Punk Jones

skelskel You can't cheat karma 5,033 Posts
edited November 2008 in Strut Central

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  • MICK FO SHO!!b,121b,121The Clash is an all time fave and as a kid i did love B.A.D....well some of them!!

  • skelskel You can't cheat karma 5,033 Posts
    First BAD album was awesome, the rest.... not so.b, 21b,121Steve wins IMHO for the guitar sound on NMTB.b, 21b, 21For all that the Clash were way more prolific, nothing Mick did comes close to the way the Pistols' sound was shaped by those anthemic riffs.b, 21b, 21And in fact, I see SJ has a signature Gibbo:b, 21b, 21 img src="http://www.andybrauer.com/apix/Steve_Jones.jpg"1 b, 21b, 21 img src="http://www.andertons.co.uk/and_news_files/images/gibson-steve-jones-les-paul.jpg"1 b, 21b, 21 img src="/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/baller3ae.gif" alt="" 21

  • JimsterJimster Cruffiton.etsy.com 6,955 Posts
    Steve.b,121b,121Chancer pub-rocker dun good.b,121b,121Never pimped a dairy product in his life and never will.

  • skelskel You can't cheat karma 5,033 Posts
    By Dominique Vidalon

    LONDON (Reuters Life!) - As a young boy, Clash guitarist Mick Jones would chase his football idols all over London for autographs. Then he discovered music and dropped the autograph book but not his manic collecting.

    Over the years, the 53 year-old co-founder of one of Punk's biggest bands has amassed a mammoth collection of books, magazines, records, posters alongside artwork, recording gear, stage clothes and song lyrics from his time with The Clash and his other bands Big Audio Dynamite and Carbon/Silicon.

    Jones is finally showing this personal archive of popular culture at London's Chelsea Space gallery in an exhibit called the "Rock and Roll Public Library" that runs until April 18.

    "I started collecting things when I was very young and I did not really know why. Then at the Millennium, the change of the century, it started to become clear. I realized I wanted to share it," Jones told Reuters.

    "It's a fantastic collection people can take great pleasure from and also learn something," he added.

    Jones, who went to Hammersmith art school before co-founding The Clash in 1976, says he thinks of the collection as "one big living artwork" that he is still working on.

    Many of the items on display had been crammed into his west London recording studio for years and Jones would not guess how many pieces he owns.

    "I have kept everything, if it exists it's probably there somewhere," he jokes.

    FOOTBALL OR MUSIC?

    An only child, whose parents divorced when he was 8, Jones says he started collecting odds and ends as a way to create his own world. Football and later music became escapes for a boy left "with little parental control."

    "If you are like a young working class boy in London, you have to make a choice between sport or music. I made the choice for music," he says.

    The installation, which seeks to recreate Jones' recording studio and adjoining store room, offers a rare insight into the life, times and influences of the musician.

    Album covers dangling on threads from the ceiling like mobiles, books and films about Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash but also Frank Sinatra, The Beatles or The Rolling Stones testify of Jones's deep and obsessive love of music.

    As a teenager Jones recalls "bunking" fares to follow his favorite bands like Mott the Hoople or Rod Stewart and the Faces around the country or standing outside Mick Jagger's house in London trying to get a glimpse of an idol.

    "We used to stand outside like urchins. I was a stalker then. I never knew I would have my own stalkers one day."

    The late Johnny Thunders was a key influence. The New York Dolls guitarist was the reason why a young Jones can be seen donning platform shoes on some pictures taken in his pre-punk English Glam days.

    Many of the music magazines and fanzines on display have deep personal meaning. Jones recalls that his mother, who moved to America when he was a young boy, used to send him issues of "Creem" and "Rock Scene" magazines every month.

    Creem's star writer Lester Bangs wrote about the early New York punk scene and artists such as Patti Smith or The Ramones.

    "I was really up on that stuff while not many people here were. Bangs was one of their main writer. So it was such a joy to get to know him when he came to write about us," he recalls.

    Bangs wrote a famous article about The Clash in a 1977 review for the New Musical Express (NME).

    Also on display are Clash memorabilia such as the famous pink flight cases, plane tickets, access badges or a hastily scribbled note to Jones by Clash frontman, the late Joe Strummer.

    True to his punk ideals, Jones hopes the collection can one day become a permanent and freely available resource.

    "Ultimately I'd like to have a permanent place to exhibit the whole collection like a museum, like a library where you can come and see the stuff and maybe get a copy or sit there and read it. I also would like to bring artists there because it's history really," he says.

    Jones would not pick a favorite item among the whole collection but admits that his old footballer's autograph book is now "one of my most treasured possessions."

    "I have the whole England World Cup winning squad. The managers, the trainers, everything. That was 1966 when we won the World Cup. Biggest thing ever !"

    "The Rock and Roll Public Library"

    Chelsea Space

    16 John Islip Street

    London

    SW1P 4JU

    March 18-April 18



    more pix here

  • Birdman9Birdman9 5,417 Posts
    By Dominique Vidalon

    LONDON (Reuters Life!) - As a young boy, Clash guitarist Mick Jones would chase his football idols all over London for autographs. Then he discovered music and dropped the autograph book but not his manic collecting.

    Over the years, the 53 year-old co-founder of one of Punk's biggest bands has amassed a mammoth collection of books, magazines, records, posters alongside artwork, recording gear, stage clothes and song lyrics from his time with The Clash and his other bands Big Audio Dynamite and Carbon/Silicon.

    Jones is finally showing this personal archive of popular culture at London's Chelsea Space gallery in an exhibit called the "Rock and Roll Public Library" that runs until April 18.

    "I started collecting things when I was very young and I did not really know why. Then at the Millennium, the change of the century, it started to become clear. I realized I wanted to share it," Jones told Reuters.

    "It's a fantastic collection people can take great pleasure from and also learn something," he added.

    Jones, who went to Hammersmith art school before co-founding The Clash in 1976, says he thinks of the collection as "one big living artwork" that he is still working on.

    Many of the items on display had been crammed into his west London recording studio for years and Jones would not guess how many pieces he owns.

    "I have kept everything, if it exists it's probably there somewhere," he jokes.

    FOOTBALL OR MUSIC?

    An only child, whose parents divorced when he was 8, Jones says he started collecting odds and ends as a way to create his own world. Football and later music became escapes for a boy left "with little parental control."

    "If you are like a young working class boy in London, you have to make a choice between sport or music. I made the choice for music," he says.

    The installation, which seeks to recreate Jones' recording studio and adjoining store room, offers a rare insight into the life, times and influences of the musician.

    Album covers dangling on threads from the ceiling like mobiles, books and films about Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash but also Frank Sinatra, The Beatles or The Rolling Stones testify of Jones's deep and obsessive love of music.

    As a teenager Jones recalls "bunking" fares to follow his favorite bands like Mott the Hoople or Rod Stewart and the Faces around the country or standing outside Mick Jagger's house in London trying to get a glimpse of an idol.

    "We used to stand outside like urchins. I was a stalker then. I never knew I would have my own stalkers one day."

    The late Johnny Thunders was a key influence. The New York Dolls guitarist was the reason why a young Jones can be seen donning platform shoes on some pictures taken in his pre-punk English Glam days.

    Many of the music magazines and fanzines on display have deep personal meaning. Jones recalls that his mother, who moved to America when he was a young boy, used to send him issues of "Creem" and "Rock Scene" magazines every month.

    Creem's star writer Lester Bangs wrote about the early New York punk scene and artists such as Patti Smith or The Ramones.

    "I was really up on that stuff while not many people here were. Bangs was one of their main writer. So it was such a joy to get to know him when he came to write about us," he recalls.

    Bangs wrote a famous article about The Clash in a 1977 review for the New Musical Express (NME).

    Also on display are Clash memorabilia such as the famous pink flight cases, plane tickets, access badges or a hastily scribbled note to Jones by Clash frontman, the late Joe Strummer.

    True to his punk ideals, Jones hopes the collection can one day become a permanent and freely available resource.

    "Ultimately I'd like to have a permanent place to exhibit the whole collection like a museum, like a library where you can come and see the stuff and maybe get a copy or sit there and read it. I also would like to bring artists there because it's history really," he says.

    Jones would not pick a favorite item among the whole collection but admits that his old footballer's autograph book is now "one of my most treasured possessions."

    "I have the whole England World Cup winning squad. The managers, the trainers, everything. That was 1966 when we won the World Cup. Biggest thing ever !"

    "The Rock and Roll Public Library"

    Chelsea Space

    16 John Islip Street

    London

    SW1P 4JU

    March 18-April 18

    ONE OF US, ONE OF US, WE ACCEPT YOU, ONE OF US



    I still like Steve Jones better on some weird level, even though I would rather listen to The Clash than the Pistols. Something about him is just what-you-see-is-what-you-get.

  • skelskel You can't cheat karma 5,033 Posts
    ONE OF US, ONE OF US, WE ACCEPT YOU, ONE OF US

    Indeed.

    His collection is ill.

    Some of the ish I could in no way care for, but the hat is off for having the love and nerdery for keeping, archiving and then displaying this stuff.

  • JimsterJimster Cruffiton.etsy.com 6,955 Posts
    Do you think any of it will go walkies whist on display to the public / being transported by minimum wagers?

    That was the first thing that crossed my mind. You can take a lad out of Widnes...

    That's why they invented rubber chocolates for window displays, I heard.

  • skelskel You can't cheat karma 5,033 Posts
    I'll let you know if and when I get there.

    I have my eye on some early Manzel 45s and a mint John Lennon moptop puppet.

    Surely these won't be missed?
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