Sherrie’s Sho-Bar Vintage 70s Keychain, Baltimore

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Larry Kane Interviews John Lennon at The Baltimore Civic Center

Baltimore Civic Center, September 13, 1964

ABOUT THIS INTERVIEW:
On this date, the Beatles arrived in Maryland for their performance at Baltimore’s Civic Center. John Lennon was interviewed by Larry Kane as part of an on-going series of interviews with the group. Kane was the only American reporter allowed to travel with the Beatles during their 1964 North American tour, and also accompanied them on their 1965 tour.

Larry Kane has authored the insightful books, “Lennon Revealed” (2005) and “Ticket To Ride” (2003) documenting his conversations with the group and also his first-hand accounts of behind-the-scenes events as they happened.

– Jay Spangler, www.beatlesinterviews.org
——————————————————————————–

Q: “John, occasionally we see magazine articles, like last night, one that had your name as ‘Jack Lennon’ and all these irregularities. What do you think of this when you look at them?”
JOHN: “Well, I just think the people are stupid, you know, if they’re not gonna bother to take enough time to do a job and find out what our names are… and try and get the facts right, you know. They must be a bit soft.”

Q: “There are alot of people who have albums out with your music on it, like this ‘Chipmunk’ album, and the ‘Boston Pops.’ Do you find this a credit to you, or an abortion of your songs.”

JOHN: “No, we enjoy it! We always try to get a copy of these people that do our songs. The thing about the ‘Chipmunks’ and the ‘Boston…’ they do it so differently from us and from each other– it’s very interesting. And also we, Paul and I, get alot of money when they make these so it’s very good for us, you know.”

Continue reading “John Lennon Interview” at Beatlesinterviews.org.

The Beatles Invade Baltimore

All of the photos below are from The Beatles historic Baltimore visit.

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Pratt Library: Your Hustling Journey Starts Here

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Having fun isn’t hard when you have a library card!

Having just watched National Geographic’s expose of Baltimore – “Heroin Capital of America” – on “The High Wire” episode of their popular Drugs, Inc. television series, we are still blown away by the unintentional product placement the drug hustlers gave the Enoch Pratt Free Library.

As one heroin (or, in local parlance “hair-on”) kingpin explained his organization’s business, he was clearly shown cutting up a mixture of morphine and heroin (a medley drug fiends call “scramble”) using a bright red Enoch Pratt Free Library card. In any other context, that’s the kind of robust brand recognition a business would die for. But given Pratt Library’s slogan of “Your journey starts here,” the inadvertent suggestion is the journey isn’t into reading and knowledge but into drug hustling and potential death.

It’s either a left-handed compliment to Baltimore literacy (i.e., criminals are readers) or a reflection of drug slingers’ greed and stinginess (that is, that men that boast of clearing $10,000 a day are too cheap to buy library books, CDs and DVDs with their excess cash, a case of “why buy the cow when the milk is free”).

Either way, it’s the kind of advertising money (even $10,000  day) can’t buy. And we’re sure it’s the kind of free publicity the library would gladly pay to undo! Still, Pratt can take a certain satisfaction in the fact that the gangbangers didn’t give a free shout-out to Baltimore County or another library system. In the Heroin Capital of America, we keep it homegrown and organic, farm to table…library checkout to drug rehab checkin!

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Drug hustlers use their library cards daily

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Pratt Library: Your journey starts here

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The camera zooms in…

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The library is ready for its close-up, Mr. DeMille

 

Related Links:

“Drugs, Inc.” looks at Baltimore in “The High Wire” (Baltimore Or Less)

Posted in 2010s, Baltimore Babylon, Drugs, Inner City, Media, Neighborhoods, Roadside Attractions, Television, Vices | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

The 2014 Chicks-a-palooza Party

Chick’s Legendary Records Party
The Ottobar
2549 N. Howard Street
Sunday, August 31, 2014

The Legendary Bird, Chick Veditz

The Legendary Bird, Chick Veditz

Veni, Vedi, Veditz. Harry “Chick” Veditz: he came, he saw and he conquered the local music scene by opening a legendary record store – Chick’s Legendary Records on Sulgrave Avenue in Mount Washington Village – with partner Don Webb back in the late ’70s. As Rafael Alvarez recalled in a 1992 Baltimore Sun tribute (“A swan song for Chick’s record store“), “Back in the glory days of Chick’s Legendary Records, gangs of rock ‘n’ roll bands would hound owner Harry Veditz Jr. for the chance to play for free at his annual summer thank-you party for customers. That was in 1978, during the first flowering of the punk movement in America, when the record store was on Sulgrave Avenue.” Over the years, the record store specializing in hard-to-find vinyl and local tunes would move to Smith Avenue and later Reisterstown Road, before finally closing in 1992, a victim of the rising popularity of cassettes and compact discs. “You have to move with the times,” he told the Sun. “I didn’t.”

T-shirt commemorating Chick's Legendary Records' First Anniversary Party: July 14, 1978

T-shirt commemorating Chick’s Legendary Records’ First Anniversary Party: July 14, 1979

I recall those days well, having been in Thee Katatonix, one of the bands that successfully hounded “Chick” to play at his 2nd Anniversary Party in August 1980. I was later in The Boatniks, who got to play Chick’s 3rd anniversary party in 1981.

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T-shirt for Chick’s Legendary Records 3rd anniversary show, 1981, featuring The Alcoholics, Mark Noone’s Wanktones and The Boatniks.

Of course, the default house band at any Chick’s party was always his beloved Slickee Boys, and no one championed them more than Chick. (Alas, the Slickee Boys are now no more as well.)

Slickee Boy Mark Noone and Katie Katatonic enjoy a cold on at Chick's 2nd Anniversary Party

Slickee Boy Mark Noone and The Boatniks’ Katie Katatonic enjoy a cold one at Chick’s 3rd Anniversary Party

Sure, there were other good record stores around at the time –  Music Machine, Record & Tape Collector, Record & Tape Traders, Vinyl Discoveries, Record Theater (and Joe’s Record Paradise and Yesterday & Today Records in the DC suburbs) – but Chick’s was the most laid back and casual.

Besides the always affable Don Webb, Chick’s staff over the years included erstwhile City Paper music scribe Michael Yockel and various local musicians (like Rockheads/DelMarVas/Big As a House bassist Bernie Ozol), besides Chick himself (who had that steady paycheck with the City of Baltimore to keep his racks well-stocked with new vinyl). And besides having a large inventory of the psychedelic and garage rock records that inspired his fave Slickee Boys, Chick’s offered an eclectic selection of records by the local, punk, and New Wave bands then playing The Marble Bar. In fact, Chick regularly advertised in Tonescale, the Marble Bar fanzine (as shown below),

 

Chicks Legendary Records ad, Marble bar "Tonescale" zine

Chicks Legendary Records ad, Marble bar “Tonescale” zine

and wrote the “A Side and B Side and This and That” record review column, as well:

Tonescale A-sides column

As an early champion of the local bands playing the Marble Bar, it was only fitting that Chick got his own night to DJ “the best recorded music of all time” there. In 1980, Marble Bar owners Roger and LesLee Anderson designated Thursdays as “Legendary Chick’s Nite,” with all girls (“chicks” – get it?) getting in free to enjoy 75 cent beers, as shown in the September 1980 calendar below.

Marble Bar Calendar - September 1980

Chick also regularly advertised in the City Paper to promote local bands and shows, such as the OHO Record Release Party for 1984’s Rocktronics LP:

Chick's ad promoting OHO's new album "Rocktronics" (June 15, 1984)

Chick’s ad promoting OHO’s new album “Rocktronics” (June 15, 1984)

My girlfriend Amy Linthicum remembered Chick’s store with bittersweet memories.

“That’s where I sold all my 10cc records,” she recalled. That was the bitter part. The sweet part was all the groovy new music she and her boyfriend of the time, guitarist Mark Harp (Null Set, Nos Mo King, et al) picked up. “Back then I was into everything New Wave and traded my Prog for Punk!” (Full disclosure: Amy has since bought back all of her 10cc collection in both vinyl and CD – proving that what goes around comes around again!)

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I myself remember picking up the rare Music To Kill By record by The Afrika Korps (an ensemble of D.C.-area musicians that included some Slickee Boys members), which in addition to an early version of the Slickees’ “Jailbait Janet” featured one of my fave tracks, “Fox Lane” (“Fox Lane, where all the girls get PhD’s in learning how to spread their knees”).

36 years later, Chick’s Legendary Records is long gone, but neither Chick nor his fans are forgotten. That’s why Chick is hosting a private party for his friends at The Ottobar on Sunday, August 31 to celebrate his glory days – as well as other notable milestones. As he wrote in his evite:

Among the many occurrences the party is to celebrate-the 30th anniversary of Arlene and Chick; my 31 years with the State of Mayland and pending retirement at the end of January 2015 (another party then); What would have been the 36th anniversary of Chick’s Legendary Records (I missed the 33 1/3 party opportunity); the 31 years since the Orioles won the World Series; The many summer parties at my parents place on Bodkin Creek; record store employees reunion; softball players reunion; mini Marble Bar reunion; seeing friends, relatives, and co-workers; and I have wanted to throw a party for a long time.

As we go to press, at least three bands – Chelsea Graveyard, Garage Sale, and The Stents – are scheduled to play, with possible guest appearances from the great local bands of the last 40 years. (Expect one or more Slickee Boys to post.)

Chick's Private Party flier (poster art by David Wilcox)

Chick’s Private Party flier (poster art by David Wilcox)

Video killed the radio stars and CDs killed record stores like Chick’s, so it’s rather ironic to see vinyl make a comeback as a hipster collectible these days, a collectible glorified on Record Store Day. If Chick’s Legendary Records opened in Mount Washington Village today, it might actually flourish.

And Chick still remains a committed to the purity of vinyl uber alles. As he told Rafael Alvarez back in 1992, “I’ll argue with any CD lover that albums still sound better,” he said. “And I like the packaging of albums, the art that comes with them. I know that albums scratch, skip and pop, but we have CDs that do the same thing.”

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That’s why Chick still has his private collection of over 12,000 LPs and 7,000 45s,  though in recent years he’s devoted himself to his other passion – selling baseball and other collectible cards at area flea markets, yard sales, and conventions. In fact, I ran into Chick “Collector of All Things” Veditz at the 2009 Mid-Atlantic Nostalgia Convention in Hunt Valley (featuring Davy Jones of The Monkees at one of his last convention appearances) and was surprised to see him selling cards instead of vinyl. But I should have known better – Chick got into trading cards back in the ’90s when he ran Chick’s Records Tapes & Baseball Cards in Pikesville. And there he was selling vintage pop culture artifacts like Monkees bubblegum cards. “With Davy Jones here, a lot of people are buying individual cards for him to sign,” canny capitalist Chick commented at the time

Chick Veditz mans his classic trading card collectibles table

Chick Veditz mans his classic trading card collectibles table

Like Judy Collins, Chick Veditz has looked at life from “Both Sides Now“- A-side and B-side! – and on Sunday night will enjoy turning back the clock and cueing up a scratchy and pop-filled remembrance of the good old days. Or as Rootboy sang, “Put a quarter in the juke, and boogie ’till you puke.” (Just don’t play any disco, or a rogue Slickee Boy might just “Put a Bullet Through the Jukebox“!)

Related Links:

Chicks-a-palooza Party @ Ottobar (a Flickr picture set)

Posted in 1970s, 1980s, Baltimorons, Decades, Music, Punk / New Wave | Tagged , , , , , , | 3 Comments