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RIP: Johnny Ramone

the_Baron

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With Johnny's passing yesterday, three of the four bandmembers are in rock & roll heaven.


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Johnny Ramone, guitarist and co-founder of the seminal punk band "The Ramones" that influenced a generation of rockers, has died. He was 55.

Ramone, who had been fighting a five-year battle with prostate cancer, died in his sleep Wednesday afternoon at his Los Angeles home surrounded by friends and family, said the band's longtime artistic director Arturo Vega.

"He was the guy with a strategy. He was the guy who not only looked after the band's interest but he also was their defender," Vega said in a telephone interview from New York.

Ramone, whose birth name is John Cummings, had been hospitalized in June at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.

Johnny Ramone was one of the original members of the struggling Ramones, whose hit songs "I wanna be sedated" and "Blitzkrieg Bop," among others, earned them an induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2002.

Johnny Ramone co-founded "The Ramones" in 1974 in New York along with singer Joey Ramone, bassist DeeDee Ramone and drummer Tommy Ramone, who is the only surviving member of the original band. All four band members had different last names, but took the common name Ramone.

Joey Ramone, whose real name is Jeff Hyman, died in 2001 of lymphatic cancer. Dee Dee Ramone, whose real name is Douglas Colvin, died from a drug overdose in 2002.

Clad in leather jackets and long black mops of hair, the group started out in legendary New York clubs like CBGB and Max's Kansas City, where they blasted their rapid-fire songs.

Since its debut album in 1976, the band struggled for commercial success, but they left a formidable imprint on the rock genre. Though they never had a Top 40 song, the Ramones influenced scores of followers, including bands such as Green Day and Nirvana.

Even Bruce Springsteen (news) was moved. After seeing the Ramones in Asbury Park, N.J., Springsteen wrote "Hungry Heart" for the band. His manager, however, swayed him to keep the song for himself and it became a hit single.

The band had encounters with other big names, including producer Phil Spector, who collaborated with the band in 1980. During the session, the late bassist Dee Dee Ramone said Spector pulled a gun on the band.

"The Ramones had it rough," said Vega, who's worked with the band for 30 years. "The band almost had to be protected from people who were taking advantage of them. There was never any money made."

Johnny Ramone changed that by demanding more money for performances, but still kept a close watch on the band's budget; Vega recalled how Johnny Ramone would insist that the band drive nonstop between Boston and New York for shows instead of spending the night in a hotel.

In addition to his financial conservatism, the guitarist was politically conservative — the late Ronald Reagan (news - web sites) was Ramone's favorite president, Vega said.

Fans have remained loyal to the Ramones, and the Ramones over the years have been loyal to their fans. In 1979, while shooting scenes for the film "Rock 'n' Roll High School," the Ramones — ignoring the director's order — played a concert-length session for fans who had paid to be extras, Vega said.

"The Ramones never ever lost their image, their aura of being the ultimate underdog, the voice of the angry young man," Vega said.

A tribute concert and cancer research fund-raiser was held Sunday in Los Angeles to celebrate the band's 30th anniversary. It featured performances from Los Angeles punk band X, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Henry Rollins (news) and others.

Along with his wife, Linda Cummings, Johnny Ramone was surrounded at his death by friends, including Pearl Jam rocker Eddie Vedder (news), singer Rob Zombie and others. Other friends who gathered at his Los Angeles home included Lisa Marie Presley (news), Pete Yorn (news), Vincent Gallo (news) and Talia Shire.

He is survived by his wife and his mother, Estelle Cummings. He will be cremated during a private ceremony.
 
I knew it was going to happen but to read about it here instead of yesterday's paper... play a Ramones' song in his memory.
 
OMG~how sucky!

"Sedated" is IMHO, one of the best songs EVER! I actually saw these guys perform at ZooMass (UMass)😉 when I was in high school~they were so much fun!

XOXO
 
steph said:
OMG~how sucky!

"Sedated" is IMHO, one of the best songs EVER! I actually saw these guys perform at ZooMass (UMass)😉 when I was in high school~they were so much fun!

XOXO

Man, I love that song as well. I saw them when I was in college with David Johansen and that show rocked to the nth degree.

Maybe the people upstairs need a good concert or something.

Steph, how about the song (Do you remember)Rock and Roll Radio?
 
I have to admit I didn't know that none of the Ramones were really brothers. In fact, a lot of my old friends used to like the Ramones and they didn't know that either.

I remember watching "Rock n'Rock High School" when they played it for a month on The Movie Channel. I must have watched that dumb thing over 10 times. It's one of those movies that you know is dumb, but you like it anyway. PJ Soles really was something in those days. A bit of r trivia from R&RHS is that the band in that film was orginally going to be Cheap Trick. Cheap Trick declined for reasons that made no sense.

Anyway, my favorite Ramones song was "Tonight," which they performed in R&RHS. RIP Johnny Ramone.
 
I used to hang around east village clubs in nyc in the 80s and once met Joey Ramone for a second hangin out at the bar and though I was never a big fan of their music he smiled and said hello when I went to to say hi to him. The guy was well over 6 foot and stuck out like crazy with that buster brown haircut leather jacket and trademark sunglasses.
 
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