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October 18, 2011

RockScenester.com


rockscene_logo

Welcome to RockScenester, my complete and completely
free online archive of Rock Scene magazine (1973-1982)


The first issue of Rock Scene magazine hit the stands before I'd blown out a single birthday candle. Thirty something years later, I still hadn't thumbed through an issue. A long overdue introduction finally got underway thanks to a deep dig through a delightfully jam-packed Los Angeles garage. Being far more interested in punk fanzines than commercial rock mags, I probably would've ignored Rock Scene had the Ramones not graced a couple covers. What elevated Rock Scene above other 70's rock rags (Hit Parader, Creem, Circus) was their wholehearted embrace of punk in its earliest formations. Every issue was packed full of non-stop photography from the likes of Richard Creamer, Bob Gruen, Leee Black Childers, Roberta Bayley and Stephanie Chernikowski. Truth be told though, it was the appearances by ridiculously obscure groups (O. Rex, Max Load, Freestone, Zolar X) in the "New Bands" section that really hooked me all these years later. Mix in a serious childhood KISS obsession, and my collecting of Rock Scene issues quickly reached fever pitch. I had to have 'em all!

RockScenester is an extreme labor of love. The amount of time I've spent putting the site together should become obvious once you've flipped through a few issues below. My hope is that RockScenester will serve as a resource for fans and collectors and people looking for new ways to procrastinate or plunge work productivity to new lows. I figure now is also a fine time to introduce Rock Scene to a whole new crowd and to give the "remember when" crowd another ride on the wayback machine while I'm at it. The accolades garnered by my Star magazine site earlier this year definitely inspired me to saddle up and tackle this one, an undertaking literally ten times the scale: 54 issues! Every single issue from 1973 through 1982 has been scanned cover to cover and made available here. Out-of-pocket expenses for creating RockScenester ran nearly $1500, dwarfing the not-insignificant outlay for Star1973. Soliciting donations or accepting advertising or even making the site subscription-based all seemed like reasonable propositions. Still, I've managed to avoid such pitfalls with all my other sites so starting now seemed like a drag. Having said that... if you wanna support this and future endeavors, why not do a little shopping over at Ryebread Rodeo where, among other things, you can find Rock Scene back issues. Feel the original artifacts' electricity buzzing through your fingertips!

If you can dig it (I knew that you could), please show some appreciation by hyping RockScenester elsewhere online. Facebook, Twitter and Google widgets can be found below. If you really wanna show some love, kick some referrals my way! I'm a rabid collector of 70's and early 80's punk rock records, fliers, fanzines and photos. If you know someone selling their collection, please send 'em to my want list page and encourage 'em to e-mail me. I'm also after all things Rock Scene related... original shirts, decals, stationery, whatever.

And finally a few THANKS are in order. Thanks to my friend Allison for spending hours meticulously recreating the the original hand-drawn Rock Scene logo. Thanks to Minnie at CSS Bakery for the elegant grid coding below. A particularly big thanks to Jacqueline for helping this johnny-come-lately complete his Rock Scene collection in record time. Richard Robinson... Lisa Robinson... I'd love to hear from y'all sometime!

Ryan Richardson
Austin, Texas
8.13.2011


A post-script about the watermarked pages... sometimes extracting a li'l common courtesy online can be difficult. Some web denizens don't even bother tipping their hats — not so much as a link — to sources of copied content and so watermarks become necessary. Hell, I even discovered one dirtbag selling CD-R's on eBay comprised entirely of images downloaded from my paperback sites! Don't get me wrong, I'm down with re-blogging and sharing. I just want a little credit for my efforts. And in a PS to the PS, I'd like to emphasize that my Rock Scene archive has absolutely zero association with the later hair metal rag of the same name and has nothing to do with its unholy rockscene.com reincarnation.


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Welcome to RockScenester, my complete and completely free online archive of Rock Scene magazine (1973-1982) The first issue of Rock Scene magazine hit the stands before I'd blown out a single birthday candle. Thirty something years later, I still hadn't thumbed through an issue. A long overdue intro ...»See Ya

star1973.com

I've decided to ring in the 2011 New Year with my own misguided version of public service: an online archive of a scandalous and short-lived 70's teen magazine! The first issue of Star hit the stands in February 1973. With its over-the-top advice and irreverent coverage of LA's teenage groupie scene, it wasn't long before Petersen Publishing was feeling the heat from "concerned citizens". Five issues and five months later, publication ceased. A sixth issue was planned but never printed. Such controversy along with coverage of "new breed" Sunset Strip groupies (Shray Mecham, Sable Starr, Lori Lightning, Queenie Glam) and glam venues like Rodney Bingenheimer's English Disco cemented the mag's later cult status among fans and collectors.

After spending endless hours and a sizeable cash stack to secure all five original issues, there was only one illogical step left: do it all over again by making every page of this impossibly rare groupie mag available online. Actually, the website idea was the very thing that induced a former Star staffer — the only one among several I tracked down who'd actually kept any issues — to sell the mags. My quest was veering toward hopeless so a big thanks to Judy Shane for making this happen. I promised a website and here it is... in record time, too!

This is the most recent and elaborate of several just-for-fun, archival sites I've created over the past decade. A complete list can be found over here. I don't accept advertising or other means of offsetting the costs of creating and hosting the sites. I will, however gladly accept referrals to collections. Know someone selling their records, fliers, fanzines or photos? Please send 'em to my want list page and encourage 'em to e-mail me. I am, of course, very interested in original Star issues and all related ephemera! My thanks to Lisa Fancher for hipping me to the mag.

Dig star1973.com? Please show some appreciation by hyping it elsewhere online! Google +1, Facebook and Twitter widgets can be found at the bottom of this page.

— Ryan Richardson



A post-script about the watermarked pages... sometimes extracting even a wee bit of online civility can be difficult. Some web denizens don't bother handing out a speck o' credit — not so much as a link — to sources of copied content. Hell, I even discovered one dirtbag selling CD-R's on eBay comprised entirely of images downloaded from my paperback sites! In a better world, the watermarks wouldn't be necessary. Don't get me wrong, I'm down with re-blogging and sharing. I just want a li'l credit for the time and money I've put into the site.

I've decided to ring in the 2011 New Year with my own misguided version of public service: an online archive of a scandalous and short-lived 70's teen magazine! The first issue of Star hit the stands in February 1973. With its over-the-top advice and irreverent coverage of LA's teenage groupie scene ...»See Ya

Rock Scenes and Blogger bloggers are the biggest assholes!

MAGAZINE REVIEW! ROCK SCENE, JULY 1975 ISSUE (still only 75 cents!)

You can tell that I'm scraping the bottom of the proverbial trashcan of seventies kultur by reviewing yet another newsstand wrap, but as Mussolini once said, eh! I mean that little bitta pertinent factoid's certainly TRUE, but once you get down to the bare facts why should anyone lose any sweat over it! Given that this is a blog that's devoted to exposing the nitty gritty of the best high energy exponents of the fifties, sixties, seventies and even beyond, why not spend some time discussing these artyfacts of past accomplishment especially since they blow away (calm down Dave!) all of the laurel-resting and general antipathy towards the rock ideal that have been going on ever since the jaded seventies gave way to the Mickey Mouse eighties.

I've blabbed on and on about the overall attitude and style of ROCK SCENE in past reviews...do a search for my previous opines since I'm to lazy to link any up myself, but for now let's talk about this particular July '75 ish which naturally displays the same sense of wonderment that was custom made for not only the ugly low-IQ remedial farting kids too cubed out to even belong to the Audio-Visual Club, but those like myself who wanted to rise above all that!

None other than Dame Elton John's on the cover which only goes to remind you not only just how long that particular buttwipe has been in the public eye, but how he was being used to push magazines to unaware teenbos who probably actually thought he was hetero back then. Here John's all dolled up as the Pinball Wizard which also goes to remind one of that big TOMMY push that was going on in '75, a year that in many ways coulda been the worst of times if you hadda rely on radio, friends and family to tell you what was "good for you", but WONDERFUL if you had developed a mind of your own and were willing to grab a piece of that big juicy glorious universe for your very own. (Hmmmm, even I'm impressed with that, and I should be since I swiped that line from Nick Tosches!)

Of course Ken Russell's film gets the royal treatment and you can always ignore that if your own personal constitution is lacking a preamble, but for me I always go for the juicy underbelly of it all first and leave the scraps for you lower menials. First place I go is Lenny Kaye aka "Doc Rock"'s column where those very same blobs of unbridled fat cells that I mentioned in the previous paragrah get to ask the Patti Smith guitarist questions about groups that I'm sure Kaye never gave the time of day to outside of his column! Naturally it's all fun, big-guy-mingles-with-the-hoi-polloi stuff, with smart questions like "Whatever happ'd to the Modern Lovers album?" being followed by groupie wannabes asking where they could write to Uriah Heap! Sure shows you what kind of a chasm existed between the good and the bad during those days of snide.

Also on my hotcha list is Wayne County's advice column which is a hoot in itself as Mr. County answers queries (no pun intended) sent in by fat suburban kids of "questionable" gender inquiring about everything from the right kind of eyeliner and rouge to use to their strange fascination with the new gym teacher. Somehow I think that no psychiatrists, clergymen, teachers or experts of any kind were consulted in the crafting of the advice given since County's remarks certainly don't jibe with the kind that Ann and Abby would dish out! But eh, once you boil down to it County sure makes a lot more sense than that Dr. Bryan guy who used to do "Into Your Head" for CIRCUS around the same nanosecond.

So what else is there besides the pictures? Marc Zakarin does a column regarding the import releases of the day telling of what new albums are not going to arrive at your local disc emporium unless you happen to live in Paris, while JAMZ/ROCK MARKETPLACE/NEW YORK ROCKER's very own Alan Betrock had his own column regarding collecting those black slabs o' disc, this time talking about such esoterica that used to really confuse the bejabbers outta me like non-LP b-sides! Donald Lyons does the moom pitcher column (not so hot this time unless you have a thing for Hollywood flotsam like THE WAY WE WERE) while none other than Lance Loud gives his impressions on...Black Oak Arkansas!

But hey, I still like ROCK SCENE for that cliched myriad assortment pix I'm always talking about, and there are plenty of 'em from the fruity (Elton hamming it up with Neil Sedaka and Monti Rock III acting beautiful because he finally got his hit record) to the hard-edged (Aerosmith trying to be the Dolls, the Dolls trying to be communists!). Keeping with the commercial aims of this magazine there are tons of snaps of the guys in Led Zep and their manager Peter Grant trying to act human and all, but even those make for passing fun while you're getting to some of the more attuned to this blog matter at hand. The page on the Television/Mumps show at CBGB was pretty good for a couple of reasons, first being that I didn't know that there was a different awning on the club before the more famous one was put up shortly after, plus I gotta give Keith Moon credit for hanging out there (with Cyrinda Fox!) long before it became the new hotcha "to-be-seen" place to be photographed not only in the pages of ROCK SCENE but elsewhere!

The "New Bands" section is always educational because you sometimes get to see a few photos of some of those under-the-cover groups who used to play CBGB and Max's but never went anywhere (other'n perhaps a member or two to a newer, more successful outfit). This time Tuff Darts, the Harlots of 42nd Street (the second go 'round for 'em and I'm not even mentioning all of the group spinoffs to come!) and Rags get the publicity amidst the usual bunch of groups already well-known (Rush) or trying to make it big even though they're from Podunk Illinois that get slapped into this section, and hey it's always fun to look at these long-haired hippie types slapping on some makeup so they could pass for glam innovators in their local burghs! Makes a great Halloween costume if you ask me.

Who could also forget all of those ads for corny iron-ons to glitter, horoscopes and miniature posters that used to appear not only here but in "sister" magazine HIT PARADER! I'll say one thing, the advertisers for this mag really had their target audience down pat if they thought clueless 14-year-olds were willing to sell greeting cards door-to-door!

And of course there are tons of photos of Alice, Brian, Rod, David and Andy, but that's not really why kids bought up issues of ROCK SCENE is it? OK maybe so, but ya gotta give Richard and Lisa Robinson as well as Lenny Kaye and Cyrinda Fox credit for warping more than a few innocent minds out there with all of that cool decadent stuff, eh?

MAGAZINE REVIEW! ROCK SCENE, JULY 1975 ISSUE ( still only 75 cents!) You can tell that I'm scraping the bottom of the proverbial trashcan of seventies kultur by reviewing yet another newsstand wrap, but as Mussolini once said, eh! I mean that little bitta pertinent factoid's certainly TRUE , but onc ...»See Ya

Favorite Vicious Mug

Jerry Lee Lewis is DOGMEAT Fan WOW!

Facebook Team has removed your video! - YouTube

SEX PISTOLS: JUBILEE BOAT TRIP(COMPLET) + 'Dangerous MINE...'

SEX PISTOLS JUBILEE BOAT TRIP COMPLETE: 1977...good day when i found this gem!

and also , fuck youin advance, Dangerous Minds , especially, nonspecializing sleazy new age pot-smoking hippie asshole, marc campbell, and sleazier enabling boss, sprocket"--whose only saving grace is that it is the greediest spammiest most subtly overadvertised, widgetized and inaccesabilized, faux-hipster site on the net, which means, i rarely have to see (except just now--which means i have to go back and see if they stole/plagiarized/unattributed one of my 15 cocksucker blues posts--on the Internet...really, i could give a fuck, but what kind of lowlife would stalk one guy's posts to the 24-hour humiliation soundtrack i've been playing from my bullhorns in order to turn the ugliest man in history and his now culpable unethical, uninterested blogowner into the most plagiarizing entity since that chick from Harvard...
Preview
Ransome
Marshgirl
Oono_
Pixlr_effect_bluehair
Punky_hash

 

fuck you in advance

SEX PISTOLS: JUBILEE: (BOAT TRIP: COMPLETE: 1977)

  • plus mrjyn saying fuck you in advance dangermindsblog especially sleazy asshole and his sleazier boss mark campbell and sprocket mrjyn saying fuck you in advance dangermindsblog especially sleazy asshole and his sleazier boss mark campbell and sprocket
  • Door: Mrjyn [Nu online!]
  • Find him on Twtter fidgety!
  • Twitter

    Sex Pistols and Malc re. Jubilee Boat Tour used mrjyn's Dogmeat

     

    ...as part of a service to protect users from boring inactivity, and to provide value for the last original postmortem as a quality signal for surfacing relevant, interesting vids and po's--

    and most of all, reminding everyone that, "If you've seen it on 'Dangerous Minds', it's probably been stolen from Dogmeat (if it's signed, 'Marc Campbell', IT DEFINITELY HAS!" .

    Back to mrjyn 123video.nl
    © 2011 Twitter
    this should almost be there
    SEX PISTOLS JUBILEE BOAT TRIP COMPLETE: 1977 good day when i found this gem! fuck you in advance Dangerous Minds , nonspecializing sleazy new age pot-smoking hippie asshole, marc campbell, and sleazier enabling boss, sprocket"> fuck you in advance SEX PISTOLS: JUBILEE: (BOAT TRIP: COMPLETE: 1977) pl...
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    SEX PISTOLS JUBILEE BOAT TRIP COMPLETE: 1977 good day when i found this gem! fuck you in advance @dangermindsblog http://www.123video.nl/playvideos.asp?MovieID=144136
    Muziek & Entertainment - SEX PISTOLS: JUBILEE: (BOAT TRIP: COMPLETE: 1977) - Video site waar je gratis video 's en filmpjes kan plaatsen, bekijken en delen met anderen
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    OH, it was a good day when i found this gem! if you don't believe what i say, here's the only online version of the complete sex pistols jubilee boat trip! love ya, ma...i just realized your boyfriend said his first 'ever get the feeling' RIGHT HERE! HISTORY IN THE UK
    Muziek & Entertainment - SEX PISTOLS: JUBILEE: (BOAT TRIP: COMPLETE: 1977) - Video site waar je gratis video 's en filmpjes kan plaatsen, bekijken en delen met anderen
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      • Doug Maet i heard about the brats...priscilla presley told me you meet really cool guys in baden baden
        5 minutes ago · Like
      • Angie O Genesis It is a whole other world.
        4 minutes ago · Like
    Muziek & Entertainment - SEX PISTOLS: JUBILEE: (BOAT TRIP: COMPLETE: 1977) - Video site waar je gratis video 's en filmpjes kan plaatsen, bekijken en delen met anderen
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    Humor & Komedie - Cindy & Bert: "Der Hund Von Baskerville" (german: Black Sabbath "Paranoid" COVER 1969/70 ) - Video site waar je gratis video 's en filmpjes kan plaatsen, bekijken en delen met anderen
    Like · ·

    Angie O Genesis charming.56 minutes ago · Like

    SEX PISTOLS JUBILEE BOAT TRIP COMPLETE: 1977...good day when i found this gem! and also , fuck you in advance, Dangerous Minds , especially, nonspecializing sleazy new age pot-smoking hippie asshole, marc campbell, and sleazier enabling boss, sprocket"--whose only saving grace is that it is the gree ...»See Ya

    October 17, 2011

    CSS Listamatic: Back to the Future! (when it wasn't obnoxious)

    Can you take a simple list and use different Cascading Style Sheets to create radically different list options? The Listamatic shows the power of CSS when applied to one simple list.

    Vertical lists

    Horizontal lists

    Experimental lists

    Links to other lists

    Information about the lists

    List Auto-Generators

    Can you take a simple list and use different Cascading Style Sheets to create radically different list options? The Listamatic shows the power of CSS when applied to one simple list. Vertical lists Simple list Simple list with square bullets Simple list with circle bullets Using images for bullets U ...»See Ya

    Which Browser Has Your Back? That Would Be Firefox

    Which Browser Has Your Back? That Would Be Firefox

    Hard on the heels of recent reports that Google's Chrome browser may overtake Firefox by year's end, Mozilla on Monday released its annual “State of Mozilla” report including rosy financial results and a discussion of its efforts moving forward.

    firefoxRevenues for 2010 were up more than 18 percent to $123.2 million, Mozilla reported, thanks largely to increased royalties from search deals with Google, Microsoft, Yahoo and others, as Computerworld has already pointed out.

    That's clearly good news for Mozilla projects including open source Firefox and Thunderbird, but also included in the report is an acknowledgment of the increased challenges Mozilla now faces in the form of increasingly closed and proprietary competitors.

    'We Are Seeing the Web Fragmenting'

    The advent of mobile computing and proliferation of devices is making the Web increasingly customizable for users, but it also presents significant challenges, wrote Mozilla Foundation chair Mitchell Baker in a blog post introducing the report.

    “Mobile platforms are more closed and more centralized than we have seen in decades,” she said. “As individuals, we are losing the ability to act on the Web without permission from large, centralized gatekeepers. We are all being tracked, logged, cataloged, monetized, and turned into products to be sold. We’re seeing the universal platform of the Web fragmenting back into multiple different worlds.”

    That, in turn, is causing changes at Mozilla as well, Baker said. Most notably, while it will continue to focus on Firefox, it will also put a fresh emphasis on expanding the number of people who understand its core values.

    The video below, also included in the report, outlines some of those values.

    'The Overall Good of the Web'

    In fact, I think those values, and Mozilla's openness and independence in general, are too often overlooked.

    In the browser arena, there tends to be a near-obsessive focus on every step the browser makers take, including--particularly in Mozilla's case--every discussion that goes on. Case in point: Mozilla's stated plan from last week to step up its efforts to get Firefox 3.6 users to upgrade, which was then postponed a few days later.

    That's something we're only seeing because Mozilla is open, as I've noted before. You can bet similar debates and changes in plans take place among the teams of the other browsers as well, but we never see them because they take place behind closed doors.

    Meanwhile, as a nonprofit, Mozilla notes that it's the only leading browser maker to be free of corporate interests. Instead, it makes Firefox “to provide an independent offering focused solely on individual experience and the overall good of the Web,” it says.

    I'm certainly not saying Firefox is perfect, or that nonprofits can't still pursue their own kind of self-interest. Particularly in the case of browsers, though, where the other big competitors are revenue-driven, the difference in Mozilla's mission has to set it apart. Which would you rather have guiding your Web experience--a company that must necessarily view you as a means to its own profitability, or an organization whose explicit goal is to improve life online?

    Which Browser Has Your Back? That Would Be Firefox By Katherine Noyes , PCWorld Hard on the heels of recent reports that Google's Chrome browser may overtake Firefox by year's end, Mozilla on Monday released its annual “ State of Mozilla ” report including rosy financial results and a discussion of ...»See Ya