PUNK Magazine Exhibit Jan 14th-30th

PUNKmag#1coverIn 1976 the first issue of PUNK Magazine was published. It was the first magazine dedicated to punk rock and the downtown NY scene. On January 14th PUNK Magazine will celebrate 40 years since the publication of its first issue at Howl, with an opening party from 6-8pm. The  group gallery show, “Howl! Happening: An Arturo Vega Project”, with works by PUNK magazine’s artists, cartoonists and illustrators runs from Jan 14th to the 30th at Howl, located at 6 East 1st Street in Manhattan.

From the Kickstarter campaign page:
“• The first issue of PUNK Magazine was developed, created written, drawn and printed in a very short time: Mid-November 1975 to New Year’s Eve 1976. It appeared three months before the Ramones first album and a year before the first Sex Pistols record were released. It didn’t cash in on a popular movement; PUNK Magazine created it.
• The radical look of PUNK magazine—hand-lettered editorials and page layouts, feature articles presented in photo-comic formats, and a cover that caricatured Lou Reed as a horror comic icon—created an authentic visual “punch-in-the-mouth” for what we insisted was a genuine social movement, and it became a knockout. “Punk Rock” before PUNK magazine appeared was a vaguely-defined term that described the New York Dolls, the Bay City Rollers, AC/DC, The Standells, the pub-rock bands popular in England at the time (Eddie and The Hot Rods, The Stranglers, etc.), and many mediocre rock bands who appeared atat CBGB. After PUNK Magazine appeared, punk rock was about the Ramones, The Dictators and the Dead Boys in the USA and the Damned, the Sex Pistols and The Clash in the UK. Thousands of great bands have emerged since then.”

You can find out a whole lot more about PUNK Magazine’s history and the exhibit at their Kickstarter campaign here.
and the Howl Happening event page here.

Previously Unreleased 1980 Talking Heads Concert Footage!

An entire set of vintage, live, Talking Heads has just become available. This is the best of the Talking Heads in top form, just before they became the arena concert show seen in Stop Making Sense. In this concert they still have some of that raw underground feel of their early days. Adrian Belew, Bernie Worrell and their “Afro-Funk Orchestra” take the band to the next level in this fantastic black and white, multi camera footage, shot at the Capitol Theater in Passiac, New Jersey in 1980. The band is in great form and these are the songs that really catapulted them into the international spotlight, favorites like: “Psycho Killer”, “Remain In Light”, “Born Under Punches”, “I Zimbra”, “Take Me To The River”, “Life During Wartime”. “Once In A Lifetime”, “Crosseyed And Painless”, “Life During Wartime”…There’s no filler here and you get to hear what a fantastic rhythm section Chris Franz and Tina Weymouth are, something that sometimes gets forgotten about the Heads.

Setlist:
0:00:00 – Psycho Killer
0:05:45 – Warning Sign
0:11:34 – Stay Hungry
0:15:25 – Cities
0:20:10 – I Zimbra
0:24:41 – Drugs
0:29:23 – Once In A Lifetime
0:35:11 – Animals
0:39:28 – Houses In Motion
0:45:56 – Born Under Punches (The Heat Goes On)
0:53:05 – Crosseyed And Painless
0:59:30 – Life During Wartime
1:04:56 – Take Me To The River
1:11:02 – The Great Curve
Personnel:
David Byrne – lead vocals, guitar
Jerry Harrison – guitar, keyboards, vocals
Tina Weymouth – bass, keyboards, guitar, vocals
Chris Frantz – drums, vocals
Adrian Belew – lead guitar, vocals
Bernie Worrell – keyboards
Busta Cherry Jones – bass
Steve Scales – percussion
Dolette McDonald – vocals

NYC Loses Another Legend

The Village Voice reported last week that founding member of the iconic NYC band Television, Richard Lloyd is leaving New York. “So many of my friends who were so much a part of New York moved away. Now I’ll be one of them.” He told the Voice

Television was one of the first bands to play CBGB in the 1970’s and central to starting what became the scene there that went on to change music around the world.

When a hardcore, living legend, New Yorker like Mr Lloyd feels he has to leave and even wants to leave, it’s a sad reflection on what NY has become.

7979114341_526d1efeff

UnCaged Toy Piano Festival

Musicians from around the world are converging at the Museum of the Moving Image this weekend for the UnCaged Toy Piano Festival’s third biennial event. If you haven’t figured it out yet, it’s wonderful avant-garde music played on miniature toy pianos! The festival takes inspiration from John Cage’s 1948 “Suite for Toy Piano”. The fantastic Angelica Negrón of the band Balún (and my former label-mate) will be performing. You can read more about it here.

Exif_JPEG_PICTURE

Ad Agency Saatchi & Saatchi NY to Close its Music Department

In another example of the dwindling New York City music industry, Saatchi & Saatchi New York confirmed they are laying off their entire music department. This is undoubtably partially due to turmoil in the music industry as a whole, but for a place like NY, arguably once the center of the musical universe, it is especially hard to watch another segment of this cornerstone of our cultural capital take another hit. With the recent news of the recording facility Avatar going up for sale, and in recent years the closing of Frank Music, Colony, Steinway’s iconic flagship location, Roseland, and the end of music row on 48th street, among other losses, it is another reminder of why MOMENT NYC exists — to help preserve New York’s musical history, to support it’s present and to do everything possible to secure its sustainable future. NY’s traditional musical ecosystem is made of many parts: music venues and recording studios of all sizes, a variety of genres of music being created by multiple generations —working separately but also together, passing on traditions, wisdom and skills— and commercial and non commercial places, and communities where people can make and experience music. Today the very problem we see with the national economy is echoed in our music economy; there are very few middle class job opportunities left. There are also the effects of technologies that increasingly make being located in places like NY less of a necessity. However, NY’s unique density of diverse cultures and communities, its world class venerable institutions, and more critically its small specialized groups still clearly create ample conditions for great stimulation in the arts. MOMENT NYC hopes to bring the common concerns of these diverse groups together as one voice that can advocate for a healthy sustainable future for the music industry and musicians in NYC, to build an institution that represents the beautiful story of music in NY that can directly provide work for musicians and education for the next generation of musicians through NY’s unique music history, exposure to a wide variety of music and hands on interaction with professional musicians, instruments and materials. The warning signs have been many and clear. Ultimately the high profitability of NYC real estate creates strong incentives that run counter to building artistic communities and without a fight these incentives will continue to gut grass roots communities. On the other end of the spectrum are the large industry players. If we lose the big ad agency work, the big studios and record labels, the mid sized concert venues, the mom and pops and the middle class jobs, what will be left? Broadway musicians are fighting to keep from being replaced by canned music, orchestras are struggling to fill seats. We need a larger vision for solutions that can benefit the entire musical community of New York City and all its citizens. As I just heard John Zorn say about the NY music scene on the Brian Lehrer show “..it’s still the most exciting city on the planet.” Let’s keep it that way!