Today's random #Discogs choice Side By Side RSD2015 7". Two live versions of Sheena Is A Punk Rocker, one by The Ramones and one by Hüsker Dü. This was a secret 7" on the day and I took a chance and was pleasantly surprised.
#nowplaying #music #theramones #HüskerDü

Ted Tocks Covers

The Top Three Posts for April and much more.

Enjoy some quality music from Dave Mason, Joe Cocker, Jimi Hendrix, The Rolling Stones, George Harrison, Jackson Browne, the Allman Brothers Band, Prince, Meat Loaf, John Prine and The Ramones plus a whole lot more.

Have a grateful day!

#davemason #joecocker #jimihendrix #therollingstones #georgeharrison #jacksonbrowne #allmanbrothersband #Prince #meatloaf #johnprine #theramones

https://tedtockscovers.wordpress.com/2026/05/01/top-three-posts-for-april-and-a-whole-lot-more-musicislife-tedtockscovers/

Top Three Posts for April and a Whole Lot More. #MusicisLife #TedTocksCovers

Hey Ted Tocks Readers! Welcome to my monthly check in. This feature marks either the end of my first 100 months of Ted Tocks Covers or the dawn of the next group of postings that will see me reach …

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That night I danced with Debbie Harry.

*(Sigh!)* The 21st May 1977 – a night I will never really forget.

I was nineteen years old. I’d left school just nine months earlier and my life revolved around athletics, playing football, music and The White Elephant Discotheque in Glasgow’s Sauchiehall Street.

My taste in music was ever expanding. It still is. Almost fifty years later and I’m still discovering new genres that excite me. But in ’77, my staple of Glam Rock, Blues Rock, Southern Rock and just plain ol’ Heavy Rock was about to be usurped by a brash, snot-filled, despised and anti-social noise.

‘Punk Rock’ had entered the British psyche in 1976, of course, with The Sex Pistols’ controversial arrival on the scene. However, the cult of Punk was still pretty much in its infancy, with The Pistols having only released one single, ‘Anarchy in the UK’ by May of the following year. It wasn’t until the end of that month (May 1977) that they really made their mark with ‘God Save The Queen’ being released to coincide with The Queen’s Silver Jubilee celebrations.

The Stranglers had released ‘(Get a) Grip (on Yourself)’ a few months earlier and The Clash, another emerging band of that ilk, released their debut album in April of that year. The whole punk ethos of DIY music was starting to make its mark and bands like The Buzzcocks and The Damned (first single released in October 1976) were gaining traction.

Not in Glasgow, though. Following the notoriety of their television interview with Bill Grundy, The Sex Pistols scheduled show at The Apollo in December 1976 was ‘pulled’ by the local council who perceived Punk rock not as a music scene, but an anti-social threat.

An effective ‘ban,’ lasting the best part of twelve months, became effective in preventing many such shows from within the city boundaries. (It wasn’t a formal ‘ban’ as such – it’s just the council blackmailed venues with the threat of losing their licence, should they host such raucous, violent purveyors of noise.)

Looking to break into the UK market, were a group of bands from USA, mainly New York, whose music, though ‘different’ from that of their UK counterparts, were still classed as ‘punk.’

But where could they play if they rocked up in Glasgow? Well, the Student Unions had a bit of autonomy from the City Council, and so when it was announced that The Ramones wanted to come and put on a show to promote their second album, ‘Leave Home,’ Strathclyde University offered its Union hall.

I didn’t go to University. But my mate Derek did. He went to Strathclyde University. Result!

I badgered him to get his hands on a couple of tickets, so he could sign me in as a guest on the night of the show.

And so it was, we met up that evening, had a good few beers at our favourite city centre pub, The MacIntosh Bar and walked /staggered round to the Student Union. Of course, once in, we headed straight for the bar, where a pint was a fraction of the price in the pubs.

Say no more.

The Ramones were an iconic underground band in May 1977. They were promoting their second album, but the song that arguably defines them, ‘Sheena is a Punk Rocker’ was still a week or two away from a UK release. Fans in their homeland would have to wait a further two months.

They were still considered very niche.

https://youtu.be/qqCcpZ_LzXM?si=NXQMNPFjjg_wrFxt

And they were not the only New York based band on the bill that night. Talking Heads were co-headliners. They took to the stage before The Ramones, and though it is most likely there were other bands on before them, I have no recollection – the beers were starting to hit home by this time!

I have to say, though I enjoy their sound nowadays, I was not impressed with David Byrne and the band on the night. I distinctly recall both Derek and I looking at each other … and deciding there was time for yet another lager in the bar before The Ramones took the stage.

When they did, we headed down to the front, right by the stage. It wasn’t a big venue, and estimates of the crowd I’ve seen on the internet range from one hundred to three hundred. I do remember there being big gaps on the audience floor, so I’m sure it wasn’t a complete sell-out.

Anyway, Derek and I were more used to shows at The Apollo, (Rory Gallagher, Sensational Alex Harvey Band, Jethro Tull, Man, Lynyrd Skynyrd etc) where any ‘over enthusiastic’ behaviour was instantly snuffed out by equally over-zealous, over-weight bouncers, whose reputations, like their bellies, went before them.

It was all pretty crazy! People pogoing frantically, crashing into each other, beer being spilt / thrown – all sort of shenanigans. Great fun.

It was then I danced with Debbie Harry.

Yes, she was there that night also, supporting her leather-jacket clad friends from Queens.

You see, the New York punk scene had transported itself to Glasgow that weekend. A band named Blondie were due to open for Television the following evening at The Apollo. Blondie were still nine months away from their first UK chart entry. Even in New York they were still very much regarded as cult heroes. So I guess they managed to avoid the ban due to their relative obscurity, and the headliners being considered more ‘art rock’ than ‘punk.

A famous picture taken by Graham Scott from the short-lived Glasgow punk band, The Exile shows Debbie on that very night.

Debbie Harry was there that night. Defo.
I was there that night. Defo.
There was a small crowd in a small, intimate gig venue. Defo.
Everyone was crashing into each other. Defo.
Everyone danced with each other. Defo.
Therefore, quite conceivably, very possibly, I perhaps danced with Debbie Harry.

Look – in the same way I can claim to have lived down the road from Dire Straits guitarist, Mark Knopfler (he moved away as a young lad just before the two-year old me moved in to the street with my parents) I can claim to have danced with Debbie Harry.

*(Sigh!)* The 21st May 1977 – sadly, a night I’ll never completely remember! 🤣

https://youtu.be/ahGxiSV_LH0?si=lWBEqU3Uhc3ZRZ0y

#Blondie #DailyBlog #DebbieHarry #humor #humour #Music #NYPunkScene #NYC #Punk #punkRock #Queens #rock #StrathclydeUniversity #TalkingHeads #TheRamones #Writing

hey gimme some time
i wanna be serrated
just 24 hours!

#TheRamones
🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘

#Haiku #Poetry #Writing #WritingCommunity #PoetryCommunity
#MastoPrompt
#Serrated
@stevencudahy

EVERETT TRUE – Hey! Ho! Let’s Go! The Story of the Ramones

RELEASE YEAR: 2026BAND URL: https://omnibuspress.com/products/hey-ho-lets-go-the-st0ry-of-the-ramones?srsltid=AfmBOop-OBwnFd-WxDMgsGKZPCGxPIUdLtnY2SPVSRjLK4NUQf37u6R0 Few bands are as influential and important as the Ramones are in wider musical and cultural context, and their classic and much-loved song material remains as fresh-sounding and innovative now as it did when it first blared out of the speakers in 1976. Spreading from the New York underground scene like wildfire, their anthems […]

https://eternal-terror.com/2026/04/27/everett-true-hey-ho-lets-go-the-story-of-the-ramones/

#TheRamones #RoadToRuin #PunkRock The Ramones - Road To Ruin (Full Album)” / “The Ramones - Road To Ruin (Full Album)” (1 user) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xXc_vogsWJA
The Ramones - Road To Ruin (Full Album)

YouTube
PJ Soles in “Rock ‘n’ Roll High School” (1979)
#TCMParty #RockNRollHighSchool #PJSoles #punk #TheRamones
Posters for “Rock ‘n’ Roll High School” (1979) from The USA and Japan
#TCMParty #RockNRollHighSchool #punk #TheRamones

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Blitzkrieg Bop

Originally posted on April 23, 2023

Hey, ho! Let’s go! The Ramones released their debut album 50 years ago this week.

“They’re forming in a straight line
They’re going through a tight wind
The kids are losing their minds
The Blitzkrieg Bop”

#theramones #BayCityRollers #rufusthomas #therollingstones #greenday #hanoirocks #themisfits #joestrummerandthemescaleros #robzombie #foofighters  #LeoMoracchioli

https://tedtockscovers.wordpress.com/2023/04/23/blitzkrieg-bop-hey-ho-lets-go-musicislife-tedtockscovers-theramones-baycityrollers-rufusthomastherollingstones-greenday-hanoirocks-themisfits-joestrummerandthemescaleros/

Blitzkrieg Bop – Hey ho, let’s go! #MusicisLife #TedTocksCovers #TheRamones #BayCityRollers RufusThomas#TheRollingStones #GreenDay #HanoiRocks #TheMisfits #JoeStrummerandtheMescaleros #RobZombie #FooFighters #LeoMoracchioli

Influence in music is everywhere. This punk rock anthem was inspired by a boy band. Hey ho! Let’s go! We can spend a ‘Saturday Night’ with The Ramones. When the Ramones wrote ‘Blitzkrieg Bop’ their…

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