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Saturday, November 10, 2012
Donations For Norton Records
Your help is still desperately needed here at Norton HQ to assist in our recovery from the destruction of Norton’s Red Hook warehouse at the hands of Hurricane Sandy. There are more records that can be saved, but we are still racing the clock to salvage them before they dry. If you want to help with Norton Records salvaging effort at our office in Prospect Heights (Brooklyn, NY), please contact us ASAP at nortonrec@aol.com with VOLUNTEER in the subject line or call 917 671-7185 (Billy) or 718 789-4438 (office). We will reply with info.
Please alert NY friends. We have had a great deal of help but we can use much more!!
Thanks
The Norton staff
Donate Here!
Posted by Debbie D at 5:17 PM 2 comments
Labels: Debbie D, Norton Records
Stompin' Riff Raffs On Fool's Paradise Today
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Photo by Adrian Jones |
Archive
Posted by Debbie D at 8:28 AM 0 comments
Labels: Debbie D, Fool's Paradise With Rex, Stompin' Riff Raffs
Friday, November 9, 2012
Ichiban in Exile!
WFMU's Rock & Soul Ichiban stream was badly injured by Hurricane Sandy, leaving its live programming orphaned for the time being while Debbie D and Dr. Filth keep the stream running with duct tape and elbow grease from their respective homes in New York City and Asheville, North Carolina. Today from Noon to 3 PM, Ichiban's beloved sister stream, Give The Drummer Radio, hosts Ichiban refugee Matt Fiveash for a special three-hour show with co-host GTDR star Amanda Nazario of Nazario Scenario fame. Matt's Singles Going Steady week show got flooded out last week so he's having it this week instead and you will hear nothing but the little records with the big holes. November is Norton Records month on Ichiban; expect to hear a whole bunch of Norton 45s. Remember that Norton suffered catastrophic destruction to their warehouse in Red Hook and they still need your help!
You can listen to the show live on the Give The Drummer Radio Stream.
But most of all, don't forget to pledge. Thanks to Sandy, WFMU is in by far the worst financial shape of its entire life, and that's saying a lot!
Mucho thanks to champion disk jockey, GTDR head honcho and beloved WFMU veteran Doug Schulkind for making this happen.
Also, please note that Ichiban is playing nothing but Greg Cartwright DJ sets all day today up until 3:00 when Debbie Does WFMU returns to the Ichiban stream!
Posted by Matt Fiveash at 8:07 AM 0 comments
Wednesday, November 7, 2012
1
Ichiban Launch Party at Lakeside Lounge |
Posted by Debbie D at 6:27 PM 1 comments
Labels: Debbie D, Norton Records
Greg Cartwright Spins
Dr. Filth & Greg Cartwright |
Greg Cartwright Spins Vol. 6 (mp3)
Holidays - Desperate
Kenny Owens - Wrong Line
Ted Lucas - Head In California
Keith Dennis - Almost Grown
Roy Hall - Little Queenie
Louis Jordan - Big Bess
Royal Rhythms - Lovey Dovey
Mosriters - Turmoil
Johnny Eager - Howl
Mad Man Taylor And His Piano - Rumble Tumble
Jerry Arnold - Honey Babe
Roscoe Shelton - Running For My Life
Len Wade - The Night The Angels Cried
Clyde McPhater - Shot Of Rhythm & Blues
Mosriters - On The Run
Four Flickers - Yo-Yo
Chain Gang - Little Black Book
Jackie Lee - Would You Believe
David Coleman - Foolish Heart
Danny Overbea - My Love
Al Brown & The Tunetoppers - Sweet Little Love
Danny Winkle - Don't Fall In Love
Arnold Sanford - LInda Lu
Holidays - Dark Valley
Posted by Debbie D at 9:37 AM 0 comments
Labels: Debbie D, Greg Cartwright Spins
Tuesday, November 6, 2012
Happy Birthday Dr. Filth!
Big thanks to Dr. Filth for saving the day and keeping Ichiban streaming after we lost our main server at WFMU. We hope to be back up and running this week! In the meantime, let's wish Dr. Filth a Happy Birthday! Eat some cake and raise a glass. Thanks.
Posted by Debbie D at 7:35 AM 2 comments
Labels: Birthday Wishes, Debbie D, Dr. Filth
Monday, November 5, 2012
You Tore My Brain
If you can get to Prospect Heights in Brooklyn this week, the Nortons need you! Email me at wfmuichiban@gmail.com for directions. The clock is ticking. Thanks!
Posted by Debbie D at 6:34 PM 0 comments
Labels: Debbie D, Norton Records
Let Her Dance!
Posted by Debbie D at 4:23 PM 0 comments
Labels: Debbie D, Norton Records, Randy Fuller Four
Dust & Grooves Video Of Operation Norton
Saving Norton Records after Hurricane Sandy from Dust & Grooves on Vimeo.
Thanks to Eilon from Dust & Grooves for shooting this.
Posted by Debbie D at 4:10 PM 3 comments
Labels: Debbie D, Norton Records
Deke Dickerson remembers his early days as a Norton Records artist
I remember asking Billy Miller if the Untamed Youth album would be released on cassette, since I was very worried (insert sad horn sound here) about our band's commercial potential in the marketplace. Billy's response was that "cassettes are for Madonna." When the Untamed Youth came to New York to play, Billy took me in the Norton-mobile to the pressing plant to see our record being made.
To an 18-year old kid, immersed in the new-to-me mystical world of intense, obsessive record collecting, seeing the antiquated processes and machinery that created these records was like a visit to the Wizard of Oz. Machines wheezed and clunked and the air was thick and acrid with the smell of vinyl particulate and steam. It was awesome. I watched as Untamed Youth "Some Kinda Fun" LP's came off the line. I was surprised at how much hand-work was involved, figuring it would be an all-automated process. Nope, it was pretty much like the 1950's, low-wage folks inserting vinyl biscuits into pressing machines, hand-inserting vinyl into sleeves.
Billy Miller looked at a stack of reject 45's and pulled out a red vinyl 45 called "Roaches" by the Court Jesters. "Hey, this one is a good doo-wop song about Roaches, you have it?" I replied I did not, but I knew I certainly needed it. Soon my world would revolve around doo-wop sounds about Roaches, one-man band songs about government cheese, and surf songs about monkeys.
We loaded a bunch of boxes of literally hot-off-the-press Untamed Youth albums into the Norton-mobile and drove to the Norton warehouse (different place than it is now, but still a musty, moldy underground bunker with the sort of infrastructure and wiring and plumbing one would expect from a city built upon the ruins of the previous three centuries). There I was, a kid fresh out of high school, unloading a princely 1000 copies of my first record down some rusty stairs into a dark basement warehouse. I probably knew at that moment, though my ambition wouldn't let me accept it, that super-stardom was not in my future. Madonna had not started out this way.
Somehow I knew, though, that this was my place. A world where a pancake-shaped molded vinyl particulate would be obsessed over as though it were the Shroud of Turin by a group of unemployed, broke jackasses that really, god bless 'em, really really cared about the music. They could tell you about alternate takes, they could tell you about which pressings were vinyl and which were noisy styrene, they could wax philosophical about how Hasil Adkins and Jerry McCain had been separated at birth, even though one was white and one was black. I felt all the same things, and I knew that Jerry Lee Lewis alternate takes were important to me, too, even if they didn't mean a damn to the friends I had back in Missouri. For that moment of recognizing and accepting my fellow species of lowlife music-obsessed, record collecting miscreants, I owe Billy and Miriam and Norton Records a huge thanks.
Now here I am, two and a half decades later, lugging my own vinyl pressings into my own storage space, 1000 copies at a time. Vinyl is hip again in a way that we never would have predicted back in the 1980s. I have no embarrassing cassingles in my past, and I have Norton Records to thank for that as well.
It saddens me now to think of the Norton Warehouse, submerged under Hurricane Sandy bilge water, those precious biscuits of vinyl waterlogged. Some of those priceless nuggets have my own precious teenage angst garage band music recorded on them. I remember lugging those boxes down the stairs nearly 25 years ago, and it makes me damn proud to know that Norton Records has hung in there that long--prospered, at that.
I know that the good people will come together and help save what records can be saved, and people will help Billy and Miriam recover from this tragedy. Norton Records is too damn important to let some flood water put 'em out of business, where Madonna had failed to do so. You can't drown the loud sound, indeed!
All photos appear here courtesy of the Untamed Youth's Facebook page.
Posted by Greg G at 3:59 PM 1 comments
Labels: Deke Dickerson, Norton Records