Issue #5 – pg. 3
Introduction to Issue #5 Well the last four months flew by. I started on this issue the day after I printed the last and that steam died off really fast. As it says on the cover, this really is the interview issue. There are 10 interviews within these pages. During the course of these last four months, I’ve loved, hated, had fun, been sad, been happy, and everything in‐ between. I’ve searched to find myself and found nothing. I’ve swore more in four months than I have during any point of my life but remained fairly happy with my life. I’ve made more friends, seen more things, and barely left the confines of my home town. Normally, people would expect to hear about how I’ve found myself and the pages of this zine contain the answers to my life. Well that’s not true. In fact, this is my break from work and school. What you hold in your hands is not about where I am in my life but where others are in their lives. I’m trying to really round out the content to include both music fans and riders. I hope you like it Alan Sternberg
Issue #5 – pg. 4
We’ve come to another issue and Alan’s shown here taking time for himself finally. Photo: Audra Beeman
Content:
Introduction: The Queers Interview: David Grant Interview: Three Bad Jacks Interview: PunkTV.ca Interview: Solution BMX/Skate Shop Interview: Unseen Interview: Mark Pappas Interview: Life Force Studios Interview: 13 Cats Interview: Matt Watkins Interview: BARJ behind the Scenes: Out of the Dog House: Photos: Reviews:
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Issue #5 – pg. 5
The Queers
by: Audra Beeman
PoB.com: Would you please introduce yourselves? The Queers: Joe Queer leader of The Queers. PoB.com: Where are you guys from? The Queers: Portsmouth, NH. PoB.com: How did you get your start? The Queers: Through a lot of beer drinking and drug use. PoB.com: How did you get the name "The Queers"? The Queers: Well our first two choices were taken-Toad The Wet Sprocket and The Dave Matthews Band so we went with this one. PoB.com: What genre would you say you were? The Queers: Hard core punk rock. PoB.com: How many years have you been in a band together? The Queers: 25. PoB.com: Where is your favorite place to play? The Queers: In a dark smelly basement. PoB.com: What are you listening to right now? The Queers: Black Flag Damaged. PoB.com: Are you signed with a label if not do you plan to? The Queers: Asian Man Records is our label now. PoB.com: How has music changed your life? The Queers: It has taught me that I hate people.
Issue #5 – pg. 6 PoB.com: How many c.d.'s do you have out? The Queers: We have about 10 albums out now. PoB.com: How many shows would you say you have played? The Queers: Maybe 3000 but I have am not sure. PoB.com: What is your favorite thing about being in a band? The Queers: Signing young girls breasts. PoB.com: How has living a "punk" lifestyle influenced your lyrics. The Queers: Well l don't really live a punk lifestyle so it doesn't influence me really when I write. PoB.com: What made you decide you wanted to be in a band? The Queers: Seeing The Ramones and Black Flag.
PoB.com: How did you meet your band members? The Queers: In a day care center. PoB.com: Where do you see the "The Queers" in 5 years? The Queers: In a rocking chair.
Issue #5 – pg. 7 PoB.com: I love the way you guys sound, how would you describe that sound to someone that has never heard you? The Queers: A retarded version of The Ramones and Beach Boys. PoB.com: What sets you apart from any other band? The Queers: My songwriting is far away the best in punk rock today. PoB.com: How can people reach you guys? The Queers: Right here on MySpace or at thequeersrock.com
Issue #5 – pg. 8
David Grant
POB.com: Name, Age, Hometown, etc... DG: David Grant, 17, Muncie Indiana
By: Alan Sternberg
Issue #5 – pg. 9 POB.com: Years Riding? DG: 3 POB.com: Sponsors and people that help you out? DG: Darken, Anymeans Clothing Co., Hezrin Bmx and punksonbikes.com POB.com: What made you want to start riding? DG: Nick called me up one day. POB.com: Who do you enjoy riding with most? DG: All the Muncie/Yorktown kids. POB.com: Do you ride with an IPod or anything like that? DG: Def ride w/ an iPod, helps me relax and not get too psyched out during slow songs and then faster songs help me want to try bigger stuff. but if there is a larger group of dudes riding i will probably not ride with one or only use one headphone at a time haha. POB.com: What are you listening to? DG: hardcore and screamo mostly, sometimes rap POB.com: What are your biggest influences on and off your bike? DG: On my bike probably nick or jerry, they both push me to try stuff and off my bike probably my brosef. POB.com: If you could ride just one spot for the rest of your life, where would it be? DG: the RCA dome in Indy, ledges and rails! POB.com: Are you filming for anything? DG: yeah, vids for all the companies haha POB.com: Where do you see yourself on and off your bike in five years? DG: On my bike, I see myself still riding hard and progressing. Off my bike, I would like to get involved more in photography and maybe even own a bike shop.
Issue #5 – pg. 10 POB.com: I feel it's safe to say that street's your favorite thing to ride but what, in your opinion, makes street better than park, vert, flatland, racing, or trails? DG: The originality that you can have when you ride, you can ride so many obstacles instead of just jumps or quarterpipes you know. POB.com: Anything else you'd like to say or any thanks? DG: Thanks to all the companies that support me and help me out.
Three Bad Jacks
Issue #5 – pg. 11
By: Audra Beeman
POB.com: Would you please introduce yourselves? Hi, we're Three Bad Jacks. We like long walks on the beach and holding hands, but not with each other. POB.com: Where are you guys from? Los Angeles, California POB.com: How did you get your start? We started at the bottom. There's nothing like choosing music that no one wants to hear and we figured that we could only go up from there. POB.com: How did you get the name "The Three Bad Jacks"? Well there were three of us and none of us were named Jack, so we figured it was perfect. Just kidding. On the serious side, it's a complete secret and if we told you we'd have to kill you. POB.com: What genre would you say you were? Rock and Roll POB.com: How many years have you been in a band together? Three Bad Jacks has been around since late 1995.
Issue #5 – pg. 12 POB.com: Where is your favorite place to play? The big cities are fun because there's typically more people, but you can get surprised in the small towns too. POB.com: What are you listening to right now? The voices in my head telling me to kill you. POB.com: Are you signed with a label if not do you plan to? Most labels are going down and we do better on our own than most labels. The music industry is rapidly changing and we're better off as an Indie band right now. POB.com: How has music changed your life? It keeps from holding down a steady and respectable job with a reliable source of income. POB.com: How many c.d.'s do you have out? We have 2 full length CDs and one EP. POB.com: How many shows would you say you have played? Thousands, I seriously couldn't even say. POB.com: What is your favorite thing about being in a band? Going state‐to‐state and meeting a bunch of super cool people that have a lot in common.
Issue #5 – pg. 13 POB.com: What made you decide you wanted to be in a band? We love playing music. None of the potential fame or fortune never really mattered. POB.com: How did you meet your band members? Brett came to a show and was asking if we knew anyone that was looking for a bass player. Shane stalked us and forced us to hire him. POB.com: Where do you see the "Three Bad Jacks" in 5 years? Hopefully still alive, touring, and making great records. POB.com: I love the way you guys sound, how would you describe that sound to someone that has never heard you? The bastard sons of Johnny Cash, Elvis Presley, The Ramones, and The Clash. We like to call it "Hellbent Rock 'n Roll". POB.com: What sets you apart from any other band? The way we put together our sound and our live shows. We never use a set list and we like to light stuff on fire. Our sound is very eclectic. It can sound very aggressive and angry or it can sound very traditional. We've bothered to learn the styles that we borrow from rather than act like a cheap imitation. POB.com: How can people reach you guys? www.threebadjacks.com or http://www.myspace.com/threebadjacks
PunkTV.ca
Issue #5 – pg. 14
By: Audra Beeman
POB.com: Would you please introduce yourselves? PunkTV.ca: My name is Dixon Christie, I am publisher, photographer and reporter for PunkTV.ca. POB.com: Where are you from? PunkTV.ca: I am from Edmonton, Alberta Canada. We are East of Vancouver and North of Seattle. POB.com: What made you start "Punk TV.ca"? PunkTV.ca: I have been a writer all my life. I felt that I had a voice and wanted a place where my voice could be heard. I have spent all my life in entertainment and was also just hoping that there would be some way I could make a living out of it, fortunately, there was. I have published zines and magazines in the past and figured this would be the most natural next step. POB.com: With having a site and being as busy as you are, how do you keep everything straight? PunkTV.ca: Managing everything is very difficult. I also own a marketing company and a record label so it gets quite nuts. My secret is to work very hard, at least 100 hours a week. It is very tiring but like I said, I feel that I have a lot to say and I can rest when I am retired. POB.com: How many years have you been running "Punk TV.ca"?
Issue #5 – pg. 15 PunkTV.ca: PunkTV.ca has been up for a year and a half and I am proud to say that we are now the biggest in Canada, with more traffic that Revolver or Alternative Press online. A very big deal, and surprising. POB.com: What has been your favorite thing about being in this type of business? PunkTV.ca: I love working with people, and especially helping young emerging writers and bands come up. I enjoy doing photography and making videos as well. I like challenging myself. POB.com: What are you listening to right now? PunkTV.ca: Right now I really like The Aggrolites new CD and the latest "Give'em The Boot" compilation. I also have a CD of electronic music that I composed for my baby in the CD player in the car a lot; its music made with natural earth made noise. People can hear it at my band site: Dixonoxid.com. People might be surprised to learn that I am also listening to Avenged Sevenfold, Cellador, Dragonforce, but also James Blunt, Michael Buble and Norah Jones too! POB.com: What has been your biggest accomplishment working with "Punk TV.ca"? PunkTV.ca: We have been extremely fortunate. One on One interviews with Stewart Copeland and The Buzzcocks were such an honor and surreal experience that I had to shake my head a few times. It just gets better; lately, I have had the privilege of meeting and interviewing Avenged Sevenfold, NOFX and most recently Henry Rollins, just getting too weird! POB.com: How has all of this changed your life? I have always wanted to create a means to make a life out of writing and publishing. Although we don't make much money, PunkTV.ca has empowered me with the tools to do this.
Issue #5 – pg. 16 POB.com: When you first started how did you get the word out? Just like you. I started with the first interview, and then the second, and the third. I tried to keep it fun and interesting, and got luck a few times along the way. Also, wherever I could, I tried talking to people in the business like you do, and it's also important to try and find 'mentors' that will advise you along the way. For the record, I am honored to be able to mentor anyone that asks for it as that was offered to me at very early ages, and I still appreciate it to this day.
POB.com: You have interviewed some really big bands; did you have a certain one that was your favorite? Ya, I have a secret love for Avenged, always loved NOFX, talking to the director Floria Sigismondi was an honor, Stewart Copeland form The Police, there are so many... However, as a kid, I always old issues of Rolling Stone magazine, and so getting to chat with Ben Fong‐Torres, ex‐editor of the magazine that started rock and roll journalism was an incredible honor.
POB.com: When you first started did you ever think it would get this big, and did you ever just want to give up? Yes, my soul mate is not such a strong believer in this since it loses money every month, but she is slowly coming around. I never wanted to give up, I am pretty pig headed when it comes to projects that I believe in.
POB.com: What are some up coming goals you have for Punk TV.ca? New features require quite a bit of attention especially when you have more than a few million hits per month. We are just about to roll out a great new streaming video function plus more user interactivity will be featured. Users will be able to comment more on articles very soon and I plan to start a nationwide search for PunkTV.ca VJ's... so heads up to any kids out there looking to become a VJ!
POB.com: Out of everything you have done with Punk TV.ca, what has been the most enjoyable? Talking to you right now is quite an honor. Actually, it is all quite surreal and since I don't take any of it for granted, I appreciate it all.
Issue #5 – pg. 17
POB.com: Where do you see yourself in 10 years? Owning a publishing empire with dozens of niche specific magazines. Publishing my own books and having a legion of minions working with us. Traveling around the world to interview massive bands and hosting a TV show.
Issue #5 – pg. 18 POB.com: What sets you apart from any other "Punk/Music" related business? I have a lot of respect for the leaders in that specific genre. I love Absolutepunk.net, and Revolver and AP, but I feel that we are very content heavy and just have found a niche within our punk and metal community. Kids seem to like it and I honestly just try and keep it real, try to ask the same questions that we always do, and just keep working really hard! POB.com: You have done some major things with your company, what would be some advice for someone trying to follow in your footsteps? Try and partner up with people that can supply you with great content. Do things for labels, publicists and promoters. I always look at business like this: "How can I make myself needed by that company or industry?" So, if you can create traffic on your website that can be a reason for labels to want to let you interview their bands. Be kind. Be truthful, honest and most of all work hard. Hard work beats out talent every time. POB.com: How can people reach you guys if they would like to know more? www.PunkTV.ca www.MySpace.com/punktv www.MySpace.com/dixphotos www.MyDocumentary.ca My email is Dixon@punktv.ca ! Thanks guys, I wish you all the best! Dix
Issue #5 – pg. 20
Solutions Interview
By: Alan Sternberg
PoB.com: First off, what is Solutions? Solution: well solution is the new bmx/skate shop that will be inside the new Just Ride skatepark. PoB.com: Who's running Solutions and the new Park? Solution: Solution is Justin Hardin and me Josh Orr/ Wombat or whatever you want to call me. The park is Brian Knopp and his wife. PoB.com: Where did the name come from? Solution: Man, coming up with a name was a hard thing to do. We had a few names that we liked, but nothing really felt right. Solution popped in my head one day and it seemed to fit what we are trying to do, so we went with it. PoB.com: I think one of the big questions is, when's the shop and park going to be done/ridable? Solution: As of today Feb. 7 we have painted the shop area. So there is still a lot of work to do, but we are getting closer. After we get the shop area all done, then we will start on the ramps. The ramps are
Issue #5 – pg. 21 going to take some time. Because there are going to be a lot of them. And Knopp goes a little crazy (which is a good thing). He just wants the ramps to be perfect.
PoB.com: Is there going to e a team and if so, who's going to be on it? Solution: Yeah we will have both a skate team and a bmx team. Right now its still talk. PoB.com: Is there a website or a way people can contact you? Solution: No website yet. We do have a MySpace page just like most of the world. solutionbmxskateshop PoB.com: What companies or distributors are you going to carry? Solution: We are going to carry as much as we can. Too many to name, but I can tell you that we will be carrying Etnies, E'S and Emercia. If there is anything people think we should carry, hit us up on MySpace and we will see what we can do. PoB.com: Where are you located? Solution: On north Wheeling in Muncie IN. You can't miss it!
Issue #5 – pg. 22 PoB.com: Could you give everyone out there an idea of what the park will look like? Solution: Oh man the ramps are going to be fun. It’s 2 times the size of the old park. Ramps on ramps /foam pit / skate section. Flow and lines is what this place will be. If anyone remembers the old Just Ride, it will be kind of the same, but way better. PoB.com: Any last words you'd like to share with anyone? Solution: First off I'd like to thank you, Alan for this interview. Also like to thank everyone for their support. And one more thing, there is a lot of work that goes into building something this big. So just give us time, it WILL be worth the wait. peace Josh
The Unseen
Issue #5 – pg. 23
By: Alan Sternberg
Photos from the Unseen’s MySpace
PoB.com: First off, would you introduce yourself, where you’re from, and who else is in the band. Mark: I’m Mark; I sing or try to haha. I’m from my moms vagina or I
Issue #5 – pg. 25 guess actually my fathers balls. Also in the band is: Jonny, Tripp, Scott, and Pat. PoB.com: How long has the band been together? How’d you all come together? Mark: We got together, fuck, like 13 years ago in high school. Tripp, Scott, and I. We got Pat 4 years ago when his old band Vigilantes broke up. And Jonny I’ve known for years. We were in a band together. PoB.com: I’m sure as much as you’ve toured, you’ve got plenty of crazy stories. Any that really standout that you’d like to tell? Mark: A ton. I’d say my craziest was when my girl, our buddy Throat, and I got the van we were driving ripped off. we were in Arizona in the middle of no where. It sucked, but we got the van back because it broke down on the crooks haha. PoB.com: Who has been your favorite group(s) to tour and/or play with? Mark: Mine? Hum. Sick of it All are great guys and awesome to watch every night. PoB.com: On a different note, where’d the name the Unseen come from? Is there any deeper meaning to it that what’s implied or is it just one that everyone liked? Mark: Tripp and I found it in an old book. The word sounded cool, was not used, and seemed to have a few meanings that could relate to a punk band. PoB.com: In your opinion, what’s the punk scene like in Boston right now? Mark: I really don’t know. I have been on tour for like 5 years so I don’t get to many shows. Most of the people I went to shows with, I still see once in a while. It’s odd I’m at that point in my life where I’ll hang out with someone I used to go to shows with at there house. Funny we used to drink behind buildings or in parks, now it’s in a home. I guess that comes with growing up.
Issue #5 – pg. 26
PoB.com: What was it like when you were growing up? Mark: It was a blast. So many kids, close friends, and great bands came through town; I used to book a lot of the punk gigs. Varukers, Casualties, Conflict, Choking Victim, Aus Rotten, Funeral Dress, The Pist. I’d book em a gig then we would hang all weekend at someone’s apt. or someone’s parent’s house if they were out of town. I remember we had a huge party with special duties at my buddy Chainsaw’s parent’s house. We ate like 500 bucks worth of the Riley’s meat haha.
PoB.com: You’re working on a follow up to ‘05’s State of Discontent. When will that be released? Mark: June on Hellcat Records. I’m psyched for it. It sounds way better then State. Some kids will probably bitch that it sounds too professional. That is something that always seems odd to me. Not being into a record because it sounds good?? I love Discharge but I don’t want our new album to sound like an early Discharge recording.
PoB.com: What’s been the motivation for the new album? Mark: Well for me, it’s been to try and top the last record all around. With me, I’m trying to come up with better lyrics that are still relevant and also, I’m trying to improve my singing skills. Mainly, I’m having
Issue #5 – pg. 27 fun and getting some anger out of my system. PoB.com: You’ve released records on some pretty prominent labels like: BYO, Punkcore, Rancid Records, and Hellcat. Has the trip been surreal or has it seemed like the natural progression of the business? Mark: It’s both, I feel so fuckin lucky to be involved with the labels that have worked with us. I also feel it is a progression as you go on, you keep trying new things. PoB.com: According to the Vans Warped Tour website (http://warpedtour.com/warpedtour/index.asp), you’re playing the whole tour this year. Do you feel Warped Tour offers something beneficial to the punk community? Mark: Well to me, I like it because you get in front of more kids and different kids that may never have seen The Unseen on their own. I wasn’t born punk, I found punk. I’d like to also help get new people into bands like The Unseen and other smaller lesser known punk bands. Show’em there is more then bands like Fall Out Boy, and Aiden. PoB.com: What bands have you been listening to lately? Also, what bands have been a major influence to you? Mark: for me Blood for Blood, Sick of it All, Dissables also a ton of older bands Varukers, Samhain, Misfits, Minor Threat influences to many to list. PoB.com: I love Scream Out on you’re last LP. Who writes the lyrics or does the band write collectively? Mark: as for lyrics, I write most of them. I feel it’s easier and more emotion goes into signing something I write. Tripp also writes some lyrics. He inked Weapons of Mass Deception, Never Go Home, and a few others on the last album. We also did about 3 songs for this new album. As for music, Scott writes a lot of the music. Tripp also writes some songs. Then we all work on it as a band to get it tight and tweaked it.
Issue #5 – pg. 28
PoB.com: Out of all the songs the Unseen has recorded, what’s your personal favorite?
Issue #5 – pg. 29 Mark: Tough, I won’t pick a new one. So let’s see. Live in Fear, off Anger and Truth or Fed‐Up off Explode PoB.com: In your opinion, what was your big break? Mark: I’m still waiting for it hahaha. So far I’d say def signing to Hellcat, it opened a ton of doors for us. Better distribution more tour opportunities etc. PoB.com: Where do you see the Unseen in five years? Mark: I have no fuckin idea either broken up or still making records. PoB.com: Punk Rock and skating and bike riding have some similar roots due to the all originated in the underground and by misfits. Have any of you ever skated or rode bmx? Mark: Not really, I dig all that stuff and think its amazing some of the stuff that people can do but I never got into it. When I was real young, I rode dirt motorbikes, it was a blast but I stopped around 17 years old. PoB.com: Other than the Unseen, what do you do in your spare time? Does anyone have other side projects they’re working on? Mark: I don’t have much spare time. I’m the asshole that deals with the band work on a day to day basis. Even when not on tour, I’m writing words or dealing with planning tours, talking to the label, etc. I am working on a side project, no name yet. It’s with my buddy Ian. He actually wrote 2 songs for the Unseen: Dead Weight Falls, off State of Discontent and a new one called Left for Dead. I’m psyched because I like his style of music he writes. PoB.com: I’d like to say thanks for your time and I guess this time would be a good time to ask if you have any last words or thanks? Mark: I think emo is finally dying out woooooo.
Mark Pappas
Issue #5 – pg. 30
By: Alan Sternberg
Mark bump jumping. Photo: John Burnham
PoB.com: Name, age, and hometown? Mark: Mark Pappas, Indianapolis, 19 PoB.com: You've been getting some decent exposure lately. I've seen pictures in BMX Plus, you had a bio in Ride, you're going to have clips in the Cinnci video (From Nothing). Have you noticed any difference in how people treat you now as apposed to two or three years ago? Mark: uhhh...not really. I just try to ride good and not worry about things too much. PoB.com: What do you have planned for the next year or so? Mark: Try and stay healthy, work on some new tricks, get some more ink done, lift weights, maybe go back to school, and I may try to take a trip to London with Matt Sal. PoB.com: Other than riding, what else do you to occupy your spare time? Mark: I do a lot of painting. I play guitar here and there when I feel like it. I also try to pick up girls that are actually my age! hahahaha
Issue #5 – pg. 31
Hip table at Ollie’s Skatepark Photo: Mark’s MySpace
Issue #5 – pg. 32 PoB.com: What influences you when it comes to both your art and riding? Mark: I have always enjoyed really creative riding. so anyone who looks at things in a diff. way pushes me to be more creative. i have always looked to Ruben and riders like KP and Aitken, Brian Kachinski (I hope I spelled that right) Gerber was always pushing me hard to ride well. PoB.com: You’ve been listening to a lot of music that a lot of people haven’t been exposed to. What are you listening to? Mark: lately a lot of metal...i think just because it is winter. I don’t really think of myself as a music buff, but i did spend a lot of time and money at LUNA over the past few years. PoB.com: You’ve been traveling a lot this past year or so. What’s your favorite travel destination that you’ve been too? Mark: Cinnci has been a lot of fun. the riders there are a lot of fun to hang out with and they are super creative. i do try to travel as much as i can. PoB.com: Are you riding for anyone right now or are you just doing things your way? Mark: I am just chillin right now. i thought i might have had the chance to be on Micreation but that kind of went away. i need to send some footage out. PoB.com: Who are your favorite people to ride with, shoot with, and video tape with? Mark: I used to film with Ryan Meijer a lot (hahaha I don’t know if I spelled his last name right, I am a jerk!) me and him got a lot of stuff done in the past few years. i like shooting with Matt Sal because we both don’t really care if anything gets done, but we usually get it done. Mullen films pretty good by the way. PoB.com: Are you filming for anything right now? Mark: From Nothing and random stuff at UV
Issue #5 – pg. 33
Mark street hop. Photo: Matt Sal
PoB.com: Where do you see yourself in 5 years? Mark: i hope i am still riding and hopefully killing it. PoB.com: Any last words or thanks? Mark: I would like to thank my parents for being awesome. I would also like to thank all my friends I have had throughout the years. I’ll also give a shout out to the higher power, whatever it is. peace
Issue #5 – pg. 34 Life Force Studios Interview and Intro by: Joel Janiszyn (photos provided by Joel)
I still remember the first time I ever met Jak. At the time, I had one tattoo that had been done by someone else. I was ready for my next piece but I wasn't sure where to go. I had just started college and met my girlfriend Meagan. She had a handful of tattoos already and we talked about tattoos all of the time. I told her that I wanted to get a new piece and she told me about Life Force Studios in Marion. I thought this was weird because I have lived in Marion my whole life and had never heard of Life Force Studios before. I took her word and took a trip to the studio one day after school. Trevor came with me and we weren't sure what to expect. I went in and met Jak and Josh the owners of the studio. It was like we instantly hit it off. We were joking with each other the first day we met. I dropped off my drawing of a bike chain that I wanted and set up an appointment. I came back about a week later to get the tattoo that I had previously dropped off for them to look at. I sat in the chair while he was tattooing me and while I was looking at all of the random things on the walls like posters, pictures, certificates, etc...I seen a framed picture of Mike Ness. I simply said "Oh, is that Mike Ness up there?" and I can't remember exactly what Jak said but his reply let me know that Mike Ness is next to Godliness to him. It all started at the moment I think. That was over a year and a half ago. I still love to show up at the studio and even if I'm not getting a new piece, I still love to just hang out in the basement with Jak and Josh and just talk about whatever random things that our slightly tweaked brains can come up with. I consider Jak to be a great friend and a great tattoo artist. Here's an interview with Jak. Hopefully you can learn a little more about him, even if you have met him already.
PoB.com: Just describe yourself to everyone, who exactly is Jak? Jak: Just a guy who tries to do the best he can with what he's got and try to convince the rest of the world you need to have what he has.
PoB.com: How did you fall into tattooing exactly? Jak: That's exactly what it is, I fell into it. It chose me. I was on my second hiatus from college. This was 1997. And some friends of mine had a studio and I had been hanging out there in between classes. I was going to Indy everyday and that was a good place to hang out. I had a truck and one day they were moving from one location to another location across the street. I had a truck and when you have a truck and someone is moving you help them move. I just never left, I started hanging out there even more and I liked my job less and less. I
Issue #5 – pg. 35
met up with one of the owners, Brett Schlemmer's mentor, the guy who taught him how to tattoo, and one night over coffee he was looking over my sketchbooks i had and he asked me if I had ever thought about doing tattoos. I had two tattoos at the time and I had never even considered it you know, it was something I wasn't even remotely interested in at the time. Being dubbed "old fashioned", I'm not afraid to learn how to do anything and he's the one to teach me. So he set me up with a line drawing and put a stencil on and showed me how to put a line on myself and left me alone for two and a half hours while I proceeded to carve a trench in my leg [laughter]. The lesson behind that was, once you learn how to scar you'll never do it again so it's better to do it on yourself. I tattooed my best friend after that. I worked on my friends, saved up enough money to buy my own equipment, quit my job, and I've been doing it ever since. That's when I was 29. PoB.com: So what are your tattoo roots? Where all have you worked?
Issue #5 – pg. 36 Jak: Sturgis, Michigan. I worked in Clearwater, Florida, Kendalville, Kalamazoo, Muncie of course, Anderson. I started to travel the metropolis that is Marion [laughter]. Pennsylvania, you know, just different spots. PoB.com: What would you say is the most meaningful tattoo you've ever done on somebody? Jak: The one that had the most meaning? Or affected me the most? My mom's friend Becky. She was a cancer survivor and she had a mastectomy. They did a really good job of reconstructing it afterwards with the implant and stuff like that. They did a tattoo of the areola where the nipple should be. The pigment they used faded away so she had one normal breast and the other one was awkward. She always felt strange about it. It looked perfect but she just felt bad about not having it there and she just wanted to do something other than a brown ring. We talked about doing a smiley face [laughter]. It ended up being a flower. For some reason it just kind of ended up giving her life back to her, you know? It was like she was complete again by having that done so that was....it wasn't something that was done for someone who passed away or just done to be cool, it was a part of her that was missing and it was like I was giving it back to her. I would have to say that one.
PoB.com: What do you enjoy the most about someone else's tattoo ideas when they bring it to you? Is it their own creativity or is them putting their own meaning behind a certain picture? Jak: Hmm, It's kind of an interactive thing. Like for me it's kind of selfish. It's taking their idea and finding a way to bring it to life in a way so when they are done they are as happy as if they had done it themselves. It's just providing....it's like skipping a step, it's providing a service that they can't do on their own. When they light up and say "that’s exactly how I wanted it". It's great.
PoB.com: Not to toot your own horn, but what makes you better than your average "Johnny with a tattoo machine"? Jak: Well I don't know, there are a thousand guys out there that are faster, better artists. I just take what I do very seriously. Like I've said
Issue #5 – pg. 38 from the beginning, if someone was not happy with their tattoo when I got done I wouldn't do it anymore, I would quit. It's just because it's like the old saying "tattooing is not a matter of life and death, it's a little bit more important than that". I think it's just throwing your heart into every single piece even if you don't like what they're doing, just do it to the best of your ability so at the end you can't say that you didn't try your hardest.
PoB.com: What are your biggest influences whether it be music or different artists? Jak: I think it's everything. It's just that whole as an artist you have to take everything you experience as a life lesson. It's like if you're not comfortable and the person isn't comfortable then it's not going to work. It's like setting a mood. Music is important. Having reference is also really important. A thousand comic books is going to get you more art reference than a one thousand dollar art book. It's all accomplishing. If the person is wearing sweats or leather pants it’s just whether you can put them in their own comfortable element. You've all been tattooed (Meagan and I) and you know if your not comfortable with the person or if you're just not into it that day you're not going to get experience with it. It's all those things.
PoB.com: I'm sure you've asked this question to death, but I have to ask it anyways, what is the weirdest tattoo you've ever done? Jak: I thought you were going to ask "Is this going to hurt?" as the over asked question [laughter].
Issue #5 – pg. 39 Subject matter or person? PoB.com: Subject matter. Jak: I did this Toxic Avenger silhouette, a green army man,... I tattooed two kids from England [referring to me and some of my friends]. That’s a hard question because everything is kind of strange on its own. After nine years it's trying to roll through and remember everything. I did a Mayan black tribal around a guy's navel. It had a tribal stem that went down from his navel to....we'll say his stem? [laughter]. That one was weird just because of the placement of it. Or I had a weird tattoo because the guy was weird, he had the hiccups the whole through it and the tattoo was on his stomach. It's just what people decide to put on their bodies and it will be there forever, like the guy who got the little carnival sign, like "this way to the Matter horn". It said "You must be at least this tall to ride" on his hip. It was funny, we were laughing the whole time. I don't know if he was into midgets or just little people. [laughter]. PoB.com: What are the ups and downs of owning your own studio
Issue #5 – pg. 40 rather than working in someone else's studio? Jak: Well, most of the people who do tattoos have the luxury of...it's more of a freedom thing. Say, if something goes wrong, like you don't get along with your boss, you can just get up and go. When you have your own place everything that happens, you are responsible for, even if you didn't do the work. It's like if you work for somebody you can show up when you want to, do whatever you want to do, then you can go home and you don't have to worry about your reputation, paying the rent, keeping the lights on, liability insurance,... unlike the guy working out of his garage. It's like all of the other stuff you have to do plus the work. All of the non‐glamorous things like cleaning up your own mess, cleaning the tubes, sterilization, bagging, scrubbing, taking out the trash...sweeping the snow off of the sidewalk. Those are some downfalls but the upside is if I want to listen to U.S. Bombs or Social Distortion all day over and over again no one is going to tell me I can't do it. It has its advantages.
Joel: What separates Life Force Studios from all of the other studios out there? Jak: Mostly just...we treat it like a job...a business, not just a lifestyle.
Issue #5 – pg. 41 We are thinking about the past today. You're creating a relationship with people. Some people look at it as a form of income but you’re making a permanent change to someone who is always going to carry that with them. What we do in our kind of business affects not only ourselves but the next guy. If someone before them comes in our door and has a bad experience....say a guy went to Spokane, Washington and the guy there had a bad day and was a jerk to somebody...this is somebody who may have gotten a lot of tattoos and now can't enjoy a lifestyle of being tattooed because they had one guy sour that experience for them. They may never get another one, or their friends may never get another one. The way we do things we think about how it affects not only ourselves but those people. We think outside the box, we think about longevity. We're nice to people.
PoB.com: It pretty much seems like you live here, but when you're not at the studio what do you do in your free time? Jak: Most of my free time is taken up by sleep. Letting my dog out.....I live an extremely simple lifestyle. We easily work over three hundred days a year. Sometimes seven days a week, mostly six days a week. My free time is very, very, rare. It's mostly spent working on the house...doing laundry. It's not very glamorous. [laughter]
PoB.com: What advice would you have for anyone else interested in doing tattoos? Jak: Stay humble. Stay hungry. Mouth shut, eyes open. Learn as much as you can. A lot of people start out thinking they are going to be Omni James or Kat Von D. There are dues to pay. Every lesson you skip is going to bite you later on because you’re just coming in. No one wants to be an apprentice; everybody wants to be a tattoo artist.
PoB.com: Who would you like to thank? Jak: All the people who told me I couldn't do it. It's like back when I was a D.J., everyone told me "you're never going to make any money doing that". All the people that was down on me or made it hard...I thank them because if it would have been easy I would have just walked away from it because it was all given to me. I had to earn everything. To all the people who were negative or tried to rip me off...that just made me want it even more. All the bad stuff just makes you stronger.
Issue #5 – pg. 42 Greg Labarbra, Brent Schlemmer...they gave me a chance when there was no future in it (tattooing). It turns back to that whole life lesson thing. I made a lot of mistakes but I waked away from them....luckily [laughter]. PoB.com: Well to sum things up, do you have any last words for anyone at home reading this right now? Jak: Some things are hard to walk away from and bad decisions in this line of work are one of those things you can't walk away from. Take your time, think about it. I guess in the words of my mentor Scott Melchi, "If you don't feel like you can go out to eat or have a beer after you're done getting tattooed, maybe that’s not the person you want be" There's millions of us out there doing it, but you know, you have to get it. You have to get along with and trust this person. Trust your instincts. To learn more about Jak, check out www.myspace.com/jakthe3rd and www.lifeforcestuios.com
Issue #5 – pg. 43 13 Cats Interview
Interview by: Audra Beeman
POB.com: Would you please introduce yourselves? Danny B. Harvey: guitar and occasional keyboards Tim Polecat: Lead Vocals missing from this interview is: Smutty Smith: Stand up bass Slim Jim Phantom: Drums and backing vocals POB.com: Where are you guys from? TIM: Danny B. is from Texas, Slim Jim fro Long Island, Smutty and I are from London . . DANNY B: but we’re all from the bad‐side of the tracks POB.com: How did you get your start? DANNY B: Smutty and I toured together for years in the 80?s rockabilly band THE ROCKATS, Tim was in the POLECATS and
Issue #5 – pg. 44 was a good mate of mine when I lived in London as a teenager and of course Slim Jim was in the STRAY CATS and we all hung out together in the 80?s. TIM: In the mid 90?s Smutty, Danny and myself booked a gig at the grease bowl in San Francisco with Levi Dexter and when Slim Jim heard we were playing together asked us if he could play drums... . . It was the prefect ROCKABILLY combination and a super group was born . . hahaha DANNY B: We booked our first show for Friday the 13th December 1996 and worked everyday writing original songs and getting ready for our debut.
POB.com: How did you get the name "13 Cats"? DANNY B: There's a famous tattoo that old school Bikers used to get that showed a black cat sitting on the number 13. TIM: I think We’ve always considered 13 and black cats to be more in line with our personalities and lifestyles then good luck charms like four leaf clovers horseshoes... DANNY B: Unless you the horseshoe is hanging upside down. Tim is also a great artist and as soon as the name was decided upon he drew the 13 CATS logo which has become so widely copied and recognizable. .
Issue #5 – pg. 45 POB.com: What genre would you say you were? DANNY B: That’s a good question, we’ve been called rockabilly, psychobilly, garage, surf and even hard rock . . . TIM: I think Psychobilly is more up our alley, however if you listen to the 13 CATS you’ll see we’re not like any other band and all musical genres find their way into our music. You’re also finding cult film, Juvenile delinquent, S&M, bondage, car culture and horror themes into our lyrics. POB.com: How many years have you been in a band together? TIM: We were together from 1996 to 2000 then because of other projects we were involved in the band took a back-seat. I’ve been getting more into film making as well as doing reunion tours with my old band THE POLECATS, Danny and Slim Jim have a band with Lemmy from Motorhead called the HEAD CAT and have been really busy lately. DANNY B: I’ve also been touring with Nancy Sinatra the past few years, touring worldwide with the duo I have with Lynda Kay called THE LONESOME SPURS as well as composing the scores for films like ?THE RAGE: CARRIE II? and ?BETTIE PAGE, DARK ANGEL?. TIM: Slim Jim besides touring with Danny in the HEADCAT has been spotted in Europe touring with DEADMEN WALKING . . We’re a group of busy guys. . . POB.com: Where is your favorite place to play? TIM: LONDON or NEWE YORK CITY DANNY B:: FRANCE, NEW YORK and TEXAS (my home state).. POB.com: What are you listening to right now? TIM: Gene Vincent DANNY B: Johnny Cash POB.com: Are you signed with a label if not do you plan to? DANNY B: Our only studio CD was released on Cleopatra in the States and Raucous in the UK, if and when we record a new studio CD we’ll probably take it to different labels before deciding who to give it too.
Issue #5 – pg. 46 TIM: In the meantime there is three live CDs out as well as a live DVD. POB.com: How has music changed your life? DANNY B: Of course, it is my life TIM: Ditto POB.com: How many c.d.'s do you have out? TIM: One CD of studio cuts called “13 Tracks”, two live CDs released in Japan called “In The Beginning” and ?In the Beginning 2?, a live CD that was recently released in Europe called ?Live IN Las Vegas? and one DVD of that same concert. POB.com: How many shows would you say you have played? DANNY B: About 150 in total . . All in the States except for one tour of Japan POB.com: What is your favorite thing about being in a band? TIM: It’s a lifestyle and a brotherhood . . like a gang, you feel protected..
Issue #5 – pg. 47 POB.com: What made you decide you wanted to be in a band? DANNY B: Same reason Tim gave in the previous question TIM: as well as getting girls. . . hahaha POB.com: How did you meet your band members? DANNY B: We all seemed to arrive together in London at the same time in the 80s and have been great friends since. POB.com: Where do you see the "13 Cats" in 5 years? TIM: Hopefully playing more gigs and recording more new CDs . . DANNY B: Ditto POB.com: I love the way you guys sound, how would you describe that sound to someone that has never heard you? DANNY B: A Garage band trying to sing Elvis Presley songs while being drunk out of our minds, with all the amps turned to ?11? and a 60s porno film playing behind us . . . is that good? TIM: Link Wray meets the Sonics at a Gene Vincent concert . . POB.com: What sets you apart from any other band? DANNY B: How unique and original we are both musically and in our personality. TIM: That fact that we don’t imitate the 50s and use all our musical influences to create our song. POB.com: How can people reach you guys? http://mysapce.com/13cats http://myspace.com/dannybharvey http://myspace.com/timpolecat or email us at the13cats@earthlink.net
Issue #5 – pg. 48 Matt Watkins Interview:
by: Alan Sternberg
PoB.com: First off what's your name, age, hometown? Matt: My name is Matthew Allan Watkins, a.k.a. Watkins, Matt, FittyWat or whatever. I was born in Kokomo, IN. then moved to Naptown when I was 12. I have been residing in Muncie for 2 years. I am 20 years old and still kickin' PoB.com: How long have you been riding? Matt: I started out on dirt bikes and then I started riding mountain bikes around 10 when I saw these kickass downhill riders while I was riding trails one day. Ever since I have been hooked. At 15 I got my first BMX. PoB.com: How has your riding changed since coming to Muncie for school? Matt: Yeah a little. I don’t get to shred parks that often but it's alright because the street here in Muncie is sufficient. PoB.com: Who's your favorite people to ride with? Matt: I'll ride with anyone with a good attitude towards other people. I don’t like riding with people that talk shit to strangers and try to get attention. Recently I have been doing a lot of solo riding. Dale Richards, Randy Reynolds, Jordon Kingdon, Jesse Shelby, Sean Seacat and many many others. PoB.com: I know you used to ride with an iPod. Do you still ride with it and if so, what are you listening to? Matt: Yeah I usually do, it depends on my mood mostly. I listen to something with a lot of flow. Hip-hop, funk.
Issue #5 – pg. 49 PoB.com: What are your influences on and off your bikes? Matt: My friends influence and encourage me quite a bit. You know that feeling you get when pull something so smooth and dialed, that influences me the most. PoB.com: Other than riding and school, what do you do in your spare time? Matt: Listen to music and hang out at my house or my girlfriends place. I chill with Clark, my baby python. I play F.E.A.R. on an unhealthy basis. Watch movies and sports. Ride the Schwinn
PoB.com: You've got kind of a different style. Lots of speed, gaps, and flow on street. What lead you to that style riding instead of lots of tricks? Matt: I really don’t know. That I think about it i have always ridden like that. I guess it’s because I love to go fast, riding dirt-bikes and mountain bikes gets you used to cruising at high speeds. I used to bust my ass all
Issue #5 – pg. 50 day doing tricks but I realized that getting hurt is the worst ever. I wish I could still force myself down a rail or to extend a no-foot can over a roaster at the trails but I feel those days are long gone. PoB.com: What's your favorite thing to ride? Matt: I will ride anything. I have sessioned parking blocks for hours. Trails, Street, Park. I love how riding can be so unique and individualistic. PoB.com: What are your riding plans for 2007? Matt: Well when 2007 warms up I'll be on a bike everyday. PoB.com: If you could only ride one spot for the rest of your life, where would it be? Matt: Beech Grove trails (with a little work), the outdoor, downtown Indy. PoB.com: Lastly, what ever happened to Autumn’s Fall Clothing? Matt: It pretty much died off. We sold two batches of t-shirts then I had to resign due to college you can still check our site. Our video is still posted. PoB.com: Any thanks or last words? Matt: I want to thank max miller, A-1 Cyclery, everyone that ever hooked me up with parts over the years, my parents. Keep rollin'...
Issue #5 – pg. 51 Behind the Band and Ramp Jam:
by: Joel Janiszyn
Here's a very large chunk of everything going through my brain about band and ramp jam. I have the history laid completely out. Right now I'm working on "Fun facts and crazy stories". I figure the whole history of everything is a good start and you can probably put it to use. I would have had the entire thing done last night but the tattoo studio wanted me to get on the red cross site and become certified on handling blood and preventing blood borne diseases. It took forever so i didn't have the chance to finish everything. Still, this should be of use to you. I'll have a rest done really soon. Tell me what you think.
‐Joel
"I can't believe this thing is still going on!" ‐ As Told By Joel Janiszyn
Infancy ________________________
The history of Band and Ramp Jam kind of started by accident in a way. The year was 2000 and Trevor and I were just shitty little kids that would ride bikes all day and into the night. We had a small ramp set up compared to what we have today. It was a quarter pipe and box jump set up like we have now, only scaled way down. The tranny was terrible and there was hardly a deck on the quarter, not to mention there was no coping. We still rode it constantly though. We'd have tons of friends from all over the place come and ride and skate it. We would just all ride and have the best time it seemed like. We were in Junior high at the time; it couldn't have been past 7th grade. We had a lot of friends that were in bands at the time. They too were in Junior high and a few might have been freshman in high school. They were always trying to land gigs and because of their age, couldn't play many places besides school auditoriums and community centers. I can't remember exactly who pitched the idea of making a day where some bands came over and played while everyone rode and skated. I thought it would be a one time thing and everyone would forget about it. We agreed to do it. If I remember correctly it was in the middle of summer. We "advertised" for maybe a week prior to the first one. There weren’t even any flyers or anything, just word of mouth. I came up with the name "Band and Ramp Jam". It wasn't very catchy, but fuck it...it was named after what it was...bands and ramps...in a jam format. Just a time where everyone did their own thing and had a good time doing it. Anyways, I think the bands included "Slow Children At Play" (who Trevor was drumming for), and Kummode (headed by the late Counter‐Coulter Unity's Joe Savarino). Anyways, we actually had a decent turn out. Around 50 or so kids showed up and had fun. This thing was just a party more or less. There was no real set up to it the way it is today. Anyways, after all was said and done, I went to bed that night happy that nothing
Issue #5 – pg. 52 sketchy happened and everyone had fun. I didn't think anything more about it. It was strange though because the next year around the time where we got out of school for the summer everyone started asking "When's the next jam?" Everyone seemed to actually show an interest in it. I was hesitant to keep it going but after some deciding with Trevor we figured we'd do it again. It just grew from there. Everyone just kept asking and asking when the next one was, and now it is to the point where it is an expected thing. I never thought it would grow to that point. The Early Years ____________________________ Like clockwork it just started to happen every year. We had the same shitty ramp set up until year number 4 actually. Still, everyone wanted to come ride our sketchy ramps and whatever other obstacles we could find to ride. (Some extra "ramps" included sheets of metal arranged into a launch ramp, a 2 foot "box jump" made out of an old chicken coop, and a box with an angle iron screwed to it to grind on.) We still had no real set up to the whole thing. Everyone just came, rode, watched the bands, and went home. We were also starting to gain a reputation for planning the Jam on the rainiest day of the year. At this point, 2 out of 3 of our jams had rained the entire time. And not just rain, but POURING rain. Much to our surprise though, no one left. Instead, everyone just was doing belling slides through puddles and riding and skating in the storm outside. It was around year number three when we realized that we attracted very...."strange" people. Our first real encounter was the homeless tuba guy. It is still just the strangest thing to me; I'll talk more about this guy later on. Year number 3 was also our first year that we had flyers. As far as I know there is only one original year 3 flyer in existence and I have it in my room (and oddly enough) cherish it. The flyer wasn't very pretty to look at. Our friend Joe Savarino made it with a little help from me. I still remember him making during a publications class that I had with him. He would just tear random things out of magazines and paste it to a paper (much like how we do it today). He told me he would go make copies of it at the hospital he worked at. He made the copies but got caught doing it. I think he actually lost his job for it! That was kind of the changing point for Band and Ramp Jam. After year #3 we decided to try out some new things. Like everything else in band and ramp jam history, it somehow caught on. The New and Improved Band and Ramp Jam ____________________________________ Year four was our year to really make it ours. Every year prior, since there was no real planning to it, everyone who came kind of made it what they wanted. We liked that everyone made it "theirs", but we started this thing, and we wanted to make sure
PUNKSONBIKES.COM
Issue #5 – pg. 54 it was truly in our hands. From that year on we started to do it all ourselves. We made flyers, we actually planned the format of how the jam would go, and we even started to feature some of those weird little "attractions" that Band and Ramp Jam has became famous for. Trevor and I made the flyers for year 4 and that particular flyer still seems to be the favorite of all of the flyers we have ever had. It featured a mug shot of me and Trevor with a black "censored bar" over our eyes with the caption "BARJ Founding Father" below the picture. Our first strange "attraction" took place at that jam. My little brother had a friend named Clay. Clay was this fat, goofy little kid that was just some kid who hung around my house. I ended up talking him into doing a "Clay the Amazing Dancing Boy" routine at year number 4 and he agreed to do it. Year number 4, like almost every other year, had terrible weather. The second I woke up that morning I thought "Fuck, not again". The sky was just a nasty terrible color and I knew it was going to be terrible. But, we held the jam anyways and even had a van full of bmx kids from Michigan drive all the way down for this thing. Of course 30 minutes after they began riding, the rain started to pour. It was raining so hard no one could ride or skate, let alone plug in their amps and play music. What ended up happening was this: Me and Trevor had a big stack of plywood sitting in the garage that we were going to use to repair the ramp with after the jam. We decided to plug in the bands under the carport connected to my garage, and to set up the plywood on all sides of the carport to make something comparable to a big room. Well, that’s what we did, and it was crazy. We crammed 50‐70 kids into this tiny little space with the bands playing at full volume. It was insane, but actually work and everyone still had fun. About 2 hours or so of staying in this deafening, tiny, little room, the sun started to come out and shine. The weather warmed right up, the sun was shining, everything was starting to get better. And since the weather had became beautiful in just the blink of an eye it seemed, I prodded Clay to go out there and do his Dancing Boy routine. He was hesitant but I made him do it anyways (because I’m a harassed boss to work for, haha). I pushed him out the door and he started nervously walking to the big crowd that awaited him. He was wearing a little top hat with a huge ceramic flower sticking out of the top and had a super tight little white t‐shirt on with a rainbow I drew on it that said "Clay the Amazing Dancing Boy". He walked up to the audience and just froze. I started barking at him to "DO THE DANCE!" DO THE DANCE!". He sat down his little boom box and plugged it in. He stood their seemingly terrified while waiting for the song to start. The song finally started which was "The Whole World" by Outkast. He just started to dance. He danced, and kicked, and jumped, and everyone was holding their sides they were laughing so hard. The thing I forgot to tell Clay was, the song was about six and half minutes. He danced through the whole thing, gasping for air, and dripping sweat everywhere. He still did an impressive job and I still laugh my ass off every time I think about it.
Issue #5 – pg. 55 Band and Ramp Jam 4 went really well, minus the shitty weather at the beginning. We (just like the audience) were already looking forward to Band and Ramp Jam 5. Half of a Decade!? ___________________________________ Year number 5. I still can't believe we did that. By far the best year we ever had. There was so much going on it was insane. We started many things that at the time was "new" to band and ramp jam but has now shaped what band and ramp jam is known for. We started to sell our own merchandise including D.I.Y. t‐shirts, patches, CD booklets, and a ton of other stuff. We also had a pool of popcorn which is still one of the weirdest ideas I've ever came up with (not to mention the messiest). We also had a mascot that year which was a huge chicken running around reeking havoc. The most important concept though, was that of doing an intro to officially kick off the jam.
Trevor and I always just did piddle little speeches before. "Thanks for coming, I hope you have fun". Blah blah blah. We decided we wanted to do something that would grab the audience by the balls, so to speak. We tossed around a ton of ideas, but settled on the 3‐wheeler intro.
The intro was set up like this. Next to the ramps is my pop's big workshop. We opened up the garage door and sealed the entrance with empty boxes. Trevor spray painted a huge mural on the boxes so it looked just like a graffiti wall or big banner to take everyone's attention away from it. The intro started with having someone read an intro that Trevor and I wrote together. The whole time the audience was focusing on the reader, we were in the shop with a little three‐ wheeler sitting on top of a launch ramp so we could get enough speed to break through the wall. We engine kept stalling and we started to panic. It was almost to the point of the story where we came out, but we still couldn't get the thing to run. Literally, about 10 seconds before our cue to exit, the motor fired up, he hopped on the three‐wheeler (Trevor driving and me on the back), went barreling down the ramp, and broke through the wall...all the while wearing suits, sunglasses, and smoking a cigar. We made our first "big" speech and will continue to make one every year that band and ramp jam lives.
We actually had "real" bands play that year. Ingsoc (the first time we ever heard of them) played and everyone loved them. Our friends "The Displeased" played, and of course, it was Counter Culture Unity's final show which was wrapped up by having the singer jump off of a roof and land in a shallow pool of popcorn.
Everything went according to plan even better than we had hoped. I think year 5 just made us hungry for more. Now we are always trying to improve. Whether it be new ramps, more merchandise, better bands, new sponsors, we're always in the market to make it bigger and even more unforgettable.
Issue #5 – pg. 56 Back to our roots? ________________________ Year six was our most recent Jam. I love the Band and Ramp Jam and I have treated it like a child for the 6 years it has been in existence but year 6...was just watered down. We had big plans but they just didn't unfold how we had hoped. The first problem was that Trevor and I had been really busy the whole year. I was in college, Trevor started a full time engineering job, and we were trying to juggle all of that while taking care of our British friends who were living with us for a month or so. Since we were so busy the date just kept getting pushed back further and further. We eventually settled on a date of the last Saturday in October (not a good idea). We knew it would be cold and nasty but we had no choice. The show must go on as they say...Well, the weather was terrible. Frigid and ungodly windy. I can't stress enough how terrible the wind was. Trevor and I was carrying a sheet of plywood and the wind caught hold of it and almost carried us across the yard. The turnout was rather disappointing too. We had a small crowd of probably around 50 kids. It just felt like first or second band and ramp jam all over again. Small crowd, and just havoc and chaos. Riding was unbearable because of the wind and everyone was miserable. We had to actually set up burning barrels so everyone could huddle around it and keep warm. Our intro was pretty funny though. We set it up as an old school magic show. The magician was played by Fairy Pie (who played the chicken mascot the year before). We ended up making a mixture of everything that makes up a Band and Ramp Jam host (some of the ingredients included unfunny jokes, bicycle parts, and a bottle of sexy?). We "magically" appeared inside the box and it actually went a lot smoother than we had thought it would. Our speech was of normal cheesiness and everyone seemed to enjoy it (keyword: seemed). I don't know...I hate to speak ill of any band and ramp jam moment but it just wasn't what we had expected. I would like to say though, that we had some really good sponsors who helped everything be not so terrible. Our good friends at Life Force Studios helped us out a ton. I seriously can't thank them enough, you guys rule. A local discount grocery store called "The Food Cupboard" donated a crazy amount of food and drinks. Thanks everybody. The bands actually had a positive attitude despite the weather. We had Ingsoc return and everyone loved them once again. We had a new band play called "Epta", it's not what we're used to but it was still cool of them to come and play anyways. The Displeased also made another appearance only this time, they were minus a drummer. They somehow coaxed Trevor into drumming for them which was hysterical to watch. Trevor didn't know the beat or stops or anything. He'd just keep one steady beat the whole way through and when the song was over he'd still be drumming because he didn't know when the song ended. Not our best year but it was still amazing to see everyone who braved the weather to
Issue #5 – pg. 57 come support Band and Ramp Jam. Thanks to everyone who came out year 6, you guys are seriously amazing. We just really want to make it up to everyone this upcoming year. We want it to be a thousand times better than it's ever been. Looks like we have a shit ton of planning to do....
What makes the Band and Ramp Jam Possible? _____________________________
Me and Trevor to make things simple. That’s the main drive behind everything. It sounds stupid to say, but there is actually a TON of work that goes into making this freak show happen every year. We plan the whole thing, repair the ramps, build new ramps, make the flyers, book the bands, book extra "gigs", make the merchandise, try to organize sponsors, and of course, just get everything set up in general. We have this inside joke that we sit around on our asses until the night before Band and Ramp Jam and then we stay up all night trying to get everything done. It's absolutely true. We didn't even have our "Magic box" done last year until the night before...well actually, the morning of (we built the box in my living room and after it was done we discovered that it was too big to fit out the door of the house so we had to dismantle it and rebuild it in the morning!). Somehow though, we still manage to get everything in order.
Our sponsors really help out a ton too. While me and Trevor hammer out the details, our sponsors help supply us with things we need to make everything go smoothly. It makes me feel so good to have people actually go out of their way to help us out with this thing. Not to toot my own horn but Band and Ramp Jam really does deserve sponsors. The Band and Ramp Jam is about one thing, and that’s fun. We just want people to ride, play, and enjoy themselves. Trevor and I don't make a penny off of donations or sponsorships. It all goes back into the ramps, and supplies and merchandise for the next year. It's a really good feeling to know that there are people out there that recognize band and ramp jam as a good thing to be a part of. We're not making money, we're not peddling anything, we're not trying to get a message across to everyone or shove anything down anyone's throats, just fun.
What About All That "Weird Stuff" ________________________________
Like I said before, we seem to attract very..."odd" characters to Band and Ramp Jam. Even if there are no weirdoes to come stir things up, something still seems to happen regardless. I'll list some of the things that still make us laugh to this day.
‐The homeless tuba guy. This was year 3 or 4 and everything was going smoothly. Half way through, a sketchy car filled to the ceiling with garbage pulls over on the middle of the highway. He asks someone near if he can skate and they told him yes. I guess we assumed it was just some grimy skateboarder who wanted to come session for a few minutes. We were wrong. A tall, lanky, old man (probably early 50's) steps out of the car with his tattered clothing and wild stringy hair blowing in the wind.
Issue #5 – pg. 58 He straps on some cheap old rollerblades that were falling apart and he began skating in circles in the driveway. The whole crowd just went dead silent. No one knew what was going on. He then returned to his car and opened up his trunk while the whole crowd was silently watching him. He pulls out a banged up, full size tuba and tosses it up on his shoulder and here he goes again. Now he's skating in circles while playing a tuba. The only sound being made besides the tuba was nervous laughter. He finally spoke and said "does anyone have a song request?" Someone yelled "KORN!!!!" just to get under the guys skin but he shrugged it off, replied with an "I don't know that one" and started playing "When the Saints Go Marching In" for the 30th time. After a few more minutes of that, he dropped his tuba and skated over to a microphone and began yelling about Jesus. "In Heaven there are ramps WWAAAAAYYYY HIIIIGGGGHHH" this nut job was screaming at everyone. He was able to preach for a few more seconds before my dad threatened to beat him to death if he didn't leave. That was the end of that. No one knows who he is, where he came from, or where he went. It was still a classic moment for sure. ‐How about the story of an abducted child? On the morning of Band and Ramp Jam four I am awoken by the sound of a helicopter. This sound was LOUD and sounded like it was right outside my window. Sure enough, I look outside and there IS a helicopter hovering about 20 feet about my house. I could already tell that this was going to go well. I shuffle downstairs and there is about 7 or 8 sheriff cars in my driveway. These cops are interrogating my parents when I come downstairs and I have no idea what is going on. They ask me "Do you know Luke Lines?" I say "No, never heard of him, why?" They proceed to explain to me that a teenage kid by the name of Luke left his house the day before claiming that he was going to ride his moped to Band and Ramp Jam. Already a couple things didn't make since. For one, this kid lived about an hours car drive away, and he was going to ride his moped here? And Two, why would this kid leave the day before the event even began. Nothing was adding up. The cops finally took off to pass out "missing child" flyers and would stop by every hour or so during the jam to see if he arrived. It turned out that a few days after Band and Ramp Jam, the police obtained a surveillance tape of him boarding a bus in Indianapolis towards Chicago or something like that, he just used Band and Ramp Jam as a smoke screen to buy him some time. Needless to say, we got some publicity that year, that's for sure. For the year 5 Band and Ramp Jam flyer, Trevor and I actually did a satire of the whole situation. The flyer included a search helicopter and a milk carton with a missing child picture on it.
Issue #5 – pg. 59 Out of the Dog House:
by: Alan Sternberg
I’m writing this article for one, because I need to vent, two to give an example of why bureaucrats in general suck. It all started when I get a phone call from my roommate/brother‐in‐law at 8:00am one morning. He informs me that my dog had run off within the last 20 min. I was across town at my fiancés’ apartment and started to head back across town when I get another phone call. At 8:15am, the pound calls to tell me they had my dog. This was his 3rd time in because people fuck with him and cut his cable. I asked how much it would be and they quoted me $35.00. At this point, I need to step back to the last time(s) he was in the “joint.” The 2nd time he was micro chipped so if he returned, his file would be brought up. This included my phone number, violations, he had had, vaccination records, etc… They charged me for the chip and putting it in without my consent. Grudgingly I paid it, thinking, it was kind of a good idea. Returning to the current situation, I went to the store to get a new tie out. I had $47.00 in my pocket. The tie out cost $5.00 and I was left with $42.00. Plenty to pay the $35.00 fee right? Wrong, I drive across town and get to the pound around 9:00am. I get in the door and this woman throws a ton of attitude about how they don’t open until 9:30. I tell her about the phone a call, how they told me I could come then and that I had a class at 9:30 and couldn’t wait. Finally she decides to start with the paperwork. Thinking everything was on file, I didn’t bring his rabies’ shot papers (he’s tagged as having his shots with a number that they can check). The lady asked if I had the papers with me and I explained they should be on file from last time. I had gotten a ticket for not having them the time before. As if someone had hit this woman in the side of the head, she had no idea he had been in before. At this point, I’m pissed. They didn’t know he had his shots, that he had priors, and they forced me to pay for this chip that didn’t do what they said it would. I asked how much it’d be and the lady informed me that it would be $45.00. I explained I only had $42.00. She started to get upset and says, “Sir, I only do paperwork. We are only charging you the price for a second offence and we are actually helping you out!” I told her, “No, you’d told me it would be $35.00. You misquoted me and now I don’t have enough because of you!” Again she assures me that she only does paper work. This goes back and forth until the supervisor comes over to say the same thing. Clearly they could have taken it because they were charging me for 2nd offence even though they wrote 3rd on the paperwork. I couldn’t wait anymore because I had a class.
Issue #5 – pg. 60 Finally I just walk out. I quickly turn around and ask where the nearest ATM was. It was in a shady part of town and it took over a ½ hour to find an ATM that wasn’t empty, broke, or ripped out of the building. Finally I get back to the pound. I pay the fee and she writes a fucking ticket. I asked, “What’s the ticket for?” She then tells me I have a “running at large violation.” At this point I’m really pissed. This is the 3rd time I’ve been in and this is the first time I’ve heard about it. No warnings or anything. I sit there watching her as she fills out the ticket and she says to me, “The officer that picked him up is issuing the ticket.” At this time, I watch her sign the ticket Jennifer something. Thinking it was funny she was singing it when the officer that picked him up issued it (remember, she ONLY does paperwork). I grudgingly asked for a note for class. She writes one and signs it Julie. What the hell. Since when can you forge anything, let alone tickets? I asked a cop that frequents the gas station I work at and the told me he didn’t think it was right either. So now I’m going to court for “running at large” because someone cut my dog’s cable and I got shitty with the lady. Because Julie or Jennifer, or whoever got on a power trip. A month goes by and I’m sitting in a courtroom to decide if I want to pay the ticket or have a trial. Of course I pick a trial because I didn’t do anything wrong. My court date’s a month later. The fine in Muncie is $184.00. Damn! A day after I go to court, we get our fence done that we’d been working on to prevent this because a 4th offence you don’t get your dog back. Anyways we get the fence done and my dog is on his tie out. I know he’s gotten off before by lodging his tooth into the clasp and letting himself off so I tape it so that doesn’t happen. I come home and the rope that held the fence gate shut (the lock hadn’t been put on yet) was cut along with the tape that had been on his tie out and he was gone. The day before my sister’s dogs had been let out of their pin but someone returned them luckily. Well we called the police and made a report. We did the “good citizen’s” thing and made a report. We went to the pound Monday morning to see if he was there after another shitty encounter with them on the phone. He wasn’t there. Not an hour later and I get a phone call saying they have him. Since one of the times they did not have on record, it was officially his third violation. I drive back across town to find out they called on their lunch break and I’d have to wait an hour. I dick around come back and realize my checkbook is at home. Eventually I get back with money and the argument picks up again. They force me to sign a paper saying if the dog is “running at large” again that I wouldn’t get him back. I argue again saying that I didn’t violate the “running at large” charge because I didn’t let him run off (the way the
Issue #5 – pg. 61 ordinance is written, it says if you allow, let, etc… that you are in violation). Since I had a fence up, a tie out on him, and was a victim of vandalism, I was not in violation of the ordinance. More arguing about how I’m wrong and how it’s all my fault ensues until they tell me that unless I have video proof of someone letting him off, next time I won’t get him back. Fuck bureaucrats! This dumb shit comes about because
they think they are someone. Because they can issue a little ticket and ruin your day. That’s not real power, that’s shit people with real power cast out on the masses to turn them on themselves. These bitches would be a lot more understanding if they were in my shoes. They didn’t dare write me a ticket this time because I was armed with the knowledge of what the ordinance says. This knowledge allowed me to do something that they hate. For once I started to beat them at there own game. There is no reason to respect these people. They were not saving lives or protecting me from anything. Instead, they have robbed me of hard earned money on four separate occasions now (none of which have been my fault). They dread me coming in because I argue so much with the girls at the front desk that every time they bring one of the big guys from the back to be an intimidating force. They always seem shocked when I don’t back down at a moments notice. Penalties and intimidation is their main tactics in forcing the masses to conform. FUCK THEM! Don’t let bureaucrats win. Don’t let them turn our kind against us. Fuck bureaucrats, they’re traitors to the working class.
Issue #5 – pg. 62
Photos:
Jordan Stark turndown air at OXP Photo: Alan Sternberg
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Jeremy Lackey turndown the first set at the Stark’s Photo: Alan Sternberg
David Grant rail hop Photo: Alan Sternberg
Issue #5 – pg. 64
Nick Carunchia up rail in the dark at the Anderson park Photo: Alan Sternberg
Issue #5 – pg. 65
Jarron Freed tiny launch to pick nick table nose manual Photo: Alan Sternberg
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Adam Strieby opposite tailwhip at sunset Photo: Alan Sternberg
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Danny Rumple big 360 over the 18ft. double at the Stark’s Photo: Alan Sternberg
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Joey “Whitesnake” Marks floats over a double Photo: Alan Sternberg Nick Carunchia barspin 180 over the euro gap in Anderson Photo: Alan Sternberg
Issue #5 – pg. 69
Joey Ross smith at BSU Photo: Alan Sternberg
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Reviews:
A Rebel Life: Murder by the Rich (Book) by: Alan Sternberg A Rebel Life is a book written about an ex‐punker and his thoughts for three days following his brother’s death from a Heroin OD. A somewhat complex theory of how the lower‐class does not have the same choices as the rich and are lead into drugs and dead‐end jobs is expressed throughout. It is because of this theory that the author concludes that his brother’s death is actually the rich murdering the poor. I personally loved it. Check it out (available through Amazon). 10/10 YCKMD: Issue 8 (Zine) by: Alan Sternberg So if you haven’t figured out by now, Sybilla and I are friends. I write for here and she helps out here too. Youth Culture Killed My Dog is her baby. I’ve loved some issues and hated some. This issue seems to be lacking something. There are several articles that I just didn’t know what to think about. One that really stuck out was about 9/11. This one pissed me off a lot because it seemed very biased and like it was copied off some 9/11 truth site. In fact, I think it even said to check one at the end. There was a lot of good too. Sybilla always has good interviews with local bands. Issue 8 seems to be a coming of age issue and I can’t wait ‘til Issue 9. 6/10 Naptown BMX: Issue 2 (Zine) by: Alan Sternberg This one is old but the only BMX zine that I have. (other than Issue 1) This was Chris Castle’s baby from 03‐04. This issue contains a mini‐trip write up, a day at the track, a couple other things, and a spot review of some of Indy’s popular spots. There was some drama over it and ultimately the drama and Chris’s busy busy schedule forced Issue 2 to be the last issue. There was some talk of bringing Naptown back as Kickstand BMX (which ultimately lead to the creation of Team BMX and now Punks on Bikes). Without Naptown, this zine would have never come to be. Chris, I’m still waiting for Issue 3. 6/10
Issue #5 – pg. 71 Bad Brains "Banned in D.C.: Bad Brains Greatest Riffs" by: Joel Janiszyn I've been a fan of Bad Brains for a long time now and when I found their greatest hits collection I was beyond excited. The cool thing about this album (like most Greatest Hits albums) is that there are songs from every album they have ever put out. It almost like you can sample each record they've ever recorded. The first track "Pay to Cum" really paints a picture of who Bad Brains are; loud, fast, and really quite clean with their instruments and vocals. The last 6 or so songs is nothing but reggae which I'm not a big fan of. Don't get me wrong, I love reggae influenced music but straight reggae just isn't for me. I wouldn't pass this up. 8/10 T.S.O.L. "Revenge" by: Joel Janiszyn I found this CD for $5.99 in the used music bin at the local music store. I figured it was worth a shot since it was only 6 bucks so I picked it up. Revenge is the album that was the turning point for TSOL. This was the transition where they started to turn into a "Goth" rock type of style. They lost a lot of fans and I can see why. I love older TSOL but Revenge was kind of hard to swallow. Everything just seems so slow and watered down. The last track "Everybody’s a Cop" is amazing though, it reminds me of their salad days with a little bit of their new style mixed in. If you only know and love TSOL by only their "Dance With Me" and "Disappear" days then album probably wouldn't be your cup of tea. 4/10
The Terribles: Banned for Life by: Alan Sternberg If you’ve never heard of the Terribles, they’re from PA and are worth a listen. Banned for Life is the Terribles new album. The band seems to have an older punk feel. Their maturity shows in their acoustic songs and in slightly political songs like Working Class Hero. Banned for Life seems to almost be a melodic but still aggressive tribute to punk’s Hardcore days. Check it out when it comes out this summer. 7/10 Discharge "Never Again" by: Joel Janiszyn This was a gift to me and I was excited to finally own a discharge album. They are legendary for being one of the pioneering bands of anarchy punk up there with Crass. The album is pretty good, but nothing to get me wound up about. Almost every song is good, but there are few "stand out in the crowd" songs. The song "Ignorance" is by far their best work though. They've inspired a plethora of bands of different genres, rumor has it that Metallica claim Discharge as one of their biggest influences? Hmm. If you’re into collecting music for the sake of having some big names in punk rock, pick it up. If you’re just into having something to listen to, I'd sample them before I bought their CD. 6/10
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