If you've ever lived with a roommate, you've probably been in a situation where your musical tastes tend to cross-pollinate. It's a great learning experience, turning each other on to music you wouldn't ordinarily listen to, especially when there are shared reference points. Try multiplying that by nine roommates (and often times more), and you have a hard time soaking it all in..
For roughly a year and a half, I lived in a seven bedroom house, with what started as eight roommates. That varied wildly. With rent at $135 a bedroom, there were instances of up to four people splitting one room, and there were a lot of extended stays by couch crashers. It was a mob scene. The core group were people in and around the punk scene, but it really wasn't a "punk house". We were pretty smart kids, almost all had pre-punk histories with varied musical, artistic and literary interests. So, what to most of the punk scene seemed like a party house, was actually a melting pot of culture.
There were records, literally, everywhere in that house. There was one closet, between the kitchen and the living room, that had a pile of records just thrown in it, a couple feet high (some with covers, some without). Just about every room in the house had some sort of record player in it. (One friend told me his first impression of the house was a hanging out in the kitchen, while people ate mac and cheese with knives and Johnny Cash played on a portable record player on the sink...) Because the majority of the records were freely shared there was a lot of exploring going on, and it wasn't uncommon to have a roommate's interest in one of your records prompt a reevaluation.
The breadth of taste in the house was wide, and looking back, surprisingly good. And, more often than not, there would be music blasting simultaneously from different rooms. A trip through the house might bring snippets of the Clash, Eddie Cochran, U-Roy, Eno, Howlin' Wolf, Abba, Pete Seeger, the Injections, Kraftwerk, and the Stones. And it played constantly. Because there were so many roommates, with varying schedules and levels of employment (many had neither), there was always someone up and around. (In the time that I lived there there was not one minute in which everyone was asleep.) So, musically, you had the best of situations: a multi-room, 24/7 record party with thousands of titles, and an abundance of taste.
The house, without any prompting from the residents, got tagged by people in the scene as "the Mod House," despite the fact that there wasn't one mod who lived there. Thirty years later, there's still theories floating around about the source of the name (one is that it was because there was a lot of early Who, Kinks and Stones played), but, nevertheless, it stuck. Oh, did it stick. All anyone had to do was open their mouth and say "party at the Mod House" as they were exiting a show, and the house would become flooded with a hundred or so of our closest uninvited guests. This, of course, would sometimes lead to bad scenes involving fights, cops, bad raps and thoroughly pissed off neighbors (not to mention a few stragglers that would be "recovering from their hangovers" for days on end, without ever vacating the house).
There were quite a few musicians and wanna be musicians among the residents and visitors and, depending on what else was going on, there might be a band playing on the back porch, or in the basement (more like a storm cellar) that had been converted haphazardly as a "practice" room (when conditions were damp, it wasn't uncommon to get shocked if you weren't standing on something off of the floor). One roommate, through his reggae connections, offered up his room, a large converted patio, for a pre-tour rehearsal studio for Leroy Smart, a reggae artist whom most of us were familiar with due the Clash name-drop in "(White Man) In Hammersmith Palais." So, for roughly a week, we had a bona fide reggae icon (and/or his band) playing in our house. The same room was used for a no-bones recording studio, producing the backing tracks for two albums, one by A Doeman, and another by Mohamed I. (I have fond memories of falling asleep to the sound of thumping reggae bass lines seeping through the floor of my second floor bedroom.)
It's been thirty years since we moved into the house. My first memory is from right after we were handed the keys. Roommate Suzie, spinning around, arms outstretched, in the large empty living room exclaiming "I can't believe this is all ours!" My last memory is returning to the same living room through an unlocked and wide open front door, post eviction party. No one else was there and the house was eerily quiet. A bashed up acoustic guitar was sticking out of a hole in the wall (that it had been used to create), choice words were scrawled on walls, and shit was strewn everywhere, including, yes, many records.
Suffice it to say that living there has had lasting effects on my musical tastes and interpersonal relationships. As with any big household, the bad shit was magnified, but then again, so was the good. I'm just thankful to remember the good, and even more thankful that, in hindsight, I can laugh at the bad.
These songs are for Margaret, Suzie, Lisa, Kathleen, Lou, Bruce, Gary and Peter, all the later roommates, and, of course, our "guests." If someone would have told me that most of us would still be around, let alone some with families, I most assuredly would have asked for some of what they were smoking (and a generic beer or two to wash it down with).
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2/25/2010 NOTE: Due to a notice from Blogger, all links have been removed on this post. I do not yet know which was the offending link, but I know enough to play it safe until I have more details. Sorry for the inconvenience.
17 comments:
Oh that is nice Tom. In addition, I also remember a lot of ABBA. In reference to the inaccurate "Mod" label (I used to hear it referred to as "the clones house" a lot more often, although that is even less kind and just as untrue) I remember once playing The Last's record and Margaret coming down on me hard for "playing that mod crap". You very nicely defended the record and me. Thanks.
Fuck yeah, the Nolte's seemed like good guys. They coulda had a long rope with me, just for that. But I liked them as a band too, particularly live (LA Explosion doesn't sweat quite as much).
I just got the LA Explosion about a year ago. Finally. Couldn't remember where I first heard it, must have been yours. (I think I just had the first 45.)
Speaking of Abba, I was in the hospital after a spleenectomy (sp?) when Talking Heads and Abba were playing on the same night, so I didn't have to make a decision. I think I remember Margaret & Lisa going to both.
You are Boswell to a million Johnsons...
You are our Boswell to a thousand Johnsons
Okay, quadrakazillions...
Im sorry there werent video cameras ala, well dare I say it,MTV's Real World in that house.Mainly because it was such a crazy kaleidoscope I have hard time remebering it all.But there isnt a day that goes by that I dont think about that year.
If anyone has a time machine I'd like to borrow it so I can go back to that year and get back my albums Jim Woods stole and to give Lisa and Margaret a frowning of a lifetime for helping themselves to my pot.
cheers ....pete
Pete!
I did not!! I least I don't think I did! Lisa, do you remember that?
Tom! I have been looking for "rebop" for years! I am so happy to have that! See, Kathleen and I did have some fun in years gone by. Your collection of songs here is much appreciated. Thank you. Don't get mad if I mention Linton Kwesi Jones and Marianne Faithful's broken english!
Love you! This song list is a gift!
Magic Bus
Torso Corso! Yeah! Haven't heard that in a while. I have it here...somewhere.
Another song I remember hearing in that house is "the Letter" by the Box Tops (Lisa put it on that night, if memory serves.)
we were a lot of things but not thieves! well, okay, the local 7-11 and safeway probably wouldn't agree, but not from our housemates! i think. i hope. sorry if that's true pete, really.
i enjoyed the parties we 'planned' in which we had different music in every room-even a cassette player on the stairwell (mad marc rude listening to the doors there), a line of punk girls singing along to aretha's 'respect' in another room...
we did video tape a party once, secretly-from behind paris' bedroom doors (i think that was carl's doing) and the best thing that happened was pete von M looking right into the camera w/o knowing and fixing his hair in the glass. good times.
jacqui-hi! how the heck are you?!
lisa
Listen, relax L & M it's okay, I'm way over it. My tongue was in my cheek when I wrote that. You were squealed out many years later, but you know stool pidgeons ain't always reliable, so if it wasn't true, my apologies. At any rate it wasn't a thing then it ain't now. Jim Woods, now that's another story.Glad to know your still both around and wish you well.It was a great time
Hi Lisa! I'm fine. Hope you are too!
2 things I vividly remember seeing posted on the refrigerator at the Mod's house:
--Someone's hand-written lyrics to "Sittin' On THe Dock Of The Bay"
--A Christmas card from Marc and Cleo which said, "Thanks for having all those cool parties." It's funny, the things you remember.
I dig stuff like that Roger. Mental snapshots.
I really dig that prehistoric photo of the Dils I found through your Facebook profile. I still love those singles. I'm sure I will think up more slices o' life from the Mods' House. Funny, at the time I had the impression that you guys, and especially Kathleen, Margaret, et al, had lived there a lot longer.
I have to say that Lou Skum was the first to play Leoneard Cohen and The Velvet Underground for me, back when I lived w/ Terry, et al. They both seem like obvious touchstones now, but they weren't back when I was a kid, especially to the hordes of "Hardcore" dumbshits w/ their mohawks and all. I remember "Town Without Pity" being played a lot too, especially after every time the cops came.
"Speaking of ABBA," Boyd Rice went to ABBA (and lived to write about it), wheras I went to Talking Heads.
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