Living Colour performing Sailn' On, by bad brains at CBGB's, in new york.
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Living Colour performing Sailn' On, by bad brains at CBGB's, in new york.

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Ramones, Today Your Love Tomorrow The World, CBGB'S, 1977
Clem Burke and Sable Starr at CBGB's.
Photo by Julia Gorton
Clement Anthony Bozewski (Bayonne, 24 de novembro de 1954 â 6 de abril de 2025), mais conhecido como Clem Burke ou Elvis Ramone, foi baterista da banda Blondie.
CBGB's; post-closure.
đ¸ Chris Stein
1989 - The Gargoyles concert at CBGB's, in New York City. Source: https://www.facebook.com/BebeBuellBand/

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I found my CBGB's t shirt today!! I hadn't seen it for a couple of years, but i was going through some boxes, and there it was!!! Please excuse the dog hair. Living with Petey ensures that I have dog hair on everything. It's worth it, though, because she's my best friend!! But I digress as is my nature. đ CBGB's was a great punk rock club in the East Village in Manhattan that I used to frequent in the 80s. It's considered the birthplace of punk rock. It was a great place to listen to music and share a couple of drinks with friends. The clothes and the hairstyles were spectacular!!! The bands were phenomenal!! I never got in to see the big name bands like the Ramones or Patti Smith or the a Talking Heads, but the bands that I did hear were great! It's funny that the initials CBGB stand for country, bluegrass, blues, and other music because it's known for punk rock. The OMFUG stood for other music for uplifting gormandizers. The owner intended to have all those musical styles play there, but punk rock won out over them. I had some very good times in that bar. I miss going out in NYC!! It's always a great time.
Tuff Darts, "All for the Love of Rock and Roll"
From the Live at CBGB's set, Tuff Darts, best known as being the band that Robert Gordon fronted before springing to semi-fame as a rockabilly revivalist, before they recorded their debut eponymous LP. This is straight-up rock, not punk, CBGB's rep notwithstanding, and the best tune on that comp.
Thurston Moore on Madonna: âShe had credibility, she was really ahead of the gameâ
The former Sonic Youth frontman remembers her emergence from New Yorkâs underground scene.
We were neighbours. We knew each other, by sight. She would say hi to me and I would say hi to her. She was dating a friend of mine for a millisecond, so we were introduced that way and then, through the years, when weâd cross paths on the street, weâd nod heads and smile. She was very friendly with Jean-Michel [Basquiat], Keith Haring, and these artists who were all our neighbours, and we all hung out at the same places: Danceteria, CBGB, Tier 3 and Club 57 were the main places. When she became super-famous, which was all of a sudden, she disappeared from the New York scene. It was a very strange thing, to be working washing dishes, and making pennies per day, and seeing someone who was in your neighbourhood all of a sudden become a superstar. It was unusual. There was no real model for that, for us. It became kind of exciting.
She was really ahead of the game. She was taking elements of what was cool at that time â punk rock, new wave, dance music, hip-hop and Latino music all clashing in this great non-hierarchical playground of New York. It was all kind of new; everybody was trying different things. Madonna was actually in a couple of no-wave bands that nobody ever talks about. She was in a band with these two twins, Dan and Josh Braun, who were the first members of Swans, Michael Giraâs band. Nobody really knows about that part of her history; she was in a pre-Swans no wave band! Thereâs all that interconnected history in New York with Madonna and the no wave scene.
She was really able to tap into the sound of what was genuine and the culture at the time, where it was free from any gender or sexual persuasion distinctions. There was no concern about any inequality or [the boundaries of] gender or race â thatâs how we felt, it was totally revolutionary. And [there was] this balance between Latino, black and white culture on the scene. She was really significant in giving voice to that and consistently doing it â you never got the sense that she was doing it as a gesture of being hip. She was a person, I think, who was really very loving toward people who were historically disenfranchised by society.
We actually embraced Madonnaâs joie de vivre, her celebrity. We did that record and everybody felt we were crazy, and some people lambasted us for giving her some kind of credibility in the underground. But she already had credibility, as far as I was concerned; she was already a part of the downtown scene. I donât think she capitalised on it.
When we first came to London, Lee [Ranaldo], Kim [Gordon] and I wore Madonna shirts and I remember kids at the gig coming up to us and saying âAre you taking the piss?â and we would say âNo, have you heard this Madonna album? You should listen to it next to your Swell Maps albums, next to your Wire albums, next to your Raincoats albums.â Mix it up. Donât be stuck in some kind of tunnel. I was all about bringing people together. Plus the T-shirts were really cheap.
Actually, I think she was very dignified in the way she referenced all of these different subcultures. She was a very big part of it. She made a lot of money, and when you make a lot of money and become so famous you have to protect yourself, because everybody wants to claw at you. Itâs not like she could just walk into a Tesco and buy milk; sheâs going to get hammered. People who bring that in to their lives⌠itâs a mixed blessing. It does prohibit you from being free in the social world. I think she dealt with it really well, letâs put it that way.