Posts Tagged ‘The Ramones’

A box set of 10 pre-1980 singles by the Ramones with reproduced Sire labels and picture sleeves (where applicable) will be released next month as part of Record Store Day in the U.S. and U.K., a collection of “great punk rock tracks that changed the course of rock ‘n’ roll.”

10 x Repro US 7″ Singles / Cigarette box / 7 x 7″ pic bags Numbered. All pre-1980 US singles by the Ramones

Ramones, ’76-’79 Singles Box (Sire/Rhino)
This unique, numbered box of Sire Records-era singles, featuring original labels and sleeve designs and including such tracks as “Blitzkrieg Bop,” “Sheena is a Punk Rocker,” “Rock ‘N’ Roll High School” and “I Wanna Be Sedated,” is a perfect set for the punk in your life (3500 copies)

Singles included: 1. BLITZKRIEG BOP/ HAVANA AFFAIR (SIRE SAA 725) 2. I WANNA BE YOUR BOYFRIEND/CALIFORNIA SUN/I DON’T WANNA WALK AROUND WITH YOU (SIRE SAA 734) 3. SWALLOW MY PRIDE/PINHEAD (SIRE SA 738) 4. SHEENA IS A PUNK ROCKER/I DON’T CARE (SA-746) 5. ROCKAWAY BEACH/LOCKET LOVE (SIRE SRE 1008) 6. DO YOU WANNA DANCE/BABYSITTER (SIRE SRE 1017) 7. DON’T COME CLOSE/I DON’T WANT YOU (SIRE SRE 1025) 8. NEEDLES AND PINS/I’M AGAINST IT (SIRE SRE 1045) 9. ROCK ‘N’ ROLL HIGH SCHOOL/DO YOU WANNA DANCE (LIVE VERSION) (SIRE SRE 1051) 10. I WANNA BE SEDATED (STEREO)/ I WANNA BE SEDATED (MONO)– CONVERTED TO US SIRE LABELS. WHITE LABEL

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There was a grungy dive of a place on the Bowery called CBGB that was home to bikers, neighborhood drunks and the seeds of a musical revolution that changed the future of music.

Chris Frantz, the drummer of the seminal new-wave band Talking Heads, had a front-row seat along with his now-wife, bassist Tina Weymouth, along with guitarist/lead singer David Byrne, and the original Ramones: Joey, Johnny, Dee Dee and Tommy, all four of whom died way too early. Chris Frantz, who still plays and records with Weymouth in their band, Tom Tom Club, shared stories of those crazed early days , when a dozen or fewer fans would show up at Hilly Kristal’s famed club for a gig.

Chris comments “We lived at 195 Chrystie St., 3¹/₂ blocks from CBGB. It was rough, man, No hot water, no shower, the bathroom in the hall we had to share with all these sweaty guys,” said Frantz, who with his band mates was fresh out of the Rhode Island School of Design.

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“That first summer there in, ’75, there was a heat wave and also a garbage strike at the same time. So you could imagine what it was like,” he said. “The kids would open the hydrants and you had streams of water going down the street with burning garbage floating on it. “The kids would set the garbage on fire. I thought I was going to lose my mind. Tina took it better than I did.”

But the band practiced every day in its ninth-floor loft with the great view of the Empire State Building way uptown, and before long debuted at CBGB, opening up for the protopunks from Forest Hills themselves.

Hilly had asked Johnny Ramone if we could open for them, and Johnny said, ‘Sure, they’re gonna suck, so no problem,’ ” Frantz recalled.  the Heads all loved the Ramones and even got to like the dictatorial Johnny Ramone, but it took a while.

“That guy was mean as a snake. He was just a pure, unadulterated mean spirit. I’m sure he had good qualities also, but they were not evident,” he said. “He came around toward the end, but for the longest time, he thought that we sucked. But they were crazy. They’d be on stage playing and then they’d just stop and start fighting.”

Their debut together was hardly a roaring success. “There were very few people in the audience, maybe 10 altogether. Five came to see us and five came to see the Ramones. The Ramones’ fans were all girls, presumably their girlfriends,” Frantz remembered.

When they weren’t performing oddball pop like “(Love Goes to) Building on Fire” and “Psycho Killer” onstage, they would drink at the bar and get to know the other bands and hangers-on. One was Legs McNeill, one of the founders of Punk magazine, which chronicled the scene when only the Village Voice and SoHo News were paying any attention.

“Legs somehow positioned himself as an expert on CBGB’s heyday, but most of the time, he was passed out. One time at about 4 a.m., Hilly said, ‘Can you just get that guy out of there?’ ” Frantz said.

Tina had a car, an old Plymouth Valiant that was a family hand-down. We could fit the whole band in there. We tried to take him home but he was so intoxicated, he couldn’t remember what his address was. We’d drive around and ask him, ‘Does that look like your place, Legs?’ Finally, we found it.”

Some of the musicians, like the poet-turned-singer Patti Smith, Debbie Harry’s Blondie, Television with Tom Verlaine, and Willy DeVille’s Mink DeVille, went on to score record deals, tour and become punk and new-wave legends.
Much of the best music from those early days was released on a double album called “Live at CBGB’s.”

Talking Heads signed up for the album but eventually bailed — although their photo remained on the record jacket. “We didn’t think we were good enough yet — that’s why we pulled out. We thought it would ruin our chances to get a real record deal. Hilly was not happy about it, but at least he understood,” Frantz said.

Meanwhile The Ramones released their eponymous first album in the April of 1976 — and things took off from there, with the iconic “Hey, ho, let’s go!” opening lines of the 2-minute and 12-second anthem “Blitzkrieg Bop,” detonating like a gun at the start of a race.

The Ramones’ appearances in London as the opening act for the Flamin’ Groovies came on July 4th, 1976 — and caused a sensation unlike anything they had seen back in the States.

While most of America was celebrating the bicentennial with fireworks, concerts and picnics, the Ramones were inspiring a generation of British punks including The Clash and the Sex Pistols, whose debut single, “Anarchy in the UK,” was released a couple months later.

The next spring, Talking Heads opened up for the Ramones on the bands’ first full European Tour. They still couldn’t afford a luxury coach with sleeping berths, so they traveled on a beat-up tourist bus with Johnny in full dictator mode. “He wanted to decide where everybody sat. If you changed your seat, he’d say, ‘Whaddya sittin’ there for? You weren’t sittin’ there yesterday,’ ” Frantz said.

Frantz, who with Weymouth and family now splits his time between Connecticut and France, remembered the now-shuttered CBGB as the incubator for it all.

“It was just a nascent scene at the time,” he said. “We had the feeling that this was going to be an important place. We had seen Patti Smith, who was bigger than the Ramones at the time. She was wild. She had that intensity that you just don’t run into these days — onstage, but also off the stage. “She was not a relaxed person.”

Also on the scene was this band Television, whose debut “Marquee Moon” is considered one of the best guitar LPs of all time.

“With that combination of bands, you know something’s going on. It just took a while to grow,”

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Ramones; Reissue

The Ramones will celebrate the 40th anniversary of their self-titled punk masterpiece with a 3CD/1LP deluxe edition packed with unreleased demos, a pair of concerts and a new mono mix. The “Greatest Punk Album Of All Time” is brief – it only runs for 29 minutes – but its impact was enormous both in terms of the early punk scene on both sides of the Atlantic and in subsequent decades for countless other artists.

Ramones Ramones’ Debut LP: 10 Things You Didn’t Know »
Ramones:” 40th Anniversary Deluxe Edition”, out July 29th via Rhino Records, houses the newly remastered original album on its first disc alongside the “40th Anniversary Mono Mix” overseen by the album’s original producer Craig Leon.

“The earliest mixes of the album were virtually mono,” Leon said in a statement. “We had an idea to record at Abbey Road and do both a mono and stereo version of the album, which was unheard of at the time. I’m thrilled that now, 40 years later, we followed through on that original idea.”

The second disc, dubbed “Single Mixes, Outtakes, and Demos,” boasts 18 tracks, including unreleased demo versions of Ramones classics like “Chain Saw,” “53rd & 3rd,” I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend” and “Today Your Love, Tomorrow the World”; on the latter track, the second disc also features that a version of that song’s “Original Uncensored Vocals.”

Disc three contains a pair of concerts the Ramones performed at West Hollywood’s the Roxy on August 12th, 1976. Finally, the vinyl LP includes Ramones’ 40th anniversary mono mix.

The deluxe edition comes packaged inside a 12″ x 12″ hardcover book that includes Leon’s extensive production notes from the recording, a Mitchell Cohen essay about the Ramones‘ early days and additional photos by Roberta Bayley, the photographer behind the album’s iconic cover. Only 19,760 individually numbered copies of the deluxe edition will be produced.

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Visit the Ramones‘ official site for pre-order information.

Ramones: 40th Anniversary Deluxe Edition Track List

Disc One: Original Album
Stereo Version

1. “Blitzkrieg Bop”
2. “Beat On The Brat”
3. “Judy Is A Punk”
4. “I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend”
5. “Chain Saw”
6. “Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue”
7. “I Don’t Wanna Go Down To The Basement”
8. “Loudmouth”
9. “Havana Affair”
10. “Listen To My Heart”
11. “53rd & 3rd”
12. “Let’s Dance”
13. “I Don’t Wanna Walk Around With You”
14. “Today Your Love, Tomorrow The World”

40th Anniversary Mono Mix

15. “Blitzkrieg Bop”*
16. “Beat On The Brat”*
17. “Judy Is A Punk”*
18. “I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend”*
19. “Chain Saw”*
20. “Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue”*
21. “I Don’t Wanna Go Down To The Basement”*
22. “Loudmouth”*
23. “Havana Affair”*
24. “Listen To My Heart”*
25. “53rd & 3rd”*
26. “Let’s Dance”*
27. “I Don’t Wanna Walk Around With You”*
28. “Today Your Love, Tomorrow The World”*

Disc Two: Single Mixes, Outtakes, and Demos

1. “Blitzkrieg Bop” (Original Stereo Single Version)
2. “Blitzkrieg Bop” (Original Mono Single Version)
3. “I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend” (Original Stereo Single Version)
4. “I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend” (Original Mono Single Version)
5. “Today Your Love, Tomorrow The World” (Original Uncensored Vocals)*
6. “I Don’t Care” (Demo)
7. “53rd & 3rd” (Demo)*
8. “Loudmouth” (Demo)*
9. “Chain Saw” (Demo)*
10. “You Never Should Have Opened That Door” (Demo)
11. “I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend” (Demo)*
12. “I Can’t Be” (Demo)
13. “Today Your Love, Tomorrow The World” (Demo)*
14. “I Don’t Wanna Walk Around With You” (Demo)*
15. “Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue” (Demo)
16. “I Don’t Wanna Be Learned/I Don’t Wanna Be Tamed” (Demo)
17. “You’re Gonna Kill That Girl” (Demo)*
18. “What’s Your Name” (Demo)

Disc Three: Live at The Roxy (8/12/76)
Set One

1. “Loudmouth”
2. “Beat On The Brat”
3. “Blitzkrieg Bop”
4. “I Remember You”
5. “Glad To See You Go”
6. “Chain Saw”
7. “53rd & 3rd”
8. “I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend”
9. “Havana Affair”
10. “Listen To My Heart”
11. “California Sun”
12. “Judy Is A Punk”
13. “I Don’t Wanna Walk Around With You”
14. “Today Your Love, Tomorrow The World”
15. “Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue”
16. “Let’s Dance”

Set Two

17. “Loudmouth”*
18. “Beat On The Brat”*
19. “Blitzkrieg Bop”*
20. “I Remember You”*
21. “Glad To See You Go”*
22. “Chain Saw”*
23. “53rd & 3rd”*
24. “I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend”*
25. “Havana Affair”*
26. “Listen To My Heart”*
27. “California Sun”*
28. “Judy Is A Punk”*
29. “I Don’t Wanna Walk Around With You”*
30. “Today Your Love, Tomorrow The World”*
31. “Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue”*
32. “Let’s Dance”*

40th Anniversary Mono Mix LP

1. “Blitzkrieg Bop”*
2. “Beat On The Brat”*
3. “Judy Is A Punk”*
4. “I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend”*
5. “Chain Saw”*
6. “Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue”*
7. “I Don’t Wanna Go Down To The Basement”*
8. “Loudmouth”*
9. “Havana Affair”*
10. “Listen To My Heart”*
11. “53rd & 3rd”*
12. “Let’s Dance”*
13. “I Don’t Wanna Walk Around With You”*
14. “Today Your Love, Tomorrow The World”*

* Previously Unreleased

Apparently, this is the 1993 version banned by MTV, but I wouldn’t know what other versions are out there. If any. This is a cover of The Who’s classic and was featured on the Ramones’ covers album Acid Eaters. The video is a tribute to b-movies.

“B-movies mania: The Ramones’ wacky new Radioactive video cover of the Who’s classic “Substitute” directed by Tom Rainone, features a veritable who’s who of B-movies stars.

The cast includes Karen Black, Linnea Quigley, Ken Force, William Smith, and Nicholas Worth, whose combined film credits include “Day of the Locust” , “Return of the Living Dead”, Dawn of the Dead”, “Grave of the Vampire”, and “Don’t Answer the Phone”.

Psycho rock fans will recognize the likes of Mötorhead’s Lemmy Kilmister, White Zombie’s Sean Yseult, and the Cramp’s Lux Interior among members of the vid cast. And bonus points go to the viewer who can spot famed comic book artist Robert Williams.”

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If punk can be likened to a religion, the Ramones’ debut album Ramones would be the bible. While acts like The Stooges, New York Dolls, The Velvet Underground, T. Rex, and MC5 may have laid punk’s foundation, it was the Ramones’ 1976 debut that started the revolution. With a combination of speed, hooks and stylistic stupidity, the Ramones served as the template for the first generation of punk bands. Their satirical take on pop culture and banal urban existence has resounded ever since. First released on April 23rd 1976, it’s been 40 years since the first needles dropped on the band’s self-titled debut. To celebrate the album that was, we look back at the top tracks.

All you need to do is hear the first twenty seconds of the Ramones self-titled debut album and you can’t help singing the words “Hey, ho, let’s go” four times. You are then left with no other choice but to start singing along to “Blitzkrieg Bop” one of the best opening tracks on any album.

Who knew that three chords could pack such a wallop? If I were to time travel back to 1976 and tell the Ramones that “Blitzkrieg Bop” would be played by high school bands and at many sporting events for the next 45 years, they wouldn’t believe me. I can barely believe that those four guys from Forest Hills, Queens would record one of the most influential punk records on both sides of the Atlantic.

The band, which formed in 1974, consisted of lead singer Joey Ramone, guitarist Johnny Ramone, bassist Dee Dee Ramone, and drummer Tommy Ramone. Each member took on the surname Ramone and the inspiration for the name was an alias Paul McCartney (Paul Ramon) would use when checking into hotels.

By mid-1974, the Ramones were playing gigs at various clubs throughout New York City with CBGB and Max’s Kansas City being the most prominent venues. They constantly played gigs throughout 1975 and later that year, former Stooges manager Danny Fields took on the same role with the group. His first order of business was to shop around their demo, featuring “Judy Is a Punk” and “I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend” to different labels. Producer Craig Leon took up the cause and brought the demo to Sire Records president Seymour Stein, who eventually signed them to the label.

In February 1976, the Ramones began recording their debut album in Plaza Sound Studios where the Rockettes rehearsed, located right above Radio City Music Hall. With a budget of $6,400 and very little time in the studio, they had to get very creative.

Over the years, there was always this prevailing thought that the Ramones’ punk masterpiece was just haphazardly slapped together, but nothing could be further from the truth. The organized chaos was meticulously mapped out. They used overdubs to give a slight echo effect on Joey’s vocals, tape delay, and creative microphone placement to produce different sound effects like a bomb going off, which was used on “Havana Affair.” They also recorded guitar and bass on separate tracks to create a similar effect you would hear on early Beatles records. You can hear it on the Beatles’ “No Reply” and the Ramones’ “I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend,” which features Joey channelling the cadence of Ronnie Spector. I can almost hear her singing the lyrics, “Hey, little girl / I want to be your boyfriend / Sweet little girl / I want to be your boyfriend.” Of course, the times being what they were, Phil Spector would have reversed the genders.

Ramones ran opposite of everything played on the radio in that era. There were no guitar solos, overblown six-minute songs from hell, or causes to sing about. It was part Beatles, part Brill Building, mixed with ‘60s garage music played at 180 MPH. While it was not commercially successful, the Ramones debut LP received much deserved critical acclaim. Robert Christgau of the Village Voice wrote, “For me, it blows everything else off the radio: it’s clean the way the Dolls never were, sprightly the way the Velvets never were, and just plain listenable the way Black Sabbath never was. And I hear it cost $6,400 to put on plastic.”

‘Beat on The Brat’

Penned by Joey Ramone, the track takes musical cues from 60s bubble-gum rocker ‘Yummy Yummy Yummy.’ It’s exemplary of The Ramones’ philosophy of shorter, faster and louder. Minimalistic rhythms, bouncy hooks and an infectiously maniacal glee pervade the track. Despite the violence, it’s really a track about stifling futility. Casting himself as the track’s malicious protagonist, Joey details a deep-seated desire of imposing control over the impetuous youths of his relatively well-to -do neighbourhood. The candid expression of violent suburban fantasy meets three chord sonic assault showcases the dysfunctional Queens natives at their best.

‘Judy Is A Punk’

One of the Ramones earliest tracks, rapid firer ‘Judy Is A Punk’ helped break the group as a live act. Recounting the doomed narrative of two girls joining an extremist social movement, the track’s blistering guitar licks and doo-woop vocals have been reimagined by countless bands. Coursing with primitive and untamed energy, it’s Ramones to the very core.

‘Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue’

Sixth track ‘Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue’ draws the listener into the darker underside of 1970s New York. It’s a world of drug dependency, boredom, entrapment and rebellious thrill seeking. The track strikes a vein that would define a generation of youth. All but the most brazen drug anthems of the early 70s remained coded, yet the Ramones belted out “Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue” unrepentantly. Garage-tinted riffs deliver some of the album’s most incisive fretwork. “We couldn’t write about love or cars, so we sang about this stuff, like glue sniffing. We thought it was funny. We thought we could get away with anything,” Johnny Ramone later reflected.

‘I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend’

While the Ramones revelled in the bleak and morbidly banal, ‘I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend’ is the first example of the group’s softer side. Contrasting with ‘Loudmouth’s’ threats of domestic violence and the nihilistic aggression of ‘53rd and 3rd’, this track comes off sugary sweet. Despite its pure pop leanings, there’s a sense of naïve sincerity here that never truly resurfaced on any of the group’s later cuts. Replete with an uncharacteristically jangly refrain, the track stands out as one of the group’s all-time best.

‘Blitzkrieg Bop’

The opener of the album is seminal punk. Likening preparing a gig to mounting a military campaign, it’s a universal call to action. Written as a tribute to Ramones fans, there’s something below the fascist imagery that begs the listener to throw on a leather jacket and hit the streets. Power chords shred with impunity while an adrenaline inducing drum pattern clocks in at 172 beats per minute. It’s an instantaneous musical barrage. In an era of egotistical virtuosity and blandness, The Ramones managed to strip rock music to back to its primitive core. Not only does ‘Blitzkrieg Bop’ embody the idea behind the Ramones’ signature sound, it’s caustic, blistering and upbeat without compare.

Media of The Ramones' Ramones

“The nifty 33 1/3 book series publishes cool little books that dive deep into individual canonical rock ‘n’ roll albums. Ramones/Ramones is undoubtedly a worthy addition to their catalog. … Rombes does a concise job of laying out a solid thesis (complete with a chart), detailing the various early waves of punk (or new wave, as the terms are proved interchangeable) and approaching these topics in a thoughtful but fun way. … This book got me thinking about this culture in ways I never had before.

As it usually goes in the music business, those at the forefront of a movement get tons of praise, but never really benefit commercially. Tommy was the only living member of the original line-up when the album was certified gold on April 14th, 2014. Sadly, he passed away three months later.

If you were to lay out a timeline of rock & roll, then Ramones would be written in bold letters as signalling the beginning of a new era in music. This album is twenty-nine of the most important and influential minutes in rock history because it defined almost everything before as “the past.”

Happy 45th Anniversary to the Ramones’ eponymous debut album “Ramones”, originally released April 23, 1976.

A Ramones radio broadcast from Buffalo in early 1979 with Marky Ramone being quite new to the band!

This outstanding performance by The Ramones was taped for radio broadcast in Buffalo, New York, on February 8, 1979, shortly after Marky Ramone joined the band. It captures New York’s punk pioneers at the peak of their powers, tearing through many of their most renowned songs in typically energetic style. It’s presented here in superb fidelity, with background notes and rare photos. Digitally remastered.

1. Rockaway Beach
2. Teenage Lobotomy
3. Blitzkrieg Bop
4. I Don’t Want You
5. Gimme Gimme Shock Treatment
6. Rock n Roll High School
7. I Wanna Be Sedated
8. I Just Wanna Have Something to Do
9. Bad Brain
10. I’m Against It
11. Sheena Is a Punk Rocker
12. Havana Affair
13. Commando
14. Surfin’ Bird
15. Cretin Hop
16. Listen to My Heart
17. California Sun
18. I Don’t Wanna Walk Around with You
19. Today Your Love, Tomorrow the World
20. Pinhead
21. Do You Wanna Dance
22. Suzy Is a Headbanger
23. Let’s Dance

19 Years Ago: The Ramones Play Their Last Show

The Ramones might have been the hardest-working band in rock and roll history. They formed in 1974, started playing shows, and pretty much never stopped until they called it quits in 1996. Over their two-plus decades of playing power-chord-fueled pop rock, the Ramones performed over 2,000 live shows, and on Aug. 6th, 1996, they played their last show ever, in Los Angeles.

Joey Ramone (1951-2001), singer with US punk band the Ramones, on stage during a live concert performance by the band, with drummer Tommy Ramone in the background behind his drumkit, 1977. The backdrop has the band’s ‘presidential seal’ logo and name.

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Born and raised in New York City, the original members of The Ramones, Joey, Johnny, Dee Dee and Tommy, burst onto the scene in 1974, becoming the quintessential punk band of the decade. On February. 4th, 1976, they released their debut single “Blitzkrieg Bop,” which had a profound influence on the punk movement in both the U.S. and U.K. Then a few weeks later the First real punk album ever? dangerous discussion. I don’t know and to be honest I don’t care. For me it’s one of the most memorable LP’s ever and that’s what counts . 14 bubblegum pop punk blitzkrieg tracks in 29 explosive minutes generated by 4 bored looking dudes with lousy haircuts, leather jackets (probably stolen) and dirty jeans.
No useless guitar solos. No expensive special production effects.
The instruments were recorded in three days, the vocal parts were in four days.

Producer Craig Leon admitted that they recorded the LP quickly due to budget restrictions,
but also that it was all the time they needed. The final result was just smashing. Loud. Fast. Primitive. And an unforgettable motto: 1-2-3-4! The songs were stripped to the bone with wicked, nihilistic lyrics like never before. The unfamiliar tumult was confrontational .
But its  all good old rock ‘n roll. Back to the dangerous alleys in dark suburbs of great cities.
Original drummer (and later producer) Tommy once said that the band was just an idea. I believe him. I can imagine that the choice was quite simple for these four no future teenagers: music or jail. GABBA GABBA HEY!.
let’s have some dazzling fun at high-speed…

On April 23rd, 1976, punk decided it was here to stay. It was on that day that The Ramones released their self titled LP “The Ramones”. After Hit Parader editor Lisa Robinson saw the band at a gig in New York City, she wrote about them in an article and contacted Danny Fields, insisting he be their manager. Fields agreed and convinced Craig Leon to produce Ramones, and the band recorded a demo for prospective record labels. Leon then persuaded Sire president Seymour Stein to listen to the band perform, and he later offered the band a recording contract. The Ramones began recording in January 1976, needing only seven days and $6,400 to record the album. They used similar sound-output techniques to those of the Beatles, and used advanced production methods by Leon.
The album cover, photographed by Punk magazine’s Roberta Bayley, features the four members leaning against a brick wall in New York City. The record company paid only $125 for the front photo, which has since become one of the most imitated album covers of all time.

So Forty years ago this month, this was the album that created punk rock’s template, recorded in New York. The budget was minimal (about $6,500), the session was brief (a week), the songs were flowing (14 were recorded; many more would have to wait), and the sound was fast and fresh (stripped-down, with buzzsaw guitars set against melodic pop vocals).

The band was the Ramones, and while their self-titled debut didn’t sell many copies at the time, it is now considered one of the most influential albums ever recorded. It’s even part of the Library of Congress’ National Recording Registry, added in 2012 and thus preserved for future generations to contemplate. Ten years prior to that, the band was  inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Gabba Gabby Hey!

I recall that first Ramones album getting home and playing it loudly at home, much to my father and mother’s dismay. One song in particular, the tongue-in-cheek “The KKK Took My Baby Away”, caught her ear. “Who writes songs about the KKK?” she protested. “And I’m like, ‘The Ramones! That’s who!’ ”

https://youtu.be/ez4yjw5Y94s

The Ramones formed in 1974 in Queens, New York Production cost of the album: $6400 with  producer: Craig Leon – also famous for his work with Blondie , later on he focused more on classic music and worked with Luciano Pavarotti, Andreas Scholl, Sir James Galway and The London Chamber Orchestra among others
The Front cover of the LP was a photo of the band in front of a brick wall in NYC – the record company paid only $125 for the now legendary picture taken by Roberta Bayley… released by the Record label: Sire Records with the Speed of: most tracks averaged more than 160 beats per minute
The album was certified as gold by the Recording Industry of America – 38 years after first release date – on 30th April 2014 , having sold more than 500,000 copies by then..
thanks to JL for some facts and words

Ork Records: New York, New York  without the Velvets it’s clear that Ork Records, a label began by Terry Ork and guided into temporary sustainability by Charles Ball, would never have been. Numero Group drops Ork’s entire run onto 4LPs or 2CDs, opening with Television’s majestic debut “Little Johnny Jewel” and offering Richard Hell, Alex Chilton, dB’s, Lester Bangs, Cheetah Chrome, and more. The aborted Feelies 45 is an utter gem, “Fa Cé La” seeming birthed from VU’s “I Heard Her Call My Name.”

In the beginning there were three record labels putting out music from America’s burgeoning punk scenes. There was Bomp Records In Los Angeles, Titan in the midwest, and, in New York City, Ork Records. 

Ork was founded by Terry Ork (born William Terry Collins) in 1975. Described by Patti Smith Band member  Lenny Kaye as a “cherubic individual”, Ork had moved from California to New York as part of Andy Warhol entourage at the Factory , helping out on Warhol’s films, He hung around the Factory until he was escorted out of the building under a cloud of suspicion of selling black market copies of Warhol’s screenprints.2311156orkrecords

In need of a job, Ork went to work at the Cinemabilia bookstore, where he met punk pioneer Richard Hell.  Despite having no experience, soon afterwards Ork started managing Hell’s band, Television . “He didn’t come from the rock’n’roll world, but he was definitely enjoying his entrance into it,” says Kaye.

“Terry definitely had a tremendous amount of charisma,” says Jane Fire, whose band The Erasers is featured on a recently-released Ork records retrospective box set. “He had kind of a worldliness about him. He just was cultured. I mean, he could talk to you about Jean Genet and the Ramones . He was just as versed in both things.”

Before launching his record label, Ork was already a regular at CBGBs, well known on the scene – enough to feature in the 2013 film CBGB , where he was played by The Big Bang Theory’s Johnny Galecki.

“I began hanging out at CBGBs with Patti Smith on Easter of 1974,” says Kaye. “That was the first time that we saw Televsion. I met their manager Terry Ork.”

Kaye noticed that Ork wasn’t a stereotypical band manager, but was more interested in helping the band achieve their purpose more than profits. It’s an ideology he carried over into his record label, Ork records, which was eventually buttressed by his partner, Charles Ball, and two Hasidic men known as “the Hats” who helped finance the record label by, it was rumoured, dealing drugs.

Idols backstage at Max's Kansas City

“Ork records began as a way to present some of the local bands that CBGBs featured,” said Kaye. “Looking at the box set, it surprises me how deep their musical sensibilities went.” CBGBs was the crucible for a lot of mould-breaking bands the Ramones, Blondie, Talking Heads – but while Ork released tracks by more well-known acts like Television, Richard Hell, the Feelies and Big Star frontman Alex Chilton, the bulk of their catalogue was made up of scratchy, trebly, energy-infused bands that never quite made it to that level of fame.

The likes of Cheetah Chrome, the Erasers, Marbles, Idols and Chris Stamey and the dBs were the more obscure bands of an already underground scene. “The scene was so much bigger than Blondie and Television and the Ramones,” says Fire. “A lot of these bands, I mean, I guess we fit in that category too, were so important to the scene, but never got their due. If Terry hadn’t been around, they may have been forgotten.”

The Numero Group, known for re-releasing back catalogues and out of print albums, stumbled on the story of Ork records when one of the owners, Rob Sevier , bought a few of the 45s released on the label and decided to collect the lot. His partner Ken Shipley soon caught the fever, too, and they decided to assemble Ork’s first full retrospective. Some of the songs hadn’t even been released, thanks to Ork’s flakiness about paying the studio bills. “This was like the first punk label in the world,” said Shipley. “Their sole mission was to document an emerging scene.”

And what a scene it was. “I don’t think we ever realized how amazing it was,” says Fire. “We had this loft and there were always these big parties where Allen Ginsberg and Iggy Pop would come by and Johnny Rotten would stay at our house. But you don’t really realize what you’re in when you’re in the middle of it.”

Ork records sputtered to a halt in 1980, Ork fleeing to Europe and then Los Angeles. He spent time in prison for fraud, adopted a new pseudonym and edited a film magazine, finally dying of colon cancer in 2004. The Numero Group leapt at the chance to allow his label to reclaim its place in history. However, as excited as they were to unleash Ork’s musical vision on the world (again), Shipley and Sevier had their work cut out.

“Terry Ork is dead, and he didn’t marry, he didn’t have any children, how are we going to do this?” said Shipley. “There’s no paperwork here, there’s no contracts. This isn’t what they did.” Without any other option, Numero set out to contact every artist who had released music on Ork to find out what it would take to re-release the songs.

Feelies at CBGBs

“We felt like Richard Hell, Television and the Feelies were going to be the biggest stumbling blocks, and it was a good thing that we approached them first because the Feelies took the longest to coming around,” said Shipley. Hell told them he would participate, but only if they got every other act on board. ”We kind of gambled, and said OK, we have to get everybody,” said Shipley. “And if we have to get everybody, let’s get everybody. We started finding people who were just tertiarily involved with the scene.”

Because of the type of reissues that they do, Numero Group is used to doing a fair amount of detective work. “We use the same computer systems that they use to find deadbeat dads and credit card debtors,” says Shipley.

They hit the motherlode when they got in touch with the owners of an Ithaca, New York, record store called Angry Mom Records. “He had bought the contents of a storage space that belonged to Terry Ork’s partner Charles Ball, and in there came lots of records, but more importantly, all the paper,” said Shipley.

As the project’s scope became apparent, the partners threw themselves into it, sometimes at a risk to their own business relationship. “We fought about the sequence. We fought about the art, we fought about everything. Just because when you really love something, you want it to be perfect,” said Shipley.

It took Shipley a year to write the book that accompanies the box set. “It’s 190 pages, and it’s close to 70,000 words,” he says. The book and the musical retrospective offer a portrait of a man, Ork, while shining a new light on New York’s punk scene. “The story has never been told,” said Shipley. “All these people are only getting older, some of them are dead. If you don’t tell it right now, there’s never going to be an opportunity to tell it.

“It’s not about the Ramones and it’s not about Blondie and it’s not about Talking Heads. They already have their own legacy sealed up,” said Shipley. “This is like there’s this world that existed after dark and, it was gone like that [snaps]. And the story that’s inside of them – this is the account. It will be here forever. We set it down.”

“I really believe that they helped document a very important scene and made it real,” said Kaye.

CBGBs may be a clothing store now; the Bowery has some of the most expensive real estate in Manhattan; and the Ramones may be on T-shirts sold at Urban Outfitters, but thanks to Numero, Ork records won’t be forgotten, which is good news for those who knew and loved Terry Ork. “He deserves that,” said Fire. “At least that.”

Ork Records Box Set is out now on Numero Group.

Patti Smith’s independent debut “Piss Factory” came out in 1974; the following November, manager Terry Ork put out Television’s first single, “Little Johnny Jewel”, on his own label. They were the first flowerings of the New York renaissance.

By 1976, big labels had carved up the CBGBs underground; Television went to Elektra, Patti Smith to Arista, Talking Heads joined the Ramones on Sire, Blondie went to Private Stock and then Chrysalis. It was a feeding frenzy that drew aspiring oddballs to the Bowery in droves.

For a few months between 1976 and mid-1977, Ork – the scene’s only active independent – had their pick of the new arrivals, snaring Richard Hell & The Voidoids, Alex Chilton, a pre-dBs Chris Stamey and The Feelies among others. This lovingly assembled, 49-track collection pieces together the projects – completed, abandoned and otherwise – that Ork helped to instigate, as the hustler-cum-superfan and sometime business partner Charles Ball seized their moment.

He completed the wiring of Television by introducing Cinemabilia employee Hell and Tom Verlaine to his leechy flatmate, guitarist Richard Lloyd (“There was a great love between us,” Lloyd remembered of Ork. “For him it was romantic, for me it was platonic”). Ork managed Television until their ascent demanded a more astute approach, but he kept busy, releasing the American version of Hell’s “Blank Generation” EP, before finding one member of bowl-cutted power-poppers the Marbles working at Cinemabilia, and making 1976’s gloriously feeble “Red Lights” his third release.

Excited by some audio verité demoes recorded in Memphis by journalist-turned-producer Jon Tiven, Ball and Ork hauled Alex Chilton up to their studio of choice ¬ Trod Nossel in Connecticut – to put down the five tracks that make up 1977’s surly “Singer Not The Song” EP. Chilton’s stag-horned “Free Again” and the excitable “Take Me Home And Make Me Like It” are deliriously grubby, though his excitable whoop of “call me a slut in front of your family” on the latter seemed a little far-fetched; so poor during his couch-surfing year in New York that for a while he did not even own shoes, Alex Chilton was in no state to be introduced to anyone’s parents.

Almost as an afterthought, Ork simultaneously put out “Girl” by Tiven’s band Prix – a delicious analogue to Chris Bell’s Big Star contributions. Tiven was not destined to be Chilton’s new musical foil, though, his time as a sideman ending when the singer tried to stub a cigarette out in his face. Stamey had a much more successful dalliance with the ex-Box Top, Chilton helping piece together the North Carolina moptop’s skinny-tie thunderbolt “The Summer Sun” – the final Ork release of 1977.

With the label momentarily buoyant, a major-label distribution deal was sought, but Ork and Ball’s failure to snare one meant a raft of projects were mothballed. A Rolling Stones tribute LP vanished without trace, and tapes of The H-Bombs – featuring Stamey’s future dBs foil Peter Holsapple – and Lester Bangs were farmed out to other labels. A first release from New Jersey’s splendidly uptight Feelies also went begging, the frenetic version of “Fa Ce La” here canned at the band’s request, though the song resurfaced as their Rough Trade debut two years later.

Ork, meanwhile, enlisted new financial backers – Hassidic Jews with decidedly unorthodox heroin habits. “Little Johnny Jewel” was repressed as a 12”, but the reactivated label evidently found the CBGBs waters of 1979 much over-fished. Ork’s final releases featured uninspiring cock-rock from the Idols – featuring ex-New York Dolls Arthur Kane and Jerry Nolan – and unremarkable one-offs from the Revelons and the Student Teachers. The last Ork release – former Dead Boy Cheetah Chrome’s “Still Wanna Die” – was an Iggy Stardust glam-punk classic, much undermined by an incongruous flower-power sleeve.

“I like Terry,” Verlaine said in 1979, showing uncommon generosity as he summed up Ork. “He has no business sense, but he’s a great guy.” At the bottom of the rear sleeve of Television’s era-defining Marquee Moon is a note reading: “This album is dedicated to William Terry Ork.” Like this collection, a small credit where it was due.

EXTRAS 8/10: A pleasantly bitchy book gives all Ork acts their due, a raft of rare tracks completing the picture. Prix offcuts are essential listening for Big Star fetishists, while unreleased Ork singles by Patti Smith-worshippers the Erasers, and angry loner Kenneth Higney feature, along with both sides of Link Cromwell’s “Crazy Like A Fox” – the 1966 Brit-invasion knock-off voiced by Patti Smith Group guitarist Lenny Kaye, which was re-circulated by Ork. Another discovery is the first version of Richard Lloyd’s sparkly “I Thought You Wanted To Know”, later re-voiced and released by Chris Stamey on his Car label when it emerged that the object of Ork’s affections was still under contract at Elektra.

Ork Records: New York, New York Track List:

1. Television – “Little Johnny Jewel”
2. Feelies – “Fa Ce La”
3. Richard Hell – “(I Belong to the) Blank Generation”
4. The Revelons – “The Way (You Tough My Hand)”
5. Erasers – “I Won’t Give Up”
6. Alex Chilton – “All of the Time”
7. Chris Stamey and the dBs – “(I Thought) You Wanted to Know”
8. Prix – “Zero”
9. Marbles – “Red Lights”
10. Alex Chilton – “Take Me Home & Make Me Like It”
11. Prix – “Girl”
12. The Idols – “Girl That I Love”
13. Mick Farren and the New Wave – “Lost Johnny”
14. Cheetah Chrome – “Still Wanna Die”
15. The Idols – “You”
16. The Student Teachers – “Christmas Weather”
17. Erasers – “It Was So Funny (The Song That They Sung)”
18. Richard Hell – “(I Could Live With You) (In) Another World”
19. Chris Stamey – “The Summer Sun”
20. Alex Chilton – “Free Again”
21. Richard Lloyd – “(I Thought) You Wanted to Know”
22. The Student Teachers – “Channel 13”
23. Chris Stamey – “Where the Fun Is”
24. Prix – “Everytime I Close My Eyes”
25. Feelies – “Forces at Work”
26. Marbles – “Fire and Smoke”
27. The Revelons – “97 Tears”
28. Cheetah Chrome – “Take Me Home”
29. Richard Hell – “You Gotta Lose”
30. Chris Stamey and the dBs – “If and When”
31. Mick Farren and the New Wave – “Play With Fire”
32. Richard Lloyd – “Get Off My Cloud”
33. Alex Chilton – “The Singer Not the Song”
34. Richard Lloyd – “Connection”
35. Alex Chilton – “Summertime Blues”
36. Mick Farren and the New Wave – “To Know Him Is to Love Him”
37. Link Cromwell – “Crazy Like a Fox”
38. Link Cromwell – “Shock Me”
39. Kenneth Higney – “I Wanna Be the King”
40. Lester Bangs – “Let It Blurt”
41. Alex Chilton – “Bangkok”
42. Peter Holsapple – “Big Black Truck”
43. Prix – “She Might Look My Way”
44. Alex Chilton – “Can’t Seem to Make You Mine”
45. Prix “Love You All Day Long”
46. Alex Chilton – “Shakin’ The World”
47. Prix – “Love You Tonight”
48. Lester Bangs – “Live”
49. Kenneth Higney – “Funky Kinky”

sad news of the passing of the original and founding member of the Ramones , Tommy Ramone