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Gil Ray



Last Updated: 3/29/2009

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Status: Married
City: ALBANY
State: California
Country: US
Signup Date: 3/16/2006

Who Gives Kudos:


Sunday, November 16, 2008 
 
 Before Jamie introduced me to the first records by the Sex Pistols, Devo, Talking Heads and Elvis Costello, Wynn and I were both having a blast being married and working at New World Records. We were making new friends, getting tons of records, partying hard and occasionally going to the few rock shows Charlotte had to offer. By the late 70's, most major bands skipped Charlotte, opting to play in D.C. and Atlanta. We did see some shows, and while most were pretty lame; Heart, Firefall, Boston, Gino Vannelli, Kenny Loggins (!) - (funny...there's a couple of those shows I wished I had paid a bit more attention to!), one concert that definitely stood out was Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band at the Charlotte Coliseum.

I still don't know how or why, but the owner of New World Records actually knew Springsteen and Clarence Clemons. While we were 2 very small independent record stores, we would usually get Springsteen's latest LP's before the big record chains would ( Record Bar and Grapevine). The owner loved that! We were special! We were so special, we all got free tickets when Bruce came to town. Everything we had heard about his legendary concerts was true. 3+ hours of high intensity rock and roll. One of the best shows I have ever seen. And we had great seats! For free!

But things were changing in the music world. Frankly, things had been changing for some time, but Charlotte was very slow to catch on to just about anything as far as the cultural arts and trends were concerned (including liquor by the drink!). At work, we started getting in tons of new records from the early days of punk and new wave. Initially, I thought the bands all looked like freaks and couldn't play their instruments - it was a knee-jerk reaction but I wanted nothing to do with such noisy sounding rubbish.

At this point I had been playing drums for about 13 years. I had played in many different bands with many different styles, and I worked hard to become a pretty good drummer - even made a living at it. It just pissed me off that these new snotty-nosed punks were making records, getting press and making statements that the bloated dinosaur-rock of the 70's was now over. Anyone could be in a band regardless of talent as long as you possessed a bad attitude and had spiky hair. That caused a huge disconnect with me. Damn amateurs! Learn to play your instruments, and then maybe.... I'll give you a listen.

But then it clicked. Once Jamie got me to actually sit down and listen to these records, it quickly connected. I was as late to the party as Charlotte was, but there it was! Aside from the cosmetic aesthetics, punk wasn't that far removed from the rebellious aspects of being a hippie freak; stand out, look weird, screw the Man, and bring on the Now. Ironically, both movements had no problem at all in plundering the past for inspiration, either. They took what they found appealing and incorporated it into something new and (hopefully) original. In the early days of hippie psychedelic bands, many San Francisco bands based their clothing design on the American Victorian age (Charlatans, Dan Hicks etc..). Punks seemed to go with a 50's biker look, but with crazy hair, and while most biker types did not favor the crazy colors the punk rockers seemed to enjoy, I bet the grease was somewhat similar...

The difference? Not much, really. But musically, the hippies seemed to expand earlier rock conventions with a no holds barred experimentation, long flowing jams, free love and....body odor, while the early punk rockers went back to more simple and basic chord progressions, adding rawness, buzzsaw tempos, spitefulness, pessimism and....spitting.

Since I was still stubbornly trying to retain at least some of my progressive-rock tastes, I was surprised that it wasn't too much of a stretch to enjoy the more angular styles of New Wave. It should also be noted that in time, some of my prog rock heroes ended up embracing and being involved in this new music - Eno (Devo, Talking Heads), Robert Fripp (Blondie, Talking Heads and his side-group The League oF Gentleman which featured Barry Andrews (XTC) and Sara Lee(Gang Of 4)). Even Ray Shulman of Gentle Giant eventually got into the act with production chores on The Sugarcubes first album!

While the photos I had seen of Devo actually gave me the creeps, once I heard Jocko Homo I was locked in. The rhythmic play between their odd drum beats, bizarre instruments and decidedly warped view of life was hard to resist. Are We Not Men? I'm not sure! They actually frightened the hell out of me. Job well done!

Elvis Costello also looked scary to me, but the Attractions were and still are one of the best bands in the world. Excellent musicians, and one of the greatest drummers I had ever heard. They sported a great look (white socks!), and seemed genuinely pissed off. The song writing wasn't too shabby, either.

Talking Heads also had sort of a prog-rock feel to them. Art damaged and clever. Not quite as scary looking as the other bands, but I found plenty of scary things in David Byrne's vocals, and since I was just a few years from my disco days, I found much appreciation in their wonderfully danceable beats, but without the cheese of a mirrored disco ball hanging from the ceiling (unless of course there was some irony in the house!)

XTC were another band not too far removed from progressive rock. The speed and tightness that they poured into their very angular style (esp. the first 2 LP's) appealed to me greatly. Herky jerky dislocation performed at warp speed. Pretty funny lyrics, too.

The first Sex Pistol's LP was an entirely different style that took me a bit longer to get in to, but ultimately I was floored by the power and tightness the band displayed. Of course I had no idea that they had a bunch of studio ringers brought in to play, but I think that's irrelevant. It blew the doors off of my world and I was gone! We all were and we embraced it with all of our hearts.

Everything was changing; our music, clothing, hair and perhaps most importantly, our attitude about culture and politics. We also found ourselves quickly wrapped up into a relatively hardcore lifestyle of sex, drugs and rock and roll. Can't really have one without the other, right? They were dangerous times, but it was also some of the most absolutely insane fun I have ever had. Glad that most of us are still here.
Doug Gillard

 
Great blog, Gil . I can remember first seeing Kraftwerk's "Man Machine" cover when I was 11 or so, and being so scared I put it back and went to another section of Camelot Music. (Probably the B's where I could always look at that naked lady on Be Bop Deluxe's "Sunburst Finish" ! The Blind Faith naked chick was too freaky and young)
I had a fear of mannequins to begin with, and this cover was too weird for me. Of course within a few years I'd be wearing the same lp out and doing my own cover of "The Model" on guitar. Ever hear Love Tractor's "Neon Lights"? That's a good'n too !

DG
 
Posted by Doug Gillard on Sunday, November 16, 2008 - 9:51 PM
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Gil Ray

 
Thanks Doug! We're gettin' to the good stuff! Mannequins and plastic hair can kiss my ass. Freaks me out.... "Neon Lights" is a gorgeous song! Best thing they ever did.
Gil
 
Posted by Gil Ray on Thursday, November 20, 2008 - 3:55 AM
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Mark

 
Good installment, my friend. I was weened on New Wave. It's what made me get excited about music.
 
Posted by Mark on Sunday, November 16, 2008 - 11:06 PM
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Gil Ray

 
Hi Mark! I got weened on new wave, too...but I was a bit older...better late than never, right???
Gil
 
Posted by Gil Ray on Thursday, November 20, 2008 - 3:57 AM
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Tim Lee 3

 
Hey Gil,

Growing up in Mississippi, my experiences were a good bit like yours, except I was probably a bit quicker to jump on the weird music bandwagon, just out of being contrary, not necessarily visionary.

I'm old enough to remember being 13 or 14 and seeing the cover of "Raw Power" on display in Miller's Department Store and thinking to myself that things were probably never gonna be the after something that bizarre-looking had been unleashed on the public. Although I probably didn't hear that record until a few years later when you could only find it as an import (at the time of my first exposure, if I had any money at all, I probably bought a Uriah Heep LP), once I did, I realized I was probably right.

I also worried about the day that I'd be old enough to have my own band, because I figured it would be impossible to come up with a name. I mean, Blue Oyster Cult had already been used, that had to mean that there were many names left in the pool.

Hope we cross paths again some day ...

Tim
 
Posted by Tim Lee 3 on Sunday, November 30, 2008 - 3:23 PM
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Gil Ray

 
Great to hear from you, Tim! I think The Windbreakers name trumps BOC any old day...I would very much enjoy a crossing of the paths...someday I hope to be back in the South. Need catfish and hush puppies.
Gil
 
Posted by Gil Ray on Tuesday, December 02, 2008 - 4:42 AM
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Brian

 
Hey Gil: sorry, but I'm gonna have to source you on your Sex Pistols comment. Where did you hear that studio 'ringers' were brought in to play? My understanding, based on listening to hours of Steve Jones' radio show here in LA [including not only interview segments with Chris Thomas, the album's producer...but with Chris Spedding, one of the alleged contributors to the album-Spedding did NOT play on NMTB, he produced their demos pre-NMTB], is that it's all Lydon, Steve Jones, Paul Cook & Glen Matlock (tho Jonesy apparently played most of the bass parts). Do tell...I'm curious. Brian :-) P.s. your blogs rock! (No pun intended.)
 
Posted by Brian on Thursday, December 04, 2008 - 6:26 AM
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Gil Ray

 
You are correct, Brian. I've been had!
 
Posted by Gil Ray on Saturday, December 06, 2008 - 7:36 PM
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