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In love with Janie Jones: The Clash and the bad girl who inspired one of their greatest songs
09.13.2010
01:45 am
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Janie Jones was a sixties pop celebrity who went from the clubs of swinging London to a jail cell in 1973. Janie had fleeting success as a singer, releasing several singles, including a novelty hit called ‘Witches Brew”, and performing in nightclubs on bills with David Frost and Peter Cook. But she was mostly known for her uninhibited sexuality and ‘fuck you’ attitude toward the stodgy and hypocritical British establishment. She hung out with actors, politicians and rock stars, including Marc Bolan, Tom Jones and Dusty Springfield. But her biggest claim to fame was when she was arrested and imprisoned for running a prostitution ring. Her high rolling friends were shocked at what was considered a harsh sentence for something as benign as arranging “dates’ for some of London’s most famous hipsters. This was the sixties after all, the era of free love. It was as if she were being punished for the behavior of an entire generation. Janie’s bust made her an instant cause celebre and the fodder for countless tabloid headlines.

When sentencing Janie Jones to seven years in prison in 1973 after she’d faced charges for vice and corruption, Judge King-Hamilton called her one of the most evil women he’d ever sentenced. Janie first hit the headlines in August 1964 when she appeared topless at a premier. A friend of hers, film producer Michael Klinger, had his new production ‘London in The Raw’ opening at the Jacey Cinema in Piccadilly. Topless dresses had proven to be something of a sensation in Paris and Klinger asked her if she would turn up at the films premier in a topless dress. She was known by her real name Marion Mitchell then and was accompanied by one of her sisters, Valerie. The two arrived in a Rolls Royce, stepped out of the car and let their wraps fall to their elbows, putting up a bold front for the photographers. “One must keep abreast of the times,” she said.

After Janie was released from prison in 1977, she became a punk icon when The Clash immortalized her in the song “Janie Jones.” She developed a close friendship with Joe Strummer, who supposedly idolized her, and Joe wrote a song for her called “House Of The Ju-Ju Queen.”  Along with the rest of The Clash and members of Ian Dury’s band, Joe went into the studio and recorded the tune with Janie doing the vocals. Joe paid for the session. Due to contractual reasons, the record was released with the band credited as The Lash.

Punk stars like Joe Strummer had also known what it’s like to have been vilified by the press. But Jones has nothing but admiration for the man whom she now claims, gave me back my dignity as an artist. As a display of her continued affection for the ex-Clash frontman, in 1992 she asked her good friend (and songwriter of some repute) Tony Waddington to translate her feelings into song. Two days later, he’d written ‘A Letter To Joe’ for me. I just seem to inspire songwriters, she says.

In the video that follows, The Clash perform ‘Janie Jones” in 1977 and Janie sings “House Of The Ju Ju Queen” and “Letter To Joe.” While The Clash’s song is a classic, neither of Janie’s songs are particularly memorable, though “Letter To Joe” is heartfelt and tender, but as pop culture artifacts they’re rock history. Joe Strummer’s muse: Janie Jones… who, by the way, is still very much alive.
 

 
“Witches Brew” after the jump…

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Posted by Marc Campbell
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09.13.2010
01:45 am
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‘My Hippie Aunt’: Dionysian LSD lovefest from 1970
09.12.2010
03:41 am
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“Search For Love” sung by Dimitri Tambossis in a scene from the Greek film I Theia Mou I Hipissa (My Hippie Aunt), 1970. This looks like a production number from Hair if Bob Fosse had choreographed it instead of Twyla Tharp.

Dimitri Tambossis went on to front Aphrodite’s Child with keyboard player Vangelis.

There’s a short but fascinating piece on Dimitri at Julian Cope’s Head Heritage website.

Posted by Marc Campbell
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09.12.2010
03:41 am
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The grooviest Greek rock and roll video from 1967 you’ll ever see
09.10.2010
04:02 am
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This scene from 1967 Greek film Nyxta Gamou is one of the grooviest things I’ve ever seen. The rattle snake funk riff, the white guy who sounds like Otis Redding, the Black chick who sounds like Dolly Parton, the dude who looks like Elvis Costello, the guitar playing beatnik, the go-go dancers, the….it’s all just plain fucking dynamite.

 

Posted by Marc Campbell
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09.10.2010
04:02 am
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Legendary Mersey beat poets and rockers: The Liverpool Scene, 1967
09.10.2010
01:17 am
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The Liverpool Scene was a confluence of poets and musicians who recorded four albums in the late 1960’s. Founded in 1967 by poet Adrian Henri and musicians Mike Evans, Percy Jones, Mike Hart, Andy Roberts and Brian Dodson, The Liverpool Scene tore down the walls between so-called high art (literature) and pop art (rock and roll). The group was championed by John Peel and received a lot of airplay on pirate radio station Radio London and Peel’s weekly radio show in Germany. But despite Peel’s support, The Liverpool Scene’s records were not big sellers and a tour of the United States was a financial bust. They did thrive on the British college and club circuit and garnered the respect and friendship of Allen Ginsberg, John Lennon and Paul McCartney. After several years of struggling to find an audience with only modest results, the group disbanded in 1970.

Adrian Henri continued to write poetry, as well as paint, until his death in 2000.

Fans of Zappa, The Fugs, Ian Dury and Beefheart will no doubt dig these clips from British TV, 1969. Adrian Henri’s satirical, edgy poetry and the band’s avant-rock and jazzy trippiness keeps the group from veering into hippie dippyness.

Ladies and gents, the amazing Liverpool Scene.
 

 
More of the Scene after the jump…

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Posted by Marc Campbell
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09.10.2010
01:17 am
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Fantastic Fest 2010: USA’s biggest genre film festival and Dangerous Minds will be there
09.09.2010
07:05 pm
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This year I’ll be attending Fantastic Fest in Austin as a reviewer/reporter/spy for Dangerous Minds. The festival which runs from September 23 thru the 30th is the largest genre film festival in the US. I plan to keep DM readers up-to-date on the latest in sci-fi, fantasy and horror films, including interviews with filmmakers and cast members.

Gallants is one of the films getting alot of pre-fest buzz. It looks like crazy fun.

Loser office boy, Cheung (Wong Yue-nam), is banished to one of Hong Kong’s rural backwaters to help greedy property developers kick a bunch of old timers out of a run down tea house. But this teahouse used to be a martial arts studio and its owners, Dragon (Chen Kuan-tai) and Tiger (Bruce Leung), are trying to keep the lights on until Master Law (Teddy Robin), wakes up from his 30-year coma and tells them what to do again.

Chen Kuan-tai was Shaw Brother’s most iconic leading man in the 70’s and Bruce Leung started his career as a Bruce Lee imitator before becoming a celebrated martial artist (he played “The Beast” in Stephen Chow’s KUNG FU HUSTLE). Teddy Robin is only four feet tall, but he’s a producer, an actor and the man who invented Chinese rock n’roll, even writing and performing the music for this film. Real-life gangster-turned-actor, Chan Wai-man plays the evil Master Poon; Lo Meng (aka Turbo Law) was one of the Five Deadly Venoms; and Susan Shaw, playing Dr. Fun, was a softcore sexpot back in the day. And with decades of experience behind them, these old pros own the screen.

 

Posted by Marc Campbell
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09.09.2010
07:05 pm
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I Read Some Marx (And I Liked It)
09.09.2010
04:01 pm
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Katy Perry really should record this.

Via Planet Paul

Posted by Richard Metzger
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09.09.2010
04:01 pm
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Christian rap version of ‘Baby Got Back’
09.08.2010
10:44 pm
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Behold the berserk cluelessness of “Baby Got Book,” a super lame, not in the least funny or clever, Christian rap ditty set to the tune of Sir Mix-A-Lot’s “Baby Got Back.”

Isn’t that special?

Via American Jesus

 

Posted by Richard Metzger
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09.08.2010
10:44 pm
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‘The Room’: Surreally bad cult movie now a video game!
09.07.2010
05:58 pm
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Holy shit, there is a videogame about Tommy Wiseau’s mind-destoying trash cinma favorite, The Room.

Play it over at Buzzfeed.
 

Posted by Richard Metzger
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09.07.2010
05:58 pm
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Honey Lantree: Skin Goddess
09.07.2010
03:35 am
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Absolutely gorgeous high definition video of The Honeycombs doing their Joe Meek produced hit “Have I The Right.” Honey Lantree on drums. Nuff said.
 
Previously on Dangerous Minds: The Incredibly Strange Life Of Rock and Roll Alchemist Joe Meek.

 

Posted by Marc Campbell
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09.07.2010
03:35 am
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‘Maybe Tomorrow’: The Iveys’ 1969 album and the genesis of Badfinger
09.04.2010
05:29 pm
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In 1969 Apple Records released Maybe Tomorrow by The Iveys, a band that was poised to be the next big thing.

Although the album was scheduled to be released worldwide, the release in the U.S. and the U.K. at that time was halted without explanation. Many reasons for halting the album have been suggested by the band and Apple employees, but the most common theory in that Apple’s newly-hired president, Allen Klein, stopped all non-Beatle releases on Apple until he could examine the company’s finances, which were in disarray at the time.

Dismayed by the failure of their first album to get a proper release and the general consensus among band members that the name The Iveys was a bit too twee, the group changed their name to Badfinger and later re-released most of the songs from Maybe Tomorrow on Badfinger’s Magic Christian Music.

The song “Maybe Tomorrow” is a decent little pop tune. “Tube Train” is a standout raver with a distinct Who vibe. A lost gem.

Maybe Tomorrow was released on CD in 2004 but has gone out of print. It’s available at a price here.
 

 
“Tube Train” after the jump…

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Posted by Marc Campbell
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09.04.2010
05:29 pm
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