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"Good evening. Hey. Ho. Let's go. Y'know, if it weren't for Johnny
Ramone, I would have come here not knowing who Brenda Lee was. But that's
part of the story you'll get in a bit. And yeah, I do have a Mohawk. No, I
didn't get it to pose up here as a punk rocker for this exalted occasion.
It actually stems from my frustration with world events and bombings and
things like that. I took it out on my own hair. Sometimes you feel
powerless and you do sometimes silly things.
"Two days after it was done, I walked in a shop to buy Christmas
gifts back in November and I was accused of shoplifting. So even though
the Ramones are being inducted into the Hall of Fame, it doesn't mean punk
rockers, or looking like a punk rocker, has become respectable.
"The Ramones didn't need Mohawks to be punk. They never had one. I
don't think anyone in the band ever had one. They were visually
aggressive. They were four working class construction worker delinquents
from Forest Hills, Queens, who were armed with two-minute songs that they
rattled off like machine-gun fire. It was enough to change the earth's
revolution, or at least the music of the time. It was an assault. Someone
asked Johnny Ramone once why the songs were so short. He said, "They're
actually fairly long songs played very, very quickly."
"First time I saw the Ramones I was pretty young. Before the show
even started, I was trying to get closer and closer and got up to the
stage. I got up there packed and ready and even a little bit nervous. The
crowd was intense, the look of the crowd. Outcasts one and all. They were
hardcore punkers with spikes on their jackets, chains on their boots.
Skinheads, horror film fans, nerds and geeks and outcasts, they were all
ready to get out all of their aggression in the next hour and 15 minutes.
As I was getting closer I saw something really strange about the
microphone stand in the middle. It was about ten feet high. There was
something really strange about that. I saw a roadie put the set list down.
He stood up and he was half the size of the microphone stand. I thought,
"Who the fuck is going to sing at that microphone stand?" It was
very unsettling. Then looking at the amount of amps that they had
symmetrically placed at either side, and knowing that there was a huge
amount of volume that was going to come out of that, it was very
unsettling. Then the lights go out and they start playing "The Good,
the Bad and the Ugly." The crowd starts getting into third and fourth
gear. Then they come out. One two three four! Into the first song. All
hell broke loose. It was complete chaos. The guy with the boots and the
chains ... all of a sudden they were right in front of your face swinging
by. It was terribly frightening and totally blissful at the same time.
"I think of the amount of intensity in that show and in that one
night, and then I think of how many times that happened. The Ramones
played 2269 shows. J.Lo's got a lot of catching up to do!
"Speaking of J.Lo, disco was huge in the '70s. Disco took over the
clubs and the airwaves, along with the indulgent guitar solos and
seven-minute songs that was the musical landscape of 1976. The Ramones
made a record in 1977. There's a black and white photo of four guys in
leather jackets all with the same last name, Converse shoes and jeans
standing against a brick wall. This became a beacon for anyone who ever
wanted to be in a band, those disenfranchised by the dynasties of giant
rock bands.
"They obliterated the mystique of what it was to play in a band. You
didn't have to know scales. With the knowledge of two-bar chords, you
could play along with their records. That's what people did. They sat in
front of their parents' hi-fis and played along with Road to Ruin or It's
Alive. Within weeks, they were starting bands with other kids in town who
were doing the same thing.
"You could be on stage, getting it out, saying what you feel, singing
about sniffing glue and not be a virtuoso or genetically gifted with
Elvis' cheekbones, either. You could look like an outcast and still be
cool. Talking Heads were the same thing in a different way. [Applause.]
It's a big night.
"The Ramones were a blueprint, a blueprint so necessary at the time.
That fact alone is so important for everything that came after. Thurston
Moore from Sonic Youth was saying that he can't think of a band or a
musician these days where the Ramones weren't a very important part of
their life. John McBain, a great musician from Seattle that I know, said
something - and I think he spoke for the whole Seattle community when he
said, "The Ramones were our Beatles."
"Going back to that time at CBGB and the New York scene, Patti Smith
said it was a reclamation of rock 'n' roll, but we created it and we're
gonna take it back. Let's take it over. [Applause. Ed drinks wine.] I'm up
here for a bit ... I need to ... It may have to happen again, because
Thurston and I were talking, and now it's Disney kids singing songs
written by old men and being marketed to six and seven year olds. So some
kind of change might have to happen again soon. But that's a whole 'nother
thing.
"After the initial surge of the late '70s, commercially the Ramones
were never embraced. Bands around them were, but never them. Virtually
ignored by radio, '80s MTV and even other artists, they never stopped and
regardless have a following worldwide that's as devoted as ever.
"I went with them once to South America. There was 50,000 people.
Riots for tickets. People screaming outside. It was the reaction I always
thought they deserved.
"When punk finally broke in '91, the Ramones still weren't brought
along for the ride, even though the bands Nirvana, Rancid, and Green Day
wouldn't have existed without them. Punk bands' first or second records
now sell ten times the amount of records the Ramones did throughout their
career of 20-something records. That's why I go over to Johnny Ramone's
house and do yard work three times a week, just to absolve some of the
guilt. A bunch of people do it. Bono and Edge do their windows. Kirk
Hammett, the guitarist from Metallica, he dusts, house cleans, makes
French toast ... that's a true story. Even Kurt Cobain wanted to be as
good as the Ramones. The list is endless. Turn page.
"They never had a top ten hit. You know it's crazy when Phil Spector
produces your record and you still don't have a top ten record. But it's
really circumstantial. It doesn't alter the fact that they were one of the
most important bands in rock 'n' roll. They accomplished a lot for a punk
band. Most of the others, like the Sex Pistols, crashed and burned. Most
punk bands pretty much crashed and burned. In the Sex Pistols case, thank
you Malcolm McLaren for being an ego-driven fool or fuck for the
non-edited version of this VH1 televised event.
"They existed for 22 years with the same level of intensity the whole
time. They may not have gotten along the whole time, but that was touring
for 22 years in a van for fuck's sake, so you have to understand ... it's
a highly respectable thing to travel in a van and not go up to a tour bus,
not get your separate planes because you don't get along with the other
guys in your van. It's torturously insane to stay in a van for eight years,
but they did it. Even after Dee Dee left the band - and he was such a huge
part of the band - he still wrote songs for them, which I think speaks to
the brotherhood they had, an intense brotherhood of sorts.
"After Dee Dee left, there were some intense Converse shoes to fill.
The guy who did it, his name was C.J. For whatever reason, the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame chose not to include him with those being inducted. It's
a Hall of Fame thing, I wouldn't understand. But he played 800-something
shows, he participated in three or four records, wrote a lot of songs and
really importantly, he was accepted by the hardcore Ramones fans. The
Ramones kept playing and were able to play for another generation because
of C.J. C.J.'s been working 12-hour days cleaning pollution out of the air
ducts down around the World Trade Center. He's here tonight. He might not
get up here, but I was going to ask him to stand up and be recognized.
C.J. Ramone! [Applause.]
"I'll mention that Johnny Ramone's been an extremely great friend.
His wife and he have been such great friends to me and taught me a lot
about music I was too young to see. Going back to the Brenda Lee comment,
and Gene Pitney ... I was introduced to them by John. He's been a tutor of
sorts. The guy saw Hendrix and was sitting down. The whole crowd was
sitting down. He saw the Who open for the Doors. He himself has more
information than probably the institution to which he's being inducted
into tonight.
"Okay, at this point I've spoken long enough. We're going to hear
three or four Ramones songs. And after this, I'm sure the evening will
move quickly. But it's the Ramones and it's punk rock and I'm just about
finished and I hope you're okay with that. Apparently you're not. Fuck
you. Take it easy, Eddie. All right.
"The last thing I was going to say was about when the Ramones'
manager Gary Kurfirst first talked to me. He said there was a night back
in December of the year 2000. He got a phone call from Joey Ramone. Joey
had had an accident in front of his apartment. He slipped and fell on some
ice. I guess he was just lying there for a bit, tangled up. He ended up
breaking his hip. He wasn't getting any help. People were just walking by,
either side of him. He was pretty upset by it. At the end, I guess he
called Gary and he said, "The worst thing about it was that no one
would help me. I was down and nobody would help me."
"Maybe they didn't know it was Joey Ramone. He was tangled in black
hair and they thought he was a bum or whatever. But in a way, it's only
mentioned because it's analogous to the Ramones' career. It's hard. Then
obviously Joey died on Easter of 2001, less than a year ago. I'm sure he
would have loved to be here tonight.
"The only reason I mention that is that's why tonight's really
important and special. Because I'm sure there's a number of bands and
people who never get to be up here and never get to be brought up before
all you people and applauded. I thought that would probably happen with
the Ramones. Something very unusual is happening here tonight, and that is
that this industry is paying some respect to the Ramones. So with the
power invested in me, I'd like to induct Joey, Johnny, Dee Dee, Tommy,
Marky, CJ, which we've talked about. The Ramones.
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