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How punk played in PeoriaLeor Galilon July 19, 2021 at 11:00 am

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Popular books about punk history tend to focus on the best-known bands from scenes in metropolitan centers, including London, New York, Los Angeles, and Washington, D.C. But punk also proliferated thanks to outcasts living in towns their big-city peers couldn’t find on a map–they too might hear something about themselves reflected in a strange, confrontational sound.

Jonathan Wright and Dawson Barrett’s new book, Punks in Peoria: Making a Scene in the American Heartland, helps demonstrate just how widespread punk was in its early years. Published last month through the University of Illinois Press, Punks in Peoria comes with a soundtrack compilation released by Chicago archival label Alona’s Dream, which includes songs by bands whose names alone express their contempt for the mainstream–among them Bloody Mess & the Skabs and my personal favorite, Constant Vomit. On September 5, Peoria’s Casa de Arte celebrates the book with a daylong outdoor concert called the Punks in Peoria Fest.

The deeply researched Punks in Peoria describes the growth of a scene in a central Illinois town that was anything but a sanctuary for subversives. In the following excerpt, Wright and Barrett show how the seeds of punk first got planted in Peoria. This passage begins with concert promoters Bill Love and Jay Goldberg, who were also owners of a local chain of stores called Co-Op Tapes and Records.

Across the river and ten miles south of Peoria, the hometown of Bill Love and Jay Goldberg was an unlikely hotbed of musical activity. Despite having a population less than a third the size of its sister city, Pekin had its own record stores, head shops, coffeehouses, folk singers, and rock bands, signaling the inroads of the sixties counterculture in a stronghold of conservativism. An outsized number of area musicians found their roots in Pekin, from the early days of rock and roll to the punk era and beyond. During the 1970s, Pekin hosted performances by the likes of Kiss, Blue Oyster Cult, the Runaways, Rush, and Journey (with a then-unknown Tom Petty opening). Perhaps more significantly, Pekin was home to the Golden Voice Recording Company–the finest recording studio in Illinois outside of Chicago.

Surrounded by cornfields on the south end of town, Golden Voice is best known for helping Dan Fogelberg and REO Speedwagon get their start in the music industry. Styx and Head East recorded there, and one of the music industry’s most successful engineers launched his career at the studio. “The reason Nirvana’s album Nevermind sounds the way it does is in part due to Golden Voice’s influence on Andy Wallace,” notes Chris Gilbert, a Pekin native responsible for reissuing scores of nearly forgotten Golden Voice recordings on his own Alona’s Dream Records. “Teenagers will still be listening to Nirvana in twenty years, maybe longer, and Golden Voice played a role in that.”

During the 1960s and ’70s, Golden Voice presented a unique opportunity to musicians from central Illinois and beyond: high-quality, professional recordings at affordable prices. Just about every Peoria-area band of note recorded there. Among them was Pekin’s answer to the Beatles and one of the Midwest’s most successful regional acts of the seventies: the Jets. Riding a wave of hype fostered by a local radio station, the band drew throngs of screaming fans to their early Peoria and Pekin shows, not unlike what the Beatles themselves had done a decade earlier, albeit on a smaller scale. Though stylistically more power-pop than proto-punk, the group may rightly be considered provincial forerunners of the punk mindset and attitude in central Illinois.

In early 1974, the Jets broke up over some members’ obsession with David Bowie; out of the ashes came the Peoria area’s first glam band: the Jetz. For singer-guitarist Graham Walker, Bowie represented the next logical extension of rock and roll in the post-Beatles era, both musically and culturally–and hinted at the shape of punk to come: “We’d all gone to Chicago and gotten glitter/glam clothes. I dyed my hair orange and shaved my eyebrows off [as Bowie had famously done]. We were just teenagers, running around Peoria and Pekin. . . . To walk down Main Street in Peoria with no eyebrows, hair dyed bright orange, and a glitter shirt on in the seventies . . . people wanted to kill us! You couldn’t be any further out. No one understood what we were doing–it was like we were from outer space.”

On Friday, May 24, 1974, Walker and his Jets/Jetz bandmate Gregg Clemons drove to Co-Op Records to pick up Bowie’s brand-new Diamond Dogs LP. “We bought the record at noon, and by 12:30 it was on our turntable,” he recalls. “We had our guitars with us and were playing along. The song that stood out was ‘Rebel Rebel.’ By 2:00 or 2:30, we were having our first run-through with it.” The band played it out that very night–a seminal moment Walker later described as “Peoria’s introduction to punk.”

The Jetz, however, lasted less than a year. Toward the end of the decade, a revived power-pop incarnation of the Jets (including Walker) released a single on Minneapolis’s Twin/Tone Records, a key independent label of the burgeoning post-punk underground. The band even had a number-one hit in Minneapolis (where a young Prince Rogers Nelson reportedly attended the record release party) and once opened for the Ramones, further tying the group to the emergence of punk rock.

A teenage Douglas McCombs skateboards in Peoria. - COURTESY DOUGLAS MCCOMBS

For sixteen-year-old Douglas McCombs, who grew up in Peoria and Pekin, the crucial “aha” moment arrived with Devo’s 1978 performance on Saturday Night Live. “Before that I was barely interested in music,” recalls the cofounder of the experimental rock band Tortoise. “The next two years were occupied with trying to find a context for how Devo even existed, connecting dots and filling in gaps”:

I had been obsessed with skateboarding since around ’72, but had not made any connection to rock n’ roll. When I discovered Devo, I started to notice that [skateboarders] Jay Adams and Tony Alva were no longer wearing Ted Nugent t-shirts in the magazines and their hair was shorter. Interesting development. I was able to eventually figure out that there were a couple of other people in my town who were interested in the same things I was.

We would scour the cutout bins at Co-Op Records in Pekin and Peoria for anything that looked weird, and without any information at all we discovered Television, Pere Ubu, Wire, X, the Cramps, the Stranglers, the Buzzcocks, etc. We got some dud records, too.

We would go to this gay bar in Peoria because they never carded us and they played good records. I learned about Iggy Pop and Lou Reed from there (didn’t know anything about the Stooges or Velvets until later) as well as Wax Trax in Chicago. We would go on buying trips to Chicago for records and skateboard parts.

For sixteen-year-old Jon Ginoli, punk was something exotic and intangible, existing only within the pages of magazines like Circus, Hit Parader, and Creem. “We’d heard about punk rock . . . but we had no idea what it sounded like!” explains the former Peorian. “It was all very secondhand–none of that was on the radio here.”

“In Peoria, it seemed like the world was happening somewhere else,” he adds. “There really wasn’t much to do except buy records.” So when the Ramones’ debut album hit Ginoli’s ears in the spring of 1976, it arrived as a revelation–as did “Anarchy in the U.K.,” the Sex Pistols’ debut single, later that fall. “I managed to order a copy from a record store in New York,” he explains. “I remember listening to it once, going ‘Hmmm . . . ‘; listening to it twice, going ‘Interesting . . . ‘; and then the third listen . . . I was like, ‘Oh my god, this is the greatest thing I’ve ever heard!'”

The mark the Ramones left on Ginoli proved indelible. Fifteen years later and a world away in San Francisco, he would stake his claim as the founder and frontman of Pansy Division–“the first all-gay rock band that any of us had ever known of.” Pansy Division’s in-your-face approach to queer sexuality, quite radical for its time, could scarcely have been envisioned by Ginoli’s younger self, an alienated teen growing up on the culturally repressive Illinois prairie. It was forged there nonetheless via punk rock: a ticket for him to embrace his outsiderness. “I wasn’t out yet and I was really uncertain of my sexuality,” Ginoli explains. “I was very frustrated. And punk rock is very good for channeling those frustrations.”

But beyond a few LPs in the racks at Co-Op, punk rock might well have not existed in Peoria. Aside from that lone MC5 show, the Bowie-isms of the Jetz, and a 1979 visit from British pub rockers Eddie and the Hot Rods, there is little trace of anything remotely “punk” playing Peoria in the seventies. All-ages shows, a staple of the DIY punk scene, were unheard of.

“If you wanted to see a rock show you went to a bar, and I certainly wasn’t able to do that,” Ginoli notes. But he was able to buy records–and that wasn’t the only aspect of the punk movement that inspired him. “I read that people were putting out zines . . . and I was able to mail-order some of them. So I thought, ‘I’ll do a zine.'”

Issue eight of Peoria punk zine Hoopla, published in April 1978

In 1977, during his junior year at Richwoods High School, Ginoli created Hoopla, Peoria’s first punk rock fanzine, its sixteen xeroxed pages crammed full of typewritten missives of punk culture. Yet few Peorians knew or cared; it was distributed almost entirely through mail order. “Trouser Press had a section where you could place short ads, so I would put ads for Hoopla in there and people would mail-order it,” Ginoli explains. “It was sort of like having pen pals. Because apart from a couple of people, I really couldn’t find people in Peoria who related to it.” v


From Punks in Peoria: Making a Scene in the American Heartland by Jonathan Wright and Dawson Barrett. Used with permission by the University of Illinois Press. Copyright 2021 by the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois.

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How punk played in PeoriaLeor Galilon July 19, 2021 at 11:00 am Read More »

Versatile instrumental trio Bitchin Bajas unspool new material at their first concert since 2019Bill Meyeron July 19, 2021 at 12:00 pm

For the past decade, local trio Bitchin Bajas have exemplified the virtues of patience and versatility. All three members play synthesizers, Cooper Crain and Daniel Quinlivan play organ, and Rob Frye plays woodwinds and percussion. They create plush, pulsing instrumentals with melodies that evolve at such a leisurely pace that you might not notice the changes as they occur–though you’ll definitely feel like you’ve been taken somewhere by the time the tune ends. As flexible as Bitchin Bajas are on their own, they’re also malleable collaborators. They’ve created a suitably aquatic soundtrack for Olivia Wyatt’s 2015 documentary, Sailing a Sinking Sea; melded into the spiritual trance vibe of Natural Information Society; transformed themselves into an AACM-inspired jazz group on Frye’s recent solo LP, Exoplanet (Astral Spirits); and nailed the plastic pop sound of disco-era Blondie while backing singer Haley Fohr in her Jackie Lynn project. The Bajas haven’t released a full album of new music since 2017, but they’ve put their pandemic time to good use by recording new material, which is due to be released as a full-length in 2022. Your best chance to hear some of the music before then will be at this concert, their first since fall 2019. While the Bajas will play monthly concerts at the Hungry Brain from August till November, those will be specially themed shows, permitting the group to shape-shift yet again. v

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Versatile instrumental trio Bitchin Bajas unspool new material at their first concert since 2019Bill Meyeron July 19, 2021 at 12:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Blackhawks: 3 unprotected players for Seattle to takeVincent Pariseon July 19, 2021 at 12:00 pm

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Chicago Blackhawks: 3 unprotected players for Seattle to takeVincent Pariseon July 19, 2021 at 12:00 pm Read More »

60 shot, 10 fatally, in Chicago over weekend. Seven of the wounded were kids 15 and youngerSun-Times Wireon July 19, 2021 at 11:33 am

Ten people were killed and at least 50 others were wounded in shootings across Chicago over the weekend — seven of the wounded were children 15 and younger.

12-year-old, 4 teenagers hurt in Austin mass shooting

Six people were shot outside a party late Saturday in Austin on the West Side, including a 12-year-old girl and four teenagers. Five of the victims, ranging in age from 12 to 19 years old, were hospitalized in fair condition, according to police

About 11:40 p.m., they were standing with a group on the sidewalk in the 5000 block of West Ohio Street when someone in a dark-colored SUV fired shots, police said.

The 12-year-old girl was struck in the hand and driven by family members to West Suburban Medical Center, police said.

A 13-year-old girl and a 14-year-old girl both suffered gunshot wounds to the buttocks and were taken to Stroger Hospital, police said.

A 15-year-old girl suffered a graze wound to the head and a gunshot wound to the buttocks, according to police. She was transported to Mount Sinai Hospital. A 19-year-old woman was struck in the back and transported to Stroger Hospital.

A sixth victim, a 25-year-old man, was struck in the buttocks and went to Mount Sinai Hospital where he was treated and released.

Boys 8 and 14 hurt in Gresham shootings

Early Sunday, an 8-year-old boy and a 28-year-old man were wounded in a shooting in Gresham on the South Side.

Just after 1 a.m., the pair were traveling in a car in the 2000 block of West 83rd Street when someone in a black SUV fired shots, police said.

The boy suffered a gunshot wound to the left leg and was transported to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, where he was listed in good condition, police said. The man was struck in the back and treated and released on scene, according to police.

In another shooting in Gresham, a 14-year-old boy was wounded Saturday. The teen was in a car in the parking lot of a gas station in the 1200 block of 87th Street when someone opened fire about 3:40 p.m., police said.

He was shot in the leg and was transported to Little Company of Mary Hospital, where he was in fair condition, police said.

West Town fatal attack

A man was fatally shot early Monday in the West Town neighborhood.

Just after 1 a.m., the 38-year-old was standing on the sidewalk in the 100 block of North Morgan Street when someone in a silver sedan fired shots, Chicago police said. He suffered multiple gunshot wounds and was transported to Stroger Hospital where he was pronounced dead, police said.

2 killed in Austin shootings

A man was shot and killed Sunday night in Austin on the West Side.

The 31-year-old was standing on the sidewalk in the 900 block of North Lawler Avenue when someone approached and fired, police said. He suffered gunshot wounds to the head and body and was taken to Stroger Hospital where he was pronounced dead, police said. He has not yet been identified.

Another man was fatally wounded Sunday night.

About 7:30 p.m., the 30-year-old was in the 5500 block of West Rice Street when someone approached and fired, police said. He was struck in the shoulder and was taken to Stroger Hospital, where he was pronounced dead, police said.

Greater Grand Crossing fatal attack

A 49-year-old man was fatally shot Sunday night in Greater Grand Crossing on the South Side.

He was speaking to someone in a parked car about 10:25 p.m. when someone inside fired shots in the 7700 block of South Normal Avenue, police said.

He was struck multiple times in the body and was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead, police said. The Cook County medical examiner’s office hasn’t identified him.

Gresham homicide

A person was shot to death Sunday afternoon in Gresham on the South Side.

The victim was near the street about 4 p.m. in the 1700 block of West 79th Street when he heard shots and felt pain, police said. He was struck in the stomach and he was taken to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, where he was pronounced dead, police said.

Man killed in Back of the Yards

A man was shot to death early Sunday morning in Back of the Yards on the South Side.

The 30-year-old was walking on the sidewalk in the 5100 block of South Marshfield Avenue about 12:40 a.m. when someone in a gray sedan fired shots, Chicago police said. He suffered gunshot wounds to the chest and was transported to the University of Chicago Medical Center where he was pronounced dead, police said. He has not yet been identified.

2 shot, 1 fatally, in Chatham

One person was killed and another wounded in a shooting Saturday night in Chatham on the South Side.

The pair was standing outside about 11:25 p.m. in the 7600 block of South St. Lawrence Avenue when someone in a black SUV fired shots, police said.

A male suffered gunshot wounds to the body and was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center where he was pronounced dead, police said. A 27-year-old woman was struck in the right knee and taken to the same hospital in fair condition, police said.

Man fatally shot in East Garfield Park

A man was fatally shot early Saturday during an argument in East Garfield Park.

About 1:45 a.m., the 31-year-old was shot in the head by a man during an argument outside in the 2800 block of West Van Buren Street, police said. He was transported to Mount Sinai Hospital where he was pronounced dead, police said.

The shooter was on the scene when officers arrived and was taken to Area Four headquarters for further investigation, police said.

1 killed, 3 wounded in Austin shooting

One man was killed and three others wounded in a shooting late Friday night in Austin on the West Side.

About 11:55 p.m., the four men were standing outside in the 700 block of North Lockwood Avenue when three people approached them and fired shots, police said. A 29-year-old man was struck in the head and back and pronounced dead at the scene, police said. He has not yet been identified.

A man, 40, suffered gunshot wounds to the hip and leg and another man, 45, was also struck in the leg, police said. Both men were transported to Stroger Hospital in serious condition. A fourth man, 62, suffered a graze wound to the back and was taken to the same hospital in good condition.

West Pullman fatal drive-by

A man was shot to death Friday evening in a drive-by in West Pullman on the Far South Side.

The 26-year-old was on the street about 6:50 p.m. in the 12000 block of South Union Avenue when a vehicle pulled up and someone from inside fired shots, police said. He was struck multiple times on the body and he was taken to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, where he was pronounced dead, police said. The Cook County medical examiner’s office identified him as Antwan Davis.

At least 38 other people were wounded in shootings since 5 p.m. Friday.

Last weekend, 13 people were killed and 33 others wounded in shootings citywide.

Read more on crime, and track the city’s homicides.

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60 shot, 10 fatally, in Chicago over weekend. Seven of the wounded were kids 15 and youngerSun-Times Wireon July 19, 2021 at 11:33 am Read More »

Man fatally shot on sidewalk in West Town: policeSun-Times Wireon July 19, 2021 at 9:07 am

A man was fatally shot early Monday in the West Town neighborhood.

Just after 1 a.m., the 38-year-old was standing on the sidewalk in the 100 block of North Morgan Street when someone in a silver sedan fired shots, Chicago police said.

He suffered multiple gunshot wounds to his body and was transported to Stroger Hospital where he was pronounced dead, police said.

There is no one in custody as Area Three detectives investigate.

Read more on crime, and track the city’s homicides.

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Man fatally shot on sidewalk in West Town: policeSun-Times Wireon July 19, 2021 at 9:07 am Read More »

Man shot to death in Austin: policeSun-Times Wireon July 19, 2021 at 8:00 am

A man was shot and killed Sunday night in Austin on the West Side.

The 31-year-old was standing on the sidewalk about 10:10 p.m. in the 900 block of North Lawler Avenue when a male approached him and fired shots, Chicago police said.

He suffered gunshot wounds to the head and body and was taken to Stroger Hospital where he was pronounced dead, police said. He has not yet been identified.

There is no one in custody, according to police.

Read more on crime, and track the city’s homicides.

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Man shot to death in Austin: policeSun-Times Wireon July 19, 2021 at 8:00 am Read More »

55 shot, 8 fatally, in Chicago since Friday nightSun-Times Wireon July 19, 2021 at 4:10 am

Eight people have been killed and at least 47 others wounded in shootings across Chicago since Friday night.

A 49-year-old man was fatally shot Sunday night in Greater Grand Crossing on the South Side.

He was speaking to someone in a parked black-colored vehicle about 10:25 p.m. when someone inside fired shots in the 7700 block of South Normal Avenue, Chicago police said.

He was struck multiple times in the body and was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead, police said.

The Cook County medical examiner’s office hasn’t identified him.

A man was shot to death early Sunday morning in Back of the Yards on the South Side.

The 30-year-old was walking on the sidewalk in the 5100 block of South Marshfield Avenue about 12:40 a.m. when someone in a gray sedan fired shots, Chicago police said.

He suffered gunshot wounds to the chest and was transported to the University of Chicago Medical Center where he was pronounced dead, police said. He has not yet been identified.

One person was killed and another wounded in a shooting Saturday night in Chatham on the South Side.

The pair was standing outside about 11:25 p.m. in the 7600 block of South St. Lawrence Avenue when someone in a black SUV fired shots, police said.

A male suffered gunshot wounds to the body and was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center where he was later pronounced dead, police said. A 27-year-old woman was struck in the right knee and taken to the same hospital in fair condition, police said.

On Saturday, a man was fatally shot during an argument in East Garfield Park.

About 1:45 a.m., the 31-year-old was shot in the head by a man during an argument outside in the 2800 block of West Van Buren Street, police said. He was transported to Mount Sinai Hospital where he was pronounced dead, police said.

The shooter was on the scene when officers arrived and was taken to Area Four headquarters for further investigation, police said.

One man was killed and three others wounded in a shooting late Friday night in Austin on the West Side.

About 11:55 p.m., the four men were standing outside in the 700 block of North Lockwood Avenue when three people approached them and fired shots, police said. A 29-year-old man was struck in the head and back and pronounced dead at the scene, police said. He has not yet been identified.

A man, 40, suffered gunshot wounds to the hip and leg and another man, 45, was also struck in the leg, police said. Both men were transported to Stroger Hospital in serious condition. A fourth man, 62, suffered a graze wound to the back and was taken to the same hospital in good condition.

Friday evening, a man was shot to death in a drive-by in West Pullman on the Far South Side.

The 26-year-old was on the street about 6:50 p.m. in the 12000 block of South Union Avenue when a vehicle pulled up and someone from inside fired shots, police said. He was struck multiple times on the body and he was taken to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, where he was pronounced dead, police said. The Cook County medical examiner’s office identified him as Antwan Davis.

In nonfatal attacks, six people were shot outside a party late Saturday in Austin on the West Side, including a 12-year-old girl and four teenagers.

Five of the victims, ranging in age from 12 to 19 years old, were hospitalized in fair condition, according to police

About 11:40 p.m., they were standing with a group on the sidewalk in the 5000 block of West Ohio Street when someone in a dark-colored SUV fired shots, police said.

The 12-year-old girl was struck in the hand and driven by family members to West Suburban Medical Center, police said.

A 13-year-old girl and a 14-year-old girl both suffered gunshot wounds to the buttocks and were taken to Stroger Hospital, police said.

A 15-year-old girl suffered a graze wound to the head and a gunshot wound to the buttocks, according to police. She was transported to Mount Sinai Hospital. A 19-year-old woman was struck in the back and transported to Stroger Hospital.

A sixth victim, a 25-year-old man, was struck in the buttocks and went to Mount Sinai Hospital where he was treated and released.

Early Sunday, an 8-year-old boy and a 28-year-old man were wounded in a shooting in Gresham on the South Side.

Just after 1 a.m., the pair were traveling in a vehicle in the 2000 block of West 83rd Street when someone in a black SUV fired shots, police said.

The boy suffered a gunshot wound to the left leg and was transported to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn where he was listed in good condition, police said.

The man was struck in the back and treated and released on scene, according to police.

At least 37 other people were wounded in shootings since 5 p.m. Friday.

Last weekend, 13 people were killed and 33 others wounded in shootings citywide.

Read more on crime, and track the city’s homicides.

Read More

55 shot, 8 fatally, in Chicago since Friday nightSun-Times Wireon July 19, 2021 at 4:10 am Read More »

Man killed in Greater Grand Crossing shooting: policeSun-Times Wireon July 19, 2021 at 3:47 am

A 49-year-old man was fatally shot Sunday night in Greater Grand Crossing on the South Side.

He was speaking to someone in a parked black-colored vehicle about 10:25 p.m. when someone inside fired shots in the 7700 block of South Normal Avenue, Chicago police said.

He was struck multiple times in the body and was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead, police said.

The Cook County medical examiner’s office hasn’t identified him.

No one is in custody as Area Two detectives investigate.

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Man killed in Greater Grand Crossing shooting: policeSun-Times Wireon July 19, 2021 at 3:47 am Read More »

Apollo Crew Passes Halfway Point: Chicago Tribune Coverage of the Apollo 11 Missionon July 19, 2021 at 3:36 am

Cosmic Chicago

Apollo Crew Passes Halfway Point: Chicago Tribune Coverage of the Apollo 11 Mission

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Apollo Crew Passes Halfway Point: Chicago Tribune Coverage of the Apollo 11 Missionon July 19, 2021 at 3:36 am Read More »