City Paper “Best of Baltimore” 1994

The Baltimore Scene 20 years ago…

Running into Madney Carlisle, the social butterfly formerly known as Madenney Schhhmadenney, at a recent cookout (as shown below)…

Madney

Meat & Greet: Madney styles his Stars Wars tee and Ray-Ban spex at Robyn Webb’s carniverous cookout.

…made me dig through my back pages to find the City Paper “Best of Baltimore” issue from September 21, 1994. I contributed quite a few write-ups to that issue and went to the City Paper “Best Of” party that year at The Paradox (?). That’s the last time I saw this 6′-5″ larger-than-life personality and former club scene fixture, who was decked out in his finest Carmen Miranda-styled glam duds, the same that were featured on the City Paper cover.

Cover boy Madenney, City Paper "Best of Baltimore" (September 21, 1994)

Cover boy Madenney, City Paper “Best of Baltimore” (September 21, 1994)

Of him, City Paper (then under the direction of editor Sono Motoyama) wrote, …we’d like to thank our cover boy (?) Madenney for his ineffable contribution to this issue. He’s definitely one of Baltimore’s Best, although we’re not sure in what category.”

Under the category “Best #?@!*”, Madenney wrote the following poem, listing himself as “Diva Bitch,  Rainbow Maker, Image Puppet, Real Phony”:

rsz_madenney_personal_best

City Paper‘s 1994 “Best of Baltimore” was one of their best, and not just because I had a vested interest in it. It made me remember many cool places and people that are now gone (like Funk’s Democratic Coffee Spot, Gypsy’s Cafe, Memory Lane, and that year’s “Best Local Band” Candy Machine, whose guitar player Daniel Papkin, once worked with me at Video Americain – another Baltimore cultural institution now gone!), though some of Baltimore’s Best of ’94 and still going strong and continuing to win plaudits 20 years later and counting – like perennial faves Atomic Books and Normals Books & Music.

Speaking of which, City Paper acknowledged the first anniversary of Scott Huffines’ original Atomic Books (then on Read Street) by awarding it “Best Subversive Literature” for featuring food-and-babes fetish mags like (John Waters’s favorite) Splosh!

Splosh

SPOSH!, the Wet and Messy Fun Mag

…and “Best Live Show,” the latter for its “One Year Anniversary Party” on March 31, 1994 at Memory Lane. That was the legendary Are We Not KISS? We Are DEVO show that featured nine local bands – including The Krudz, Soul Pit, Scapegoat (that year’s winners of “Best Local Band Tape”), Frost Mini-Flakes,  Maypole, Edith, Helikopter, Blister Freak Circus, and W.O.D. (Womyn of Destruction) – playing tunes by Huffines’ favorite goofball-theatrical bands of the late ’70s and early ’80s.

Atomic Book's' "Are We Not KISS? We Are DEVO!" Program

Atomic Book’s’ “Q: Are We Not KISS? A: We Are DEVO!” Program

And Normals co-owner Rupert Wondolowski (the self-described “Bookseller/Writer/Crank” who won numerous awards that year in various poetry and literature-related categories) had a “Personal Best” celebrating Blaster Al Ackerman, along with this classic bookworm photo:

rsz_rupertwondolowskipersonalbest

Paging through the Arts & Entertainment section of this special issue, I came across a picture for The Polkats, who won 1994’s  “Best Any-Reason-You-Want-a-Band Band” (as shown below) and remembered that accordian player (and all-around nice guy) John Shock is now married to my former library co-worker Kelly Ostrom (it’s Smalltimore: everyone is connected somehow to everybody else!).

The Polkats, featuring John Shock, played at the 1994 CP Best Of Party.

The Polkats, featuring John Shock, played at the 1994 CP Best Of Party.

In the same section I came across a pic of the lovely Donna Sherman, who won “Best Actress” for her role as campy femme fatale Roxanne in Impossible Industrial Action’s production of Charles Ludlum’s The Artificial Jungle.

"Best Actress" Donna Sherman

Donna later met City Paper photographer Sam Holden while performing at the Axis Theater and they became an iconic couple for the next 15 years, until Holden’s unfortunate passing at age 44 in April 2014.

Also spotted in this section was Jeffrey Claggett, whose “Hermaphroditee” (one of many characters in his theatrical drag-bag, along with his beloved Cher and Lady Di) won “Best Performance-Art Drag Queen,” as shown below.

Jeffrey Claggett as "Hermaphrodite"

Jeffrey Claggett as “Hermaphroditee”

Claggett was also a member of the performance-art troupe Haus of Frau, whose racy flier for a show at the 14Karat Cabaret led to a raid by the Baltimore Police Department’s vice squad on July 17, 1993 (see “Baltimore Vice: The Night They Raided the 14Karat Cabaret” for details).

Other winners in 1994 included:

  • Todd Stachowski – “Best Anti-Music Critic” and “Best Politically Incorrect Comic Strip” (“The Anti-Griffith Show”) for Shockwave magazine
  • Fudgie Dobson – “Best Booking Agent” for Memory Lane
  • Richard Gorelick – “Best Flack” for being Walter’s Art Gallery’s “public relations god”
  • John Leist (my old high school and college pal, who sadly passed away before his time) – “Best Sick Jokes” for Funny Pages
  • Funk’s Democratic Coffee Spot – “Best Coffeehouse” and “Best Condom Machines”
  • Chambers – “Best Living Room to see a Rock Show” (“Personal Best” pick of Miuki Fortado, drummer for Jag and Pornflakes); the Davis Street music club later became the original Ottobar.
  • H.O.M.E. Group’s Monthly Independent Film & Video Screening – “Best Independent Film and Video Series”; though started by tENTATIVELY a cONVENIENCE and Rebecca Barten, by 1994 it was being run by film-music wonderkid Skizz Cyzyk out of a former funeral home (complete with coffin) now called The Mansion Theater. This is where I first saw Craig Smith’s Psychedelic Glue-Sniffin’ Hillbillies and other crazy independent and experimental films. My brain’s never since been the same. (Thanks Skizz!)

Sadly, this issue has not been archived on the City Paper‘s online web site. Glad I kept all my CP “Best Of” issues (might as well get my money’s worth at my storage facility!).

 

 

 

Posted in 1990s, Atomic Books, Baltimorons, Decades, Entertainment, Events, Music, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

The First Annual End of the World Show (1973)

[After spotting a framed poster for this legendary Johns Hopkins University event hanging on Robyn Webb’s wall, I checked the Internets (all of them!) and found this review by the guy who organized it all, Tom D’Antoni. The former Baltimore writer and publisher of underground paper HARRY is featured on the poster saying “I’m gettin’ out!”. D’Antoni had Pooba headline the show, an event attended by John Waters, Edith “Egg Lady” Massey, and tENTATIVELY a cONVENIENCE– Tom Warner, BOL]

The (original) First Annual End of the World Show – 39 years ago…here’s how it happened

By Tom D’Antoni (Editor-in-Chief, Oregon Music News, December 21, 2012)

Poster designed by Chris Cottrell, former HARRY art director. / Poster photo by Glenn Ehasz, former police officer.

Poster designed by Chris Cottrell, former HARRY art director. / Poster photo by Glenn Ehasz, former police officer.

 

That’s me in 1973 and that was my show. I was standing (although you can’t see it) at the end of an uncompleted freeway. Declaring, “I’m getting out,” was a plea for escape. If you’ve ever been to Baltimore, Maryland, you know why. Yes, I know it seemed like I was bravely getting out before the world ended, but upon further review I think I just wanted to get out of Baltimore. It took me 25 years to do that.

Thirty-nine years before the Mayans got famous for predicting the end of the world, we were celebrating it in Baltimore. It may have had something to do with the impending collision between earth and the comet Kahoutek. More likely, we were all sitting around smoking dope and somebody had a good idea.

Mose Allison once wrote:

Ever since the world ended,
I don’t go out as much.
People that I once befriended
Just don’t bother to stay in touch.
Things that used to seem so splendid
Don’t really matter today.
It’s just as well the world ended–
It wasn’t working anyway.

Appearing at the show:

I know Portlanders like to think of themselves as weird, but consider this lineup:

Pooba

Pooba -- Steptoe T. Magnificent, center

Pooba — Steptoe T. Magnificent, center

Headlining was a band called Pooba. Before there was punk, there was Pooba. After Pooba, there was Glam Rock. Pooba didn’t fit into either. They didn’t fit, period. I scheduled them to headline, and thereby be the last band, because I knew everyone would leave when they started to play.

Pooba in action. I could have manipulated these, but it would have spoiled the flavor.

Pooba in action. I could have manipulated these, but it would have spoiled the flavor.

I had, not long before, been the publisher of the Baltimore’s “underground” paper of record named HARRY. I had become fairly notorious and was so scary I couldn’t hitchhike alone because no one would pick me up…at a time when hitchhikers always got rides. Perhaps that’s evident from the poster.

Michael (From Great Neck) Klahr, one of our writers, wrote a piece on Pooba. In it, he said:

POOBA has captured the excitement of Rock and Roll without the accompanying restrictions of art or music.  This distillation is the most important since scientists isolated the spirochete as the little devil that causes syphilis.

POOBA has captured the noise that is basic to Rock and Roll!  The noise your parents hate.  POOBA’s music is an exact recreation of what your parents perceive when they listen to Hard Rock.  Not the sounds that a rock band plays, but the sounds your parents hear.

There was a very wide generational divide at that time, much wider than we have today (to the disgust of today’s youngsters).

He goes on:

Pictured: Michael (From Great Neck) Klahr, the author

Pictured: Michael (From Great Neck) Klahr, the author

POOBA is not really a band but a troupe.  There are approximately eight musical members – drums, bass, guitars and vocalist.  They arrive on stage with various costumes with all visible skin painted a shiny silver.  Unleashed they are a berserk toyshop of metallic horrors wound too tightly, exploding into the manic movements of uncontrolled psychotics.

The Poobettes, rumored to be all girls, complement the male musicians….The Poobettes in sexual splendor! Loose and wanton painted women.  With saliva dripping from their mouths they writhe an erotically suggestive palsy that climaxes is frequent she-demonlike shrieks.  Cries originating deep in the sweaty pussies that ceaselessly drip love juices for just one band – POOBA.

Kraig Krixer, aka Trixie the Space Queen

Kraig Krixer, aka Trixie the Space Queen

Steptoe T(he) Magnificent was the front man for Pooba. On Tuesday, he nearly remembered something about the show:

As for memories of that night….. throwing tampons with “POOBA PLUGS’ written on them into the crowd…our “girls’ passing out air sickness bags before the set….Wayne throwing up in a bucket he had next to him on stage…. Kraig and Chris Krixer arriving through a packed lobby in drag …….as to playing, it all become verrrryyy hazy.

A young individual was in the audience, now known by the name of Robyn Webb, she has been known by other names (including Dick Hertz), but that’s another story. She remembers:

Robyn today.

Robyn today.

I’m not entirely sure how I learned that the end of the world was imminent, but as I was but a wee tranny at the time, the tender age of 15, I wasn’t going to go quietly into cosmic dust. No. I was going to party.

The show has left me permanently scarred, and the mighty mighty Pooba, brainchild of Baltimore underground rock legend, Steptoe T. Magnificent certainly helped. Earlier that year, at the Read Street festival, I had sent a great purple geyser of Boone’s Farm Mountain Grape wine spewing down the middle of Read Street during Pooba’s set. What a great show! And Pooba was good that day, too.

So, as purple seemed to be the color that defined my relationship with Pooba, I gulped down a couple of hits of purple microdot and headed on down to JHU.

The Chesapeake Retrievers

Jon Glik

Jon Glik

This was the only “straight” band, although there was a member or two who hadn’t been in unaltered consciousness for some time. It was a Bluegrass band. Bluegrass was very popular in clubs at the time, the Mid-Atlantic states being a Bluegrass hotbed.

The band featured a great fiddler by the name of Jon Glik. I used to think of him as the Charlie Parker of the Bluegrass fiddle. He later went with Del McCoury and other such stars. He’s still playing.

Their set was an interlude of near-sanity in an otherwise insane evening.

Jeff Berkow

He was a self-styled Rock star. How do we know? Because he wore a shirt with a star on the front all the time. He was a popular singer around town who had lived in Europe for a while, came back with a wife and kid and recorded what I consider to be the worst song in history, “Nancy Negro.” Not kidding. He was later a partner in the concert production company Jim Davis (my collaborator on this show) and I launched and was subsequently run out of business by promoter Dickie Klotzman (who subsequently went to jail…although not for that).

He has found much more success operating Ethel and Ramone’s, a Baltimore restaurant since 1993.

Fuji’s Navy

Playing vacuum in Fuji's Navy

Playing vacuum in Fuji’s Navy

Not an offshoot of Pooba, but close friends, somewhat led by Bill Blankenship. I’m not sure exactly what they were, but they were loud and left a cover of glitter on the stage, and in the first few rows of the audience, so much of it that when the Johns Hopkins Board of Directors met there the following morning, a shitstorm of approbation hit the Chaplain’s Office, who had co-promoted the show with us.

Jim Davis remembers:

Fuji’s Navy played the opening theme from “The Dick Van Dyke Show” – where he trips over the ottoman coming into the room – on the Hooverphone – an amplified vacuum cleaner.  The guy playing the vacuum cleaner was doing a better job holding the melody and line than the guys playing actual instruments.

Robyn continues:

As the live acts hit the stage, things became sort of blurry….a glorious cacophony from Fuji’s Navy, and then, as Steptoe, the Poobettes and the rest of his band of merry miscreants took the stage and began to create their own special brand of pandemonium, the acid started coming on strong. As the colors of the cosmos swirled around me, I thought to myself “Surely, this is the end of the world.” Suddenly, people in the crowd began to shout. At first, I couldn’t understand what they were saying. Eventually, through the hallucinogenic haze, I could tell they were all shouting “Egg Lady!!! Egg Lady!!!!”

The beloved Edith Massey

The beloved Edith Massey

I turned around to see a royal entourage enter the hall, and there, descending the aisle, was the Egg Lady herself. The late, great Edith Massey. After much hoopla surrounding her grand entrance, she came over toward me. “Anyone sittin’ here honey?” And she plopped herself down in the seat next to me. She reached into her handbag and pulled out a pint of Chevas Regal, handed it to me “Would you please open this, honey”….Dumbfounded, I complied and handed her the bottle. The colors swirled and swirled. We commenced to kill the bottle together and I had one of the most surreal evenings of my life.

John Waters’ “The Diane Linkletter Story

I had written the first, or one of the first reviews of “Pink Flamingos,” and we had named John “Man of the year, in one of HARRY’s final issues.

Jim Davis says:

I recall that Divine made a guest appearance at the show and took questions from the audience.  One of the questions was, “How does dog shit taste?”

“About like it smells,” she said without batting either of her fabulously made-up eyes.

The film was based on the real-life story of the daughter of “Kids Say the Darndest Things” TV star Art Linkletter. Diane had jumped off a roof and killed herself while on acid. Linkletter was furiously anti-drug before this happened. What better fodder for parody, we all thought at the time.

This is what comes of being born with Baltimore DNA…although I must say the theme and consciousness caught on very quickly around the world as Mr. Waters’ films gained popularity

The Legendary Cowboy Foulke

He was an old coot. Had been seen briefly “Pink Flamingos” but wasn’t really part of the Waters crowd. He was a “Country and Hawaiian” lap guitar player who had been with Wild West and Hawaiian shows in the distant past. He still could play up a storm though.

Listen to a self-made audio cassette of his:

I took an interest and got him a few gigs in bars. He wanted hula girls. I got him hula girls. He make leis for them and taught them a time-step. He had gigs a couple times a year in bars in Ohio and not long after I met him, was in an auto accident and got his guitars smashed.

Kind of like this, except it was red and kind of beat up.

Kind of like this, except it was red and kind of beat up.

When he got home, in addition to driving him around to some bogus doctor’s appointments (to collect insurance), I found him a triple-neck Gibson table-model guitar, which he used for the rest of his life.

He made his own wine (undrinkable), grew his own dope (didn’t share) and showed his penis to the hula girls in the dressing room.

I got him a gig at the Cellar Door in D.C. shortly before I left to take a job in Los Angeles in 1977. He had three hula girls and opened for the New Riders of the Purple Sage. There he was, playing in the big time again. A few weeks after I settled in L.A., he died. But he died having his last gig be a big one for him.

As the show progressed:

Jim reports:

Goucher College girls were coming in, getting disgusted in about three minutes and leaving in a huff.  A couple of them complained to me on the way out that “this wasn’t what we expected”.  I asked what they thought the end of the world would look like, if not this?

Lew Rudner

As the show approached we ran out of money. We thought we’d have to cancel. All of a sudden this guy Lew Rudner showed up, literally fresh off the boat…a merchant marine. He’d put up the money if he could sing on the show.

Welcome to show biz, Lew.

Love is Hard To Get, ” a film and “Wendel Wilke on Parade,” another film

Years later, Davis and I brought HARRY back to life.

Years later, Davis and I brought HARRY back to life.

Billed on the poster as being a “Firesign Theater” movie, it was actually by Firesign’s Peter Bergman. It was made in 1073, and except for a few mentions in web searches, remains elusive and obscure. I think “Wendel Wilke on Parade” was a campaign film but nobody remembers anything about it.

[Tom Warner adds: According to www.firezine.net, “Love Is Hard To Get” was a 26-minute, black-and-white film produced by Peter Bergman, starring Anton Greene, and in which Bergman appears as Nasi Goring – a professor who turns into a gorilla to get the women he wants. The picture’s plot revolved around a Samurai warrior statue that comes to life to save a girl from Bergman’s evil character. It was released by New Line Cinema and originally packaged with “Jimi (Hendrix) Plays Berkeley,” a top 20 grosser for the year. It was later re-released as a segment of “Firesign Funnies.”]

And so….

It was a wild night. Don’t even ask about the party at my place afterwards.

Robyn says:

Edith and I remained friends for years after that. I also remain friends with Steptoe, and this D’Antoni fellow, whose underground newspaper Harry I hold singularly responsible for corrupting me in my youth, and I wouldn’t have it any other way.

I consider myself to be a proud survivor of the first end of the world. So, if Friday, December 21 is supposed to be the next end of the world, my only question would be this. Who’s got the purple microdot?

As for me, I’m still trying to get out. Maybe today. One can only hope. Maybe I’ll throw the 40th Annual End of the World Show in Portland next year…unless the world ends today.

Or as Mose says:

Ever since the world ended,
There’s no more black or white.
Ever since we all got blended,
there’s no more reason to fuss and fight.
Dogmas that we once defended
no longer seem worthwhile.
Ever since the world ended,
I face the future–
With a smile.

 Related Links:

Baltimore Backtrack: Pooba on WTMD (Baltimore Or Less)

Tom D’Antoni: People Seem Dumber In Baltimore (Baltimore Or Less)

A Short Guide to Baltimore Underground Newspapers (1968-1970) (Baltimore Or Less)

Posted in 1970s, Baltimorons, Celebrities, Decades, Dreamlanders, Edith Massey, Entertainment, Events, Films, John Waters, Music, Punk / New Wave, Roadside Attractions, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Baltimore Bull Escapes Slaughterhouse; Shot by Baltimore Police

Baltimore police shoot bull running loose in city
Bull spotted in Mount Vernon on North Avenue

(WBAL TV)

Baltimore police said officers shot a bull that had escaped from a city slaughterhouse on a downtown street.

Police spokeswoman Sgt. Sarah Connolly said the animal was shot shortly after 10:15 a.m. at the intersection of Charles and Biddle streets in the Mount Vernon neighborhood.

Connolly said the animal was shot and killed, a move that was necessary for public safety.

Police believe the bull escaped from a slaughterhouse in west Baltimore.

Actually this is the last shot:

bullshirt

thumb-400
via http://www.wbal.com/article/107948/2/police-shoot-steer-on-the-loose-in-baltimore

Related Bullet List

Garage Sale: “The Lonely Bull”

Posted in 2010s, Baltimorons, Roadside Attractions | Leave a comment

Gram Parsons – The Streets of Baltimore

caprock

Cap Rock, Joshua Tree National Park

My brother recently visited Cap Rock in Joshua Tree National Park
outside of L.A. He had just seen a Travel Channel documentary  depicting
the September 19, 1973 overdose of country/folk rock songwriter and
performer, Gram Parsons, who was a former member of the Byrds. The
documentary quickly covers the story of Gram’s death and how his road
manager, Phil Kaufman, made good on a promise to burn Gram’s body at
Joshua Tree upon his demise. Good friends keep promises. Phil kept his
promise to Gram.

Many photos are out there of Gram Parsons communing with nature at
Joshua Tree, especially with close bud Keith Richards of the Rolling
Stones.

caprocknephew

My nephew communing with nature and pondering how to dispose of Uncle Scott’s remains in the near future.

Gram teamed up with folk legend Emmylou Harris to record their version of the heavily covered “Streets of Baltimore”:

Back in 2003, Johnny Knoxville, Christina Applegate, and Michael Shannon (Agent Van Alden of HBO’s “Boardwalk Empire”) starred in “Grand Theft Parsons.” This scene depicts Phil Kaufman (played by Knoxville) dousing Gram’s casket with five gallons of gasoline and setting it ablaze at Joshua Tree.

Related:

  • “Streets of Baltimore” — Wikipedia
  • The Strange Death of Gram Parsons: 1973 — Byrd Watcher
  • 1969 Desert Trippin’: Gram Parsons, Anita Pallenberg & Keith Richards — The Selvedge Yard)


Tompall and The Glaser Brothers – Streets Of Baltimore


Bobby Bare – Streets of Baltimore

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