They've Torn Down Vet's Memorial, part three - by Ricki C.

The heading of my year-long Pencilstorm series has changed this month, as I read in my daily newspaper (a newspaper, how quaint) that the demolition of Vet’s Memorial is complete.  

 

JUDY COLLINS / March 20th, 1970

I would guess the first question longtime readers of Pencilstorm would have about this month’s entry is: “What the hell was Ricki C. doing at a Judy Collins concert?”  There are a variety of answers to that question: I’ve always had a soft spot (no pun intended) for acoustic music, even in my most rockin’ times.  In 1969 I loved The MC5 and Joni Mitchell with equal and opposing fervor.  The Mekons and Shawn Colvin probably shared roughly equal time on my cassette deck back in 1989, and right now Jack White and Dar Williams CD’s are both stacked next to my player.

Also, I probably wanted to see Judy Collins in early 1970 because I still LOVED Crosby, Stills & Nash in those days, and Stephen Stills had penned all those tunes about Collins: “Suite: Judy Blues Eyes” and the like.  (By 1973, only three years later, when the New York Dolls released their first record, I was ready to ship CS&N and all of their hippie brethren ilk out on the Japanese current.)  

Probably the biggest reason I attended Judy Collins, though, was that I was dating a girl named Linda Finneran at the time and Linda liked Judy Collins.  (There’s an entire blog about Linda and my schizoid senior year of high school – Linda Finneran & Scoring Heroin – in my former blog, Growing Old With Rock & Roll.  Check it out if you get twenty free minutes.) 

I don’t really remember a whole lot about the show: I can’t even recall who the opening act was, and that’s very unusual for me, they must have been a genuine folkie snooze.  I do remember that Collins opened the show with a song called “Hello Hooray” by Canadian singer/songwriter Rolf Kempf, which, roughly three months later - June 13th, 1970 - Alice Cooper opened THEIR set with at the Cincinnati Pop Festival.  That has to be the ONLY song ever shared by  Judy Collins AND Alice Cooper.

I further remember that Ms. Collins displayed an absolute MANIA for being in tune.  She spent literally minutes at a time between songs tuning the six-string she started with and what seemed like HOURS fooling with the tuning pegs of her twelve-string acoustic.  Collins sang great, but the bouts of tuning REALLY began taking a toll on the show; people started yelling for her to just sing, to just get on with it.  (And those were the days before guitar tuners were invented: Collins just muddled along, tuning & re-tuning every string interminably.  It was maddening.)

Finally, after about 40 minutes in which I think Collins had managed to perform only five songs between tuning, she put down her 12-string and walked over to the Vet’s Memorial grand piano positioned stage right.  She sat down, played a couple of notes, put on a sour face and stood up to actually LOOK INSIDE THE PIANO.  At that point a hippie guy seated right behind Linda and I said – in a voice loud enough to carry to the stage – “Oh man, if she starts tuning that goddamn piano I’m LEAVING.”

The entire audience cracked up laughing at that, Collins looked pissed, and was perfunctory the rest of the show.  It was the best, and most memorable moment of the concert.  Nameless hippie heckler, I salute you.  – Ricki C. / March 17th, 2015.


SHOWS I SAW AT VET’S MEMORIAL MARCH HONORABLE MENTIONS

March 3rd, 1968 – The Jimi Hendrix Experience (full account at Growing Old With Rock & Roll, 11/13/13)

March 26th, 1969 – Steppenwolf  


I Helped Cheap Trick Get Elected to the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame and All I Got Was This Lousy T-Shirt

The Goal: Raise $1,200 to purchase a full page advertisement in Cleveland Scene Magazine asking "Why Isn't Cheap Trick in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame?" It will run for a week starting April 15th. The actual rock Hall of Fame ceremony is being held in Cleveland Saturday April 18th. 

The Means: All we need  is to sell 60 "Why Isn't Cheap Trick in the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame?" T-shirts and the ad will be bought along with 10 website banners. We only need SIXTY Cheap Trick fans in the entire world to make this happen. And the shirt is limited edition and very cool. You have probably seen a few around. 

The Result: Everybody visiting Cleveland for the rock hall ceremony will thumb through the local magazine only to notice a giant "Why Isn't Cheap Trick in the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame?" staring back at them in the newspaper and on the internet.

Look, I don't want to call out my fellow Cheap Trick fans  but not only have I ranked every single Cheap Trick song for your enjoyment, I also started a band called "Why Isn't Cheap Trick in the Rock N Roll Hall of Fame?" that will again be playing TWO FREE SHOWS this year of all Cheap Trick covers that will surely make you long for the real Cheap Trick. Between missing work to practice, filling up the van with gas and pricy marriage counseling, being in this band is a big sacrifice. But it is our way of kicking in to support this most worthy of all worthy causes. 

We only need 60 fellow Cheap Trick fans to purchase a shirt or one really rich Cheap Trick fan to purchase all sixty (you save on shipping). We don't care how the numbers add up. We are pleading with you to help us find the answer to the question, "Why Isn't Cheap Trick in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame?" Won't you please help us?

"Why Isn't Cheap Trick in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame?" shirts are $29.99 + shipping with $20 of each sale going directly to purchasing the advertisement. Wear the slogan on your chest and help us put it in the paper. What is NOT to like. Do it. Do it. Do it. This is the year. Thanking you in advance, Colin Gawel

Click here to purchase a T-Shirt and help us raise $$ to help Cheap Trick Get Into the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame.

  

Why Isn't Cheap Trick In the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame? will be performing April 17th @ Ace of Cups in Columbus. OH and Saturday April 18th at the Beachland Ballroom in Cleveland. (Afternoon show!) Teenage Fanclub Fanclub opens both shows and both are FREE. Details below.

 "Why Isn't Cheap Trick in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame?" returning for the third year with two FREE shows of all Trick covers, 

Click here to sign an online petition supporting the cause.  

Click here to sign another petition supporting the cause.

 

 

Reelin' and Rockin' @ The Gateway Schedule is LOADED - Elliot Smith, Mekons, Devo and more.

Hola, fellow rock n roll/movie fans. Brian Phillips and myself would like to thank all of you for supporting the Reelin' and Rockin' @ the Gateway Film Center film series, which is still going strong three years after we hatched this crazy plan in a bar somewhere.

To get you up to speed, a rock n roll movie is shown the 3rd Wednesday of every month at the fabulous Gateway Film Center. Drinks at 7 pm, movie starts at 8pm. Tickets are only $5, and all profits benefit CD1025 for the kids. 

Check out these upcoming movies:

March 18th : Turn it Up! A Celebration of the Electric Guitar.

April 15: Revenge Of The Mekons.

May 20: Heaven Adores You (New Elliot Smith doc).

June 17th: Devo Hardcore Live. 

Hope you can join Brian and myself for one of these great flicks - Colin G.

Click here for a story of the first twenty two Reelin and Rockin movies.    

Click here for the Reelin' and Rockin' Facebook Page.

Random Willie Phoenix Stories, Part One - by Ricki C.


(from Ricki C. - It seemed like we were getting a little too serious and devotional in our Willie coverage, so I thought I’d throw in a coupla mildly scabrous, “when-we-was-young” rock & roll stories from back in the day.  Apologies to everybody involved, not many names were changed. Click here to hear two FREE songs from the Willie Phoenix Tribute Machine and links to all things Willie Phoenix)

I

When I first met Willie in 1978, when he was leading Romantic Noise, the band (Willie, Greg Glasgow on bass & vocals, John Ballor on lead guitar & vocals, and Dee Hunt – the pride of Beckley, West Virginia – on drums) all lived together in a house on 4th Street, right around the corner from that little strip-shopping center on Summit, near Oakland, where Café Bourbon Street and The Summit are located.  (I’m not sure Willie lived there all the time.  As always, his living arrangements were and are a mystery to me, but he was consistently there whenever I dropped by to visit.)

Frequent visitors to the 4th Street house were The CookieBakers: three teenage girls – Erin, Kim & Cindy, by name – who came to all the bands’ gigs and, true to their name, baked cookies for the boys.  It was all really quite innocent & charming; the girls really did bake cookies and bring them to the house.  They weren’t groupies exactly, but Kim and Willie “dated” for quite some time and Erin later married and still later was divorced from Greg, so more than chocolate chips got exchanged, if you get my drift. 

Anyway, one day in early spring ’78 we were all at the house and Erin was telling an elaborate story about something that had happened at high school that day.  She was wearing a longish skirt, but the skirt was also really sheer and once the setting sun starting pouring in the picture window in the front of the house, she might as well NOT HAVE BEEN WEARING A SKIRT AT ALL.  So Erin’s jumping around, acting out the story and the guys and I are all stifling laughs, just staring at her essentially naked from the waist down form, when Kim walks back in from the kitchen and yells, “ERIN, WHAT ARE YOU DOING??!!!?”

She pulls a confused Erin out of the sunlight while the rest of us just fall over laughing.  Erin turns beet-red and flees the room, pulling her skirt tighter well after the fact and Kim soundly reads us the riot act: “That wasn’t funny, you guys, that was just mean.”  I think she might have actually cuffed Willie on the head, and then she spun on me, saying, “I would have expected this from these guys, Ricki, but I really expected better behavior from you.”  What the hell?  Was my twelve-years-of-Catholic-school-upbringing really that apparent, even at that late a date?

“I’m just one of the boys,” I said to a livid Kim, “you’d best not expect that much of me.”  That became only truer & truer as the year went on.  

II

It’s after a gig at Bernie’s Bagels.  I’m packing up gear and Willie initiates a conversation with my lead singer & girlfriend Nicole, whom I’ve brought along to the show that night:

Willie – “Hey Nicole, why don’t we go out to my car?”

Nicole (feigning naivete, she’s seen this Willie show before) – “What would we do in your car, Wilie?”  

Willie – “Oh, we’d just talk and stuff.  It’d be no big deal.”

Nicole – “Well, we could talk right here, Willie, we’re talking right now.”

Willie – “Yeah, but in my car, we could listen to music, or we could talk more private.  Or do more private things.”

Nicole (in a tone like butter wouldn’t melt in her mouth)  – “Oh, I’m not sure Ricki would like it if we did more private things, Willie.”  

Willie – “Oh no, Ricki would be cool with that.  Ricki’s a cool guy.”

Ricki – “WILLIE, I’M STANDING RIGHT HERE.”

Willie (glancing briefly in my direction, and then totally ignoring the outburst) – “So, whattya say, should we go outside?”

Nicole – “We’re not going out to your car, Willie.”

Willie – “Okay, just give it some thought,” patting Nicole’s hand and walking over to a random girl standing by the bar, “Hey, why don’t we got out to my car?”

III

Drummer Dee Hunt, Willie & I are having a bite to eat at that Wendy’s across from campus by Schoolkid’s (now Used Kid’s) Records and Willie starts telling us – apropos of not much – that he scored the night before with a Hare Krishna girl he picked up at the airport.  Dee & I exchange a glance, and then Dee says, “You made it with a Hare Krishna girl?”  “Yeah,” Willie says, nonchalantly, like this is an everyday occurrence in the little rock & roll circles in which we move.

“Didn’t it creep you out that she was bald?” Dee asked, in those long-ago pre-Sinead O’Connor days of the late 70’s.  

“Well, I made her wear a hat,” Willie deadpans, and I laugh so hard that some of my Frosty comes out my nose.

Willie was my hero.

I miss the 1970’s. – Ricki C. / March 4th, 2015.

 

Willie Phoenix & Dee Hunt / May, 1978

Miles Nielsen is the Opposite of Sammy Hagar's Kid and that is a Good Thing. - by Colin G.

A little while back I wrote a story titled "Sammy Hagar's Kid and the Dark Side of Crowd Funding". You can click here for the full read, but the basic gist of it is that a rich son of a rich rock star wants you to give him $100,000 so he can record songs he hasn't written yet. Needless to say, yuk.

Do you know who else is a son a a famous rock star? Miles Nielsen, the son of an actual rock legend, Cheap Trick guitarist Rick Nielsen. Miles goes about his business in a slightly different manner than Hagar's kid. Miles writes and records great music and doesn't ask you for a single dime to make it happen. Unless you want to buy a record or go see him and his excellent band The Rusted Hearts performing live.

As luck would have it,  Miles Nielsen and the Rusted Hearts will be playing my hometown of Columbus, OH on Tuesday March 10th at the fabulous Natalie's Coal Fired Pizza. Showtime is 8pm, Tickets are just $10 and can be purchased by clicking here. 

I am ashamed to say, despite being the world's biggest Cheap Trick fan (click here for my bona fides) I had never checked out Miles before this week. Is it possible Miles suffers from reverse nepotism? Does that term make sense? I finally put on the latest Rusted Hearts record and guess what? It's great. In fact, I would put in on par with any recent record by Ryan Adams, Steve Earle and the like. 

I shouldn't have been surprised. Music flows in the Nielsen family like water flows down the Rock River.  Hell, Miles' grandad owned a music store in Rockford and his brother Daxx is the current drummer for Cheap Trick. I suspect the topic of music has come up a time or two around the Nielsen dinner table. 

I guess the point of all this is that it is easy to pick on a rich guy's kid and more often than not, the spoiled little bastards deserve it. Let's face it, the country is crawling with people born on 3rd base who act like they just hit a triple. Just scroll down a list of U.S. Presidents if you need further evidence. 

But there are exceptions to the rule and Miles Nielsen deserves not only your respect but more importantly, he deserves your ears. You won't be disappointed. 

Colin Gawel wrote this at Colin's Coffee where he started Pencilstorm. "Hitless Wonder" tells the story of his life and the band Watershed. Check it out.

Somewhere between a bar and the recording studio, Miles Nielsen's stirs up his own pop rock brand of Beatles-eque Cosmic Americana. Pop rock arrangements and sunny melodies tucked between a long lost country folk steel guitar floating through speakers around crashing drums, bouncing bass lines and smooth as butter keys.

Video by Barton Bishoff - www.bartonbishoff.com Recorded live at The Midwest Sound in Rockford, IL by Daniel McMahon Miles Nielsen - Vocals / Acoustic Adam Plamann - Clarinet Daniel McMahon - Electric Guitar / Vocals www.themidwestsound.com www.milesnielsen.com www.rotownrecords.com


THIS MONTH IN ROCK 'N ROLL HISTORY - CHEAP TRICK RELEASE THEIR FIRST ALBUM - BY SCOTT CARR

February, 1977 - Cheap Trick Release Their First Album

 

Nothing I write will justify how great Cheap Trick's 1977 debut album is and will fall short on relating my love for it. It is a perfect blend of catchy power-pop hooks and raw punk rock attitude. The combination of Rick Nielsen's frantic Pete Townshend-esque guitar riffs, the golden voice of singer Robin Zander and the booming backbeat of drummer Bun E Carlos and bassist Tom Petersson creates a sound that hints at their influences but manages to carve out an identity that is all Cheap Trick. Ten perfectly crafted songs with a bare bones production provided by Jack Douglas. No other studio record in the Cheap Trick discography captures the way this band should sound like their debut.

 

        Concert ad for my first Cheap Trick show

        Concert ad for my first Cheap Trick show

My first brush with Cheap Trick was September 20, 1978 when I saw them in concert opening for AC/DC at the Huntington Civic Center in Huntington, WV. At that point, I had no idea who Cheap Trick were but had recently became a fan of AC/DC. Prior to that, KISS was all I cared about. I was barely ten years old at the time and always tagged along with my older brother to rock shows. I felt like a concert veteran as I had already seen Kiss twice as well as Heart, Rush, Blue Oyster Cult and a few others but the AC/DC - Cheap Trick show was a game- changer for me. I remember the lights going down and seeing Bun E Carlos enter the stage looking like an out-of-shape bank teller with a cigarette hanging out of his mouth sitting down behind the drum kit and begin bashing away in a Keith Moon fury.... the band kicked in and I was instantly hooked. I didn't know any of their songs at the time but it didn't matter, they rocked and I loved every minute of it. Even though I was a huge AC/DC fan and they were the reason I attended the show, I left the concert with a Cheap Trick poster, bow-tie and a huge Cheap Trick logo button. The next day I promptly headed to Davidson's  record store in downtown Huntington and spent my allowance on two Cheap Trick albums, “In Color” and “Heaven Tonight.” Having no knowledge of the band's history I assumed they had only released two records. Cheap Trick broke big in the USA a few months later in February 1979 with the release of their live album “At Budokan.” The live record featured songs from “In Color” and “Heaven Tonight,” plus a couple new songs. The debut album was not represented at all on Cheap Trick “At Budokan,” so I was still in the dark about its existence.

                                                   "Elo Kiddies" Netherlands 7" single

                                                   "Elo Kiddies" Netherlands 7" single

                                                                                                                                                                                                  This would all change in May of 1979 when I saw the movie “Over The Edge.” "Over The Edge” is a coming-of-age film about delinquent teenagers living in a small town with nothing to do, which leads them to teenage rebellion in the form of drug & alcohol use and healthy doses of rock n roll. The soundtrack features songs by The Cars, Van Halen, Ramones and Cheap Trick. After seeing the movie I went out and picked up the soundtrack and it featured a Cheap Trick song I had not heard called "Speak Now or Forever Hold Your Peace." I thought it was a new song but with further investigation I learned it was on Cheap Trick's debut album that came out in 1977. I was ecstatic and needed to get this record immediately. After a bit of searching I eventually tracked down a copy of the elusive album and in my ten year old mind I thought I had found the Holy Grail. I rushed home to give it a listen, quickly opened the album and put on side one. The drumbeat to "Elo Kiddies" came blasting through my stereo speakers and it sounded so good. The album managed to capture Cheap Trick the way I remembered them sounding in concert, loud and melodic, every song a winner. After side one finished I turned the record over and realized that the flip side was labeled "Side A." Initially I thought there had been a printing mistake, but in reality the band was so confident in the material that they put down on their first slab of wax that they felt there was no "B" material, so this record has no B side. Some may say that's a bit arrogant, but after one spin of the record I could hardly argue with their reasoning. After all these years I still listen to side one first, although I think it was meant to go the other way around.

                                             Japanese "Over the Edge" EP

                                             Japanese "Over the Edge" EP

 

Recently someone asked me to list my Top 10 Cheap Trick songs and I replied by saying all the songs from their debut record. Of course there are plenty of songs I could have picked from the bands' great catalog of music, but the '77 debut album is pure magic from start to finish and sounds as important and relevant today as it did when it first came out.  

 "Elo kiddies, elo kiddies, What ya gonna do when the lights start shining?

 Elo kiddies, elo kiddies, What ya gonna do when your head's exploding?

 So you missed some school? / You know school's for fools

 Today money rules and everybody steals it"

 

Check out Colin Gawel's ranking of EVERY Cheap Trick song here

 

Scott Carr is a guitarist who plays in the Columbus, OH  bands Radio Tramps and Returning April. Scott is also an avid collector of vinyl records and works at Lost Weekend Records. So...if you are looking for Scott....you'll either find him in a dimly lit bar playing his guitar or in a record store digging for the holy grail.

                                                   Ad for Cheap Trick debut album

                                                   Ad for Cheap Trick debut album

                             Bio included with promo copies of the first album

                             Bio included with promo copies of the first album

                                           My original 1978 Cheap Trick badge

                                           My original 1978 Cheap Trick badge

Cheap Trick - ELO Kiddies - Night Gallery 1977

Cheap Trick - Oh Candy - Night Gallery 1977

Cheap Trick - Hot Love - Night Gallery 1977

Matt Dillon makes his screen debut in director Jonathan Kaplan's 1979 film Over The Edge about a group of teens in a suburban community who turn to crime after being neglected and bored. Also starring Vincent Spano.

Studio version of the Live At Budokan classic. I do not own any rights to this song. All rights property of Cheap Trick and Epic/Sony Records I assume.