4.10.2010

MALCOLM MCLAREN DIES AT 64



Music mourns another godfather of punk Malcolm McLaren, impresario who made the Sex Pistols infamous died in Switzerland yesterday at the age of 64 after a long battle with cancer

By Tom Peck (full story)

Friday, 9 April 2010

He died in hospital in Switzerland with his partner, 37-year-old Korean- American Young Kim by his bedside, along with his son Joe Corre. Ms Kim told The Independent: "We were there with him when he passed away. He was diagnosed with cancer in October. He was very active until the end of February when his tumor became very aggressive. He just went very quickly. He said he wanted to be buried at Highgate cemetery. We are now taking steps to try to make that happen."

McLaren had kept his illness quiet. In February he had traveled to New York in February for the launch of an art book before returning to Switzerland to be treated at a clinic.

Best-known as the manager of the punk band the Sex Pistols, he achieved the notoriety he sought – and which never left him – when the band's anti-establishment single "God Save The Queen", released during the Queen's Silver Jubilee, was banned from the airwaves by the BBC and the Independent Broadcasting Authority.


He was raised by his grandmother in Newington Green, north London, after his war-deserter father left home when he was two. After having been expelled from several art colleges, he opened a clothes shop on the King's Road, with his then girlfriend Vivienne Westwood in 1971. The couple's son, Joe Corre, went on found the lingerie company Agent Provocateur.

Last night Miss Westwood said: "When we were young and I fell in love with Malcolm, I thought he was beautiful and I still do. I thought he was a very charismatic, special and talented person. We hadn't been in touch for a long time. The thought of him dead is really something very sad."


Malcolm McLaren, who made a name for himself managing and creating the Sex Pistols persona, has died at the age of 64 and Rob Zombie and Johnny Rotten remember.


Ivan Kral recalls Malcolm McLaren:

“I remember going to his clothes store SEX on one of our first tours. Jay D and I heard rockers shopped there, so I was expecting Keith Richards’ kinda stuff like snakeskin and velvet scarves.



Wrong. Bondage pants, rubber clothes, dirty t-shirts with anarchy statements – with real stains. I got an eyeful of hard-core punkers….green mohawks, safety pinned faces, even a straitjacket walked in. Almost like Halloween.


Another time I met Malcolm at the Portobello Hotel in London. Johnny Thunders warned me he was a manipulator, but I just remember a pale arrogant guy rambling on and on about how he was gonna do this and that. You know, conquer-the-world type stuff. But, his Bow Wow Wow band were great -- the whole tribal thing was something new".


Mark Childress

From Mark Childress Lead Singer of THE DEAD CITY PROPHETS

I worked with Malcolm, I assisted on his "Waltz Darling" album in 1988 at Pearl Sound. He was an odd little dude, he always wore a white button down shirt and never buttoned the cuffs or rolled up the sleeves.

Whenever I wear a button down for a performance I never button the cuffs or roll up the sleeves because of that. The studio was located in Canton Michigan near a Meijers store, Malcolm loved Meijer's for some reason. The day before I met him he was in town for the sessions and I spotted this odd little curly red headed man wandering down Ford road, white shirt sleeves flapping.


Mc Laren Sleeves

It turned out that he was walking to Meijer's, I often thought that no matter how hip anybody was to Malcolm and who he was, they would have never in a million years believed that the little red headed man browsing fruit of the looms up the aisle was the same one who helped start a musical revolution.

"Get us a tea boy" Earl Grey with just a splash of cream, he was one of a kind.

Mark Childress
Dead City Prophets

Rip Malcolm and thank you Ivan and Mark for the guest posts!

4.09.2010

REQUIEM FOR DETROIT?

Detroit Woodward Avenue 1942

A friend sent me a video tonight and it opens with former Detroit mayor Jerry Cavanagh talking about his vision of the future of the model city of Detroit. Back in the day Detroit was a completely different city.

Detroit 1970's

Detroit was thriving with manufacturing and car plants. The term "Ghetto" didn't describe Detroit at all. It was "The Paris of the Midwest." Then Detroit had the 1967 riots and then "white flight" began because of fear of crime and looting.





Today when I saw the same opening as the original video I thought I was posting this video to facebook. Instead it was a different video that shows all the devastation of this once great city.

This video prompted a rush of comments ranging from creepy, sad, to makes me sick to view this. Now why is Jerry's view so different from what the future Detroit really turned into? One of my personal opinions concerns the politicians that did get federal funding to help rebuild the city after the riots. It was the choices they made with those funds that led to the creation of a fantastic downtown area with the surrounding residential areas so completely ignored to this day.

Comerica Park

The auto companies and unions knew decades ago that changes needed to be made to compete with the Japanese car makers. As I worked in 2 large auto plants in the 1970's I heard the managers and committee men talking about the "downfall" of the auto industry then. What changes were made? Very few... The auto industry continued on it's path to bankruptcy.

They sold a product that fell apart quickly where the foreign cars lasted longer with were more compact/sporty and had much better gas mileage. Basically the money went to rebuild downtown to impress visitors and entice them to do business and hold trade shows in Detroit. They spent a fortune in the 80's to increase the size of Cobo Hall.

Great idea except there were not enough sleeping rooms to accommodate big trade shows. Attendees were shipped out to the suburbs as far away as Ann arbor and Lansing the transported into Detroit to the shows. Do they do this in Atlanta, New York, or Chicago? No they don't. I have worked on shows in all those cities and many more.

Abandoned building in Detroit

But they all have "ghetto" areas to contend with economically challenged city residents. Visit Memphis, Nashville, St Louis, Cincinnati, Buffalo, Dayton and many more and you will find the same issues that Detroit endures. Very poor residential districts hidden from business visitors.

My point is that Detroit is not unique unfortunately. Politics in my opinion is what keeps these cities down and the lack of technology that can compete with Germany and Japan. American fiddled while Rome was burning.

St Louis, MO abandoned buildings

Our jobs and labor forces became so expensive and workers so cheap over seas that we lose hundreds of thousands of jobs annually. Rather than comment about how sickening Detroit is now or how sad it looks why not come up with ideas to build on what industry we still have? Here is a brilliant article I posted months ago about why Detroit can't cash in on it's music industry.

Read full story by Don Gonyea of NPR HERE I do have some ideas in this area and plan to build an event that focuses on the fantastic music that is booming in Detroit. More to come on that soon. in the meantime why not find ideas to promote this city versus talking about how it makes us sick to look at it. As the MC5 once sang..

THE FUTURE IS NOW Of course there are many more reasons why we have such decay in the USA compared to the way Europe had maintained the beauty of their big cities for hundreds of years but that is another story. What ideas CAN we imagine to rebuild the inner cities of America and not just New Orleans?

Death of Detroit:Harbinger of Collapse ofDeindustrialized Americaby Richard Freeman

Observing the death of Detroit, as it shrinks into oblivion and its citizens are ravaged, one is struck by a fundamental transformation: In the period 1940 through 1963, Detroit was the greatest manufacturing city in the world, unmatched in real physical productivity. But during the period 1964-2004, Detroit became synonymous with blight and decay beyond imagination...Read More


4.08.2010

RETRO: KIMMER'S POSTCARDS



This is my brand new 4x6 postcard...

The reason I commissioned these big cards is that as I appear at events people are asking me for autographs! Well, I don't sing or act (debatable) so I have no CD's of DVD's to sign.

I bought 100 cool business cards and they were one, too small, and two gone in a blink. So I had 1000 printed for me. These have my web address retrokimmer.com and my email retrokimmer@gmail.com too. I forgot to put the website on the biz card! DUH

4.06.2010

HANGING WITH STANLEY T. MADHATTER


Stanley T. Madhatter next to Grimshaw's Love In Detroit Poster

Yesterday I went eastbound and snatched up Stanley T. Madhatter famed rock Emcee and took a little road trip to Detroit. Go be a fan Stanley's Facebook Page HERE



Stanley was really hungry so we decided to go eat at the restaurant where they held the Gary Grimshaw benefit last Thursday which I had to miss because of my working late. The lovely Grand Trunk server called manager and organizer of the benefit, Don Bailey to see if there were any posters left and I GOT ONE!


This is the benefit poster sold for Gary

We had a great lunch on the Grand Trunk side of the Foran's restaurant. Foran's on the right and Grand Trunk on the left. Stan talks about Detroit.


BTW it was the Leni Sinclair photo of Fred Smith that was missing.....

We had a great time laughing and eating our lunch. Afterward I shot stills or the gorgeous building with the incredible ceiling, chandelier and cross. Stan is pointing up at the cross.



4.04.2010

Erykah Badu OH MY!


Erykah Badu

As they say .... IN STORES NOW!

Ever heard the phrase that there is no such thing as bad publicity? What a brilliant way to announce a cd release than to strip your clothes off in front of cameras in the street where JFK was shot in Dallas.

It made headline news world wide and Ms Badu's police charges will bring more cd sales than ever imagined. Brilliant promo my dear!


One of tons of stories about the "incident"

Singer to be cited for stripping at JFK killing site: report (AFP)



LOS ANGELES (AFP) – Iconoclastic R&B singer Erykah Badu is expected to receive a disorderly conduct citation this week for stripping naked in her new video at the Dallas, Texas plaza where John F. Kennedy was assassinated.

Dallas Police Deputy Chief Mike Genovese told the Dallas Morning News that a witness had come forward who "observed Ms. Badu remove her clothing on the public street. The witness had two small children with her and was offended."

He told the paper the citation, which is to be issued this week, was "about as serious as a traffic ticket."

In her new video "Window Seat," filmed in Dallas' Dealey Plaza, Badu -- once known for her towering turbans -- progressively loses her clothes, keeps walking in black lingerie and then peacefully strips.

Badu, who was born in Dallas, in February 1971, just released a new CD "New Amerykah Part Two: Return of the Ankh."

Some of her fans were surprised at the public undress but she sent a message on microblog site Twitter saying "the people caught in the shot were trying hard to ignore me. LOL cept one guy grabbing clothes... it was the peeps off camera yelling."

Once appalled onlooker told her "THIS IS A PUBLIC PLACE : YOU OUGHTA BE ASHAMED : PUT YOUR CLOTHES ON : DAMN GIRL! etc," Badu added on the site, saying she has always shared her own vulnerable, naked truth.


ALICE COOPER TALKS ABOUT THE INCIDENT....

JAIL GUITAR DOORS: THE POWER OF MUSIC



JAILGUITARS.ORG

Jail Guitar Doors USA seeks a more fair and just America. We are a non-profit program that provides musical instruments and opportunities to help rehabilitate prisoners. We organize prison out-reach programs and produce public concert events. We advance new solutions to diminish prison violence. We support organizations that engage in policy reform efforts and partner with social service groups to help people in prison reconnect with the outside world.


History


In A Texas Jail, An Exclusive SXSW Concert

In 1978, The Clash released the song, "Jail Guitar Doors." The song tells the story of the imprisonment of their fellow musician Wayne Kramer. In 2007, to honor the life of Clash founder, Joe Strummer, Billy Bragg launches an initiative in England to provide musical equipment used to rehabilitate inmates serving time in Her Majesty’s Prisons in the United Kingdom. His initiative is named for that very same song, “Jail Guitar Doors.” In 2009, Wayne Kramer partners with Billy Bragg to found Jail Guitar Doors USA. Together, their combined effort continues the mission for prisoners in America. The circle is unbroken.


The Vision:

Jail Guitar Doors USA believes our country’s human and financial resources should be dedicated to education and ending poverty, the primary source of crime. We support public safety. We believe in accountability in a civilized society. We believe the punishment should fit the crime and that one is sentenced to prison as punishment, not for punishment.

We believe in reform and that if we expect more of offenders and empower them with the necessary tools and resources they need to change, most will choose to change and not repeat offend. We work for better implementation of best practices in ways to treat non-violent offenders and minimize prison violence.

We believe prisoners provided with the musical tools to create songs of their own can achieve a positive change of attitude that can initiate the work necessary to successfully return to life outside prison walls. Creating music, along with other educational and vocational programs, can be a profound force for positive change in a prisoner’s life. Our goal is to aid the ‘correctional’ aspect of corrections that can only come from a regenerated belief in ones future as a positive, contributing member of society

DONATE HERE

DYNASTY'S JOHN FORSYTHE RIP (1918 – 2010)


Linda Evans John Forsythe and Joan Collins

This was my favorite show for a few years until the cast changes made it too weird to watch. I used to go to this fabulous pink gay bar on Wednesday nights to watch Dynasty with othe big FANS. While the show was on, the room was totally silent. During the commercials the chatter became loud with everyone trashing their most hated characters... Usually Joan Collins and her "outfits". Big fun I loved it.

Bought the DVDs but they are so dated now I can't bear to watch the terrible acting. John was good and Joan but everyone else sigh.... But Mr. Forsythe had a very long career and was in a lot of great projects. I thought he deserved a story...

John died on Thursday at his home in Santa Ynez, Calif. He was 92. His publicist, B. Harlan Boll, said the cause was complications of pneumonia, following a yearlong battle with cancer. Mr. Forsythe had earlier received a diagnosis of colon cancer, and in 1979 underwent quadruple bypass surgery. RIP John Read more: NY Times Story

Forsythe became nationally known in the late 1950s as the playboy lawyer, Bentley Gregg, in the acclaimed TV series Bachelor Father (1957). After six successful seasons, the series was cancelled in 1962, at which time Forsythe concentrated on film projects. He headlined the campy drama Kitten with a Whip (1964) with Ann-Margret, as well as the highly anticipated film adaptation of Truman Capote's book In Cold Blood (1967). In 1969, Forsythe reunited with Hitchcock in the spy film Topaz.

During the early 1970s, Forsythe was featured in a succession of mediocre made-for-TV movies, including Murder Once Removed (1971) and Terror on the 40th Floor (1974).



In 1976, producer Aaron Spelling cast Forsythe as the voice of Charlie Townsend in the widely popular TV series Charlie’s Angels, which starred Farrah Fawcett, Cheryl Ladd, and Jaclyn Smith. While working on Charlie’s Angels, Forsythe continued to appear in television movies, including The Feather and Father Gang (1977), With This Ring (1978), and . . . And Justice For All (1979).


Under the recommendation of Spelling, Forsythe landed the part of debonair businessman Blake Carrington in the long-running primetime drama Dynasty (1981-89). Throughout the 1980s, Dynasty--as well as Forsythe's patriarchal character-- became a significant icon with the American public. Forsythe won back-to-back Golden Globe Awards for Best Actor in a Television Series in 1982 and 1983. In 1985, he became a spokesperson for the successful men's cologne line Carrington.

Most recently, Forsythe reprised his role as the enigmatic Charlie in the feature film Charlie's Angels (2000), which starred Drew Barrymore, Lucy Lui, and Cameron Diaz.

Forsythe married actress Julie Warren in 1943. The couple had two daughters before Warren’s death in 1994. In 2002, at age 84, he married businesswoman Nicole Carter in a small, private ceremony.

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