Date: Fri 01-Mar-1996
Date: Fri 01-Mar-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Illustration: C
Location: A-10
Quick Words:
Ramones-concert-review-Adios
Full Text:
(concert rev, The Ramones @Toad's Place, 3/1/96)
Concert Review-
Could This Be The End of An Era?
(with photo)
By Shannon Hicks
NEW HAVEN - Like a good margarita, you really have to take it with a grain of
salt when a musician, band or group decides to announce retirement. The
Rolling Stones and Elton John have been threatening to do so for so many
years, no one takes that threat very seriously anymore. Rod Stewart, who
returned to Connecticut for a concert last week, has also been threatening to
pack it in for a few years. Even Ozzy Osbourne, who made a big stink about
retiring less than two years ago, is back on the road these days.
These are just a few people who have decided to announce retirement, yet
continue making music. Don't even get started on the number of people who have
work "discovered" posthumously...
Now it looks like The Ramones may be making a run for the gold ring of
retirement. The three-chord wonderboys of punk, a longstanding quartet of
"brothers" from Forest Hills, Queens, won't answer questions concerning an
impending retirement with a straight, direct answer, but there are a few
nagging hints that have fans of all ages scratching their heads, getting out
to every show possible, and preparing for the worst.
With the band's latest release - one of the best in a few years - having been
named Adios Amigos , and a current tour dubbed "The Final Tour," it doesn't
look like there will be too many more opportunities to send that familiar call
("Hey, Ho! Let's Go!") out to Joey, Johnny, Marky and CJ to get a show going.
Connecticut fans have had numerous opportunities over the years to see this
band live, a show that has been often simulated, never imitated. "You give us
17 minutes, we'll give you 20 songs," could have been The Ramones' original
mantra, and it continues to hold true today.
Luckily, the state was not left out this year when the band set up its concert
itinerary. Shortly after the release of Adios Amigos last July, the band
played a show at Riverside Park in Agawam, Mass. Local radio stations pushed
that performance - quite confidently, in fact - as "what could be New
England's last chance to see The Ramones!" Last Friday proved that statement
untrue.
Packed in like sardines, the crowd at Toad's Place on February 23 knew what to
expect, from raised arms and bodies, body surfers by the dozen, lots of black
leather jackets, and songs that spanned the band's 21-year history. Before
recording Amigos , Johnny and the rest of the band decided they wanted to get
into the studio and "just play the songs, not having to do overdubs," he says
in the band's press release. The result is a Ramones performance captured just
as it would more or less sound on stage, sans the audience's reaction.
The audience reaction is what is saved for the live shows, and Friday's in New
Haven was as typical reaction as a Ramones show is typical in presentation:
straightforward punk, no rinky-dink guitars or keyboards, with loud crashing
drums and Joey's unmistakable vocals.
These guys can't retire! Who's going to tell us about babies stolen by the
KKK, graduating from Rock n' Roll High School, doin' the Blitzkrieg Bop, not
wanting to grow up, or remind us to listen to Rock n' Roll Radio? Who's going
to tell us the antics of Sheena the Punk Rocker, take us back to Rockaway
Beach, give us Shock Treatment or talk us into wanting a lobotomy during our
fragile teenage years?
Others may try. They may even have a similar style. But the best they can hope
for is to be a distant cousin of the Ramones, not one of the brothers of the
defining punk band that took not just New York, the East Coast or the country
by storm, but the entire world.
Like Jell-O is gelatin and Jose Cuervo is tequila, The Ramones were, is and
always will be punk. Retirement or not.
