Showing posts with label Crime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crime. Show all posts

November 11, 2024

Gray Loft Gallery ~ The New College Circle exhibition closing

 ~                                    

 
 
 
 
photos by Styrous®
(except where noted)


Last Sunday I had the pleasure of attending the closing reception for The New College Circle exhibition at the Gray Loft Gallery (link below).       
 
During the event I had the fantastic fortune to find and buy a 45 RPM album by Crime and have Henry S. Rosenthal, aka Hank Rank, autograph it. The album contained Hot Wire My Heart and Baby You're So Repulsive, both songs I already had on 45's, but the album had other songs I didn't have.         
 
 

 
Crime - Live 1978 
album photo by Roberto Morrison
45 RPM album
 
 
  
 
Jan Watten w/ Hank Rank
 
 
Another group in the show, Other Music, had their albums Prime Numbers and Incidents Out Of Context for sale but I'd bought both albums sometime in the early eighties . . .     


 
. . . however, I did buy one of their t-shirts . . . 

 
. . . which is 100% cotton AND made in the USA! 
 

 
Other Music T-shirt 
photo by Jan Watten



Meredith Tromble (curator) & Jessica

 
 












 

 
 
      
Viewfinder links:       
         
Crime           
Gray Loft Gallery            
Jan Watten                 
     
Net links:        
         
Gray Loft Gallery          
Jan Watten                         
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
Styrous® ~ Monday, November 11, 2024           
        















November 3, 2024

New College Circle Part 2: Other Music & Crime




It is totally amazing to me how my life is a never ending parade of circles/cycles intermingling, colliding and during The New College Circle exhibition at the Gray Loft Gallery in Oakland, SEVERAL of them came washing me away to Memory Land!   
 
Participants in the exhibition included David B. Doty, Henry S. Rosenthal and Dale S. Soules, all wonderful and excing music flashbacks for me from the seventies and eighties.           
 
Doty, Rosenthal and Soules recorded a superb series of Avant-garde music albums under the name, Other Music. Their works were inspired by Avant-garde musicians such as Harry Partch, Lou Harrison and others of that ilk. I discovered their album, Prime Numbers, sometime in the early eighties; I have been intending to write about it on a future article on the vinyl LP section (link below); NOW I need to get on the ball and DO it.    
 
Doty and Rosenthal (aka Hank Rank) formed one of the early San Francisco punk rock groups in the seventies, Crime (link belows). They were intense to say the least; I caught them at the Deaf Club on Valencia Street, San Francisco. I bought their 45 RPM, Hot Wire My Heart, the "B" side had Baby You're So Repulsive. How could you pass up that?            

Well, back to the exhibition! It will have one more showing on Saturday, November, 9, then the closing reception will be the next day, Sunday, November, 10, from 4 to 6 PM.    

Closing reception: 
Sunday, November, 10, 4 to 6 PM   

         
This exhibition is a celebration of fifty years of creative achievement launched by an experimental education at New College of California (NCOC) in San Francisco.  On view in the exhibit are archival materials, costume design, film, drawing, landscape design, music, installation, sculpture, performance, and photography.

Featured Artists
Carola Anderson, David B. Doty, Michael Patrick Lynch, 
Elaine McKeen, Henry S. Rosenthal, Dale Soules 
and Meredith Tromble who curated the show

In the mid-1970s, a group of young artists at New College of California fueled their creative practices with friendship and the radically experimental education offered by the school. They drew each other, recorded their own physiological data, performed plays written by their professor, invented musical instruments, and received credit for a gallimaufry of life experiences. At the time, statistics revealed that of students graduating with an art degree, only 5% were still making art ten years later. But in the ensuing decades each person in the New College Circle created their own path over, under, or around the barriers that stop young artists from becoming mature artists, pursuing creative practices and careers. This exhibition presents the New College Circle’s vibrant work in context with the unique institution that prepared them to thrive creatively throughout life.             
 
Closing reception – November 10, 2024
 
 

Installation photos by Styrous®



  


 
 
 
 
Michael Patrick Lynch 

 
 


 








 
 
 
above: Michael Lynch
below: Time As the Crow Flies - 2023
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Dale S. Soules & Other Music

 
 
 

 
 
 

 
 

 

 
 
 


 
 
      
Viewfinder links:       
         
Crime           
Gray Loft Gallery            
Lou Harrison             
Harry Partch             
Jan Watten                 
     
Net links:        
         
Gray Loft Gallery          
Jan Watten                         
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
Styrous® ~ Sunday, November 3, 2024           
        














August 12, 2024

45 RPMs 84: Crime ~ hot wire my heart, baby you're so repulsive

 ~     
Crime - ca 1977 
photographer unknown


The late seventies was a terrific time for punk rock in San Francisco. I could go to a couple of clubs in my neighborhood, the Mission. One of them was the Valencia Tool & Die at 974 Valencia, just around the corner from my studio. I saw the Japanese New Wave group The Plastics there; Devo, who was just starting up, showed up during their set.       
  
Another club four blocks away and just around the corner from the Roxie Theater (link below) was The Deaf Club (link below). It was there I first saw Crime. I saw them later at the Mabuhay Gardens on Broadway, across the street from the Condor Club, which was made famous by Carol Doda (link below), and the Hungry i where I danced (link below).          


Crime poster - ca 1978
poster photo by James Stark

 
The first time I saw them, the members of Crime were pretty scary looking; they dressed like very sinister cops.       
 
 

Crime - ca 1977 
photographer unknown
 
 
Crime was an early American punk band from San Francisco. The band was formed in 1976 by Johnny Strike (vocals, guitar), Frankie Fix (vocals, guitar), Ron "The Ripper" Greco (bass; ex-Flamin' Groovies), and Ricky Tractor (Ricky Williams) (drums). Their debut, the self-financed double A-side, Hot Wire My Heart and Baby You're So Repulsive, appeared at the end of 1976, and is the first single released by a U.S. punk act from the West Coast.          
 
 
Crime 
45 RPM single 
cover photo by James Stark
photo of record sleeve by Styrous®
 
 
Hot Wire is on the "A" side of the record, which is usually the "Hit" song . . .      
 



. . . but it is the "B" side with, Baby You're So Repulsiv, that got my attention; to me it is the epitome of punk music; it is a love song, punk style, and it fit right into my biker lifestyle at the time (link below).       
 
 
Baby you're so repulsive
Honey you're so sick
Baby you're so repulsive
Honey I'm a masochist
Baby, honey when I'm motor-bikin'
All around your town
Bad girl movin' forwards and then backwards
And I'm upside down

You're so repulsive

Baby you're so repulsive
And you got me down
Baby you're so repulsive
Think I'm gonna hang around

Baby, honey when I see you comin'
I just gotta run
Baby, I'm movin' faster and faster
I'm like a tommy-gun

You're so repulsive

Baby you're so repulsive
Honey you're so sick
Baby you're so repulsive
Honey I'm a masochist

Baby, honey when I'm motor-bikin'
All around your town
Bad girl movin' forwards and then backwards
And I'm upside down

You're so repulsive

So repulsive Baby
       
 



Crime recorded Hot Wire My Heart written by Johnny Strike and Baby You're So Repulsive written by Frankie Fix, in November of 1976 at Blue Bear Studios in San Francisco in a room that was fifteen by ten feet resulting in tons of distortion, exactly what the group wanted.           
 
 
photo by James Stark
 
            
James Stark began photographing Crime in 1976. In 2006 he wrote a history about the punk scene; he mentions the group in it.           


Punk '77 - 2006
written by James Stark


Punk '77: An Inside Look at the San Francisco Rock n' Roll Scene, 1977
ISBN 10: 1889307149 / ISBN 13: 9781889307145
Published by Re/Search Publications, 2006       
 
 


   
Tracklist:
       
Side 1:
        
A - Hot Wire My Heart, written by Johnny Strike
       
Side 2:
       
B - Baby You're So Repulsive, written by Frankie Fix
       
Credits:
       
    Bass – Ron The Ripper
    Drums – Ricky Tractor
    Guitar – Frankie Fix, Johnny Strike
    Vocals – Frankie Fix, Johnny Strike
       
Notes:
       
1000 black vinyl copies with picture sleeve
       
Barcode and Other Identifiers
       
    Matrix / Runout (Runout, Side A (Etched) (Special Characters not Included): SAC 0188-A- 29949
    Matrix / Runout (Runout, Side B (Etched) (Special Characters not Included): SAC 0188-B 29949
        
Crime (2) – Hot Wire My Heart / Baby You're So Repulsive
Label: Crime Music – sac 0188
Format: Vinyl, 7", Single
Country: US
Released: 1976
Genre: Rock
Style: Punk       
       
       
Viewfinder links:          
         
Beemer Memories            
Carol Doda        
Frankie Fix        
Ron "The Ripper" Greco        
Hungry i           
Hank Rank         
Johnny Strike         
Ricky "Tractor" Williams          
      
Net links:          
             
Center Label ~   
       Crime       
       Crime Releases       
James Stark ~  
      The Band Crime: Punk '77 Revisited                     
      James Stark                     
     
YouTube links:                       
The Bachelors ~ The Stars Will Remember         
 Crime -     
        Baby You're So Repulsive       
        Baby You're So Repulsive (live @ the Mab - 1977)      
        Hot Wire My Heart      
        Piss On Your Dog          
         
        
Styrous® ~ Monday, August 21 2024        
       
 
 
 

 

 

 

 

October 6, 2021

Hank Rank (Henry S. Rosenthal) articles/mentions

 ~         
     
      
mentions:          
Can You Hear Me? Music from the Deaf Club  
Gray Loft Gallery ~ Other Music & Crime    
      
     
      
     
      
     
      
     
     
     
      
photo by James Stark     
     
      
     
      
     
      
     
      
     
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Frankie Fix articles/mentions

 ~         
     
      
     
Can You Hear Me? Music from the Deaf Club  
     
      
     
     
     
      
     
      
     
     
     
      
Frankie Fix - 1978    
photo by Peter Paul Geoffrion