Category Archives: MY FAMOUS BAND, THE SKUNKS

BLEU MONDAY

Jesse Sublett, blues singer, crime novelist, noir, hardboiled

Jesse, Secret Six

A quick blog this morning as we clear away the fog. Had a fine time Sunday morning at the Standard brunch at Swift’s Attic. First up as we came in the door, Kelly Truesdale of Standard and Samantha Howe of Blurb. It was nice to attach faces to the names of the cool people we’ve been coordinating with for SXSW and the whole E-Publishing thing. Standard is a very, very cool online magazine of style and art, and Blurb is a publishing/print-on-demand platform and new model publishing concept for writers, photographers, artists and other creative types seeking new ways of getting their work before the public. On hand were print editions of the latest Standard, showcasing the excellent print quality Blurb has to offer, and it wasn’t until we got home that I really, really looked at the magazine and found photo essay profiles of the Standard people we dined with.

[Note: For more info on this, read my post THE 7 STAGES OF E-BOOK GRIEF].

 

Walking into the room, I heard that unmistakeable shimmering tone of a Collings guitar, which was being played by a singer / songwriter type, name unknown to me, as he serendaded the guests. I wanted to grab the guitar and treat the folks to my rendition of Death Letter, but alas, he wasn’t playing in Open G and I’d left my set of slides at home. Collings are made right here in Austin and the man behind Collings, Steve McCreary, was also one of the guests, giving life to the photo essay on his fine company.

Collings guitar, at birth, in Standard magazine, online & print edition

Collings guitar, at birth, in Standard magazine, online & print edition

Kelly Truesdale, Publisher, Standard Magazine, inside a screen shot of the online version of the SXSW edition

Kelly Truesdale, Publisher, Standard Magazine, inside a screen shot of the online version of the SXSW edition

This is what the Standard magazine interface looks like.

This is what the Standard magazine interface looks like.

Expect to see these people at the E-Book MeetUp hosted by my terrible self and Nettie Reynolds Tuesday, 12:30-1:30 at Proof Annex. There will be copies of this magazine available, and also, if you are interested, you can see my the very FIRST print edition of my latest novel, GRAVE DIGGER BLUES. I’ve ordered a very small print run of special editions that I’ll be signing at events around Austin in the near future.

Also, be aware that the digital versions of the Martin Fender mystery novels, set in Austin in the 1980s, are free to Amazon Prime members today and tomorrow only. That’s ROCK CRITIC MURDERS, TOUGH BABY and BOILED IN CONCRETE.

The next MURDER BALLAD MONDAY at The Buzz Mill, featuring my terrible self and special guest Bruce Salmon, an early show, 7:30-9 PM, will be April Fool’s Day. That’s April 1, 2013 for all you newbies.

pulp fiction, Grave Digger Blues, e-book, blurb, crime fiction, noir, austin author

The author checks a proof copy of his latest mistresspiece.

One final quick note:

Please check out this temporary page of photos by Bill Leissner. Be warned, however, that you might get tired of seeing my face, as all the photos in my collection are of bands I was in during the 1980s. That includes The Skunks reunion show 1985, plus Secret Six, Flex and Hang Em High. Those last 3 bands covered a total of about 4 years and 18 truck loads of Aqua Net hair spray.

The Skunks, Jesse Sublett, Jon Dee Graham

The Skunks Reunion 1985, Jon Dee Graham foreground, Jesse Sublett on bass

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Friday Favorites

OK so it’s Friday, so here are some of my favorite things.

JON DEE GRAHAM’S BIRTHDAY PARTY, which was last night, at Maria’s Tacos. Jon Dee played for us, working on his birthday, as he tends to do, and so we were all reminded what a gift he is. Mike Hardwick accompanied him, although the size of Mike’s contributions kind of make the word “accompanied” seem inadequate. Suffice to say, if you’re a fan of Jon Dee Graham, and you go way back to the origins of his groove as a solo performer / bandleader, then you’re aware that a good deal of Jon Dee’s material from his first two albums was developed this way, just the two of them, together, melding their harmonic and melodic grooves. It was grand to hear the early material like this again.

jon dee graham, mike hardwick, the skunks, jesse sublett, maria's tacos

Jon Dee Graham’s birthday party at Maria’s had many cool guests in attendance

Not surprisingly, Maria did a superb job decorating. It was post card perfect. Lots of cool friends were there and a grand time was had by all, I’m sure.

I’ve probably said this before, in this space, but Jon Dee and I met when he was 19 years old, a Plan 2 student at UT with a brilliant career ahead of him, but that was all ruined when he auditioned for The Skunks, to replace the departing Eddie Munoz (who went off to be Elvis Costello‘s guitar tech, then guitarist with the Plimsouls), and Jon Dee got the job, as you may know. Then he went on to other things. UT’s loss was the art world’s gain.

MONDAY IS MURDER BALLAD MONDAY AT THE BUZZ MILL.

jesse sublett, the buzz mill, murder ballads, crime fiction, noir, blues, austin music

I am playing solo 7:30-9 PM Monday March 4. I love this new joint. It’s just off I35 down Riverside on 1505 Town Creek. Sure, you know where Walgreen’s is, right? It’s just West of that, on the North side of Riverside. Before Emo’s or Antone’s or whatever it’s called now. See my blog about the gig here, or just come out. It’s free, for all you cheapskates, and it’s early, for all you elderly 9 to 5 types, and there are drink specials, for all of you lounge lizards. The Facebook event link is here.

SPEAKING OF THE SKUNKS, we will be playing at the super fab MARGARET MOSER BIRTHDAY EVENT, which is being organized by Jon Dee’s son, William Harries Graham. Confirmed performers include The Skunks, Kathy Valentine, Mystic Knights of the Sea, with many other super special guests yet to be announced, so an eye on Facebook or whatever social media pipeline suits you, for more details. Margaret Moser‘s precise birth date happens to be May 14, and mine is May 15, the same year, and Eddie Munoz and Lesley Woods are May 16; and there are many other notable Taureans are around, as you may know.

AND THEN THERE’S SXSW. Nettie Reynolds and I are hosting an EBOOK MEETUP Tuesday March 12, 12:30 PM, details here . It’s sponsored by BLURB. It will be a cool opportunity for all of you who are working with, trying to figure out, or simply curious about going digital with your writing life. It’s been a very, very interesting year for me in the world of EPublishing, and I’m not saying it’s been all wonderful and that I am now an eTycoon or an eNicholas Sparks, or whatever, but I’ve learned a lot and been incredibly inspired. As you can see.

Grave Digger Blues, crime ebook, Jesse Sublett, Dick Cheney in drag

Secret backstage scenes after the Republican coup, as chronicled in Grave Digger Blues.

If you have not yet downloaded my latest noir novella, GRAVE DIGGER BLUES, I hope you will give it a shot very soon. You can buy the Kindle version here, or the Blues Deluxe iPad Edition here. And if you’re really cheap, the Smashwords Bare Bones Edition, text only, is here, for $.99.

enhanced ibook, ipad, novel for iPad, Jesse Sublett, noir, pulp fiction, Kindle, crime fiction for Kindle

GRAVE DIGGER BLUES may in fact be too weird for you. Maybe you’d rather listen to Celine Dion and wear elephant plaid to your high school reunion.

 

 

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Getting Twisted at Club Foot

Remember that great booming sound of Club Foot? It was just a big stone and concrete warehouse, multi-level, old as dirt, and the building really magnified the sound of a good rock n roll band in a neat way. Sure, I consider the Skunks a good rock band, he said, not so modestly, in fact, one of the great ones. The incarnation of the band that was around when Club Foot was in existence (1982-3) isn’t my favorite but we still had our moments. The Skunks Live at Club Foot

A handful of videos appeared out of nowhere the other day on youtube so I’m posting one of them here, apropos of nothing, except to say that I sure miss the sound and feel of that club. Clubs come and go, it’s part of the natural order of things, and I never did spend much time crying about the demise of one club or another. But I miss that sound. Also, it’s fair to mention that those were great days for rock n’ roll in Austin. The club drew really large crowds to see live music. Now that we’re officially (or not) the Live Music Capital of the World, we’ve got 100 or 200 clubs, but it’s not often that they’re full of live music fans.

I wish the above video would have surfaced when Dawn Cooper Johnson was producing her Dead Venues Live series. The Club Foot story, featuring my terrible self, Jesse, and the great band Ume, were in the first episode.Dead Venues Live starring Jesse Sublett and Ume

I mean, as far as bank towers go, the Frost Tower, which was built atop the grave of Club Foot, is pretty neat looking. But the acoustics ain’t worth shit.

Additionally, the same youtube user uploaded a couple of videos of the Skunks from a session on ACTV, but I think this is enough nostalgia for one day. But that doesn’t mean I can’t post this photo of our great pals, Joseph Gonzales and Bobby Morales, the great Buddhas of Raul’s Club, where this whole putting-Austin-on-the-rock-n-roll-map thing started, back in January and February of 1978, with the Violators and the Skunks, Austin’s first two punk bands. And, he immodestly added, I was in both of them!

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The Skunks Are Number One (in Davis, CA)

Just rec’d this message. — The Skunks are #1 in Davis, CA. Hello, Austin?

The message was from Harry at Last Laugh records, who reissued “Earthquake Shake” / “Can’t Get Loose” a few weeks ago. The single is available at Waterloo Records, unless they’ve sold out, and by now should be available from major distributors.

See a recent clip of band doing “Earthquake Live” "Earthquake Shake".

The exact message from KDVS-FM, with the Top 30 list, is below. But if you’re in town for SXSW, you can see 2/3 of the Skunks — Jesse Sublett & Jon Dee Graham, at Uncle Billy’s on Barton Springs Friday 3/16, 5:30-7:30 PM. That’s right, we’ll be doing two sets, murder ballads, blues, etc., doing our part to keep austin Weird.

We are happy to announce that The Skunks’ “Can’t Get Loose” was among our Top Ten most played records this week at KDVS 90.3 FM in Davis, CA. (#1)

KDVS Top 30 and Top 5 New Adds for 03/05/2012

Tali Link, Jess Abell, Hatem Gallouzi: Music Directors
Brent Batty: Assistant Music Director

KDVS Top 30

1. The Skunks – “Can’t Get Loose” (Last Laugh)
2. Charles Albright/Matt K. Shrugg – “Split Personalities 7″ (Sacramento/Phono Select)
3. U.S. Girls – “The Island Song” (Calico Corp.)
4. The Mentally Ill – “Gacy’s Place 7″ (Last Laugh)
5. King Lollipop – “Woodland Whoopee Songs Of OL’ Callowee!” (1-2-3-4 GO!)
6. Terrible Truths – “s/t” (Small Town City Living)
7. Buzz – “See You Sioux” (Dark Entries)
8. The Pharmacy – “Dig Your Grave EP” (Kind Turkey Records)
9. Unnatural Helpers – “Unnatural Helpers” (1-2-3-4 GO!)
10. Thorbjorn Risager – “Dust & Scratches” (Cope Records)
11. King Dude – “My Beloved Ghost” (Bathetic)
12. Baloji – “Kinshasa Succursale” (Crammed Discs)
13. Actual Water – “She’s A Priest b/w Latoya” (Plastic Idol)
14. Sola Rosa – “Get It Together” (Melting Pot Music)
15. Uzi Rash – “I Saw You 7″” (1-2-3-4 GO!)
16. Bad Drugs – “Raw Powder” (Rotted Tooth)
17. Cheater Slicks – “Guttural: Live 2010″ (Columbus Discount)
18. Twin Steps – “Serial Parade” (Cola Bruin)
19. Sound Became Color – “Sometimes the Sun Shines Through the Rain” (Daly City Records)
20. The Lonesome Savages – “All Outta Love EP” (Kind Turkey Records)
21. Slim Twig – “There’s A Secret To Your Pleasure” (Calico Corp.)
22. Beverly McClellan – “Fear Nothing” (Junk Drawer)
23. The Andy Poxon Band – “Red Roots” (EllerSoul Records)
24. Various Artists – “Friends & Friends Of Friends Vol. 4″ (Tender Loving Empire)
25. Dead Boomers – “The Pig in the Python” (Sabbatical )
26. Lilac – “Lilac” (Omega)
27. Kidda Band – “(Watch Out) Thief” (Last Laugh)
28. Vanna Inget – “Allvar” (1-2-3-4 GO!)
29. “Blue” Gene Tyranny – “Detours” (Unseen Worlds)
30. Pete Swanson – “High Time b/w Trees” (Emerald Cocoon)

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Perry is on Brokeback Mountain; SKUNKS 45 RE-ISSUED!

A couple of news bits here, completely unrelated, I think. First, I’m sure you’ve seen the vile, psychotic Rick Perry ad in which he complains about how “gays can serve openly in the military, while our kids can’t celebrate Christmas openly.” And goes on to lie about some mythical “war against religion” being conducted by President Obama. (Hey, I was thinking, if a person really wanted to sign up for this war, where would they go to find it? I can’t find a single place to volunteer, offer aid or anything. In fact, I can’t find any evidence of such fanciful beast.)

Anyway, so look what Gov. Rick Perry, CEO of the nation’s dumbest and most deprived state, is wearing in this anti-gay ad: The jacket from Brokeback Mountain.

I stole this from alternet, by the way. Click the link to read the full post.

The other, unrelated news is that the reissue of The Skunks’ first single, “Earthquake Shake” b/w “Can’t Get Loose” is now available from Last Laugh records. This is a true artifact, recorded in a garage in the west campus area in early 1979 on a two-track reel to reel recorder. We bounced the tracks once to add backing vocals, mixed it down and sent the half inch tape off to a pressing plant along with our $300 and then when the records arrived, drank a case of beer while we slipped the 45s into a sleeve designed by our roadie and which was printed for free by a fan who worked at the Ginny’s in Dobie Mall. This is a true facsimile production in glorious low-fi; not remastered or recorded or sweetened in any way. This was the first punk single to emerge from the Austin, Texas scene and it helped put Austin on the map. We headed off to NYC to conquer the world from the stages of CBGB, Max’s Kansas City, Hurrah’s, etc. and crisscrossed the USA in shitty vans, playing in the midwest, Deep South, Oklahoma, LA, and every bar and dive across Texas who was brave enough to take a chance on a loud glorified garage band from Austin, Texas. OK. so we didn’t conquer the world. Like a dog catching a car, what are you gonna do next? So there you go. Last Laugh plans to release our big hit, our terrifying albatross, our “Stairway to Heaven,” —- “Cheap Girl” — next. Stay tuned.

Last Laugh, based in Brooklyn, NY, where a lot of other cool stuff comes from, also does some contemporary bands, including the totally rocking new release “Yeah Buddy” from the band Liquor Store. Some of the tracks are reminiscent of early New York Dolls. And what great cover art. {see above}

Order your copy of “Earthquake Shake” here, just in time for Xmas.

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HOWLING WITH THE SKUNKS

THE SKUNKS played a mini-show for the HAAM benefit & launch of the book, “Austin Chronicle Music Anthology.” Jon Dee Graham on guitar, me on bass & vocals, George Duron on drums. Here are 2 songs from our set, “St. James Infirmary Blues” + “Commit a Crime.” The latter song was made famous by Howlin’ Wolf. (speaking of the Mighty Wolf, see an important announcement below the second video window.)

and here’s the other song.

And speaking of Chester Arthur Burnett, the Howlin’ Wolf, we’ll be throwing another annual Howlin Wolf birthday tribute on Friday, June 10, at the Continental Club. This will be the 101st anniversary of his birth. We’re working on the lineup, but expect to hear all Wolf, all night, including my terrible self on bass & vocals, plus sets by Big Foot Chester, Greg Izor & the Box Kickers, Churchwood, and Eve & the Exiles (tentative) plus many special guests. Stay tuned for updates.

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GARAGE EARTHQUAKE

The Skunks in 1979: L-R, Billy Blackmon, Jesse Sublett, Jon Dee Graham, backstage at Boondocks, which would later become Club Foot, and even later, the basement of Frost Bank Tower.

Tune into episode 30 of the Mal Thursday Show podcast for a lengthy interview with yours truly about The Skunks. It’s on the GaragePunk Podcast Network GPPN, which beats the heck out of MTV, CNN, MSNBC and PBS for coverage of great music!

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“THE RUNAWAYS” & FLASHBACK TO AUSTIN 1970s

Lordy, Lordy, Mizz Izzy!

LAST NIGHT WE WENT TO THE SCREENING OF THE RUNAWAYS, the new film about that pioneering proto-punk band that blazed trails in the rock world and proved that, yes, women can rock.

Kathy Valentine, Roadway Inn, Dallas, January 1978, in the middle of three days of gigs we played in DFW.

Yes indeed back when knuckle-draggers ruled the Earth and the name John Wayne cut more ice than Jon Stewart, there was a lot of sexist baloney passing for wisdom. The film is good. I loved all the Iggy music in the soundtrack. Michael Shannon’s portrayal of reptilian beast Kim Fowley almost steals the show. Cherie Currie was there to do Q&A afterward, looking good, as were Kristen Stewart & Dakota Fanning also. But then again, director Floria Sigismondi, statuesque and dripping classic rock star panache that would make Anita Pallenberg and Jerry Hall envious, really outshone the so-called movie starlets. But then again I don’t go to many teenage vampire flicks.

Marilyn Dean (drummer) & Kathy Valentine. All the Violators, plus Lois, my wife, shared an apartment on E. Riverside in 1978. Those were some kind of times, I tell ya.

Oh and Kristen does a very credible job as Joan Jett, Dakota does a good portrayal of Cherie Currie.

The Violators 1977: Clockwise from top: Jesse Sublett, Carla Olson, Kathy Valentine, Marilyn Dean.


Floria Sigismondi, the director who is more rock star than the stars she directs.

I was reminded of those days in the mid-seventies not just because I saw the Runaways at the Armadillo World Headquarters, but because it reminded me of when I first met Kathy Valentine, Carla Olson and Marilyn Dean, three of the first rock chicks in Austin. Carla was about 25, when I met her, I think, but she’d already been in band called Silver Cloud in about 1974 or so. Kathy and Marilyn were age 16 and 15, respectively, and they were starting a band. About a year later they were starting another new band and wanted to have an all girl band, but could find no satisfactory girl bassist, so I joined, which is not to be taken as a shot at my lack of masculinity. We were all friends. The band was the Violators, which debuted at Soap Creek Saloon on New Year’s Eve 1977-78, also with a preview of my other band, The Skunks. This took place as a mini-set in the middle of a set by a band called the Tools. The Tools was a songwriting project of a guitarist and sound man named Charlie Ray. Eddie Munoz, Billy Blackmon and I had played on his demo, so we also did this one-off gig with him. At the same time we used it as a venue to preview the new bands, the Skunks and Violators. Lots of trivia there. Anyway, the Skunks (Eddie, Billy & myself) played our first real gig opening for the Violators at Raul’s in February 1978. The rest is Austin rock / punk / new wave history.

Sally Norvell sang for the Gator Family, was married to the Huns' Phil Tolstead, later to Jon Dee Graham, and I have no wisecracks for that. She was also in Congo Norvell, and she's quite fabulous.

Playing with the Violators was a trip. These cavemen would come into the dressing room after the gig, expecting to be invited to an orgy. Even many of the guys who assumed a sort of “cool” aura would say, “You guys play pretty good for girls,” as if that was a big compliment.

Carla Olson/Mick Taylor Band: L-R: Jesse Sublett, Carla Olson, Juke Logan, Mick Taylor, George Callins + 5 others, including Ian McLagan & Joe Sublett & Rick Hemmert.

Later I played with Kathy Valentine in LA in World’s Cutest Killers. She was an international rock star by then from being in the Go-Go’s, which were kind of on hiatus at the time. Kelly Johnson was from Girlschool, an all-girl metal band from the UK (Kathy was actually in an early version of that band). We recorded a demo that was produced by Mike Chapman, producer of most of Blondie’s hit records. That was interesting, too.

Last night at the screening I spoke to one of my most handsome friends, the drummer Clem Burke (drummer for Blondie and a long, long list of other great bands) and Nigel Harrison (Blondie ex bassist), Kathy Valentine and others. Plus a Skunks fan behind the counter gave me my popcorn and drinks on the house “as a gift for all that great music you’ve made!!” Which was sweet! Kathy, by the way, has several SXSW showcases this week with her band, the Bluebonnets, and Clem will be her guest drummer.

Clem and I discussed the death of Alex Chilton and the fact that Eddie Munoz, who was in the Skunks (original guitarist) and now plays with Clem in Magic Christian, has moved to New Jersey! Good luck, Eddie.

World's Cutest Killers, L-R: Jesse Sublett, Jebin Bruni, Kathy Valentine, Kelly Johnson, Craig Aaronson

The Runaways film is being distributed by Bob Berney’s new company, Apparition, so I expect it to do well. They don’t call Bob “the Guru of indie film” for nothing.

The Skunks give Patti Smith (in hat) room to chant "Have no fear! Tell God the Skunks are here!" as she rips the strings off Lois' guitar. That guitar was later stolen from our van in New York City, after our second night at CBGB.

My good friend Tony O’Neill co-wrote Cherie Currie’s new memoir, Neon Angel. Nobody writes about being a rock n roll dope addict like Tony. Nobody writes like Tony, period. His new novel, Sick City, comes out this summer. Full disclosure: Tony and I have the same literary agent, Michael Murphy, and we have made a blood pact to co-promote Michael’s roster. On the other hand, I would promote Tony’s work even if we were talking about Michael Murphy the old cosmic cowboy singer, who has absolutely NO connection to yours truly.

My wife, Lois Richwine, and Debbie Harry, backstage at the Austin Opera House in 1978. Debbie was sweet & gracious, the guys were very cool. Lois is also in Austin's vanguard of rock chicks. Not as a musician but a personality. plus she made the deadbeats pay the lousy cover at our gigs! plus she booked Max & the MakeUps, Charlie Sexton, Lou Ann Barton, etc.

The after party at Moonshine was cool. I met Floria Sigismondi and her husband, who plays in Living Things, plus their lovely daughter, Stephanie, who looks maybe 3 or 4. I had to tell Floria how cool she is, not that she doesn’t already know.

Also two women mistook me for Michael Shannon. I hated to disappoint them, but the real Kim Fowley was there, so, anyway. Shannon was in NYC, acting in “Our Town.” Hmmm.

Here’s yet another shameless plug for my gig Saturday: High Noon at Antone’s Records with the Murder Ballad Show. Jon Dee Graham and I will be joined by one of Austin’s awesomest girl rockers, Terri Lord.

Terri Lord

Terri Lord rocks!

No story about Austin's girl rockers (or any real rock n roll story) is complete without a tip of the hat & full body hug with Margaret Moser. Without her a lot of us would have had to get real jobs.

AND NOW… a post script… I want to do a shout-out to a couple of my current favorite Austin gals with guitars, just to prove that I don’t live in the past. If you are not hip to Izzy Cox, you ought to be. Friend her on FaceBook, check out her MySpace and she’s all over YouTube. I love this gal.

Izzy Cox, outlaw murder ballad queen

She is scary, endearing, super-talented. She bills herself variously as the Queen of Murder Ballads and the voodoo jazz blues murderbilly babe, whatever. She is a just a big-eyed, big-chested world of wonder, if you ask me. Some girls could pose in their underwear with a shotgun and look like a silly poseur, a Victoria’s Secret ad gone to the dark side. But when Izzy does it, well, it’s got its own reality.

Also, here’s to Eve Monsees, one of Austin’s best guitarists, no kidding. I’ve had the pleasure of playing with her a few times and she’s got it in spades. She’s got her own band called Eve & the Exiles and she also plays with Kathy Valentine in the Bluebonnets.

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KICKING OUT THE JAMS

Elvis Costello, far right (and far skinnier than today)jams with the Skunks at Rauls.

Elvis Costello, far right (and far skinnier than today)jams with the Skunks at Rauls.

This is a continuation of the Backstage History page I began a while back. I’ve already written about playing at Raul’s and it was covered in the 2000 Austin Chronicle story about the Skunks, which you can read on that page.

The Skunks always had the philosophy that if it’s rock n’ roll, it’s not brain surgery. We usually worked up new songs in the van or during sound check. Show the other guys the riff, give it a shot, bang it out that night at the gig. This usually worked fine. Really.

Before starting the Skunks in 1978, Eddie Munoz and I played one gig at an outdoor festival near San Antonio with a band after only an hour’s rehearsal. We played a weird collection of covers, including “My Boyfriend’s Back,” a couple of Beatles songs, something by the Young Rascals, and other eclectic stuff like that. The singer had just gotten out of rehab, probably by escaping. He was on thorazine. It sounded kind of like the New York Dolls crossed with the MC5.

By the time we started the Skunks, Eddie and I knew dozens of covers between us. We were fearless. Friends came to gigs to jam with us. Often touring bands stopped at our gigs and joined us. Elvis Costello came up to play “Mystery Dance” and then never left. He played on cover tunes, he played on our originals. We did “Pushin’ Too Hard,” by the Seeds, several covers from the Who in their early days, including “My Generation,” lots of Stones and Chuck Berry. … Wait, wait, there’s more. We covered the Kinks and I’ve always had a half dozen Lou Reed or Velvet Underground covers to pull out (in those days it was “Sister Ray,” “Waiting for My Man,” “Heroin” and “White Light/White Heat.”). The Count Five’s “Psychotic Reaction” was a great song for us, and we loved Mose Allison — “I’m Not Talkin’” and “Young Man Blues.” We also knew a Twyla Gang song or two, plus some Dr. Feelgood, Bo Diddley and of course, Willie Dixon.

Oh, yeah, and the Yardbirds… but nope, no Led Zeppelin, no “Freebird.” We were capable of slamming out “Gloria,” “Route 66,” “Dirty Water,” “Shotgun” and even “Louie, Louie” with our heads held high, our amps turned up to eleven, but we never considered ourselves a “cover” band because we didn’t play the Top 40. We were playing the real shit, we thought. It was rock n’ roll.

Costello knew them all, of course. even came back up for our second set and played a bunch of hard core country songs, including “The Night the Bottle Let Me Down” and “Honky Tonkin’”. I wasn’t too keen on country music at the time and was anxious for him to get off, so I kept turning up the volume on my bass amp and using the fuzz box. Finally he got the message. I hate to sound ungrateful, because the fact that Elvis Costello jammed with us got us a lot of publicity and respect. More people came to our gigs to check us out. I just felt I had heard enough country music when I was growing up in Johnson City, Texas. Typically, the people who loved George Jones and Merle Haggard hated black people and wanted to kick my ass because I had long hair and wore mod clothes.

Lois Richwine and Debbie Harry, backstage 1978

Lois Richwine and Debbie Harry, backstage 1978

As I’ve mentioned elsewhere, I met Debbie Harry and Chris Stein of Blondie when they were in town before their first gig here. I had a feeling the band might drop in at Mother Earth, which was really the only rock club in town at the time, except for Raul’s, which may have been having conjunto that night. The introduction was easy because I was carrying a pet skunk, which a fan had left with me for the weekend (Actually, the fan never came back for little Flowers, who had been de-scented but was still rather smelly at best and was not terribly cuddly most of the time and was definitely NOT house broken, as the fan said). Debbie and Chris came up to me and Flowers and petted flowers and received a gig flyer and an invitation to be on our guest list at Raul’s that night.

So the band came to see us at Raul’s. By mid-set, we had Clem Burke on drums and Frank Infante on guitar. We also may have had Jimmy Destri playing the keyboards left by the opening band, but I don’t remember for sure. No Deborah Harry, sorry to say, but they were all really nice people. We had lots of beers with them afterward. Besides being one of the greatest drummers of all time, Clem is a world class gentleman. Years later, our paths crossed often, when I was living in LA. He and Frankie jammed with the band I was in, which happened to include Kathy Valentine, his paramour at the time.

My then-girlfriend/now-wife, Lois Richwine, had been a major Blondie fan since forever. Years earlier, living in NYC, she used to go see the Ramones, Television and the Stilettos (the pre-Blondie band with Chris Stein) at CBGB. So it was only fair that she got the snapshot with Debbie Harry and her souvenir Skunks T-shirt.

One of the craziest nights at Raul’s was when Patti Smith came to jam with us. This was in 1979 and she was in town to play her first Austin concert the following night. I had been a fan of hers ever since her first single, produced by ex-Velvet Underground John Cale (“Piss Factory” and “My Generation”, if I remember correctly), followed by her debut LP, Horses, also produced by Cale. Cale was a real hero of mine (Later we got to open for him at the Armadillo). I had read a story in CREEM magazine about her jamming with a local band in Detroit, I think it was, so I knew it was possible. I showed up at her poetry reading at the university that afternoon and introduced myself and gave her a flyer for the gig. She said, “The Skunks, huh? I have a poem called ‘Skunk Dog’” I said, “I know, I like your poetry a lot.” Which was more or less true.” I said, “Why don’t come down and play with us?” She said, “I can only play in the key of E, you know.” I said OK, having read that, too, in CREEM. Actually, she couldn’t play a lick. She just strummed and wanked and made noise with the guitar.

So we spread the word that Patti Smith was coming to Raul’s to jam with the Skunks. She showed up. The place was packed tight. You could barely move in there and the temperature was about 120 degrees. She came up during the first set and we jammed. Eddie and Billy and I started this jungle thing and she chimed in with the noise and started chanting, “Have no fear! Have no fear! Tell God the Skunks are here!” There was more to it than that, but I forget. I had a cassette of it for a long time, but finally it disappeared.
The Skunks give Patti Smith (in hat) room to chant "Have no fear! Tell God the Skunks are here!" as she rips the strings off Lois' guitar. That guitar was later stolen from our van in New York City, after our second night at CBGB.

The crowd went nuts. We finished out set after she left, playing “My Generation” toward the end and during the chorus, she’d grab the microphone and sing along.

It was a pretty cool night, except I found out that just because Patti Smith jammed with us, it didn’t mean she wanted to be pals. I tried to strike up a conversation but got nowhere. She was wearing this shortbrim hat and at one point, after she had irritated me, I patted the crown a bit and said, “Nice lid, Patti,” and she scowled and walked off.

We played the last set without her. By then everybody was so happy and loaded they didn’t give a shit.

The following year, Lois and I went to NYC, trying to get bookings for the band. Nobody would talk to us. One night we ran into John Cale at the Mudd Club. He recognized me from when the Skunks opened for him at the Dillo. We caught the band at their San Antonio show, too, and became pals with some of them. I gave him a demo cassette. Guess what? He liked it! He said to call his manager, Jane Friedman. We went to see her and five minutes after we walked into her office, she had booked a half dozen shows, starting with a Friday and Saturday at CBGB. She didn’t even listen to the tape or the record.

By then we were friends with the late George Scott III. George, formerly of James Chance and the Contortions, played bass for Cale and Lydia Lunch’s band, 8-Eyed Spy (a really great band!) and stayed in his apartment whenever we were in NYC. It was just around the corner from CBGB and after our second night there, we got drunk and left all our equipment in the van. The door locks didn’t work (hell, the thing barely ran). Jon Dee’s only guitar got stolen, Billy’s snare got stolen and I lost two Fender basses, my amp head and Lois’ little black Fender Music Master guitar. The one Patti Smith ripped the strings from. Boy, we were hung over that day. Hung over all the way back to Texas!
We opened for the Clash and Joe Ely at the Armadillo World Headquarters in 1979. Now that was a hell of a night. Ely was in his “Live Shots” era and the Clash were white hot. After the Dillo gig we had a gig at the Continental Club, which was right around the corner. A lot of the crowd from the concert came down to the Continental so we had a full house. Ely and Topper Headon and Mick Jones joined us onstage. I looked around and said, “Well, what do you wanna play?” Nobody said anything, nobody had any ideas. So I got to sing, which was fine with me. “You Keep A Knockin’”, “Route 66,” and a few others. We also did Ely’s “Fingernails.” I didn’t know any Clash songs and nobody suggested it anyway.
Big Dave, the door man, came up to the stage with Ely’s fancy cowboy hat. Seems like it was more like a mariachi hat or something, I remember it was decorated somehow and really, really big. In any event, I had always detested cowboy hats, going back to my time growing up in Rednecksville, Texas, and I always believed that cowboy hats were OK if you were riding a horse, roping cows and pigs. But not if you were supposed to be playing rock n roll. So when Big Dave tried to hand up Joe’s hat, I shook my head and said, “No way, no hats on my stage.” Big Dave was flustered. This was a big dude, one of the old Austin Opera House employees, if I remember correctly, a guy who looked like one of the Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers, cosmic cowboy all the way. He didn’t understand. His face got red. How could I forbid Joe Ely his hat? I could, I said, because it was my band, my stage. No cowboy hats allowed.
I explained to Dave later on and he understood.

Maybe this will help explain a little better. The Continental had recently been taken over by a partnership of guys from the old scene, Wayne Nagel, Roger One Knite Collins, Robin, Summer Dog, and another guy or two. They were all longhaired and bearded guys. The kind of guys you saw mixing with the Willie Nelson entourage. They were great guys, generous, hearty, funny, and they liked to party all night long. And then some.
Roger, whom I had met back in the days of the One Knite Saloon, was the most colorful of the bunch. (The One Knite, by the way, was more or less a biker bar located in the same building now occupied by Stubbs Barbecue on Red River; a small, dark, dank, dusty, smoky joint with a ton of weird junk attached to the ceiling and a coffin lid door and man, it was one of Austin’s greatest joints of all time.) Roger was a gambler for real and a kind of gunslinger-type personality. Long hair, beard, cowboy boots, gruff voice and a serious prankster. He never went anywhere without his cowboy hat. Nowhere. He wore it everywhere and he never took it off. It wasn’t just part of his image, it was his statement to the world.
But after seeing the Skunks that night, blasting our industrial strength rock n’ roll, flexing our muscles with the Clash and Joe Ely, Roger underwent a change.
Roger hung up his cowboy hat after that night. He even cut his hair.

PS. 10.3.09. The info on the jam with Costello has been added to this fan site. These things are pretty weird, one of the odd little gems of unknown value on the internet. I’ve seen sites devoted to Mick Taylor, cataloging all of his gigs, including many of those from the period when we had the Carla Olson Band featuring Mick on guitar. (I used to tell people that Mick was the only guitarist to quit the Rolling Stones and live to tell about it… until it got old and it didn’t seem funny anymore). More on those fan sites later.

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BLONDIE: Flashbacks to Raul’s 1978

My wife, Lois Richwine, and Debbie Harry, backstage at the Austin Opera House in 1978. Debbie was sweet & gracious, the guys were very cool.

Blondie put on a superb show at the Austin Music Hall last night. Original members Deborah Harry, Clem Burke and Chris Stein were augmented with new guys on bass, keyboards and lead guitar. Nigel Harrison hasn’t been with them for years; they parted ways with Frankie Infante more recently and keyboardist Jimmy Destri appears on their website but doesn’t tour with the band. They played all the hits and songs like Atomic which were touchstones for people of a certain generation back in the late 70s and early 80s. Deborah Harry looked like a million bucks and her voice was sublime. Clem is still the hardest working drummer in the business and Chris Stein is still the melodic spine of the group’s instrumental sound.
I watched from backstage with my wife, Lois, who actually caught the band on their first European tour, with Talking Heads, in London in ’77 (and also at CBGB’s in 1975, when they were called The Stilettos), and Kathy Valentine, who was Lois’ roommate in 1977-78 when things started getting exciting here. I had begun playing bass with a new band, the Violators, which included Kathy, Carla Olson and Marilyn Dean. By the time of the band’s debut at Raul’s in February 1978, the Sex Pistols had just played San Antonio and I had started a new band with Eddie Munoz and Bill Blackmon called the Skunks. 1978 got off to a rocking start as we started tearing it up at Raul’s and every other club who would take a chance on booking us. Sometimes things got violent, like when the Violators opened for Nitzinger, a hard rock band, at El Conquistador in New Braunfels, and we had to dodge beer bottles for our whole set. Other times were exhilarating for other reasons, like when Elvis Costello jammed with the Skunks at Raul’s, with Nick Lowe and Dave Edmunds in the audience. Nick did a double take when he walked in while we were playing his “Heart of the City.”
That same year Blondie came to town to play the Armadillo. I met Deborah Harry and Chris Stein at the rock club Mother Earth where I happened to have a pet skunk with me, which they admired greatly. They were sweet and I gave them a flyer for our gig that night. The band came and jammed with us. We also hung out and drank with them as they regaled us with gossip and inside details of the NYC punk scene.
Others basking in the glow of this veteran of coolness were Dominique Davalos, who plays bass and sings in the Bluebonnets, Kathy’s current band (aside from the Go-Go’s), and Danny Harvey, the suave axe-man for Charlie Terrell & the Murdered Johns plus many other Austin ensembles.
Years have passed and things have changed but Deborah Harry and the gang are still super cool. I always enjoy talking to Clem Burke and admiring his flair for looking good and being more or less a man’s man.
Nostalgia? I don’t know. It was a good time 30 years ago and a great time last night, too.

The Violators 1977

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