. 477 00:26:00,800 --> 00:26:03,285 I think I was seven years old. 478 00:26:04,632 --> 00:26:07,116 When I was a kid I lived on Targee Street 479 00:26:07,117 --> 00:26:09,808 in Staton Island across the street from the court house 480 00:26:09,809 --> 00:26:14,642 and we lived downstairs in the basement ground floor thing. 481 00:26:16,160 --> 00:26:20,992 The back was my father's tool shop or whatever, you know? 482 00:26:20,993 --> 00:26:25,341 The front was kind of like a play room kind of whatever. 483 00:26:25,342 --> 00:26:28,447 We had a stereo down there and all these 484 00:26:28,448 --> 00:26:30,691 eight tracks, tons of eight tracks. 485 00:26:30,692 --> 00:26:34,557 Bobby Sherman, Voltic, Partridge Family. 486 00:26:34,558 --> 00:26:38,286 But we had Goats Head Soup by Rolling Stones. 487 00:26:39,736 --> 00:26:41,909 I remember my brother playing and 488 00:26:41,910 --> 00:26:44,222 singing along to Star Fucker. 489 00:26:44,223 --> 00:26:47,226 As kids, I thought that was amazing. 490 00:26:49,193 --> 00:26:52,369 That and Simon and Garfunkel, I loved. 491 00:26:53,473 --> 00:26:55,371 I guess I was like three or four years old 492 00:26:55,372 --> 00:26:58,063 and I knew all the lyrics to Cecilia. 493 00:26:58,064 --> 00:27:00,100 I used to sing that all the time. 494 00:27:00,101 --> 00:27:03,379 As soon as it came on in the car, we were driving. 495 00:27:03,380 --> 00:27:04,829 You had a three year old kid singing 496 00:27:04,830 --> 00:27:07,383 about a girl cheating on ya. 497 00:27:07,384 --> 00:27:10,144 What made me start paying attention to music was 498 00:27:10,145 --> 00:27:12,595 what also made me not pay attention to music for 499 00:27:12,596 --> 00:27:15,874 a couple years, which was having to listen to my father 500 00:27:15,875 --> 00:27:19,740 play country music on his guitar along with his friends. 501 00:27:19,741 --> 00:27:22,329 Every night, all day long it seemed like. 502 00:27:22,330 --> 00:27:25,228 Everyday, 24/7 it seemed like. 503 00:27:25,229 --> 00:27:29,717 The same old junk from the 40s and 50s and I hated it. 504 00:27:31,235 --> 00:27:36,240 That was my first exposure to music and they play 50s songs. 505 00:27:37,932 --> 00:27:41,382 My mother loved Elvis and I could care less about any of it. 506 00:27:41,383 --> 00:27:42,694 Nothing drew me in at all until, 507 00:27:42,695 --> 00:27:45,248 like you mentioned, Led Zeppelin. 508 00:27:45,249 --> 00:27:48,458 When I was nine years old, Led Zeppelin Whole Lotta Love 509 00:27:48,459 --> 00:27:50,806 came out as a single and was being played everywhere 510 00:27:50,807 --> 00:27:53,774 and that part in the middle where the sound effects 511 00:27:53,775 --> 00:27:55,845 would come in and he started breathing heavy 512 00:27:55,846 --> 00:27:58,365 and he's like "ahh ahh ahh" 513 00:27:58,366 --> 00:28:01,471 Actually disturbed me to a degree, but attracted me also. 514 00:28:01,472 --> 00:28:06,029 Being disturbed, and a little bit today, and attractive 515 00:28:07,616 --> 00:28:10,757 I was drawn into that song. 516 00:28:10,758 --> 00:28:14,243 That was one of the first albums I ended up buying. 517 00:28:14,244 --> 00:28:15,969 You grew up in Los Angeles 518 00:28:15,970 --> 00:28:19,351 and there were long drives and back then 519 00:28:19,352 --> 00:28:21,664 you didn't really have a cassette player. 520 00:28:21,665 --> 00:28:23,666 You listened to the AM radio. 521 00:28:23,667 --> 00:28:26,807 There were a lot of AM radio, you know The Beach Boys, 522 00:28:26,808 --> 00:28:29,051 The Beatles, that kind of stuff. 523 00:28:29,052 --> 00:28:31,882 I distinctly remember Cat Stevens. 524 00:28:33,608 --> 00:28:36,058 This was like late 60s early 70s. 525 00:28:36,059 --> 00:28:39,717 My brother got a reel to reel player 526 00:28:39,718 --> 00:28:43,065 and the first recollection I have of listening to music 527 00:28:43,066 --> 00:28:46,725 or hearing it was West Side Story soundtrack 528 00:28:48,209 --> 00:28:51,868 and the song Gee Officer Krupke was my first 529 00:28:53,939 --> 00:28:56,319 recollection of any kind of music. 530 00:28:56,320 --> 00:28:58,045 My mom was a big music fan. 531 00:28:58,046 --> 00:29:00,945 My parents split up when I was young, 532 00:29:00,946 --> 00:29:04,570 but they both were record... not collectors 533 00:29:05,882 --> 00:29:08,400 but it was the 60s and everybody had 534 00:29:08,401 --> 00:29:11,231 Herb Albert and stuff like that. 535 00:29:11,232 --> 00:29:14,337 My mom, she was really into The 5th Dimension 536 00:29:14,338 --> 00:29:19,343 and so that was kind of the first song, Up Up and Away, 537 00:29:20,551 --> 00:29:21,759 that I really got into 'cause my mom 538 00:29:21,760 --> 00:29:24,002 would fucking play that song twice a day. 539 00:29:24,003 --> 00:29:26,729 When I was really little there was this record called 540 00:29:26,730 --> 00:29:28,973 Journey to the Center of the Earth by Rick Wakeman 541 00:29:28,974 --> 00:29:31,803 and that record like, I was super into it 542 00:29:31,804 --> 00:29:34,772 because it had a gate fold sleeve with a kind of like 543 00:29:34,773 --> 00:29:37,671 weird iguana that was dressed up in this crazy background 544 00:29:37,672 --> 00:29:40,432 to look like a giant dinosaur living in a cave in 545 00:29:40,433 --> 00:29:42,814 the center of the earth and it was narrated by 546 00:29:42,815 --> 00:29:46,507 Viv Stantial maybe, it was one of those 547 00:29:46,508 --> 00:29:49,338 important sounding British dudes who would tell the story. 548 00:29:49,339 --> 00:29:52,375 In between give the narration and between 549 00:29:52,376 --> 00:29:55,206 the Prague, people with swords or whatever. 550 00:29:55,207 --> 00:29:57,139 Well my dad was who he was and he loved 551 00:29:57,140 --> 00:30:01,350 and listened to and knew, inside and out, classical music. 552 00:30:01,351 --> 00:30:04,767 These are highly complex, if you've ever seen 553 00:30:04,768 --> 00:30:07,149 a music sheet for an orchestra for 554 00:30:07,150 --> 00:30:10,980 classical music, Brahms, Beethoven, Chopin, 555 00:30:10,981 --> 00:30:15,088 my dad loved Chopin, and Mozart and et cetera. 556 00:30:15,089 --> 00:30:19,851 He could whistle along to an entire symphony of Beethovin. 557 00:30:19,852 --> 00:30:22,095 He would hear a little snippet that guys like you 558 00:30:22,096 --> 00:30:24,442 or me would not, I mean it would sound nice. 559 00:30:24,443 --> 00:30:25,823 We would say that it was pretty. 560 00:30:25,824 --> 00:30:27,514 We might even know, I'm at the stage where 561 00:30:27,515 --> 00:30:29,654 I kind of know it's Mozart versus Beethovin. 562 00:30:29,655 --> 00:30:31,242 I kind of know those distinctions, 563 00:30:31,243 --> 00:30:35,868 but I don't know that's Mozzart's Suite in E minor or that's 564 00:30:37,283 --> 00:30:39,595 Beethovin's... okay Beethovin's Ninth is easy. 565 00:30:39,596 --> 00:30:43,081 But there are some that are difficult and my dad, instant. 566 00:30:43,082 --> 00:30:45,497 So I grew up with that permeating to me, 567 00:30:45,498 --> 00:30:48,328 so I think that had a lot to do with my sense of melody 568 00:30:48,329 --> 00:30:50,951 my sense of timing, building, layering, you know? 569 00:30:50,952 --> 00:30:53,574 All of that is incredibly complex stuff 570 00:30:53,575 --> 00:30:55,197 that you don't just pick up easily. 571 00:30:55,198 --> 00:30:57,440 I'm grateful to him for that, so that was 572 00:30:57,441 --> 00:30:59,857 sort of the planting of the seeds. 573 00:30:59,858 --> 00:31:01,582 When I was 10 to 12 months, 574 00:31:01,583 --> 00:31:03,653 I guess this doesn't really count as a memory 575 00:31:03,654 --> 00:31:06,691 'cause it's before I remember it, but I always had 576 00:31:06,692 --> 00:31:09,694 lots of music around growing up and Aretha Franklin 577 00:31:09,695 --> 00:31:13,732 Respect, the background vocals of the ree-ree-ree part. 578 00:31:13,733 --> 00:31:15,907 I would stand up in my crib and yell, 579 00:31:15,908 --> 00:31:18,910 "Ree-ree-ree-ree" whenever I wanted to hear music. 580 00:31:18,911 --> 00:31:21,395 I guess that's my first identifying with music 581 00:31:21,396 --> 00:31:25,123 and sort of like, probably one of my first words too, 582 00:31:25,124 --> 00:31:26,884 as it being counted as a word. 583 00:31:26,885 --> 00:31:29,921 My memory is of being very young 584 00:31:29,922 --> 00:31:33,200 at my dad's apartment in Columbus, Ohio 585 00:31:33,201 --> 00:31:35,754 and my parents were divorced when I was pretty young. 586 00:31:35,755 --> 00:31:37,895 I lived in Cleveland. He lived in Columbus. 587 00:31:37,896 --> 00:31:40,381 I think he had ordered a K-tel 588 00:31:42,038 --> 00:31:45,834 Little Richard, just like off the television, 589 00:31:46,801 --> 00:31:49,355 Little Richard's Greatest Hits. 590 00:31:52,048 --> 00:31:55,361 I just remember literally dancing around 591 00:31:57,053 --> 00:32:01,954 in our tightey whiteys to Keep a Knocking or something. 592 00:32:03,093 --> 00:32:05,544 It makes me emotional to remember this. 593 00:32:09,065 --> 00:32:11,930 But, I mean, how are you not going 594 00:32:13,069 --> 00:32:16,036 to devote yourself to music after that. 595 00:32:24,804 --> 00:32:26,909 I discovered a lot of music through radio 596 00:32:26,910 --> 00:32:29,256 and so there's some certain DJs that 597 00:32:29,257 --> 00:32:30,948 were really important in my life. 598 00:32:30,949 --> 00:32:33,709 When they were on WHFS was a station 599 00:32:33,710 --> 00:32:37,023 based in Mathesda, Maryland that had a couple 600 00:32:37,024 --> 00:32:39,611 DJs that were really interesting, 601 00:32:39,612 --> 00:32:42,476 playing their own thing, and didn't 602 00:32:42,477 --> 00:32:46,205 have to play some corporate song list that... 603 00:32:47,586 --> 00:32:52,349 Late at night I could hear early blues from this guy Weasel 604 00:32:53,695 --> 00:32:57,353 and discovered so much about music through DJs 605 00:32:57,354 --> 00:32:59,769 and also discovered punk rock, it was a great show, 606 00:32:59,770 --> 00:33:03,325 and Mystic Eye, greatest show on the HFS. 607 00:33:03,326 --> 00:33:05,741 First place I heard Iggy Pop, you know? 608 00:33:05,742 --> 00:33:08,916 So much music I learned through DJs. 609 00:33:08,917 --> 00:33:13,059 Discovering FM radio and discovering on accident 610 00:33:13,060 --> 00:33:16,717 Left of the Dial college radio and hearing 611 00:33:16,718 --> 00:33:21,378 heavy stuff on college radio, that's what did it for me. 612 00:33:22,828 --> 00:33:27,557 It wasn't any people because I didn't really know anybody. 613 00:33:29,007 --> 00:33:32,941 It was just pretty much me, so I discovered it through FM. 614 00:33:34,357 --> 00:33:37,152 I would have to say my biggest influence in music 615 00:33:37,153 --> 00:33:42,158 that really got me into punk rock was my cousin Choochee. 616 00:33:43,262 --> 00:33:45,677 I remember, it's a funny interesting story 617 00:33:45,678 --> 00:33:48,439 because Choochee was supposed to not 618 00:33:48,440 --> 00:33:50,682 be with us today, he still is! 619 00:33:50,683 --> 00:33:53,858 He had this disease where he lost one kidney. 620 00:33:53,859 --> 00:33:57,103 He was gonna lose his second, he was apparently 621 00:33:57,104 --> 00:33:59,622 supposed to die, but he never did. 622 00:33:59,623 --> 00:34:01,900 The crazy story about that is his mom, 623 00:34:01,901 --> 00:34:04,075 because we were young, we were all young. 624 00:34:04,076 --> 00:34:05,870 We were all like 15, 16 years old. 625 00:34:05,871 --> 00:34:08,010 You're son's gonna die. What are you gonna do? 626 00:34:08,011 --> 00:34:09,218 Give him anything he wants! 627 00:34:09,219 --> 00:34:11,496 So he had a big Marshall amplifier, 628 00:34:11,497 --> 00:34:14,741 this punk rock band called Barb Wired Babies. 629 00:34:14,742 --> 00:34:17,502 He was just punked out, he's doomed 630 00:34:17,503 --> 00:34:19,297 so he's gonna go all out. 631 00:34:19,298 --> 00:34:22,162 I'd go into his room and he'd be blasting The Sex Pistols 632 00:34:22,163 --> 00:34:25,165 and I was like, "What the hell is this?" 633 00:34:25,166 --> 00:34:28,479 Then we're doing mescaline and all crazy out of my minds. 634 00:34:28,480 --> 00:34:30,170 My father's taste was horrible. 635 00:34:30,171 --> 00:34:32,345 Mom's taste was white trash country. 636 00:34:32,346 --> 00:34:36,626 But my cousin's just, were two years older than me, 637 00:34:38,421 --> 00:34:42,217 and there was four of them, they were 638 00:34:42,218 --> 00:34:44,391 twins that were two years older than me. 639 00:34:44,392 --> 00:34:46,255 I was like 11 and they were 13 640 00:34:46,256 --> 00:34:48,257 and Keith was 15 and Ricky was 17. 641 00:34:48,258 --> 00:34:50,777 They said, "Let's take him to a concert! 642 00:34:50,778 --> 00:34:53,400 "Let's take the little kid to the concert." 643 00:34:53,401 --> 00:34:55,609 I was like, "Okay, I want to go." 644 00:34:55,610 --> 00:34:58,095 My parents go, "What show are you taking him to?" 645 00:34:58,096 --> 00:35:00,580 "Oh, it's gonna be at the Boston Garden. 646 00:35:00,581 --> 00:35:05,586 "It's gonna be fine. This band is doing a whole opera." 647 00:35:06,311 --> 00:35:07,656 I'm going to an opera? 648 00:35:07,657 --> 00:35:10,797 "Yeah, it's called Quadrophenia. It's like an opera." 649 00:35:10,798 --> 00:35:13,903 Cousins, it was my cousins Rhonda and Carrie. 650 00:35:13,904 --> 00:35:18,080 We looked up to them, they were four, five, six years older 651 00:35:18,081 --> 00:35:20,739 than I am and their basement was 652 00:35:22,810 --> 00:35:24,811 The Monkees, The Beatles, and KISS. 653 00:35:24,812 --> 00:35:28,470 I do remember Jim Croce as well, but those were 654 00:35:28,471 --> 00:35:30,886 the main records we would listen to. 655 00:35:30,887 --> 00:35:33,406 My cousin Jimmy, who lived around the corner from me 656 00:35:33,407 --> 00:35:36,443 for a few years, he was a big music fan. 657 00:35:36,444 --> 00:35:39,757 He was mostly into blues and bluesy rock and roll. 658 00:35:39,758 --> 00:35:42,311 I had just heard Jimi Hendrix for the first time, 659 00:35:42,312 --> 00:35:45,797 so this is my maybe 14 years old and I went over to see 660 00:35:45,798 --> 00:35:48,352 Jimmy and said, "Hey, you got any Jimi Hendrix records?" 661 00:35:48,353 --> 00:35:50,285 He loaned me his copy of Smash Hits. 662 00:35:50,286 --> 00:35:54,427 He was very generous loaning me his records. 663 00:35:54,428 --> 00:35:56,981 I still got a few in the pile down there, 664 00:35:56,982 --> 00:35:59,156 which I'm gonna return to him one of these days. 665 00:35:59,157 --> 00:36:01,088 I would say it would be my older cousin, 666 00:36:01,089 --> 00:36:04,713 Johnny, who was just cool and he's 667 00:36:04,714 --> 00:36:08,095 probably like 10 years older than me. 668 00:36:08,096 --> 00:36:10,788 I would hang out with him and he'd let me clean out 669 00:36:10,789 --> 00:36:14,688 his weed and we'd go to the unemployment office together. 670 00:36:14,689 --> 00:36:16,966 I was just his little side kick. 671 00:36:16,967 --> 00:36:20,868 He was very into the Yankees, that's not music, 672 00:36:24,182 --> 00:36:26,597 but he was into Bruce Springsteen 673 00:36:26,598 --> 00:36:29,945 and Lynyrd Skynyrd and Molly Hatchet. 674 00:36:29,946 --> 00:36:32,396 My brother, who's two years older than I am, 675 00:36:32,397 --> 00:36:35,400 was kind of into drugs and you know, 676 00:36:37,816 --> 00:36:39,713 he tried to get me to listen to the Grateful Dead. 677 00:36:39,714 --> 00:36:43,304 I remember at the UCLA, what was it called? 678 00:36:44,443 --> 00:36:46,962 The Pavilian, or the UCLA something, 679 00:36:46,963 --> 00:36:48,343 I don't know what it was. 680 00:36:48,344 --> 00:36:50,310 Grateful Dead I was like, no way. 681 00:36:50,311 --> 00:36:52,381 I'm not going to The Grateful Dead. 682 00:36:52,382 --> 00:36:56,143 This is where I kind of already knew about punk, 683 00:36:56,144 --> 00:36:57,386 like I already knew. 684 00:36:57,387 --> 00:36:58,905 I was listening to Rodney on the Rock. 685 00:36:58,906 --> 00:37:00,596 I'm like, "You want to see The Grateful Dead, why?" 686 00:37:00,597 --> 00:37:01,529 He's like, "You know you can take acid 687 00:37:01,530 --> 00:37:02,736 and it's really awesome." 688 00:37:02,737 --> 00:37:03,841 I was like, "No, I don't want to do that. 689 00:37:03,842 --> 00:37:05,843 "I don't want to do that." 690 00:37:05,844 --> 00:37:08,190 In a way, he was my inspiration that made me 691 00:37:08,191 --> 00:37:10,641 even more into punk, because it was like 692 00:37:10,642 --> 00:37:12,988 that is so not what I'm into right now. 693 00:37:12,989 --> 00:37:15,266 I have a huge answer to that and I've actually 694 00:37:15,267 --> 00:37:20,098 credited it on record covers to my older brother Bob. 695 00:37:20,099 --> 00:37:22,135 I've said, "It's your fault! 696 00:37:22,136 --> 00:37:23,861 "You got me into this whole mess." 697 00:37:23,862 --> 00:37:27,485 Being in the music business, he really pushed 698 00:37:27,486 --> 00:37:31,524 Hendrix on me, like you said your dad did 699 00:37:31,525 --> 00:37:34,147 and The Allman Brothers, Brothers and Sisters. 700 00:37:34,148 --> 00:37:36,460 He's like, "You gotta hear this Jessica! 701 00:37:36,461 --> 00:37:38,393 "The guitar playing is amazing on here." 702 00:37:38,394 --> 00:37:41,810 Then Cream, and I'm still into Clapton big time. 703 00:37:41,811 --> 00:37:43,605 Both of my older brother's because they had 704 00:37:43,606 --> 00:37:47,609 such different musical tastes were huge influences. 705 00:37:47,610 --> 00:37:50,888 One brother was listening to Lynyrd Skynyrd 706 00:37:50,889 --> 00:37:53,062 and The Allman Brothers and the other brother 707 00:37:53,063 --> 00:37:57,274 was listening to Dylan and Leonard Cohen and Joni Mitchell 708 00:37:57,275 --> 00:38:01,588 and later on Patti Smith and lots of stuff. 709 00:38:01,589 --> 00:38:06,110 But a neighborhood friend of my brother's, an older kid, 710 00:38:06,111 --> 00:38:11,080 named Eddie Rose in the late 70s came over to the house 711 00:38:11,081 --> 00:38:14,498 with Clash and Ramones records, the first ones. 712 00:38:14,499 --> 00:38:17,294 That was, you know, legend. 713 00:38:17,295 --> 00:38:20,020 My older brother and my sister, I was the youngest. 714 00:38:20,021 --> 00:38:23,439 They definitely influenced me, my brother 715 00:38:25,268 --> 00:38:27,131 because he had the early Slade records. 716 00:38:27,132 --> 00:38:30,065 They were popular on Staten Island in the 70s. 717 00:38:30,066 --> 00:38:34,449 Slade was with like the poor kids, whatever. 718 00:38:34,450 --> 00:38:39,455 The white trash kids, he had that and-you outta here? Okay. 719 00:38:43,804 --> 00:38:46,081 He had that and Mott the Hoople. 720 00:38:46,082 --> 00:38:49,016 He had Black Sabbath, Alice Cooper. 721 00:38:50,949 --> 00:38:53,260 My sister was more into the pop side. 722 00:38:53,261 --> 00:38:57,680 She was into The Baycity Rollers and stuff like that. 723 00:38:58,888 --> 00:39:01,615 But then Kiss came into the picture. 724 00:39:02,719 --> 00:39:03,961 I really don't know. 725 00:39:03,962 --> 00:39:06,066 My sister brought me to The Clash 726 00:39:06,067 --> 00:39:09,069 and then The Clash opened up my eyes to a whole nother world 727 00:39:09,070 --> 00:39:13,351 of underground music and I think there were movies. 728 00:39:16,319 --> 00:39:18,941 Stop Making Sense came out and that was The Taking Heads 729 00:39:18,942 --> 00:39:22,498 and then there was all these little avenues 730 00:39:23,844 --> 00:39:27,744 and then I heard Gang of Four and I don't know, 731 00:39:28,918 --> 00:39:31,920 I ended up at some show in college. 732 00:39:31,921 --> 00:39:36,442 I walked through the kitchen, in these back hallways, 733 00:39:36,443 --> 00:39:39,445 and ended up in this room and I was watching Gang of Four. 734 00:39:39,446 --> 00:39:41,412 They were performing at Carnegie Melon 735 00:39:41,413 --> 00:39:43,449 and I fucking lost my shit right there! 736 00:39:43,450 --> 00:39:46,659 I was like I love this band! Oh my god! 737 00:39:46,660 --> 00:39:50,560 Probably my father, who was a swing jazz guy, 738 00:39:52,597 --> 00:39:56,531 but he was hard core and he listened to records constantly. 739 00:39:56,532 --> 00:40:01,433 He was just a really avid, close, critical musical thinker. 740 00:40:03,746 --> 00:40:07,473 Plus, it was a tremendous gift he gave to me, 741 00:40:07,474 --> 00:40:10,890 he used to take me into New York to the jazz clubs 742 00:40:10,891 --> 00:40:12,823 to see people that he admired. 743 00:40:12,824 --> 00:40:15,032 That was a tremendous gift to me. 744 00:40:15,033 --> 00:40:19,865 My father was a television producer and record companies 745 00:40:23,731 --> 00:40:28,217 would give promo copies to the TV station for whatever. 746 00:40:28,218 --> 00:40:32,843 He was on the local CBS affiliate, he did nighttime news. 747 00:40:32,844 --> 00:40:34,672 They had all this other stuff, and so 748 00:40:34,673 --> 00:40:36,778 they would send him all these records. 749 00:40:36,779 --> 00:40:41,266 He'd bring records home, so it was like having Spotify 750 00:40:42,647 --> 00:40:46,374 in 1975 and so my influence was kind of DIY on it, 751 00:40:48,963 --> 00:40:51,171 but there's always this rack of new stuff coming. 752 00:40:51,172 --> 00:40:54,037 Toto, oh that's bad. Like bad good! 753 00:40:56,764 --> 00:40:58,662 Toto's cool, it's got guitar. 754 00:40:58,663 --> 00:41:01,078 Cody Alexander, he had six other brothers. 755 00:41:01,079 --> 00:41:03,943 He's the youngest and they're all just 756 00:41:03,944 --> 00:41:08,119 these long haired dudes that were really into rock and roll. 757 00:41:08,120 --> 00:41:11,537 His older brother, Roy Alexander, I used to go 758 00:41:11,538 --> 00:41:14,091 into his room when Cody wasn't around 759 00:41:14,092 --> 00:41:16,058 and I'd get stoned with Roy and his buddies, 760 00:41:16,059 --> 00:41:18,613 like Boyd and Daryl and stuff like that, or Dilbert. 761 00:41:18,614 --> 00:41:21,029 We'd listen to Steely Dan. 762 00:41:21,030 --> 00:41:24,101 He had Endless Summer by The Beach Boys. 763 00:41:24,102 --> 00:41:26,897 All the stuff that I wouldn't have heard normally. 764 00:41:26,898 --> 00:41:29,313 I will give a shout out to a guy who lived 765 00:41:29,314 --> 00:41:32,350 two doors down, a guy named Joe McGrath. 766 00:41:32,351 --> 00:41:35,458 I was probably eight or nine, Joe was 767 00:41:36,770 --> 00:41:39,945 probably the ripe old age of 12 or 13. 768 00:41:41,326 --> 00:41:45,260 He saw something in me and literally, 769 00:41:45,261 --> 00:41:49,645 we would hang out, I think Joe smoked the pot as well 770 00:41:51,612 --> 00:41:55,442 but that never came into our conversations. 771 00:41:55,443 --> 00:42:00,379 He would turn me onto the first three Aerosmith records, 772 00:42:01,795 --> 00:42:04,694 the first two Alice Cooper records, Black Sabbath. 773 00:42:06,593 --> 00:42:08,801 For me and my friends, 774 00:42:08,802 --> 00:42:10,423 it was a guy named Matt Fields, 775 00:42:10,424 --> 00:42:12,529 who still is a dear friend of mine. 776 00:42:12,530 --> 00:42:15,533 I remember I met Matt at a JCC dance 777 00:42:17,258 --> 00:42:19,052 and he was wearing a trench coat 778 00:42:19,053 --> 00:42:22,159 and a Joy Division pin and had like six rat tails 779 00:42:22,160 --> 00:42:25,818 and we immediately met and became best friends. 780 00:42:25,819 --> 00:42:28,993 It was through him that we all started listening to 781 00:42:28,994 --> 00:42:33,171 XTC, the entire first wave of 4AD bands, Parooboo. 782 00:42:38,348 --> 00:42:42,110 Damon Locks, who's still one of my best friends 783 00:42:42,111 --> 00:42:44,837 in the world, and Derek Bish who was his friend 784 00:42:44,838 --> 00:42:47,460 who I'm still friends with and Chris O'Conner. 785 00:42:47,461 --> 00:42:50,014 These were just three kids, that we were 786 00:42:50,015 --> 00:42:52,292 all in this art magnet together. 787 00:42:52,293 --> 00:42:57,263 I was doing these faux HR airbrush paintings and stuff 788 00:42:57,264 --> 00:43:02,096 and I think they kind of rescued me and they started making 789 00:43:03,546 --> 00:43:07,999 me tapes of DC punk rock and just like whatever it was. 790 00:43:09,379 --> 00:43:11,035 When we got to high school there was this 791 00:43:11,036 --> 00:43:12,899 transfer kid from California named Richard Bash. 792 00:43:12,900 --> 00:43:15,212 He's the one that brought us to our first show. 793 00:43:15,213 --> 00:43:17,490 He's the one that said, "Oh! Black Flag is playing." 794 00:43:17,491 --> 00:43:19,872 Oh yeah, we like Black Flag. 795 00:43:19,873 --> 00:43:21,805 He's like, "Well, we're all gonna go." 796 00:43:21,806 --> 00:43:24,980 Around that time we're just buying up 797 00:43:24,981 --> 00:43:26,568 all the records that we can based 798 00:43:26,569 --> 00:43:28,328 on what he's sort of letting us know. 799 00:43:28,329 --> 00:43:31,055 He's like, "Oh you should check out Minor Threat." 800 00:43:31,056 --> 00:43:33,782 They're from here, so my friend Dave went out and bought 801 00:43:33,783 --> 00:43:38,338 the record and it was like, we thought it was illegal. 802 00:43:38,339 --> 00:43:41,652 It was just like ♪ Fuck yeah, fucking shit 803 00:43:41,653 --> 00:43:43,378 The amount of cursing that was going on, 804 00:43:43,379 --> 00:43:45,760 we're like I don't know if we're allowed 805 00:43:45,761 --> 00:43:47,278 to listen to that, but I really like it! 806 00:43:47,279 --> 00:43:49,833 My best friend Mark Haggardy, who I was 807 00:43:49,834 --> 00:43:51,731 in bands with later, me and him sort of 808 00:43:51,732 --> 00:43:53,526 discovered rock music at the same time 809 00:43:53,527 --> 00:43:55,321 and started really getting into it. 810 00:43:55,322 --> 00:43:59,083 A lot of it was just us feeding off of each other. 811 00:43:59,084 --> 00:44:00,947 Going to record stores together, watching all 812 00:44:00,948 --> 00:44:04,399 the TV show specials with bands from the 60s 813 00:44:04,400 --> 00:44:06,988 and taking notes on them and later when we get 814 00:44:06,989 --> 00:44:10,647 into punk rock, going through photo magazines 815 00:44:10,648 --> 00:44:13,270 and trying to pick bands off of people's jackets. 816 00:44:13,271 --> 00:44:15,513 I wonder what that is! 999! 817 00:44:15,514 --> 00:44:18,309 That looks cool, let's check out that record! 818 00:44:18,310 --> 00:44:20,380 If he's got it on his jacket, maybe it's worth listening to. 819 00:44:20,381 --> 00:44:23,383 My best friend, Eric Neil, he had an older brother 820 00:44:23,384 --> 00:44:26,524 who was friends with The Feelies, who were 821 00:44:26,525 --> 00:44:30,012 kind of a popular indie band at that time. 822 00:44:31,289 --> 00:44:35,016 But Fritz Neil was his name, the older brother, 823 00:44:35,017 --> 00:44:39,676 and Fritz turned us both onto The Clash, I remember 824 00:44:39,677 --> 00:44:44,129 Plastic Bertrand, 825 00:44:45,510 --> 00:44:48,892 obviously the early Ramones, and all these things. 826 00:44:48,893 --> 00:44:53,241 Fritz Neil probably has no idea, he probably doesn't 827 00:44:53,242 --> 00:44:54,829 remember any of that, but he would put all 828 00:44:54,830 --> 00:44:57,383 this stuff in you know, "Try this, try this, try this." 829 00:44:57,384 --> 00:45:01,111 I was like a junkie. I needed more and more and more. 830 00:45:01,112 --> 00:45:02,526 So I'm working at this restaurant 831 00:45:02,527 --> 00:45:06,427 and these two cooks were just blasting 77 punk. 832 00:45:07,532 --> 00:45:11,086 They were blasting Plasmatics, The Ramones 833 00:45:11,087 --> 00:45:14,883 and telling the stories about them going to the Rath 834 00:45:14,884 --> 00:45:18,991 Underground Paradise, places that I was too young 835 00:45:18,992 --> 00:45:21,096 to go to and I'd heard a lot about. 836 00:45:21,097 --> 00:45:25,066 From '78 to '80 I was locked up and I went into the navy. 837 00:45:25,067 --> 00:45:29,208 Then I was stationed in Northfolk and there was 838 00:45:29,209 --> 00:45:33,108 this dude down there, I think his name was Dave or Dan. 839 00:45:33,109 --> 00:45:37,872 He was a mod dude. He was into the jam, but he was British. 840 00:45:37,873 --> 00:45:42,394 He knew all the fucking punk shit from, this was 1980. 841 00:45:43,982 --> 00:45:46,432 He knew all the punk shit from London 842 00:45:46,433 --> 00:45:50,022 and turned me onto this Live at the Vortex. 843 00:45:50,023 --> 00:45:54,475 I started really getting into a lot more of The Clash 844 00:45:59,170 --> 00:46:02,620 and The Damned and obviously The Pistols, 845 00:46:02,621 --> 00:46:04,588 but I heard them in the 70s. 846 00:46:04,589 --> 00:46:09,007 He had a real great sense of what music was going on. 847 00:46:10,181 --> 00:46:12,113 Henry Rawlins, we started hanging out. 848 00:46:12,114 --> 00:46:13,390 I remember going to his house. 849 00:46:13,391 --> 00:46:16,773 He had a BB gun. We'd go into his basement. 850 00:46:16,774 --> 00:46:19,846 He had a piece of foam against a wall 851 00:46:21,019 --> 00:46:24,540 and a cigar box he put poker chips in slots 852 00:46:25,955 --> 00:46:29,095 and we'd just sit there and shoot the poker chips. 853 00:46:29,096 --> 00:46:32,098 He had a Crosman 760 Pump Action Rifle 854 00:46:32,099 --> 00:46:36,103 and a little Co2 Pistol and I remember listening 855 00:46:37,242 --> 00:46:41,763 to Cheech and Chong, Aerosmith, Led Zeppelin. 856 00:46:41,764 --> 00:46:45,491 That's where I first heard Nugent, was in his basement. 857 00:46:45,492 --> 00:46:48,701 Henry Rawlins, he is absolutely the most influential 858 00:46:48,702 --> 00:46:53,017 music taste maker of my early interest in punk music 859 00:46:56,365 --> 00:46:57,814 and then other music, and still is. 860 00:46:57,815 --> 00:46:59,885 I still listen to his radio show and always hear 861 00:46:59,886 --> 00:47:02,957 something that is interesting even if I don't like it. 862 00:47:02,958 --> 00:47:05,062 I was actually the one that turned 863 00:47:05,063 --> 00:47:07,099 most of my friends onto certain bands. 864 00:47:07,100 --> 00:47:10,619 I would be out there buying anything that looked 865 00:47:10,620 --> 00:47:13,865 interesting at yard sales or something. 866 00:47:15,556 --> 00:47:20,216 I had a collection of probably 2500 albums at one point. 867 00:47:22,460 --> 00:47:24,495 I discovered music cheaply until 868 00:47:24,496 --> 00:47:27,085 I learned how to shoplift well. 869 00:47:27,983 --> 00:47:31,709 ♪ Why am I going insane 870 00:47:31,710 --> 00:47:35,197 ♪ Why am I the one to pay 871 00:47:36,646 --> 00:47:38,164 What records made me who I today? 872 00:47:38,165 --> 00:47:40,857 Which is an interesting question because I mean 873 00:47:40,858 --> 00:47:44,689 I'm sitting here decades later, still probably 874 00:47:47,381 --> 00:47:51,040 over involved with music, never looked back. 875 00:47:54,699 --> 00:47:58,944 To me, the most influential record as a person 876 00:47:58,945 --> 00:48:03,258 was SS Decontrol's The Kids Will Have Their Say. 877 00:48:03,259 --> 00:48:05,951 If there was ever sort of a scene maker band 878 00:48:05,952 --> 00:48:09,576 for Boston hardcore, DIY independent action 879 00:48:12,890 --> 00:48:16,376 fought involvement, that was SS Decontrol. 880 00:48:18,102 --> 00:48:20,586 First Generation X record, and this record 881 00:48:20,587 --> 00:48:23,416 I listened to more than anything else in the 80s, 882 00:48:23,417 --> 00:48:26,179 pretty much until this came along 883 00:48:27,283 --> 00:48:30,768 which I probably listened to even more. 884 00:48:30,769 --> 00:48:33,426 Between these two, both in G, those would be 885 00:48:33,427 --> 00:48:36,983 my formative sort of 80s punk rock records. 886 00:48:38,087 --> 00:48:39,398 This one. 887 00:48:39,399 --> 00:48:42,402 This record as a musician is like... 888 00:48:45,715 --> 00:48:48,752 I love this record it's like flawless. 889 00:48:48,753 --> 00:48:50,719 It's hilarious. It's powerful. 890 00:48:50,720 --> 00:48:53,206 It's snotty. It's intelligent. 891 00:48:57,727 --> 00:48:59,418 Yeah, I like this one. 892 00:48:59,419 --> 00:49:02,869 Outcasts, Self Conscious Over You. 893 00:49:02,870 --> 00:49:06,080 First album. Bell faced die on a dare. 894 00:49:06,081 --> 00:49:10,602 This album's beautiful. It's just so innocent, really. 895 00:49:14,468 --> 00:49:16,918 They could barely play their instruments 896 00:49:16,919 --> 00:49:20,542 and the timing's off and they're singing 897 00:49:20,543 --> 00:49:24,788 love songs and stuff like that about being a teenager 898 00:49:24,789 --> 00:49:29,586 while bombs are going off in the streets outside. 899 00:49:29,587 --> 00:49:33,210 This album without a doubt meant a lot 900 00:49:33,211 --> 00:49:36,420 to me growing up and even to this day. 901 00:49:36,421 --> 00:49:39,113 I mean I don't even have to think about that. 902 00:49:39,114 --> 00:49:41,770 The Bad Brains first album 'cause I was living in 903 00:49:41,771 --> 00:49:44,946 the studio with them at 171 when they recorded it. 904 00:49:44,947 --> 00:49:47,397 So seeing what they were living through. 905 00:49:47,398 --> 00:49:49,986 For me, it's not just I put the record on. 906 00:49:49,987 --> 00:49:53,161 Every song has a story to it. 907 00:49:53,162 --> 00:49:56,578 I was there when HR was recording it. 908 00:49:56,579 --> 00:49:58,511 The guys were talking about it. 909 00:49:58,512 --> 00:50:00,582 We were living it, I was living it with them 910 00:50:00,583 --> 00:50:03,551 when that record was being made. 911 00:50:03,552 --> 00:50:05,725 To this day there ain't a fucking band 912 00:50:05,726 --> 00:50:08,280 on the planet that could touch those guys 913 00:50:08,281 --> 00:50:10,213 musically or lyrically or anything. 914 00:50:10,214 --> 00:50:14,287 Having been there when the late great Jay Dublee, 915 00:50:16,875 --> 00:50:19,430 God rest his soul, recorded it. 916 00:50:20,603 --> 00:50:23,467 It's like nobody made The Bad Brains 917 00:50:23,468 --> 00:50:27,678 sound that way on any record to this day. 918 00:50:27,679 --> 00:50:30,647 Obviously The Bad Brains are a huge influence for my band. 919 00:50:30,648 --> 00:50:34,720 A lot of British punk, Jam 69, The Damned. 920 00:50:34,721 --> 00:50:37,516 All those records. Over and over again. 921 00:50:37,517 --> 00:50:41,347 You know, Iggy Pop, Stranglers, The Sonics. 922 00:50:41,348 --> 00:50:43,108 It's so crazy now, you hear them 923 00:50:43,109 --> 00:50:45,696 on TV commercials, but when we first started 924 00:50:45,697 --> 00:50:47,664 getting into them, no one heard them. 925 00:50:47,665 --> 00:50:50,149 Those are the garage punk bands 926 00:50:50,150 --> 00:50:52,910 and the punk bands that got us into music. 927 00:50:52,911 --> 00:50:56,812 Hearing the first Blag Flag single, whew man. 928 00:50:58,158 --> 00:51:00,539 Nervous Breakdown record was massive for me. 929 00:51:00,540 --> 00:51:03,852 Sham 69, Tell Us the Truth. The live side of that. 930 00:51:03,853 --> 00:51:06,856 I thought, wow that's what I wanted. 931 00:51:08,479 --> 00:51:09,479 For me, the idea of being in a 932 00:51:09,480 --> 00:51:10,549 room with people singing along? 933 00:51:10,550 --> 00:51:12,068 That's all I've ever wanted. 934 00:51:12,069 --> 00:51:16,348 What blew my mind was probably Iggy Pop and The Ramones 935 00:51:16,349 --> 00:51:18,764 because everything is sped up and louder. 936 00:51:18,765 --> 00:51:22,699 What really made me want to play fast aggressive punk 937 00:51:22,700 --> 00:51:26,565 is, I would say, Greg Ginn from this record. 938 00:51:26,566 --> 00:51:30,017 I would listen to this, someone's picking 939 00:51:31,709 --> 00:51:33,503 me up to go to college and I'm blasting 940 00:51:33,504 --> 00:51:35,643 this in my bedroom and I miss my ride. 941 00:51:35,644 --> 00:51:39,992 I was in a head shop in downtown Lim when I was about 16, 942 00:51:39,993 --> 00:51:42,408 this would be 1976, and they had 943 00:51:42,409 --> 00:51:44,341 a crate of records on the floor. 944 00:51:44,342 --> 00:51:45,894 I'm looking through it and all of a sudden I see 945 00:51:45,895 --> 00:51:48,104 this record with this freaky looking guy on the cover. 946 00:51:48,105 --> 00:51:50,036 It's like wow, what's this? 947 00:51:50,037 --> 00:51:51,245 I turn it around and it says 948 00:51:51,246 --> 00:51:53,247 Iggy and The Stooges, Raw Power. 949 00:51:53,248 --> 00:51:55,318 Had the clerk play me a couple of songs, 950 00:51:55,319 --> 00:51:57,458 like wow this is great and I took it home. 951 00:51:57,459 --> 00:51:59,977 It didn't leave my turn table for a long time. 952 00:51:59,978 --> 00:52:01,462 That was a life changer. 953 00:52:01,463 --> 00:52:03,636 I was listening to something called 954 00:52:03,637 --> 00:52:06,191 punk rock before I knew such a thing existed. 955 00:52:06,192 --> 00:52:09,746 I think that certainly the first Clash record 956 00:52:09,747 --> 00:52:12,750 blew my mind and the second as well. 957 00:52:14,131 --> 00:52:18,755 Their early stuff was, the first two, three Ramones records 958 00:52:18,756 --> 00:52:23,692 also, the energy and the sheer dedication they played with. 959 00:52:24,865 --> 00:52:26,521 One, two, three, four! You know? 960 00:52:26,522 --> 00:52:29,938 Just you know, when you're a kid that touches you. 961 00:52:29,939 --> 00:52:32,769 That grabs your heart and makes it race. 962 00:52:32,770 --> 00:52:34,253 At this point, it sounds cliche, 963 00:52:34,254 --> 00:52:35,841 but it is 100 percent true. 964 00:52:35,842 --> 00:52:38,706 There's nothing that comes anywhere near this record 965 00:52:38,707 --> 00:52:40,673 was The Ramones, Rocket to Russia. 966 00:52:40,674 --> 00:52:44,470 I was listening to our college radio station at the time. 967 00:52:44,471 --> 00:52:47,474 I was 17, I'd heard about punk rock. 968 00:52:48,682 --> 00:52:51,615 I was drawn to the 60s counter culture thing. 969 00:52:51,616 --> 00:52:54,308 Not the hippie shit, but the counter culture. 970 00:52:54,309 --> 00:52:56,931 I was too late for that and I was looking 971 00:52:56,932 --> 00:52:59,002 for something out there, didn't know what it was. 972 00:52:59,003 --> 00:53:02,972 I could rebel with, not rebel thinking back then, 973 00:53:05,596 --> 00:53:08,253 wishing I was alive back then. 974 00:53:08,254 --> 00:53:11,877 Something relevant that meant something today. 975 00:53:11,878 --> 00:53:16,883 The DJ was saying I have to play a song from this band here. 976 00:53:17,746 --> 00:53:19,022 This is something called by 977 00:53:19,023 --> 00:53:21,957 The Ramones called Teenage Lobotomy. 978 00:53:23,165 --> 00:53:25,408 When that started playing, I'd never 979 00:53:25,409 --> 00:53:27,030 heard anything like that either. 980 00:53:27,031 --> 00:53:30,102 I just cranked it up to 10 and I was like 981 00:53:30,103 --> 00:53:33,243 yeah, this is fucking exactly what I like. 982 00:53:33,244 --> 00:53:35,107 There was this record store in 983 00:53:35,108 --> 00:53:38,490 Dupont Circle called Bread and Roses. 984 00:53:38,491 --> 00:53:40,733 We used to be regulars there and we walked in 985 00:53:40,734 --> 00:53:44,254 and this guy John was playing, it had just come out, 986 00:53:44,255 --> 00:53:47,534 it was The Ramones, Road to Ruin album. 987 00:53:50,296 --> 00:53:52,745 We were like, what the hell is this? 988 00:53:52,746 --> 00:53:55,783 He's like, "It's The Ramones. It's their brand new record. 989 00:53:55,784 --> 00:53:57,233 "I just got an advanced copy." 990 00:53:57,234 --> 00:53:59,752 We were like, "But what kind of music is this?!" 991 00:53:59,753 --> 00:54:02,272 We don't really understand what we're hearing. 992 00:54:02,273 --> 00:54:05,586 He said it was basically punk rock. 993 00:54:05,587 --> 00:54:07,898 From our perspective, we had always, you know, 994 00:54:07,899 --> 00:54:10,453 the media line of punk rock is it's an exclusively 995 00:54:10,454 --> 00:54:13,732 British form of music that people beat each other up to. 996 00:54:13,733 --> 00:54:15,285 That's kind of all anybody would tell you. 997 00:54:15,286 --> 00:54:19,427 It sounded stupid. Yeah, we were immediately sold on it. 998 00:54:19,428 --> 00:54:21,498 If I had to give credit to a single record 999 00:54:21,499 --> 00:54:24,950 if I ever have to, I think Never Mind the Bollocks 1000 00:54:24,951 --> 00:54:26,641 by The Sex Pistols is just mind blowing. 1001 00:54:26,642 --> 00:54:29,299 I think that just shook the world. 1002 00:54:29,300 --> 00:54:33,235 That just changed music. It changed everything. 1003 00:54:35,858 --> 00:54:38,550 It pretty much set and opened all doors 1004 00:54:38,551 --> 00:54:40,828 in me and my life and so much more to walk through. 1005 00:54:40,829 --> 00:54:42,657 There was other great bands doing stuff. 1006 00:54:42,658 --> 00:54:45,695 The Ramones, I can't take that away from them, Dead boys. 1007 00:54:45,696 --> 00:54:50,044 A lot of good stuff, but there was nothing as intense as 1008 00:54:50,045 --> 00:54:52,736 Never Mind the Bollocks, just intense. 1009 00:54:52,737 --> 00:54:55,394 Tom Snyder had a show on that was 1010 00:54:55,395 --> 00:54:59,192 like every first Saturday night of the month. 1011 00:55:00,918 --> 00:55:05,923 Instead of Saturday Night Live, he had his little news show. 1012 00:55:07,131 --> 00:55:09,651 I remember they did a thing on the new thing 1013 00:55:10,824 --> 00:55:14,137 in England called punk rock and Barbie Benton, 1014 00:55:14,138 --> 00:55:17,761 they were interviewing her on the street. 1015 00:55:17,762 --> 00:55:18,935 She goes, "Oh my god! 1016 00:55:18,936 --> 00:55:20,350 "There's this band called The Sex Pistols." 1017 00:55:20,351 --> 00:55:23,215 That name stuck out and the next time 1018 00:55:23,216 --> 00:55:26,632 I was up at the record store, there it was. 1019 00:55:26,633 --> 00:55:28,289 It must have just come out. 1020 00:55:28,290 --> 00:55:30,533 I bought that and that was it for me. 1021 00:55:30,534 --> 00:55:35,470 The record that changed the direction was The Teen Idles. 1022 00:55:37,610 --> 00:55:41,372 In DC of course, punk rock was sort of recent 1023 00:55:42,546 --> 00:55:44,478 when I was wandering around Georgetown 1024 00:55:44,479 --> 00:55:45,755 looking for something fun to do 1025 00:55:45,756 --> 00:55:46,997 and I'd hear that people hung around 1026 00:55:46,998 --> 00:55:48,723 in Georgetown and looked for fun things to do. 1027 00:55:48,724 --> 00:55:52,175 I was wandering the streets and I went into a record store 1028 00:55:52,176 --> 00:55:56,594 and they said, "oh you should listen to this record." 1029 00:55:58,044 --> 00:56:01,806 So of course, I bought the record immediately. 1030 00:56:02,980 --> 00:56:07,052 It is the first record on Discord Records, 1031 00:56:07,053 --> 00:56:11,539 which I subsequently worked for for 22 years. 1032 00:56:11,540 --> 00:56:14,542 Apparently I really liked this music. 1033 00:56:14,543 --> 00:56:16,234 This record, 9353, 1034 00:56:17,581 --> 00:56:22,205 extremely important band for me and my friends. 1035 00:56:22,206 --> 00:56:25,382 Growing up in DC in the 80s and a band 1036 00:56:26,521 --> 00:56:29,454 that is sort of lost to the sands of time. 1037 00:56:29,455 --> 00:56:34,460 I discovered Dead Kennedys and AC/DC at the same time. 1038 00:56:36,013 --> 00:56:38,463 I remember asking my guitar teacher, 1039 00:56:38,464 --> 00:56:41,466 the first song I learned to play was Back in Black. 1040 00:56:41,467 --> 00:56:44,123 I remember asking him to teach me 1041 00:56:44,124 --> 00:56:47,852 California Uber Alles and he was not into it. 1042 00:56:49,060 --> 00:56:51,027 He goes, "I don't want to teach you 1043 00:56:51,028 --> 00:56:52,615 "any songs by this band The Dead Kennedys. 1044 00:56:52,616 --> 00:56:57,033 "That name is just really offensive to me." 1045 00:56:57,034 --> 00:56:58,690 Which made it all the more interesting. 1046 00:56:58,691 --> 00:57:01,486 Beatles, Beatles, Beatles, Beatles. 1047 00:57:01,487 --> 00:57:05,317 As a kid and then when I started to become very interested 1048 00:57:05,318 --> 00:57:10,323 in guitar as I got older, AC/DC, KISS, AC/DC, KISS. 1049 00:57:15,155 --> 00:57:19,745 But if I'm gonna have to puck one, probably AC/DC. 1050 00:57:19,746 --> 00:57:22,472 Malcolm, more than Angus. 1051 00:57:22,473 --> 00:57:25,613 Get Your Ya-Ya's Out by The Rolling Stones. 1052 00:57:25,614 --> 00:57:27,581 That was in my dad's collection. 1053 00:57:27,582 --> 00:57:29,548 That's the first record I obsessed over. 1054 00:57:29,549 --> 00:57:33,000 It was probably around '72 or '73. 1055 00:57:33,001 --> 00:57:35,312 I was like nine years old I think. 1056 00:57:35,313 --> 00:57:37,625 I listened to that record constantly. 1057 00:57:37,626 --> 00:57:41,353 I used to take wax paper and trace the pictures 1058 00:57:41,354 --> 00:57:44,218 on the back of Keith and Mick. 1059 00:57:44,219 --> 00:57:48,015 Just kind of wonder who was playing what instrument. 1060 00:57:48,016 --> 00:57:52,778 I knew all the between song banter so that record was huge. 1061 00:57:52,779 --> 00:57:54,470 Paranoid and then I went back and 1062 00:57:54,471 --> 00:57:56,748 got the first Black Sabbath record. 1063 00:57:56,749 --> 00:58:00,546 Electric Funeral, that really changed my life. 1064 00:58:01,685 --> 00:58:04,928 It was more dark stuff, then later on 1065 00:58:04,929 --> 00:58:07,483 pushing ahead it would be the Killing Joke. 1066 00:58:07,484 --> 00:58:09,139 The first Killing Joke record 1067 00:58:09,140 --> 00:58:11,072 is still a huge influence on me. 1068 00:58:11,073 --> 00:58:13,973 Blood sport, the stance, punk rock. 1069 00:58:15,802 --> 00:58:19,495 Then seeing them live, it was just so pummeling. 1070 00:58:19,496 --> 00:58:22,843 It still had heavy guitar, but it was punk 1071 00:58:22,844 --> 00:58:25,224 and new wave and dance music. 1072 00:58:25,225 --> 00:58:27,123 Completely different than anything else. 1073 00:58:27,124 --> 00:58:29,194 Just like Paranoid, I thought was, 1074 00:58:29,195 --> 00:58:33,543 I just was blown away by that first Killing Joke record. 1075 00:58:33,544 --> 00:58:35,683 One big turning point for me was when you're getting 1076 00:58:35,684 --> 00:58:39,066 an album for Christmas, two copies of the big hit album 1077 00:58:39,067 --> 00:58:41,344 that year, Rod Stewart, A Night on the Town. 1078 00:58:41,345 --> 00:58:45,900 I took one to Payless Drugstore to exchange it. 1079 00:58:45,901 --> 00:58:49,801 I was riffling through all the records 1080 00:58:49,802 --> 00:58:52,079 and this Led Zeppelin four album cover, 1081 00:58:52,080 --> 00:58:54,322 the man with the bundle of sticks on his back. 1082 00:58:54,323 --> 00:58:57,981 I saw that and I go, this is incredibly cool. 1083 00:58:57,982 --> 00:59:00,777 I don't remember whether I bought it because of 1084 00:59:00,778 --> 00:59:04,229 the album cover or because I might have recognized it and 1085 00:59:04,230 --> 00:59:07,612 remembered Stairway to Heaven, I don't remember honestly. 1086 00:59:07,613 --> 00:59:10,994 I was very young. I took it home and put the album on. 1087 00:59:10,995 --> 00:59:13,134 Everything in my world changed. 1088 00:59:13,135 --> 00:59:15,723 In terms of impact, life changing, 1089 00:59:15,724 --> 00:59:20,315 planet wobbling off its access kind of impact, Hendrix. 1090 00:59:22,766 --> 00:59:25,561 There's nothing even close, really there's nothing close. 1091 00:59:25,562 --> 00:59:27,840 I mean he was the God head. 1092 00:59:29,393 --> 00:59:34,052 When I heard that first album, all bets were off. 1093 00:59:34,053 --> 00:59:36,641 Anything was possible. 1094 00:59:36,642 --> 00:59:39,506 It was a world of wild imagination 1095 00:59:40,542 --> 00:59:43,268 and color and limitless possibilities. 1096 00:59:43,269 --> 00:59:47,929 That guitar, I'm getting goosebumps just thinking of it. 1097 00:59:49,102 --> 00:59:52,760 The same record that originally blew my mind 1098 00:59:52,761 --> 00:59:57,766 when I was 10 or 11 years old that made me want to change my 1099 01:00:00,286 --> 01:00:05,015 religion to Jimi Hendrix was the Live at Woodstock album. 1100 01:00:06,464 --> 01:00:10,295 Him playing, it sent me on a path of wanting to play rock, 1101 01:00:10,296 --> 01:00:14,610 of wanting to play rock and roll, to play at an extremely 1102 01:00:14,611 --> 01:00:17,855 loud volume, to be extremely distorted. 1103 01:00:19,098 --> 01:00:23,102 That feedback was a note and a chord and a song. 1104 01:00:27,244 --> 01:00:31,178 Jimi Hendrix. It all comes back to him. 1105 01:00:38,358 --> 01:00:42,051 A house is on fire, what three records would you grab? 1106 01:00:42,052 --> 01:00:44,675 Is that a desert island dissoff? 1107 01:00:46,125 --> 01:00:48,782 First, if you're on a desert island, there's no electricity. 1108 01:00:48,783 --> 01:00:52,130 Your batteries are gonna run out pretty soon, 1109 01:00:52,131 --> 01:00:54,339 so I don't think any records are gonna help you. 1110 01:00:54,340 --> 01:00:55,961 But if your house is on fire, 1111 01:00:55,962 --> 01:00:59,862 you grab Minor Threat, Out of Step test pressing, 1112 01:00:59,863 --> 01:01:03,831 only because number one it's a great record 1113 01:01:03,832 --> 01:01:07,939 and number two it's extremely rare and will allow you 1114 01:01:07,940 --> 01:01:11,977 to buy records to replace the one you lost in the fire. 1115 01:01:11,978 --> 01:01:14,497 If my house was on fire and I had 1116 01:01:14,498 --> 01:01:17,224 to get three records out, the first thing 1117 01:01:17,225 --> 01:01:19,157 I would definitely get is... 1118 01:01:19,158 --> 01:01:23,782 I have a Minor Threat test pressing of Out of Step. 1119 01:01:23,783 --> 01:01:26,958 It's worth enough to probably fix some of the smoke 1120 01:01:26,959 --> 01:01:30,237 and water damage, so I would need that in order 1121 01:01:30,238 --> 01:01:32,273 to get sorted out because you know insurance, 1122 01:01:32,274 --> 01:01:33,758 they could do anything and just say no. 1123 01:01:33,759 --> 01:01:37,037 So I'd get that, and it's a good record. 1124 01:01:37,038 --> 01:01:41,041 I would definitely take Exile on Main Street, 1125 01:01:41,042 --> 01:01:42,801 by far my favorite Stones record, 1126 01:01:42,802 --> 01:01:45,631 just such an important thing and I would 1127 01:01:45,632 --> 01:01:48,565 take the Black album by The Damned. 1128 01:01:48,566 --> 01:01:52,121 Probably the Minor Threat discography and let's face it, 1129 01:01:52,122 --> 01:01:55,780 except for Good Guys Don't Wear White, 1130 01:01:55,781 --> 01:01:57,402 they didn't have a bad song. 1131 01:01:57,403 --> 01:01:59,369 I'd just get the fuck out of the house. 1132 01:01:59,370 --> 01:02:01,199 If my house were on fire and I could 1133 01:02:01,200 --> 01:02:05,204 only grab three records, I would grab The Faith, 1134 01:02:07,827 --> 01:02:10,623 The Damned, and Love and Rockets. 1135 01:02:11,486 --> 01:02:13,349 If my house were on fire, 1136 01:02:13,350 --> 01:02:16,698 I would grab one of my favorite records. 1137 01:02:19,977 --> 01:02:23,669 I did punk rock, which is what threw off my entire college 1138 01:02:23,670 --> 01:02:27,087 career in the end, but I went to college for opera 1139 01:02:27,088 --> 01:02:31,989 and Maria Callas was my actual favorite singer of all time. 1140 01:02:34,129 --> 01:02:37,062 MC5 which is one of my favorite 1141 01:02:37,063 --> 01:02:39,099 records of all time, oh my goodness. 1142 01:02:39,100 --> 01:02:42,931 Reptile House, which is also a Discord record. 1143 01:02:44,346 --> 01:02:46,934 If my house is on fire, which is not even a funny question 1144 01:02:46,935 --> 01:02:48,487 because I've already been through this. 1145 01:02:48,488 --> 01:02:51,939 I've unfortunately been through a fire and lost records, 1146 01:02:51,940 --> 01:02:55,460 lost a dog, which is more heartbreaking than anything. 1147 01:02:55,461 --> 01:02:57,842 I was actually playing a show with The Bruisers 1148 01:02:57,843 --> 01:03:00,396 and I got that call and was like "Oh." 1149 01:03:00,397 --> 01:03:04,296 Anyway, if I had to get out of my house with three records, 1150 01:03:04,297 --> 01:03:05,953 you're making it really tough on me, 1151 01:03:05,954 --> 01:03:10,130 I would definitely grab my Bad Brains, Pay to Cum. 1152 01:03:10,131 --> 01:03:14,720 This has got to come with me everywhere I go. 1153 01:03:14,721 --> 01:03:16,239 I love all of these. 1154 01:03:16,240 --> 01:03:19,656 I would grab SS Decontrol, Kids Will Have Their Say. 1155 01:03:19,657 --> 01:03:22,763 This is one of my all time favorite albums. 1156 01:03:22,764 --> 01:03:26,492 All time, love it. Everything up here I love. 1157 01:03:27,873 --> 01:03:29,805 I don't think I would need to grab my own because 1158 01:03:29,806 --> 01:03:34,050 it's in my mind, but if I had to take another choice, 1159 01:03:34,051 --> 01:03:37,641 I love the Misfits of course, Minor Threat. 1160 01:03:41,300 --> 01:03:44,647 Can I take four? Can I take The Misfits and Minor Threat? 1161 01:03:44,648 --> 01:03:48,409 I'll take these two. Bullet and In my Eyes, Minor Threat, 1162 01:03:48,410 --> 01:03:50,032 I'd be very tempted to grab a couple 1163 01:03:50,033 --> 01:03:52,241 test pressings like Flex Your Head test pressing 1164 01:03:52,242 --> 01:03:53,759 or the Iron Cross test pressing, 1165 01:03:53,760 --> 01:03:56,383 just because I wouldn't be able to replace those. 1166 01:03:56,384 --> 01:04:00,526 The Bad Brains single I like because it's the only 1167 01:04:01,941 --> 01:04:06,532 signed record I have and it's also one of the early ones. 1168 01:04:07,947 --> 01:04:10,190 They didn't figure out how to fold the cover correctly 1169 01:04:10,191 --> 01:04:13,469 so it's like too fat and long which I kind of like. 1170 01:04:13,470 --> 01:04:15,643 I don't know, I'd probably grab something like that. 1171 01:04:15,644 --> 01:04:19,199 My Bad Brains, seven inch, which I could easily 1172 01:04:19,200 --> 01:04:22,996 put that in this category because it completely 1173 01:04:22,997 --> 01:04:26,862 changed everything I knew about music and it sounded pro. 1174 01:04:26,863 --> 01:04:28,346 It didn't sound like a local band. 1175 01:04:28,347 --> 01:04:31,452 It was just amazing and I hadn't heard that much. 1176 01:04:31,453 --> 01:04:34,110 There wasn't really any hardcore to hear at that point. 1177 01:04:34,111 --> 01:04:37,113 So this record, I'd grab it, and it's also 1178 01:04:37,114 --> 01:04:39,391 probably my only valuable record left. 1179 01:04:39,392 --> 01:04:42,499 Raw Cassette, Catch a Fire, and man 1180 01:04:45,640 --> 01:04:48,642 I've got to go with fucking Master of Puppets. 1181 01:04:48,643 --> 01:04:51,438 I fucking love that record dude. You know why? 1182 01:04:51,439 --> 01:04:55,270 When Master of Puppets came out I was addicted 1183 01:04:57,307 --> 01:04:59,308 to cocaine and freebase at the time 1184 01:04:59,309 --> 01:05:00,999 and going through a lot of crazy shit. 1185 01:05:01,000 --> 01:05:02,967 When I put that record on I was like, 1186 01:05:02,968 --> 01:05:06,177 to wake up and have your breakfast on a mirror, 1187 01:05:06,178 --> 01:05:09,905 it was a lot of deep shit being said there 1188 01:05:09,906 --> 01:05:12,908 and the music was just fucking brutal 1189 01:05:12,909 --> 01:05:15,324 and it's Cliff Burton's last record with them. 1190 01:05:15,325 --> 01:05:19,362 It was just like, you know, I was like holy shit. 1191 01:05:19,363 --> 01:05:23,677 3, 2, 1, I would grab the Bad Brains wire sessions 1192 01:05:23,678 --> 01:05:25,713 which I have on cassette, but I don't have it with me. 1193 01:05:25,714 --> 01:05:30,063 But I would grab this one, and number two would be this. 1194 01:05:30,064 --> 01:05:32,789 But my number one record, if I just 1195 01:05:32,790 --> 01:05:35,378 had to grab one, would be this one. 1196 01:05:35,379 --> 01:05:38,864 Okay, so if my house was on fire what would I do? 1197 01:05:38,865 --> 01:05:43,008 Do I want this? It's cool. This is a great record. 1198 01:05:47,805 --> 01:05:50,049 I mean, a classic for sure. 1199 01:05:51,223 --> 01:05:52,948 Well if my house is on fire, I have this 1200 01:05:52,949 --> 01:05:57,193 one box of all my collectable, or records 1201 01:05:57,194 --> 01:05:59,333 that some people refer to as bonzers. 1202 01:05:59,334 --> 01:06:02,958 I heard that somewhere basically refer to rare 1203 01:06:02,959 --> 01:06:05,236 or prized records so I guess that's kind of 1204 01:06:05,237 --> 01:06:07,376 the term I go with, but I'd just grab the box. 1205 01:06:07,377 --> 01:06:11,518 If I had to specifically pick three, one would be 1206 01:06:11,519 --> 01:06:15,832 the first Articles of Faith album, What We Want is Free. 1207 01:06:15,833 --> 01:06:19,146 Another one is Negative Approaches first seven inch, 1208 01:06:19,147 --> 01:06:20,976 in fact their only seven inch I guess. 1209 01:06:20,977 --> 01:06:25,982 This last one isn't really anything that rare, I suppose. 1210 01:06:27,293 --> 01:06:28,984 It's a band from Michigan called The State. 1211 01:06:28,985 --> 01:06:32,297 I had a friend named Jane from here and she went 1212 01:06:32,298 --> 01:06:34,403 to the University of Michigan and would send me back 1213 01:06:34,404 --> 01:06:38,338 flyers and records and this is one of the ones she sent me. 1214 01:06:38,339 --> 01:06:40,409 "You gotta check this band out, they're great!" 1215 01:06:40,410 --> 01:06:43,722 I did that and it has really strong 1216 01:06:43,723 --> 01:06:47,726 sentimental value because she died on 9/11. 1217 01:06:47,727 --> 01:06:50,315 She was on one of the planes, so I really cherish 1218 01:06:50,316 --> 01:06:53,594 any of the records I got from her after she passed away 1219 01:06:53,595 --> 01:06:58,013 I basically inherited her record collection as well. 1220 01:06:58,014 --> 01:07:00,912 That's something that means a great deal to me. 1221 01:07:00,913 --> 01:07:03,190 It's an impossible answer. Honestly? 1222 01:07:03,191 --> 01:07:08,196 I think, like I mentioned before, why I keep these things 1223 01:07:09,577 --> 01:07:10,818 in boxes is so I can throw them at the window, 1224 01:07:10,819 --> 01:07:13,718 so I don't have to pick threw them. 1225 01:07:14,961 --> 01:07:18,793 I could just throw them out and I'll be great. 1226 01:07:22,176 --> 01:07:25,350 I don't know, this The Saints third album, 1227 01:07:25,351 --> 01:07:26,834 Prehistoric Sounds. 1228 01:07:26,835 --> 01:07:29,320 Slade, Play it Loud. I only get three. 1229 01:07:29,321 --> 01:07:32,668 This record, the Why EP. Discharge. 1230 01:07:32,669 --> 01:07:36,223 Jesus. It's like I got this when it first came out. 1231 01:07:36,224 --> 01:07:38,018 This fucking record scared the shit out of everybody. 1232 01:07:38,019 --> 01:07:42,643 Let's see, Rocket to Russia and then probably, 1233 01:07:42,644 --> 01:07:43,645 I get three? 1234 01:07:48,064 --> 01:07:53,034 Two of the three signed by Edward Gory albums that we have. 1235 01:07:54,622 --> 01:07:57,175 One False Move by The Freeze, Edward Gory the artist 1236 01:07:57,176 --> 01:08:00,075 signed them and because I love Edward Gory 1237 01:08:00,076 --> 01:08:02,492 and I miss him I'd grab those. 1238 01:08:03,631 --> 01:08:05,425 That's funny that you asked that. 1239 01:08:05,426 --> 01:08:07,565 My answer is I'd grab my negatives. 1240 01:08:07,566 --> 01:08:09,291 I wouldn't grab records. 1241 01:08:09,292 --> 01:08:11,741 I'd probably just grab a few Rolling Stones records. 1242 01:08:11,742 --> 01:08:14,227 I would probably give a different answer 1243 01:08:14,228 --> 01:08:16,436 to this every hour of every day, 1244 01:08:16,437 --> 01:08:19,371 so if I had to answer it right now, 1245 01:08:20,510 --> 01:08:23,582 let's go with The Clash, London Calling; 1246 01:08:26,240 --> 01:08:30,795 The Beatles, it's like I want to say the White album, 1247 01:08:30,796 --> 01:08:35,765 but believe it or not I'm gonna say Magical Mystery Tour; 1248 01:08:35,766 --> 01:08:38,458 It's a tie right now in my brain between 1249 01:08:38,459 --> 01:08:42,877 Let it Bleed by the Stones and Blue by Joni Mitchell. 1250 01:08:44,327 --> 01:08:48,538 If my house was on fire I would grab the White album. 1251 01:08:49,953 --> 01:08:54,647 I would grab, I might grab Honky Dory - no I would grab Low. 1252 01:08:58,996 --> 01:09:03,138 For sure. I would definitely grab Street Hustle. 1253 01:09:03,139 --> 01:09:05,140 All right, I gave it some thought 1254 01:09:05,141 --> 01:09:08,315 and every time I thought about it I changed my mind. 1255 01:09:08,316 --> 01:09:11,319 But this morning, Electric Ladyland. 1256 01:09:15,496 --> 01:09:18,153 My second choice this morning would be Trout Mask 1257 01:09:18,154 --> 01:09:21,225 and the last one, it could have been their third album, 1258 01:09:21,226 --> 01:09:23,468 you know I love their third album as well, 1259 01:09:23,469 --> 01:09:25,539 I love even some of those later things that are sort of 1260 01:09:25,540 --> 01:09:29,199 compilations of live stuff recorded at Max's 1261 01:09:32,858 --> 01:09:36,172 but this record is very important to me. 1262 01:09:37,656 --> 01:09:41,660 I actually met Lou a few years ago he signed it. 1263 01:09:43,109 --> 01:09:45,283 Then I was bummed that I had him sign it on the front. 1264 01:09:45,284 --> 01:09:47,147 This front is just so brilliant. 1265 01:09:47,148 --> 01:09:48,976 Have to be an Allman Brothers record. 1266 01:09:48,977 --> 01:09:50,668 This was one of my first favorite bands. 1267 01:09:50,669 --> 01:09:54,327 When I was 14 I took a bus and went down to Georgia 1268 01:09:54,328 --> 01:09:57,192 and saw them at Lana Jam so it would have to be 1269 01:09:57,193 --> 01:09:59,435 an Allman Brother's record, probably 1270 01:09:59,436 --> 01:10:00,885 either Eat a Peach or Live at Fillmore. 1271 01:10:00,886 --> 01:10:03,922 East, John Coltrain Ballads, and then 1272 01:10:03,923 --> 01:10:08,237 Will the Circle be Unbroken by The Nitty Gritty Band. 1273 01:10:08,238 --> 01:10:10,584 To be honest, the first thing I would 1274 01:10:10,585 --> 01:10:13,587 grab would be my 1952 Gibson ES175. 1275 01:10:25,600 --> 01:10:28,499 The last record that I bought was Drinks, 1276 01:10:28,500 --> 01:10:31,951 which is a project band with Tim Pressley 1277 01:10:34,575 --> 01:10:39,130 from White Fence and Kate Lebon who's a Welsh singer. 1278 01:10:39,131 --> 01:10:43,410 I think it's called The Essential Charlie Rich. 1279 01:10:43,411 --> 01:10:46,793 The last record I purchased was by 1280 01:10:46,794 --> 01:10:49,554 an artist by the name of Eluvium 1281 01:10:49,555 --> 01:10:53,248 and the record's called Nightmare Ending. 1282 01:10:53,249 --> 01:10:54,939 Honestly the last record I bought was probably 1283 01:10:54,940 --> 01:10:56,734 Duran, Duran and it was for my wife 1284 01:10:56,735 --> 01:10:58,874 because we got a new turn table. 1285 01:10:58,875 --> 01:11:03,465 I got this Moondog record a few weeks ago. I love Moondog. 1286 01:11:03,466 --> 01:11:04,638 The last record I purchased 1287 01:11:04,639 --> 01:11:07,503 was Radkey's Dark Black Makeup. 1288 01:11:07,504 --> 01:11:10,956 The last record that I bought would be, 1289 01:11:12,371 --> 01:11:17,273 I forget the title of it, it's a Delbert McCLinton record. 1290 01:11:18,239 --> 01:11:19,757 Yeah. That would be the last one. 1291 01:11:19,758 --> 01:11:23,381 The last record I bought was Key Markets by Sleaford Mods. 1292 01:11:23,382 --> 01:11:27,247 Animals, box set. I wanted the Animals box set. 1293 01:11:27,248 --> 01:11:29,629 The last record I purchased, and I've been doing this 1294 01:11:29,630 --> 01:11:32,183 as a habit from the very beginning that our first album 1295 01:11:32,184 --> 01:11:36,394 came out, Victim in Pink, it's just for the purpose 1296 01:11:36,395 --> 01:11:39,017 of good luck itself, I always go out and but my record. 1297 01:11:39,018 --> 01:11:41,537 I go to the record store and I buy my record. 1298 01:11:41,538 --> 01:11:44,816 It hasn't worked. 1299 01:11:44,817 --> 01:11:45,784 Christ, I don't know. 1300 01:11:45,785 --> 01:11:48,199 I've been illegally downloading 1301 01:11:48,200 --> 01:11:50,512 for so long now I don't know. 1302 01:11:50,513 --> 01:11:52,168 I can't remember the last one. 1303 01:11:52,169 --> 01:11:55,586 Probably Leatherface, Stormy Petrol. 1304 01:11:55,587 --> 01:11:59,142 Battle Ruins. It's a bunch of local guys. 1305 01:12:00,868 --> 01:12:02,938 They're like a side project. 1306 01:12:02,939 --> 01:12:06,010 If I tell you, then people will think I'm just a hippie 1307 01:12:06,011 --> 01:12:08,737 and I'm not even into hardcore and I'm just a fraud, 1308 01:12:08,738 --> 01:12:13,743 but you know, but Apostrophe by Frank Zappa 1309 01:12:15,296 --> 01:12:17,366 was something that I picked up. 1310 01:12:17,367 --> 01:12:22,267 I'm spoiled by the internet because I look for stuff 1311 01:12:22,268 --> 01:12:25,132 that I didn't buy that's not in my collection 1312 01:12:25,133 --> 01:12:27,445 of records and CDs and I just stream it 1313 01:12:27,446 --> 01:12:30,862 and I don't download it and it's kind of a shame. 1314 01:12:30,863 --> 01:12:33,209 The music industry is like that. 1315 01:12:33,210 --> 01:12:34,935 This is the last record I purchased. 1316 01:12:34,936 --> 01:12:37,490 It's a band from New York City called Nandas. 1317 01:12:37,491 --> 01:12:40,251 I found out about it just on the internet, you know, 1318 01:12:40,252 --> 01:12:43,530 checking them out online and it was really good 1319 01:12:43,531 --> 01:12:47,085 so I got this a couple weeks ago and I was not disappointed. 1320 01:12:47,086 --> 01:12:50,744 The last record I bought was last week for a road trip. 1321 01:12:50,745 --> 01:12:53,402 I got Singles Going Steady by the Buzzcocks. 1322 01:12:53,403 --> 01:12:56,785 The stereo situation hasn't been around for decades. 1323 01:12:56,786 --> 01:12:58,476 It's just too easy with the digital stuff. 1324 01:12:58,477 --> 01:13:00,167 I listen in the car and I listen 1325 01:13:00,168 --> 01:13:02,411 on that little speaker there. 1326 01:13:02,412 --> 01:13:03,999 It's sort of pathetic, isn't it? 1327 01:13:04,000 --> 01:13:07,865 That little Bose, whatever it's called. 1328 01:13:07,866 --> 01:13:10,971 The last single record I got 1329 01:13:10,972 --> 01:13:14,181 was a reissue of a DC band called The Hangmen, 1330 01:13:14,182 --> 01:13:17,841 60s garage band who was sort of hard to hear 1331 01:13:19,567 --> 01:13:23,467 this band in the 80s and 90s, but now being rediscovered. 1332 01:13:23,468 --> 01:13:26,332 I got 'Bout Love by Clydie King. 1333 01:13:28,473 --> 01:13:32,441 It's a northern soul, all these old. 1334 01:13:32,442 --> 01:13:34,581 All the Time, by The Intruders. 1335 01:13:34,582 --> 01:13:39,414 Both of these I got for maybe 20 bucks with postage. 1336 01:13:39,415 --> 01:13:43,418 The last record I purchased was Black Sabbath's 1337 01:13:43,419 --> 01:13:47,112 first album because it's the deluxe version. 1338 01:13:48,320 --> 01:13:52,323 It's a double album with outtakes and this album 1339 01:13:52,324 --> 01:13:56,708 is ground zero for a lot of people and I can see why. 1340 01:13:57,950 --> 01:14:00,676 Let's go with KISS, Dressed to Kill. 1341 01:14:00,677 --> 01:14:02,747 It sucks that I don't have time to listen to vinyl. 1342 01:14:02,748 --> 01:14:05,094 Almost never can I make time to do it, 1343 01:14:05,095 --> 01:14:07,614 so I totally turned into one of the file people. 1344 01:14:07,615 --> 01:14:10,618 I just pluck music out of the ether. 1345 01:14:11,895 --> 01:14:15,898 I think it was the first Undertones record. 1346 01:14:15,899 --> 01:14:18,591 I just, you know one thing I just recently bought? 1347 01:14:18,592 --> 01:14:20,696 I'm not sure this was the last record, 1348 01:14:20,697 --> 01:14:23,285 but Eddie Harris live. 1349 01:14:23,286 --> 01:14:25,149 You know Eddie Harris? The jazz guy? 1350 01:14:25,150 --> 01:14:27,496 Had a listen here track, good jam. 1351 01:14:27,497 --> 01:14:29,981 Him live at The Village Gate, I think. 1352 01:14:29,982 --> 01:14:31,983 That's a great record. 1353 01:14:31,984 --> 01:14:34,676 I bought Funky People Part One, James Brown. 1354 01:14:34,677 --> 01:14:37,507 That was the last record I bought. 1355 01:14:46,412 --> 01:14:50,036 Record labels sell plastic. That's what they're selling. 1356 01:14:50,037 --> 01:14:54,937 And the reason we buy one piece of plastic over another one, 1357 01:14:54,938 --> 01:14:57,353 is because they have licensed information 1358 01:14:57,354 --> 01:15:01,530 to be inscribed into that plastic that is more attractive 1359 01:15:01,531 --> 01:15:04,637 to us than say some other information 1360 01:15:04,638 --> 01:15:07,571 that the guys licensed for another piece of plastic. 1361 01:15:07,572 --> 01:15:10,781 Ultimately, records label, it's just fucking plastic 1362 01:15:10,782 --> 01:15:13,231 and with paper on it right? 1363 01:15:13,232 --> 01:15:15,234 That's what a record is. 1364 01:15:17,409 --> 01:15:21,240 What do you call a record you don't listen to? 1365 01:15:22,138 --> 01:15:24,484 A piece of fucking trash. 1365 01:15:25,305 --> 01:15:31,720 Craving big poker? Feast your eyes on Venom. $5 million GTD. AmericasCardroom.com 114178

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