Max's Kansas City closed 25 years ago this night. Although
Hilly Kristal's CBGB's is
more iconic and perhaps better known today,
Mickey Ruskin's Max's Kansas City (and its infamous
back room) was every bit as important to fostering the
punk scene of the late 1970s and early 80s. Located a
213 Park Avenue South, just up the street from historic
Union Square, Max's played host to
the Heartbreakers,
Bruce Springsteen,
the Ramones,
Wayne/Jayne County and the Fast,
the New York Dolls, and quite a few others. What's standing there today? Why, the
213 Park Avenue South Deli, of course.
posted by psmealey
on Dec 31, 2007 -
26 comments
CBGB is closing at the end of the month. Yeah, newsfilter, NYCfilter, say what you will, and the club hasn't "mattered" in decades, but anyone who cares about punk rock will feel the pang. This should probably have been posted by jonmc, but I wanted to do it so I could highlight
this excellent piece by Paul Collins; besides the inevitable "I played CBs" anecdote, there's some wonderful history of the site. [Quote inside.]
posted by languagehat
on Oct 13, 2006 -
110 comments
The Ramones and the Talking heads to get rock and roll rocking chairs in Cleveland
The sparring, though, is as much a part of the Ramones' history as their baseball-bat-clutching American eagle logo. "They'd play for 40 minutes," recalls CBGB proprietor Hilly Kristal. "And 20 of them would just be the band yelling at each other." Danny Fields says that early on, they'd also come to blows after their sets. "Johnny would be strangling Dee Dee, and there'd be press or fans waiting to see them," he says. "I'd tell folks they were just toweling off, give them a couple of minutes, and by the time people saw them, they'd be sipping a beer."
posted by AsiaInsider
on Mar 12, 2002 -
18 comments