Music stores we loved

Blue Ridge Music in Encinitas is long gone now, but from age 12 (when I started playing guitar) to 16 (when I got a driver’s license and could explore further afield), this little place was my favorite toy store.

David Rives and I spent a lot of time in the shop and learned a great deal about instruments and their use from Andre, the proprietor, and his staff.

Blue Ridge was hardly a rock-‘n’-roll Mecca, although I did buy there the Guild guitar and Fender bass I still own today, and I did have one memorable encounter with Bo Diddley when he visited Blue Ridge to test out effects boxes for that evening’s gig at La Paloma Theater one block north.

Read moreMusic stores we loved

Hair Theatre onstage and backstage

Detail: Sergio at the mic (collection Laura Swapp)Hair Theatre documentarian Laura S. joins the list of contributors to the Che Underground photo archive. First up: a set of photos that I would estimate to be from 1986 or 1987, when Rockin’ Dogs guitarist Sam Wilson joined Hair Theatre after the departure of Paul Allen.

Besides Sammy, this set features our clearest views yet of the rest of the band; there’s vocalist Sergio, of course, but also great shots of bassist Sergio Castillo, guitarist Cesar Castillo and drummer Steve Broach.

Detail: Hair Theatre’s Cesar Castillo, Sam Wilson, Sergio Castillo (collection Laura Swapp)Detail: Hair Theatre’s Sergio, Steve Broach (collection Laura Swapp)Detail: Hair Theatre’s Steve Broach and friend (collection Laura Swapp)Detail: Hair Theatre’s Sergio at the mic (collection Laura Swapp)

Read moreHair Theatre onstage and backstage

Manual Scan in autofocus

Detail: Manual Scan (Bart Mendoza, Kevin Ring, Paul Kaufman) (collection Bart Mendoza)Bart Mendoza of Manual Scan and the Shambles comes through with a cache of photos, sounds and a video montage of Scan and its predecessors, the Pedestrians and Starjammer.

First up: a photo of three-quarters of the original Manual Scan lineup from 1981. The band had recently formed when Bart Mendoza and Kevin Ring of the Pedestrians (guitars) joined forces with Dave Fleminger (bass) and Paul Kaufman (drums). Says Bart (on the left), “Here is an early pic for the site, I’d love to hear what Paul remembers of this day. I think it’s a transitional pic, just post-Pedestrians, probably a few weeks after.”

Paul Kaufman responds, “It’s a blast to see this! Yes, I remember when we headed down to Balboa Park, which provided nice backdrops for a photo shoot … But where’s Dave in this photo?… You can tell I wasn’t able to keep up with the Mod attire. I think the jacket might have been a last-minute addition from the Ring wardrobe.”

Detail: Pedestrians onstage, Abbey Road (collection Bart Mendoza)Detail: Boys About Town, 1986 (collection Bart Mendoza)Detail: Pedestrians flyer; Wizard; Dec. 29, 1980 (collection Bart Mendoza)Detail: Dennis, Jerry, Bart, Dave; Kings Road (collection Bart Mendoza)
Detail: Untouchables/Manual Scan/Playground Slap/Trebles; SDSU; Dec. 3, 1983 (collection Bart Mendoza)Detail: Starjammer, New Year’s (?) at Bird Rock (collection Bart Mendoza)Detail: Manual Scan in Balboa Park (collection Bart Mendoza)

Read moreManual Scan in autofocus

Old Dogs, new tricks

Detail: Rockin’ Dogs (Dave Ellison, Scott Harber, Sam Wilson, Cole Smithey)Lori Stalnaker-Bevilacqua continues to enrich our historical understanding of the Rockin’ Dogs with priceless artifacts. Here’s a pre-Jane Bunting photograph of the Dogs — ca. 1982 — when Scott Harber was the bassist.

“I loved this shot from the series,” Lori writes. “I love the fact that you got two lookin’ at the camera and two turned to the side. I don’t think I directed them to that, just spontaneous. Nevertheless, it works!

“That is one good-lookin’ band! ;)”

“I remember the photo, but I don’t remember much about it other than the fact that the red plaid scarf belonged to a girl I was dating,” writes Dave Ellison. “Scott didn’t play with the band for very long. I remember he was planning a long trip somewhere … to another country, I think … so he was more or less filling in for a while.”

Read moreOld Dogs, new tricks

Monday, December 8

Toby Gibson reminds us it’s been 28 years since John Lennon’s death. We’ve already discussed at length that very dark moment just before the Reagan era, but it was an event that affected many of us deeply, provoking black humor and profound sorrow and coloring our attitudes about peace, love and understanding. (I can still recall every detail of that other Monday night.)

How about if we change gears, though, and talk a little more about what Lennon and the Beatles meant to us? For me, they were the original touchstone for what being in a rock-‘n’-roll band was supposed to be. How about you?

Pictures through the past, darkly

(A plaintive cry for ephemera from Darren Grealish.)

Detail: Darrin (photo by Cyndie Jaynes)Hey, I don’t have any pictures from my youth at all. A crazy girlfriend I had in the late ’80s threw all my photo albums away, and sadly, all my pics are gone forever.

If you have pictures from the good old days with all of us please post ’em up! Maybe if we get enough of them after time we can get a groovy slide-show movie that people can watch on the site. Maybe we can have Jerry Cornelius be the narrator!

Come on and sock it to me! I would like some visual memories to look back on. As it is now I have only memories and this site!!!!! If you got em’ put em’ up! Let’s see the gold!

— Darren Grealish

[Editor’s note: All vintage Grealish beefcake welcome at Che Underground HQ: cheunderground@gmail.com. We will ensure Darren receives your contributions posthaste.]


The Wallflowers: “TV Eye”

Detail: Wallflowers promoThe night I met the Wallflowers, the Stooges’ “TV Eye” was playing on the stereo. I know it was the summer of 1983, when I met so many of you, and I believe my introduction was brokered via Rockin’ Dog Dave Ellison.

That moment forged a lasting connection in my mind between the Wallflowers and the Stooges, an impression that was reified by the Wallflowers’ blistering interpretations of the older band’s oeuvre — including “TV Eye,” presented here in all its synapse-rattling glory.

Per vocalist Dave Rinck, “‘Walldrugs’ and ‘TV Eye’ were recorded in a ‘studio’ at Music Power; ‘Raw Power’ was, too, but not until a little later than the other two.”

Read moreThe Wallflowers: “TV Eye”

Then and now: Saigon Palace

(Roving correspondent/photographer Kristen Tobiason revisits the scenes of our past glories. Today, the Zebra Club/Saigon Palace becomes a meat market.)

Detail: Nicky Rotten’s exterior, November 2008 (photograph by Kristen Tobiason)I’d never gone to the Zebra Club, later Saigon Palace, at 560 Fifth Avenue in San Diego. I look forward to hearing others’ tales of it.

One time, after a Wallflowers gig (two doors down at Greenwich Village West), we stopped by so [Wallflowers vocalist] Dave Rinck could pop in and visit so-and-so, who I don’t recall. But I do remember hearing a rumor that Tom Waits played there.

[Editor’s note: While no one else has mentioned Tom Waits, many of our colleagues remember the club’s plumbing. “The Saigon Palace was a very small, dive bar in downtown San Diego with sewage problems and sleazy cocktail waitresses,” writes Dave Ellison. And Ray Brandes recalls, “The Town Criers had their debut at the Saigon Palace in 1987, summer. What I remember most is that there was a leaky sewer pipe that ran across the length of the bar, and it smelled awful.”]

Read moreThen and now: Saigon Palace

The Tell-Tale Hearts vs. Joe Meek

(Exclusive to Che Underground: The Blog, Ray Brandes unearths a Tell-Tale Hearts single with a rich pedigree.)

Detail: Tell-Tale Hearts group shot (collection Ray Brandes)Heinz Burt was discovered slicing bacon in a Southampton market at age 19. In 1962, he played bass on the Tornados’ smash single “Telstar,” produced by the brilliant but misunderstood Joe Meek, Britain’s first independent pop producer.

Detail: Heinz Burt (collection Ray Brandes)Heinz soon became a pet project of Meek’s. Inspired by the movie “Village Of The Damned,” Meek encouraged the young Heinz to bleach his hair white and release a single, “Just Like Eddie,” a tribute to the recently dead Eddie Cochran which reached number 5 on the British pop charts.

Detail: Heinz EP promo (collection Ray Brandes)Heinz never returned to that altitude on the charts but did record a series of bizarre singles including “Big Fat Spider,” “Country Boy” and “I Get Up in the Morning.” Heinz was sent on tour with Gene Vincent and Jerry Lee Lewis. Meek envisaged Heinz’s audience as teenage girls, but young British audiences booed him and showered him with beans.

Read moreThe Tell-Tale Hearts vs. Joe Meek

This We Dug: K.C. and the Sunshine Band

(In this installment, Wallflower Dave Rinck revisits the bouncy side of the ’70s.)

K.C. and the Sunshine Band group shotWe used to have a great Halloween tradition in San Diego, which I am frankly surprised hasn’t been covered here yet. Anyway, I’m sure someone will get around to this one soon enough. Of course I’m talking about the Pink Panther Halloween Ball. Man, that was fun!

The deal is, one year I was attending this event, and I ran into Darren Grealish and Burt Huerta, and these guys had on these leisure suits with lapels out to their shoulders. (I think I was dressed as a gerbil or something equally stupid.) I mean, they looked great, almost as if they had just stepped out of Studio 54 in about 1978. And Darren says to me, “People think I’m dressed up for Halloween, but this is how I like to dress every day!”

And who wouldn’t? I mean, come on get real: Black leather biker jackets and torn jeans every day? How much of that stuff can you really stand before you need to cut your jive talkin’ and lighten up a bit? Yes, if punk rock can be summed up as the Mister Hyde of our angry rebellious youth, then Disco would be the happy Doctor Jekyll.

The Che Underground