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PLEASE NOTE SOME OF THESE ARTICLES WERE HEAVILY RE-WRITTEN FROM MY ORIGINAL NOTES IN 1994 & 2002.
These original Data-Boy Music columns have been collected in a book with LOTS of new material and photos - it's the story of Data-Boy magazine and the LA Punk / Post-Punk scene. The story presented is a lot more complete! From the found archives of The Billy Eye and Judy Zee articles from Data-Boy Magazine / 1980-85. Everything you're looking for is here:
See more Flight of the Conchords style T-Shirts! Wild 1970s / 1980s Retro Gay T-Shirts Here!
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Last issue I told you about some great bands and seedy clubs that might fall into the 'punk' category. On the pop music side of things, there are some interesting so-called 'new wave' bands playing around town, and some wildly fun clubs to go to. The Toasters play some of the best music you'll hear anywhere - I don't really know how to classify the band other than pop, they aren't hard rock, but they burn the stage and shear the audience with crisp, clean tunes that are both lyrically and musically right on target. It's a real treat to watch these guys play, each one of them has an engaging, accessible stage presence that works for them as individuals and adds to their appeal as a group. I guess that's what it's all about tho, huh? The word for this group is 'together' and you should get together with this band wherever they play next and The Toasters are appearing with great frequency throughout the LA club scene. I caught them at Blackie's, a great little hole in the wall in Santa Monica that thankfully serves up cold beer and great west-side bands. Blackies is more laid back than the Hollywood clubs, and bands seem to feel at home here, more of a hang out than an event. HEAR
THE (original LA) TOASTERS - A list of the most popular local 'new wave' bands might include the so-so Great Buildings, who just signed a deal with CBS. Lucky for them, because band signings by major record companies are getting scarce - and the budgets are much smaller for these newly signed bands that they were just a year ago. The record industry is in a severe slump right now, the direct result of bloated spending on seventies dinosaurs and lame 'new wave' crap bands like The Knack, the band that started the whole "LA explosion," then poisoned the well. The Go-Gos had to sign with an independent (Stiff Records) to get some kind of deal this year. The majors may be sorry they passed on The Go-Gos, crowds are jamming their shows and their self-released single, 'We Got The Beat,' is starting to gain national attention besides getting relentless play on KROQ.
Speaking
of The GoGo's, they played two sold out shows on the
12th and 13th of September at The Whisky and the whole experience was
a perfect ending to a great summer of new music, bringing together a crowd
from every spectrum - from punkers to gay clones and everything in between.
HEAR
THE (original )
The Downtown crowd converged with the Hollywood scene for a great big
Go-Go's love-in at
the Whisky,. The real fun was in the crowd outside on the streets
(undoubtedly the biggest freak show on Sunset since the Bowie era),
and backstage amongst the graphitti scrawled walls of the Whisky's derelict
dressing area. Names of the great and not-so great who have played the
club in past decades are scrawled on the backstage walls to remind us
all of the rich history this club represents.
Following their phenomenal blowout at The Starwood a couple
of months earlier, it truly was the summer of The Go-Gos.
Sunset Boulevard is coming alive again, thanks to the energy of new groups, like The Go-Gos, that are bubbling up from the smaller clubs. These girls originally got together because their boyfriends were in local bands, and their awkward gigs earlier in the year at Club 88 and Al's Bar downtown are fondly remembered by many, but let's face it, musicians they weren't. Still, these inexperienced punk chicks have an overpowering exuberance, and an abundance of crowd pleasing tunes, that carry them over the top. They're more popular than the bands their boyfriends are in now! On the other hand, a 'new wave' group with a lot to learn is The Works. Put simply, The Works doesn't. (Even if I didn't think so, I would have been compelled to write that line, right?) Leading the group is an Erik Estrada look-a-like with sort of the same smarmy 'CHIP's' attitude. This guy swaggered across the Wong's East stage in the best Rod Stewart tradition. The problem is - he isn't Rod Stewart. And even if he was, I wouldn't waste my time. It's way too late for this crap, some people just don't get it, I guess. It's not about haircuts and costumes. Hey, I was going to tell you about some of the cool New Wave clubs, but I got sidetracked. I'll clue you in when we get together again in two weeks. In the meantime, if you have a band you would like reviewed here, just call Billy Eye or Judy Zee at the Data-Boy multi-national corporation - we'd love to see you. And
without delay here is the lady herself, Judy Zee, who answers a reader's
question about the definition of 'New Wave' . . .
Rock
and Roll -1980 Much of the music
we now call 'new wave' extends far beyond that classification itself.
Now that the record companies have gotten a hold of that phrase it makes
the music seem as if it's just a pawn in an industry game, another fad
created from above.
Don't let the hype
mislead you or turn you off to the music- it has a lot to offer, being
a highly evolved sort of sound. (and to clarify the confused- 'new wave'
is not 'punk'. It is not that scratchy noise where every voice and instrument
is screaming. 'Punk' is a very preliminary form of rock, where 'new
wave' is a far more advanced form.)
There is a preciseness
in most 'new wave', a stylistic approach with an innovative edge and
pointed lyrical message. Frankly, I tire of the words 'new wave' and
simply consider it today's form of rock and roll, which has grown through
many shifts in style to reach this point in time. Luckily we have grown
out of the dinosaur rock age of heavy metal and have turned up in a
brighter world, progressed a bit past 'progressive', and are finally
here in the age of the sophisticated equipment and electronic wizardry
that made all of this possible.
So, here we are in the world of new rock. Viola! |
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