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Showing posts with label 1. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1. Show all posts

November 7, 2011

What Gets Me Hot! (uncensored...finally!)

i figured i'd stop teasing everybody and upload What Gets Me Hot (uncensored, etc.)

 from the mysterious norwegian pevanel125 whose Traci Lords library is unsurpassed. 

i'd like to thank him again for including some of my What Gets Me Hot! mashes in his collection and for his inspiration and friend to precocity!

i like the soundtrack!

Traci_lords_what_gets_me_hot
Found_it_traci_lords_happy_new_year

  1. Traci Lords First Film What Gets Me Hot! (Audio)

    whatgetsmehot.posterous.comMay 10, 2011 - 3 min
    Traci Lords First Film What Gets Me Hot! what gets me hot opening dogmeat good.wmv.wmv Watch on Posterous ...
     
  2. Dogmeat Dailymotion Skin=Cappuccino Jukebox ...

    whatgetsmehot.posterous.comNov 13, 2010
    Dogmeat Dailymotion Jukebox Skin=Cappuccino See and download the full gallery on posterous mrjyn_dogmeat ...
     
  3. NOW YOU CAN SAY, 'I Finally Figured out 'WHAT ...

    whatgetsmehot.posterous.comApr 7, 2010
    NOW YOU CAN SAY, " I Finally Figured out 'WHAT GETS ME HOT!' " Traci Lords' First Role (First Scene) by ...
     
  4. Facebook | Videos Posted by Fans of What Gets Me ...

    whatgetsmehot.posterous.comJan 26, 2011
    Permalink | Leave a comment »
     
  5. BLACKCURRANT BODICE

    whatgetsmehot.posterous.comJan 6, 2011
    Cho cynophagie's YouTube Channel What Gets Me Hot dogmeat's FriendFeed mrjyn's Flickr What Gets Me Hot ...
     
  6. The Cramps (Bryan Gregory): Loving God Through ...

    whatgetsmehot.posterous.comSep 21, 2010 - 3 min
    Blogs 2 new results for blogspot site: whatgetsmehot (video) whatgetsmehot site:animoto.com By limbsandthings ...
     
  7. Google Alert - a blogurl:http://whatgetsmehot.blogspot ...

    whatgetsmehot.posterous.comJun 30, 2010
    THE ULTIMATE ELVIS DIARY! | What Gets Me Hot By limbsandthings@gmail.com (What Gets Me Hot) 1957 THE ...
     
  8. HALLOWEEN Facebook STORY is IMPOSSIBLE ...

    whatgetsmehot.posterous.comOct 28, 2011 - 5 min
    LEAVE his camp of hate" S [S] Orry to be born! --- READ shocking story of what they did! * Including FateBOOK ...
     
  9. La Cicciolina Outfits and Jeff Koon Wedding

    whatgetsmehot.posterous.comAug 25, 2011 - 2 min
    Masturbation (cont.) Here péripatéticienne crépusculaires somnambulisme What Gets Me Hot Traci Lords Ilona ...
     
  10. Desiree Cousteau Pizza Girls - 80s Female Mud-Wrestling

    whatgetsmehot.posterous.comJul 25, 2011 - 9 min
    pizza_girls.mp4 Watch on Posterous Permalink | Leave a comment » ...
     

i figured i'd stop teasing everybody and upload What Gets Me Hot (uncensored, etc.)  from the mysterious norwegian pevanel125 whose Traci Lords library is unsurpassed.  i'd like to thank him again for including some of my What Gets Me Hot! mashes in his collection and for his inspiration and friend ...»See Ya

July 28, 2011

3 Sex Pistols Video-FIRSTS

Sex Pistols


Sex Pistols FIRST American gig

+

Sid and Nancy Visit Mom

+

Sid Vicious Death

 

  • Sex Pistols

Atlanta

  • Sid and Nancy
    • visit mom

  • Sid vicious
    • murder
    • DEATH

  • BBC

Sex Pistols Sex Pistols FIRST American gig + Sid and Nancy Visit Mom + Sid Vicious Death   S ex Pistols Atlanta sex pistls atlanta first concert.mp4 Watch on Posterous sid and nancy visit mom.mp4 Watch on Posterous sid vicious murder bbc.mp4 Watch on Posterous Sid and N an cy visit m o m Sid vici ou ...»See Ya

February 27, 2011

Serge Gainsbourg Birkin - 1st Charlotte TV Appearance

big question mark
Gainsbourg Birkin
Follow Gainsbourg, Birkin
 and children

visit his apartment, writing session for

"Eugenie Sokolov", listen to him play piano.

Three daughters: Charlotte, Kate and Jane Birkin playing together.
Serge GAINSBOURG out into the street with Kate and Charlotte.
Jane JUMPS in a taxi bound for the airport.
Serge Gainsbourg in the library recalls writing "Eugenie Sokolov".
Then he takes the young Kate and Charlotte Gainsbourg to dinner at the restaurant.
Home, he presents a sculpture by Claude Lalanne,
"The man at the head of cabbage"
 

Plays Marseillaise!  

day with Gainsbourg

   Birkin  \

and children

Journée

l'enfantSLe morning March 31, 1979!

Une journée avec Serge Gainsbourg et ses enfants

(28711 KB)
Watch on posterous

Reportage tourné chez Serge GAINSBOURG pour suivre une de ses journées, entre vie familiale avec Jane BIRKIN et ses deux enfants, une visite de son appartement, une séance d'écriture de "Eugénie Sokolov" et quelques notes égrenées sur son piano.Le matin du 31 mars 1979, Serge GAINSBOURG arrive à son appartement de la rue de Verneuil et commente la décoration de son salon.Il présente ses trois filles de la maison, Charlotte, Kate et Jane BIRKIN jouant ensemble. Serge GAINSBOURG sort dans la rue avec Kate et Charlotte pour mettre Jane dans un taxi en partance pour l'aéroport. Serge GAINSBOURG assis à son bureau de la bibliothèque évoque l'écriture de son livre à sortir, de "Eugénie Sokolov". Ensuite, il emmène Kate et la jeune Charlotte GAINSBOURG à dîner au restaurant. Revenu chez lui, il présente la sculpture de Claude LALANNE, "L'homme à la tête de chou" et joue sur son piano quelques notes de sa "Marseillaise".

Il s'agit de la première apparition de Charlotte GAINSBOURG à la télévisionbig question mark

First Television appearance by Charlotte Gainsbourg

Collection L'invité du jeudi Productionthis image rule effects the text surrounding it its alignment

producteur ou co-producteur: Antenne 2 Générique réalisateur : Leridon, Jean Luc participant : Gainsbourg, Serge


http://t3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSHCHRNKJZ7POl04zcBVAwafMFto24nnLHzcpy1XfiIvo_H6OUlbig question mark

big question mark

 

 

big question mark

big question mark

 


 

 


Equestriennehttp://t3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSHCHRNKJZ7POl04zcBVAwafMFto24nnLHzcpy1XfiIvo_H6OUl

 



Who

http://t3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSHCHRNKJZ7POl04zcBVAwafMFto24nnLHzcpy1XfiIvo_H6OUl

SERGE

 


http://t3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSHCHRNKJZ7POl04zcBVAwafMFto24nnLHzcpy1XfiIvo_H6OUlbad-Chihuahua-imitation of Peter Lorre

Cont.


 

Dogmeat

 

Paris

 

 

MORE » on Dogmeat

January 27, 2011

WATCH Willy and Toots DeVille (3 videos lost and found again - thanks aggiespoenk)


WATCH Willy and Toots DeVille (3 videos lost and found again - thanks aggiespoenk)


Video 1ère||




Charles Dumont, Edith Piaf, Doc Pomus Connexion!
  http://i.ytimg.com/vi/MJshooqelpw/0.jpg
||You recorded ||Le Chat Bleu|| in  ||Paris||  because of || Edith Piaff | ?| 



||Yeah, it was for the chance to work with
||||Charles  Dumont||
who'd written music for  
|| Edith |and| Doc Pomus ||

Ouais, c'était pour avoir la chance de travailler avec||||Charles  Dumont||

le composeur qui avait écrit la musique pour
||Edith |et|Doc Pomus ||


 «Un reve de mon vie» ||
Télévision Française   || 1982 || 


What you see in Video 1ère is a still very junk-dependent (although in this film, a junkie with a full dose, and as fine as wine and more healthful and alive than you or I or ten friends--the unfair trade-off that junkies make in lieu of anything approximating real health). 


The Willy DeVille of 1982, whom without knowledge of such encumbrances would perhaps be appraised as a Rock Star with epic centering, or confused for unwarranted extra charm which his looks do not require to be unfair to most men--or perhaps simply demonstrating his oft-sung  savoir faire  in these dreamy vignettes as instant Parisian peripaticienne engaging in crepuscular discussion avec one of his many (and to me, his most charming of charms), obscure collectibles,  le compositeur pour Edith Piaf, et Doc Pomus, Charles Dumont (throw in Little Willie John's Parisian Aunt and he'd have hit the French Derby trifecta). |
||| 



|| Here is the subtly, almost criminally sly insertion of the most delicate scent of Piaf film scenes in what is an  initial weaving of what will elegantly transform into an Edith Piaf narrative, replete with flash forwards,  flashbacks, and moody placemarker referencing for a story Willy relates through the piece (as you suddenly realize, this is not a dated Rockumentary but a French soul-mining, and luckily one that pulls back before any typical franco-overarching can do it damage). I tried to imagine this appearing on my 1982 screen, and just couldn't...I could only picture myself in my first girlfriend's living room grimacing at John Stossel...slightly realizing that the Internet has not been thought up yet.
 ||You know the first day I walked into the studio and they were working with an orchestra, and I heard the strings playing one of my songs. I had to go into the bathroom and shed a tear. Seeing these guys playing their instruments, with long white hair hanging down over their collars, looking like what classical musicians are supposed to look like, doing a song I wrote, really got to me. 
Video 2ème
2ème  ||



Willy DeVille  ||
Charles Dumont  ||
compositeur pour  Edith Piaf || Doc Pomus ||  
«Un reve de mon vie» ||

Télévision Française   || 1982 ||




I will continue to research more backstory on the origin/creation of this tribute to legendary Punk Soul Dracula-man, Willy DeVille, through his gravel-road, Howlin' Wolf Meets Barrio Gangbanger - magic, North of Miles Davis, but not much - vocal chords,  the same sorely missed Willy Deville whom I also called a friend and neighbor in the early-90s witchy Quarter, and as featured in Lech Kowalski's brilliant document of the final days of Johnny Thunders (whose shocking reality came home to us all the more for its unexpected almost filmic intrusion into our otherwise oblivious Vieux Carre life one April). 


Junco pardner, barely by definition (although I've never met a man who shared the excitement of the fool's  transitory few hours deliverance that a pill brings). 


I thought I was over my mourning from week of his (to me) unexpected, premature death, but certainly this document, more appropriately described as clairvoyant verite into his ultimate inquisitiveness and acquisitiveness, proves that theory wrong--happily.


read both halves of interview conducted 2006, in which Willy goes into great depths on his New Orleans move (why), and more interestingly, regarding this video--on Charles Dumont (Doc Pomus musical co-composer, and most famously, or obscurely known to not just me, I assume, but as Edith Piaf's favorite go-to compositeur of her late chansons (which I also look forward to digging and updating this blog upon finding--gladly).




||Roughly  our conversation could be divided into the early years, the middle part, and what's going on now||E nviron notre conversation pourrait être divisé en les premières années, la partie du milieu, et ce qui se passe maintenant||
||
||Willy is always "doing" something to keep moving on musically, personally, and whatever else is needed for growth as an artist||
  
||Willy est toujours «faire» quelque chose à garder de passer musicalement, personnellement, et tout autre élément nécessaire à la croissance en tant qu'artiste||

Where did it all start for you, you were born in New York right?
No I was born in Stanford Connecticut (laughs); nobody's born in Manhattan. We moved there when I was 13 or 14, but I had been coming into town since I was about 12… I had fallen in love with the city.
The bright lights and all…
Nah, it was the musicians. Everywhere there was music it was amazing. But it was everything else too, you know, the smells of pizza … Somewhere else than where you are always looks better to you, and we all come from some little itty bitty place. I don't want this to sound like those, he came from a small town and made it big stories right, but it's more about having a dream and having the patience and the, oh I don't know what (me: "perseverance") yeah, to make it happen, you know, and that's what I feel like it's always been.
Why music, what was it about music that grabbed you?

Well according to my mom I was singing before I was talking right. I mean I don't even come from a musical family, but it just always seemed so natural to me. You know I grew up and I had older brothers, four and six years older, so there was always music around, on the radio at breakfast as we ate our corn flakes, or American Bandstand. I still remember listening
Listening to the radio and the songs I would get you know like images of the story in my head, like reading a book and you imagine what's going on. I would see the music like that too, in my head while listening…
There's something that happens to me when I sing, (a slight hesitation as if he's unsure about talking about this, like how's this going to go over), this is going to sound weird right, but it's like I don't know where the voice comes from for different songs, but it's just there. I described this to a friend once and he said it sounds like voice shifting, where a masking spirit comes over people and sings through them…
That sounds like what happens to Native singers when they sit around the big drum and are playing. They sing in this high falsetto, that nobody can talk in, and that they sure don’t talk in…
Did you say native, like native American? Cause you know that I'm part native...
Which part? No, no, I mean which nation, sorry.
Iroquois, I'm part Iroquois, part Basque, a little of this and a little of that. I'm a real street dog.
Heinz 57
(laughs) Yeah right. I prefer street dog.
Did you ever hear any of that stuff Robbie Robertson did with Red Road Ensemble about, I don't know a dozen years ago… He's an Iroquois..
That's right he's from up around near you. Isn't he?
Yeah Grand River Six Nations reserve
There was this album he made with John Hammond that changed my life.
Robbie made an album with Hammond?
Yeah him and Ronnie Hawkins and the Hawks, Levon Helm, or Lee-von,( laughs) back in 1962, it was called So Many Roads It's still around on CD you've gotta to hear it, it's amazing.
So how did it all start for you; what was your first band, was it Mink DeVille?
Nah the first band was The Royal Pythons. Wanted it to be different from what everyone else was doing, electric this and strawberry that. But actually, you know I went over to London for a couple of years, real obvious American with my Pompadour hair, kicked around until my money ran out than came back here.
I had only been back a bit when a buddy called me up, and they were out west in San Francisco, he'd had to leave town cause he'd gotten in trouble with the cops, and he said I should come out there it was really amazing, he'd already met Lighting Hopkins' drummer. So I bought a 57 Chevy Van and drove out. 
I used to really like the work of Tom Waits back in the late seventies and early eighties, that sort of trash can jazzy/blues, and I was thinking there were similarities in your music, maybe not style, but intent.
Yeah? Maybe it's something about the band and how we work together; when we set up on stage it's not with the audience in mind, but so that we can see each other, and look around and have fun… if we're not having fun, nobody else is going to have fun are they. So we want to be in contact with each other all the time.
Tom's music is like that too, there's that quality of being really tight, but so tight that you're loose.
I want to tell you something about Tom. Back in 1980 I was banned in Boston. I had done something or other foolish, and this guy, a booking agent who if you pissed off could guarantee you'd never work Boston, said "Willy DeVille will never work Boston again." Well Tom was playing in Cambridge Mass. and we were traveling with him. Tom refused to go on, not only if we weren’t allowed to play, but also if we didn't get equal billing. He really put his balls to the wall for us. This agent guy was making this huge fuss about it, but Tom just said "Willy gets equal billing or I don't play." So they gave us equal billing.
Can you do me a favour, I want you to say thank you to Tom from me in what you're writing. I want that out there. A lot of people don't understand where Tom's coming from, with some of his stuff, but I think when you’re an artist you just aren't going to be satisfied with doing the same stuff over and over again. You want to do something new to surprise people with. Whether they like it or hate it…
One of the first teachers I had always talked about making people have an opinion, you don't want anybody being ambivalent about your work
You had a good teacher
The last thing you want to hear is that your work is "nice".
Yeah that's for sure. You know and that's what people have got to understand about anybody who's serious about this stuff, it may sound selfish, but we can't keep doing the same stuff over and over again. We need to keep trying different things.
The curse of originality
Yeah (laughs) I'm a singer/songwriter, and the front man, so I have to deal with all these different facets, taking the flak and so on. It's hard to keep the passion going sometimes, and if you can't keep changing it up, it would be damn near impossible.
Why did you leave New York for New Orleans
I was tired of being 'Willy DeVille'...

2ème Poste
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Thanks to Author: Richard Marcus
Published: May 15, 2006

January 20, 2011

bOING bOING #2 (1990 Zine!) PLUS CHRISTY LEIGH #1 (i went to alta-glamour)

CHRISTY LEIGH #1

November 1965

bOING bOING

1990 (zine) #2

 

”In the days before the Internet, I had my finger on the pulse of culture by collecting zines in the mail. This involved a lot of research in Factsheet Five and other directories, then sending out envelopes full of stamps and dollar bills and assorted bulldada for intriguing-sounding items; and then the waiting for days or weeks or months for the ordered items to appear in my post office box.


I saved many of these zines, and now have several huge boxes where they reside, obsessively bagged, carded, and alphabetized... with all their correspondence, too.

I don't know where bOING bOING number 1 got to, but I have all the rest of the print magazines, including this #2 with colored collage cover

essays by Antero Alli, Rudy Rucker (who continues to be featured on the boing boing website), and Paul di Filippo; comics by Ace Backwords and Dennis Worden (prolific zinester comix artists); and articles by Carla and Mark plus those great Frauenfelder title graphics.

bOING bOING #2 (1990 Zine!) PLUS CHRISTY LEIGH #1 (i went to alta-glamour) 

via alta-glamour.com

CHRISTY LEIGH #1 November 1965 bOING bOING 1990 (zine) #2   ”I n the days before the Internet, I had my finger on the pulse of culture by collecting zines in the mail. This involved a lot of research in Factsheet Five and other directories, then sending out envelopes full of stamps and dollar bills ...... Read MORE » on Dogmeat

January 17, 2011