"Who is Lydia Loveless?" Filmmaker Gorman Bechard Plans on Finding the Answer.

Fans of the Reelin' and Rockin' movie series might recall our screening of the excellent documentary, "Color Me Obsessed, a film about The Replacements" by filmmaker Gorman Bechard. Well, as it turns out, the acclaimed film maker has set his sights on a new project featuring Columbus' own Lydia Loveless. He recently launched a Kickstarter campaign to help finance his forthcoming feature, "Who is Lydia Loveless?"

Click here for the Kickstarter page and all kinds of interesting info about the project. 

Gorman was kind enough to answer a couple of my questions about "Who Is Lydia Loveless?"

Colin G. - Previously, your movies have focused on iconic underground acts with long histories like The Replacements / Archers of Loaf and so on. How does your approach to a project change when the subject is a younger artist just starting to make a dent in this big mean world?

Gorman - Well for one, I can capture the making of a record as it's happening.  But I tend to approach every film differently.  How can I turn the genre on its ear?  The normal VH1 rock doc formula bores me to tears.  In this case I really want to show Lydia at work, how she writes, records, tours, deals with the inherent sexism of rock & roll, etc.  And I definitely want her amazing sense of humor to shine through.  People will not only fall in love with Lydia and her music, they will have a good time doing so.

Colin G. - Was there a single moment or song when it suddenly hit you that you had to make this movie? What pushed it over the edge from a crazy idea to actually making it happen? Can you pinpoint it?

Gorman - It was the first time I saw her live.  It was just her and Ben.  She was singing Verlaine Shot Rimbaud.  The line about "I just wanna be the one you love."  She stepped back maybe 7 or 8 feet from the mic, yet her voice filled the room.  I was awash with goosebumps.  And right then and there I knew.  It was definitely a crazy idea.  I really thought I would not make another rock doc, at least for a while.  But I thought about it a lot.  Never really mentioned it to anyone, until the next time I saw her live.  We were talking outside while she took a smoke break.  And I just sort of asked.  She said sure.  It all came together as simple as that.  

Colin G. - If you could wave a magic wand what is your best-case scenario for this movie? What story do you hope to tell?  When and where would you like to see it premier? 

Gorman - I hope to tell a completely entertaining story about a young artist breaking through.  The struggles, the joys, all of it.  I want the world to fall in love with Lydia, because she really is the future, the hope, for rock and roll.  She has The Replacements gene.  I hope to capture the brilliant chaos of her live set. Well, I guess the obvious place to premiere would be SXSW.  But we'll see.  

Colin G. - Thanks Gorman and good luck. I cannot wait to see this movie.

Don't forget to check out the Kickstarter campaign by clicking here. 

Colin Gawel started Pencilstorm in his coffee shop and has spent his life playing with the rock band Watershed. To learn more about him or our other contributors please click here

Pete Vogel Talks About His Columbus Music Movie "Indie" - by Colin G.

On Sunday, January 18th, King Ave 5 will be screening the movie "Indie" at 4 pm. Admission is FREE. "Indie" tells the story of a handful of Columbus, Ohio musicians and their passion to succeed. Director and accomplished musician himself, Pete Vogel was kind enough to answer some questions concerning the movie.  Click here for Facebook event link

Colin G. - You always have a ton going on, but making movie is a monumental task: How long had the idea for "Indie" been kicking around in your brain?

Pete Vogel:  I was asked to join Matt Monta and The Hot Coal band in December 2009 and had been away from the scene for a few years.  After playing a few gigs with them - all shared between other acts - I realized what an original and diverse scene Columbus had evolved into during my absence.  The ideas came almost immediately...hearing these new bands and talking to these new artists, it just seemed like a good fit for me to put a storyline to this discovery.

C.G. - I always love asking, what was the moment when you knew this crazy idea had to become a reality? Did something inspire you to take that last huge step?

P.V. - I had just purchased the Canon 60-D camera which shot real good low-light video and all I really wanted to do was make some good, high-quality video for some of my friends.  I was so happy with the outcome that I started making vignettes of some artists I admired...including montage clips and interview clips of some of my favorite artists.  Over time I had compiled enough material to put a full-fledged film together....it simply evolved out of my video work.

C.G. - Did you know exactly where you wanted this movie to go or did it take some twists and turns you weren't expecting along the way?

P.V.- The movie kind of "wrote itself" as I was putting it together.  Performances and/or interviews took  on their own life and before you knew it, the story was written and all the pieces came together.  It was actually kind of miraculous because I didn't really write a story board or plan too much. It slowly evolved over a six-month period of watching people perform and asking for interviews.

C.G. - Being an accomplished musician yourself, how did you choose the musicians to be featured in the movie? What qualities as a story teller did you find interesting?

P.V. - I actually had my "short list" of performers I wanted in the flick and some of them panned out and some didn't.  For instance, I really wanted the perspective of Columbus through the eyes of Willie Phoenix, but it never crystallized.  I also wanted to focus on a band called "The Songbirds" but they had gone on hiatus due to the fact that both women were pregnant.  Some of the artists were referred by their fans - such as Joey Hebdo - and some were bands I had seen and thought were worthy of being documented.

C.G. - Just for the hell of it, who are some of your favorite local musicians? Who just blows you away?

P.V. - I have several favorite musicians, all for different reasons.  I think Matt Monta is one of the most original lyricists, and he paints a beautiful picture with his words.  The Shaw Brothers are talented, interesting & beautiful to listen to, and I'm a big fan of their stuff.  I like the country sensibilities of Angela Perley and the Howlin' Moons, especially when Angela was on dobro.  And lastly, I think the best songwriter in town is Joey Hebdo.  What he can do with his voice is truly inspiring.

C.G. - Is there a scene or two that you think really captures the spirit of the movie best? Something people should give a little extra attention to?

P.V. -  My favorite scene in the movie is when I caught video of a jazz acoustic guitarist named Shohei Toyoda.  He's originally from Japan and had been teaching at a music store in Worthington.  He was at Woodlands Open Mic and went up and performed an original composition that floored me.  Of course, there were only about 15 people there...go figure.

Also,  I think my interview with Donna Mogavero captures the spirit very well.  She's an iconic Columbus musician...she's been a big supporter of local music as well, and capturing her essence on film was intriguing, to say the least.

C.G. - If people are interested in sharing this movie with friends, what is the best way for them to do so, if they cannot make a screening?

P.V. -  If they can't make the screening, they can contact me about a private screening.  Or if they want to purchase a DVD I'm selling them for the low, low price of $10.  They can contact me via e-mail: petevogel@yahoo.com

C.G. - Can you give us a quick update on upcoming gigs and projects you have cooking?

P.V. - Right now I'm playing drums with a fantastic cover band called Stadium11.  We're a bunch of dudes who really dig the arena sound from our childhood, so we've been together for six years and love playing the quintessential "stadium gig."  If you like Boston, Styx, Journey, The Who, Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple, etc., you'll love our band.  Check us out: www.stadium11.com

C.G. - Final question, you get to play drums for one song with any band in history: What band and what song?

P.V. -  I'm still waiting for Pete Townshend and Roger Daltrey to call me and ask me to join their next tour.  I'm pretty sure they have my phone number.  I'll continue to wait.

"Indie" a film produced by Pete Vogel, is an inside look at the Columbus music scene in 2010, early 2011. Matt Monta & The Hot Coal Band, The Shaw Brothers, Joey Hebdo, Donna Mogavero Band, Phillip Fox Band, Salty Caramels, Throat Culture, Angela Perley & The Howlin' Moons, Oswald & The Herringbones and many more bands/artists are featured!


CD102.5's Brian Phillips Answers Colin's Questions About Pulp.

This month's installment of Reelin' and Rockin' at the Gateway Film Center features Pulp - A Film About Life, Death and Supermarkets. Drinks at the upstairs bar at 7 pm and movie at 8 pm. Tiks only 5$ and proceeds to CD1025 for the kids. Colin knows this is an important event but really doesn't know why. Brian was nice enough to fill him in.

Colin - I know I should know Pulp but really other than the one guy is named Jarvis, I can't say I can name a song offhand. Does this make me a total dumbass or is in natural for us Yanks to have trouble keeping track of all these UK bands?

Brian- Not at all. It's tough to break into the U.S. market. Look at Pulp the way you would The Kinks or Blur. Their Britishness makes large scale success in America a more difficult proposition. 

Colin: What record would be the best one for a novice like myself to start with?

1995's "Different Class" has their best known song "Common People" and is generally regarded as their greatest top to bottom. It garnered the 1996 Mercury Prize for England's best album and sold a million and a quarter copies in their native land alone. That's like moving around seven million copies here. If you need more convincing William Shatner covered "Common People" several years ago and it's hilarious!

Colin: Have you ever seen them live? Have they done a big room appearance at CD1025?

Brian- I have not. America was never a touring priority and jaunts of any length have been sadly few and far between. 

Colin; This movie is brand new and making it's Columbus debut at our little movie club. Any initial word on reviews?

Brian- Reviews have been across the board very positive. I've read that their home town of Sheffield is an important part of the film. The "Common People" that live and work there are reportedly instrumental in the film's success. 

If I could I'd like to add a recommendation. Front man Jarvis Cocker's (no relation to fellow Sheffield native Joe Cocker) 2009 solo album "Further Complications" is for my money the funniest album ever recorded about being a recently divorced sexually frustrated middle-aged man. It is an excellent display of his lacerating wit. It also rocks like a mother. 

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An Homage to "Repo Man" 30 Years On - by Nick Taggert

An Homage to “Repo Man” 30 Years On

You know the way everybody's into weirdness right now? Books in all the supermarkets about Bermuda triangles, UFOs, how the Mayans invented television? Well, they’re into celebrating anniversaries, too. Aging soldiers were trotted out to commemorate the 70th anniversary of D-Day and Baby Boomers got all gooey about marking 50 years since the Beatles first came to America. Anniversaries help us reflect on where we’ve been and how those events have shaped us. That’s why I find it somewhat unfathomable that another great cultural anniversary went uncommented on by the media: this past March marked 30 years since the release of the movie, “Repo Man”.

I was 21 when it was released and it came at a formative time when I was trying to figure things out; you know, finding an identity and a path worth pursuing, blah, blah, blah. Not that the movie helped me find a vocation. Repossessing cars from dildos who don’t pay their bills didn’t sound like an attractive career. And despite a burgeoning music scene in early 80s Columbus, I was not a white suburban punk and would never have dreamed of getting sushi and not paying for it. But the movie opened my eyes in other ways by introducing me to genres of music and humor that might not have otherwise reached the Westside of Columbus. 

Everyone has a movie they can quote ad nauseam: “Caddyshack,” “Slap Shot,” “Fletch.” For me, it’s “Repo Man.”  Like Pavlov’s dog, I can’t see a pine tree air freshener dangling from a rearview mirror without commenting, “You find one in every car. You’ll see.” Or reciting the soliloquy regarding John Wayne’s sexual preferences whenever the Duke’s name is mentioned. It’s some form of “Repo” Tourette’s, I’m sure.

“Repo Man” contains the perfect blend of wackiness and youthful ennui, and it sucked me right in. There are hardcore punks, car chases through the concrete riverbeds of Los Angeles, a ’64 Chevy Malibu with dead aliens in the trunk, and a deranged inventor of the neutron bomb attempting to keep the two hemispheres of his brain from exploding. Not to mention gun play and people getting vaporized. It’s intense! But as we learn from the film, the life of a repo man is always intense. 

The characters are memorable: Emilio Estevez in his finest role as punk turned repo man, Otto Maddox; curmudgeonly Harry Dean Stanton as the fatherly Bud; Tracey Walter as the wise car-yard philosopher, Miller; and all the other beer-monikered cast members and offbeat extras.

The movie isn’t for everyone. Commies won’t like it, nor Christians, nor ordinary fucking people. It might be a gender thing, too. The film does seem geared toward guys. Punk is a testosterone-driven art form and all the repo men are, well, men. My wife is not a big fan. But then she doesn’t like shrimp either. Or plate. Or plate o’ shrimp. She loves Monty Python, so it’s not as if she doesn’t appreciate silly or absurdist humor. Maybe she just needs to watch it another ten to twenty times. Like me.

Multiple viewings reveal layer upon layer of pop culture references that eventually enmesh the movie in a lattice of satirical coincidence, if you will. Scientology gets a poke in the eye when government agents are found reading Diuretics: The Science of Matter over Mind, and a term paper is waiting to be written comparing Bud’s “Repo Code” (“I shall not cause harm to any vehicle nor the personal contents thereof, nor through inaction let the personal contents thereof come to harm.”) to Isaac Asimov’s Laws of Robotics. (“A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.”)

The movie is obviously peculiar, but it’s effectively peculiar. It not only entertains, it blows the mind, making our brains receptive to new and original ideas. The cerebral cortex can always use a good scrubbing. 

But what is the movie about? Punk rock? Aliens? Time travel? Nuclear war? How the fuck should I know? The only certainties are that it is funny and it has a killer soundtrack. From Iggy Pop’s title track to the teen angst anthem of Suicidal Tendencies’ “Institutionalized” (“How can you say what my best interest is?/ What are you trying to say, I'm crazy?/When I went to your schools/ I went to your churches/ I went to your institutional learning facilities?!/ So how can you say I'm crazy?”), it’s cool and it rocks and it’s infused with humor. There’s Black Flag’s “TV Party” (“We've got nothing better to do/ Than watch T.V. and have a couple of brews”) and Burning Sensations cover of Jonathan Richman’s “Pablo Picasso” (“Some people try to pick up girls, get called an asshole / This never happened to Pablo Picasso”). And for some hip cache, there’s the Latino punk band, The Plugz, singing a Spanish version of Johnny Rivers’s “Secret Agent Man,” or “Hombre Secreto” as they say in the barrio. In the early 80s, punk rock was ripping the seams off the bloated music that came before it. And for a Midwestern boy raised on Top 40 and Album Oriented Rock, it kicked open doors of scary cubbyholes I might not have otherwise peered inside. 

Thirty years on, does the film hold up? Does one run the risk of seeing it again with mature eyes and concluding, as Otto does when watching a familiar band in a nightclub, “I can’t believe I used to like these guys.” In my humble opinion, “Repo Man” continues to entertain. The Criterion Collection released an enhanced 2-DVD set last year, so someone else must think so, too. (It contains the expected director’s and actors’ commentaries, but what makes it especially coveted is the rare TV-edit of the movie where “melonfarmers” replaces “motherfuckers”!)

No doubt if you pulled a core sample from the film, the plug would show ample evidence of the 1980s. There are people using phone booths (how quaint); Otto’s a cappella version of “TV Party” includes “Dallas” and “The Jeffersons”; and there’s the running gag of generic “Food” and “Beer” packaging, funny as well as nostalgic for those of us who remember those blue and white unbrands. 

I’m fond of saying “Repo Man” contains the meaning of life, but, of course, that’s hyperbole. For the vigilant viewer, however, there are enough meaningful aphorisms to fill a Mitch Albom book. For example, we learn food is more enjoyable if eaten off a plate; there is room to move as a fry cook; the more you drive, the less intelligent you are; and, while getting by however we can, we all gotta duck when the shit hits the fan. 

So, what’s the meaning of it all? There isn’t any! That’s what makes it so much fun. (Kind of like life?) Just sit back and enjoy the ride, as if cruising through the night sky of southern California in a glowing Chevy Malibu that is really…yeah, you got it…a time machine! It’s all part of the cosmic unconsciousness.

Shadowbox Live Presents "Louder Than Love" (Grande Ballroom documentary) Sunday, July 20, 7 pm / Bonus Content by Mike Parks & Ricki C.

First the details, below that some great MC5 readin' from Ricki C. & Mike Parks. 

 

Shadowbox Live (503 S. Front Street, phone 416-7625) will present Louder Than Love, the acclaimed documentary about Detroit’s legendary Grande Ballroom this Sunday, July 20th, at 7 pm.  The Grande (pronounced Gran-DEE) was Detroit’s version of the Fillmore East and West, Chicago’s Kinetic Playground or the Boston Tea Party, the great rock & roll ballrooms of the 1960’s.  Produced & directed by filmmaker Tony D’Annunzio, Louder Than Love won Best Documentary Award at the Las Vegas Film Festival, Best Independent Standout Award at Hell's Half Mile Movie & Music Festival, and has had 16 consecutive sold-out screenings. 

Shadowbox Live plans to provide a true Grande Ballroom experience with the award-winning film interlaced with authentic light shows, original poster art and artists.

Legendary MC5 guitarist Wayne Kramer will join Shadowbox house band Bill Who? as they kick out the jams on tunes by not only The MC5, but also Led Zeppelin, The Who and more.

Some of the greatest bands in the world got their start or made their name at the Grande Ballroom in the late 60’s and early 70’s.  Louder Than Love is the greatest untold story in rock & roll history as revealed by the musicians, artists and people who lived it.

 

Schedule of Events:

4:00pm – Doors Open to the Backstage Bistro.  There will be a gallery and sale showcasing authentic rock art and photography

6:30pm – Doors Open to Shadowbox Live

7:00pm – Louder Than Love Begins

 

For ticket prices and more information on Louder Than Love, Sunday July 20th, please visit www.shadowboxlive.com.

 

 

The MC5 and The Grande Ballroom by Mike Parks 

 

The MC5/Grande Ballroom symbiotic relationship: linked together forever. 

Detroit and Ann Arbor in the late 1960’s were violent, high-voltage and dangerous.  The MC5 was the response, referred to as “The fathers of metal & punk,” but they were in a category by themselves. 

My involvement in the 5’s story happened by accident: a fork in the road.  To celebrate my expulsion the last day of my senior year of high school, my hitchhiking partner and fellow musician Phil Stokes and I decided to go to Chicago to a Spooky Tooth and Bo Diddley concert.  En route we were tossed off the Ohio turnpike by a patrolman who suggested we go to Detroit where we might find satisfaction. 

That night we ended up on the doorstep of the Grande Ballroom, where the MC5 were playing.  This was a pivotal moment.  After the show we met the sole member of the road crew who offered us a road gig and a floor to sleep on at the MC5’s Hill Street house.  We accepted and turned one night into a summer of electrifying shows. 

Fred “Sonic” Smith and Wayne Kramer were two of rockdom’s best dual guitarists – tight and damaging.  Rob Tyner was a fearless front-man.  The rhythm section of Dennis Thompson and Michael Davis: NUCLEAR.  Each live show outperformed the last, and obliterated the politics and bad management that surrounded them. 

The MC5 was like no other band. 

A True Testimonial.  - Mike Parks / July 17th, 2014

 

THE MC5 IN 1968 by Ricki C.

 

“I was 16 in 1968 the first time I heard The MC5
Rock & roll was, at that point, the only thing keeping me alive”

Ricki C. / “If All My Heroes Are Losers” / © 2000

 

I first heard of The MC5 sometime in 1968.  I can’t remember exactly how, it was just part of that Teenage Jungle Telegraph that existed back in those days.  There was no real Rock Press to speak of back then, Rolling Stone had just started publishing, and you could only buy it in head shops on campus, not in every Meijers and Kroger’s.  There was certainly no internet or YouTube.  If you wanted to see a band you had to GET IN YOUR CAR, DRIVE TO A VENUE AND PAY MONEY TO WATCH THEM.  (How very quaint.)  And there were no Smartphones, Spotify and Rhapsody: if you wanted to hear a band you had to go downtown to Marco Records or Lazarus and BUY A SLAB OF VINYL.  (Grandpa, what was vinyl?)

Anyway my rock & roll best friend Dave Blackburn and I somehow discovered The MC5 (I’m betting by some connection to The Who) and became Instant Raving Fans.  We were lower-middle class West Side boys – although attending a rather genteel Catholic high school, I must admit – who had mortal blows delivered to our beloved jagged-edge Power Rock & Roll by the Summer Of Love bands in 1967.  I mean, I’m sure Jefferson Airplane and The Grateful Dead meant well, but let’s face facts, they were hardly delivering the likes of “My Generation” or “Get Off My Cloud.”  (And indeed, it was during soundcheck at Detroit’s Grande Ballroom that The MC5 – who were opening that night for rather lightweight Boston folk-rockers The Beacon Street Union – first issued the timeless invocation “Kick out the jams, motherfuckers.”)

Dave & I and our West Side compadres were hippies for about 20 minutes, but even as early as ’68 we were looking for something a little wilder and a lot louder & harder, ya know?  And The MC5 and all the other Detroit bands fit that bill to a tee.  Plus they were only one state over from Ohio, so they played the Midwest like the local bands that they were.  (I saw the Bob Seger System at the Sugar Shack on 4th Street more times than I can count.)  

And then in February 1969 the first MC5 album – Kick Out The Jams – was released and OUR FUCKING BRAINS EXPLODED!  Really, I can’t overestimate to you the effect that album had on our teenage psyches.  From the very first moments of Brother J.C. Crawford’s intro straight through to the last outer-space noises of “Starship” this record is one for the ages.  (Is it the Greatest Live Rock & Roll Record of All Time?  It was until the expanded version of The Who’s “Live At Leeds” was released in the CD era.  And some nights at my house even now, 45 years later, the original vinyl edition of “Kick Out The Jams” still kicks Pete & the boys’ asses.)

Okay, okay, okay, I promised I’d keep this at 500 words, we’re rapidly headed for 900 and I could go on like this all night, so let me just say this: The MC5 were one of the five greatest bands EVER on this planet.  They kicked out a truly fearsome noise, they had killer stage outfits and they did unison dance steps, like a punk/metal Temptations or Four Tops (they were from Motown after all).  In some ways they were like James Brown backed by The Who, and what more could you ask for in a rock & roll band?  The MC5 never made it big because they were just too loud, too smart, too uncompromising, too political, just flat-out too bad-ass to play The Great American Entertainment Game and become Big Stars.  (It’s widely held that The MC5 were the target/inspiration for The Beatles couplet:  “And if you go carryin’ pictures of Chairman Mao / You ain’t gonna make it with anyone anyhow” in the song “Revolution.”  For a West Side boy like me, those whiny limey bastards putting down my Midwest crew was just too hard to stomach.)  (sidenote – It was only five years from The Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show to The MC5 at the Grande, five years from “I Want To Hold Your Hand” to “Kick Out The Jams.”  Where have we gone in the last five years in what is today laughingly referred to as rock & roll: from Mumford & Sons to Imagine Dragons?  God help us.)

The MC5 were, in many ways, their own worst enemies: they refused to play by the rules, refused to keep their mouths shut, made their fair share of bad decisions, managed to alienate both the Straight AND the Hip Worlds (The Velvet Underground in particular) and eventually tumbled down into Street Drug Hell.  Does any of that make me love them less?  No, it just makes me respect them more: because we were all lower middle-class boys and we were all supposed to be in this together.  Kick out the jams, motherfuckers.

(ps. The MC5 is not in The Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame.  And that is why I do not go there.) – Ricki C. / July 15th, 2014. 

 


Brian Phillips Explains Why You Need to See "Hype" @ the Gateway Film Center this Wednesday

Our monthly movie series "Reelin and Rockin' @ The Gateway Film Center" returns Wednesday July 16th with the movie "Hype". CD1025 jock and Pacific Northwest native Brian Phillips explains why this is a must see movie for all fans of the Seattle music scene. Click here to read his CD1025 blog about the movie.

Click here to learn more about the history of the Reelin and Rockin movie series and to see what you have missed.