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The Ramones were loud and fast
- Everyone
knows that, even the poor, blind saps who never loved the band. But the
Ramones were many things, and gloriously so, from the moment of their
inception in Forest
Hills, New York, in 1974, until their final concert, #2,263, in Los Angeles
on August 6, 1996.
They
were prolific - releasing 21 studio and live albums between 1976 and 1996
- and professional, typically cutting all of the basic tracks for one
of those studio LPs in a matter of days. They were stubborn, a marvel
of bulldog determination and cast-iron pride in a business greased by
negotiation and compromise. And they were fun, rock n' roll's most reliable
Great Night Out for nearly a quarter of a century. Which seems like a
weird thing to say about about a bunch of guys for whom a show, in 1974
or '75, could be six songs in a quarter of an hour.
The
Ramones were also first: the first band of the mid-'70's New York
punk rock uprising to get a major-label contract and put an album out;
the first to rock the nation on the road and teach the British how noise
annoys; the first new American group of the decade to kick the smug, yellow-bellied
shit out of a '60s superstar aristrocracy running on cocaine-and-caviar
autopilot.
Above
all, the Ramones were pop: stone believers in the Top 40 7-inch-vinyl
songwriting aesthetic; a nonstop hit-singles machine with everything going
for it - hammer-and-sizzle guitars and hallelujah choruses played at runaway-Beatles-velocity
- except actual hits. According to an August 1975 article in England's
Melody Maker about the crude, new music crashing through the
doors of a former country-and-bluegrass bar in lower Manhattan named CBGB,
the local press was already hailing the Ramones as - get this - "potentially
the greatest singles band since the Velvet Underground." A peculiar compliment
since the Velvets' own few 45s were all crushing radio bombs.
But
there was one thing you could never, ever say about the Ramones: that
they were dumb. In their time, in their brilliantly specialized way, the
Ramones - the founding four of Johnny (guitar), Joey (voice),
Tommy (drums), and Dee Dee (bass); along with Marky,
who spent 15 years and 11 albums behind the drums beginning with "Road
To Ruin" and who was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame along
with the original four; - later followed by CJ, who stepped out
of the Marine Corps and into Dee Dee's king-sized sneakers in 1989; and
Richie, who kept the beat while Marky was on hiatus between '83
and '87 - were the sharpest band on the planet. Fully evolved as musicians
and songwriters. Confident in their power and the importance of what they
had.
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