Big Money Hustler
Saturday, July 28, 2018
Thursday, July 26, 2018
Necrophilia Not Funny, Alice.
Monday, July 23, 2018
Punk Rock in Detroit (1976-1986) Presented by Third Man Records and Cranbrook Art Museum
C'mon down and hang for a bit and bat the fat–it could be wacky. It's free.
Where: Third Man Records441 W Canfield St, Detroit, MI 48201
When: Saturday, August 4, 2 p.m.
Friday, June 8, 2018
"Your body is not a temple; It's an amusement park. Enjoy the ride." -Anthony Bourdian 1956-2018
Bourdain visited Detroit in 2013 to shoot an episode of Parts Unknown and came away with a better appreciation and understanding of the Motor City than most:
Kick Out The JamsAnthony Bourdain, CNNThis is it. The last episode of our second season of "Parts Unknown."And I'm glad it's set in Detroit. Because Detroit, for many Americans, is an abstraction -- truly, if incredibly, a part unknown.One only need look at some of our representatives, who, a while back, were actually suggesting it might be OK to let the beleaguered auto industry fend for itself, to leave Detroit to its fate to see how blithely willing much of America would be to point the gun straight at their own heads and pull the trigger.Detroit isn't just a national treasure. It IS America. And wherever you may live, you wouldn't be there -- and wouldn't be who you are in the same way -- without Detroit.
Tuesday, June 5, 2018
Sunday, May 20, 2018
Happy 50th Birthday, Hot Wheels
From the original sweet sixteen to Sizzlers, and from the welt-inducing orange track to the iconic logo, we love you Hot Wheels. In celebration of your 50th anniversary, we've collected some of our favorite vintage Mattel Hot Wheels TV adverts for your viewing pleasure:
Fun Fact: The 1st Annual Hot Wheels Collectors Convention was held in Toledo, Ohio, in 1987 and returned at least four additional times in the ensuing decade. The 5th Annual Collectors convention was held in nearby Maumee, Ohio.
Friday, May 11, 2018
Jeep Wagoneer for 1966: Vigilante V-8 or High-Torque Six?
Saturday, May 5, 2018
Jamie Farr, Toledo's Favorite Son
Not content to simply sit back and enjoy the spoils of his success, Toledo native and solid gold superstar Jamie Farr, aka Jameel Farah, is leveraging his legacy with Klinger Kreations, a can't miss entry in the highly competitive celebrity condiment arena. Try some today!
*Art and concept courtesy of comedic genius and talented illustrator Cris Shapan.
Sunday, March 25, 2018
Toledo – The Fireworks Center of America
Oh Boy! THINK OF IT! World's Loudest.
FUN FACT: John Miller, of Toledo's Miller Fireworks Company, is largely credited with popularizing the M-80 as a civilian firework.
Wednesday, February 7, 2018
02.07.73 Raw Power Released, Life Made Tolerable.
Brutal, simple, and boogie-free, Raw Power forgoes melody instead relying on the visceral power of the guitar riff to drive the songs forward. Although hardly noticed when released in 1973, the album would serve as the "how to guide" for aspiring guitarists of the nascent punk scene. Without it, players such as Cheetah Chrome, Johnny Ramone, Steve Jones, and countless others would likely have never made it out of the basement. For that we are eternally grateful.
Produced by David Bowie, the original mix was polarizing. Several attempts have since been made to "improve" it, which at this point is a bit like trying to punch up the Ten Commandments for a more casual feel. But before the masters were committed to vinyl, a few early mixes were leaked to WABX, Detroit's premier FM rock station at the time. Listen here as Mark Parenteau and Dennis Frawley discuss and play the tracks during a live broadcast.
Sunday, January 28, 2018
John Lee Hooker in Frogtown: The Secret Session at Toledo's Sweeney Sound Engineering
Dig below the surface of Toledo's rich and diverse music history and you'll inevitably uncover vague references to John Lee Hooker recording at Toledo's Sweeney Sound Engineering. While the bluesman's affinity for the Toledo-adjacent Hines Farm blues club is well documented, the link between Hooker and Sweeney Sound is far more tenuous.
Hooker's notoriously cavalier attitude regarding the signing of and adhering to binding contracts makes verification difficult, but Sheldon Brown, son of Detroit Based Fortune Records founder Jack Brown, has long maintained that John Lee Hooker’s first recording session was actually conducted under his father’s supervision at Toledo’s Sweeney Sound Engineering.
The session, which reportedly produced the tracks “Miss Sadie Mae: Curl my Baby's Hair” and “609 Boogie,” went unreleased at the time. Additionally, David A Carson confirms the session in his exhaustive Grit, Noise, and Revolution: The Birth of Detroit Rock 'n' Roll. This is significant as historians have for years generally credited Hooker's late 1948 recording of "Boogie Chillen" at United Sound Systems in Detroit as his first session. These claims instead indicate that Hooker's first session was, in fact, in Toledo.
Information detailing the history of Sweeney Sound Engineering is similarly hazy, a lazy google search turning up a 1950 recording of Fred Harris & his Uptown Band. Ripped from the 1980 release, Vintage Toledo Blues 1950-1980 (TRH Records #8001), Fred Harris--not to be confused with the legendary Canadian TV host of the same name--apparently went on to form Fred Harris' Red Tops who recorded this jam in the studio at Toledo's WTOD radio station in 1957.
Linkapalooza:
The Bull- Fred Harris' Red Tops Organ Trio- New Song
Remembering Hines Farm, a legendary African-American mecca for the blues
Hines Farm Movie
Sunday, September 3, 2017
Sunday, July 2, 2017
Found! #2: Giant "I Drink Your Blood" Silk Screen and Vintage Hand Crafted Rad Boyz Longboard Protoype.
necros, maumee, rad boyz, rad boys, skates, skateboarding, horror movies, screenprinting, screenprint