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Les Paul and Mary Ford

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Les Paul (b. June 9, 1915, original name Lester Williams Polfus) and Mary Ford (July 7, 1928-September 30, 1977, original name Iris Colleen Summers) were a husband-wife musical duo.

Paul was a guitarist, born in Waukesha, Wisconsin, who created his own electric guitars from acoustic ones, and recorded several solo guitar hits as well as the songs where he backed his wife's singing.

Ford was born in El Monte, California. The name Mary Ford was picked out of a telephone directory by Paul, so she had as short a name as his when they recorded as a duo. She was originally a country music performer, working with Gene Autry and Jimmy Wakely, and became one of the early practitioners of multi-tracking, where she recorded several parts of a multi-part harmony. She, Patti Page (who was probably the first), and Jane Turzy were three singers who used multi-tracking on their hits in the early 1950s.

They were a couple from 1946, and married in 1949. In 1964 they broke up both personally and professionally; Mary Ford went into retirement, while Les Paul continued as a consultant for the Gibson Company, guitar makers.

She died of complications from diabetes in Arcadia, California.


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She died of complications from diabetes in Arcadia, California. Nueva Vision is the official Ramones Fan Club of Spain, and also a popular bar in Malasańa in Madrid. They were a couple from 1946, and married in 1949. In 1964 they broke up both personally and professionally; Mary Ford went into retirement, while Les Paul continued as a consultant for the Gibson Company, guitar makers. The song also appears in the soundtrack for the film 'All Over Me.'. She, Patti Page (who was probably the first), and Jane Turzy were three singers who used multi-tracking on their hits in the early 1950s. Corin Tucker, lead singer and guitarist of Portland, Oregon-based rock band Sleater-Kinney, wrote a song titled 'I Wanna Be Your Joey Ramone' for their sophmore record, Call The Doctor. She was originally a country music performer, working with Gene Autry and Jimmy Wakely, and became one of the early practitioners of multi-tracking, where she recorded several parts of a multi-part harmony. Website HomestarRunner.com (http://www.homestarrunner.com) featured a character dressed up as one of the Ramones in the cartoon The House That Gave Sucky Treats.

The name Mary Ford was picked out of a telephone directory by Paul, so she had as short a name as his when they recorded as a duo. They say that The Ramones are one of their main musical influences. Ford was born in El Monte, California. Australian punk rock band The Spazzys are huge fans of The Ramones and once played with Mark Ramone. Paul was a guitarist, born in Waukesha, Wisconsin, who created his own electric guitars from acoustic ones, and recorded several solo guitar hits as well as the songs where he backed his wife's singing. Animation TV show Oggy and the Cockroaches featured a trio of cockroaches called "Joey", "Marky" and "Dee Dee". June 9, 1915, original name Lester Williams Polfus) and Mary Ford (July 7, 1928-September 30, 1977, original name Iris Colleen Summers) were a husband-wife musical duo. The street behind CBGB was named after Joey Ramone after his death.

Les Paul (b. By the end of the video, the puppet name is revealed as being "Joey". Swedish band Roxette included a tall thin puppet with long black hair, Perfecto leather jacket and red sunglasses in one of their video clips. The uniform often consists of a Perfecto leather jacket, ripped jeans, and Converse sneakers. Ramones fans often try to look like their idols.

William Shatner mentions Joey Ramone on a song. Jello Biafra has a track called Joey Ramone on one of his spoken word albums. On the next day, Bono from U2 made a speech about Joey and the Ramones. When Joey died, The Misfits removed their content from their website and replaced it with a picture of Joey.

The Human League song Things That Dreams are Made Of (from their platinum-selling 1981 album Dare) namechecks "Johnny, Joey, Dee Dee" in the lyrics. Lemmy Kilmister wrote a song called R.A.M.O.N.E.S.. Frank Black from The Pixies has a song on his first solo album called I Heard Ramona Sing that is a Ramones tribute song. Slash from Guns and Roses has stated that he learned to play guitar by listening to Road to Ruin.

I went onstage with Steve Jones of the Sex Pistols and we did Judy is a Punk, Commando and Blitzkrieg Bop.". Tim Armstrong, Danny Bosstone, Brett Bad Religion, Eddie Vedder--everybody sang and played great. The performers demonstrate the breadth of the Ramones' influence: The Red Hot Chili Peppers, The Dickies and X played great sets and then CJ Ramone, Marky Ramone and long time producer Daniel Ray took the stage and played while different guitar and vocal teams came out and did Ramones songs. The event was at Los Angeles' Avalon and hosted by Rob Zombie.

Longtime Ramones fan Henry Rollins appeared at a Ramones Thirtieth Anniversary Tribute concert September 12, 2004. Notable bands include Screeching Weasel and The Queers, both of whom recorded entire Ramones cover albums. The music is generally a little faster and heavier on the guitars with (often) tongue in cheek lyrics about girls and similar fare. These bands often dress up like the Ramones, and play instruments like theirs.

Some bands are so taken by The Ramones as a whole that a subgenre dubbed "Ramones-punk" has appeared. The Ramones' first British tour is widely credited with inspiring the first wave of English punk groups: The Sex Pistols, The Damned, The Clash and others. Several people often state that, when they first heard the Ramones, they felt that they could do the same, deciding to play instruments and form their own groups. While the origins of punk rock are the subject of debate, The Ramones are widely credited with popularizing the form.

The Ramones have proven hugely influential, mostly on later musicians, but in other fields as well: In 1997 four species of trilobites were named after members of the band: Mackenziurus johnnyi, Mackenziurus joeyi, Mackenziurus deedeei, and Mackenziurus ceejayi. Their last show is recorded on video and CD and featured several special guests such as Lemmy Kilmister from Motörhead and Eddie Vedder from Pearl Jam. Joey was also reported to have drug problems. Joey and Johnny didn't speak to each other for years.

After a spot in the 1996 Lollapalooza festival, The Ramones disbanded, reportedly due to ongoing personality clashes and frustration at not achieving success commensurate with their influence. However, Dee Dee did continue contributing to the music of The Ramones by lending his lyrics for use in later songs. Ramone), a Ramones fan that gave a younger rock feeling to the Ramones' work. Dee Dee Ramone left after 1989's Brain Drain, and was replaced by Christopher John Ward (C.J.

Burke lasted two days in the band before Marky came back in 1987. Elvis Ramone) from Blondie. They recorded several albums with Richie Ramone who was then replaced by Clem Burke (a.k.a. Marky Ramone was fired because of his alcoholism and eventually replaced by Richard Beau (under the name Richie Ramone).

Johnny recalls that he was disappointed with the outcome of End of the Century.. The band would later consider this one of the 'not-so-great' albums they had distributed, crediting tensions between the producer and the artists. During the recording sessions for End of the Century, Spector reportedly pulled a gun on Dee Dee Ramone. After Rock 'n' Roll High School, legendary producer Phil Spector became interested in the band and produced End of the Century.

It was the lineup with Marky which played a central role in the 1979 film Rock 'n' Roll High School, a film that Roger Corman originally called Disco High until writer/director Allan Arkush heard the Ramones. Tommy worked with Marky to ensure that his drumming was appropriate for the Ramones style; he also produced the Ramones fourth studio album Road to Ruin and their eighth Too Tough To Die. Tommy left the band to go back to his studio work, which he preferred to the hard life of touring. After two years on the road and the Top 50 hit album Rocket to Russia, an exhausted Tommy Ramone was replaced on drums by Marc Bell, who became Marky Ramone.

Another Ramones gig in England became their first live album, It's Alive, considered by most critics one of the best live albums ever. Their appearance galvanized the UK punk rock scene, inspiring future punk stars including members of The Clash and The Sex Pistols. They appeared at The Roundhouse in London, England, on July 4, 1976, second billed to the Beatlesque Flamin' Groovies. After playing for several nights at CBGB, they were signed by Sire Records in autumn 1975 and recorded their debut album Ramones for about $6000.

A non-fan friend-of-a-friend who went to a concert commented later that she "couldn't understand why they kept calling out 1-2-3-4 in the middle of the songs"!. One reviewer (unknown) described them as taking "three chord rock back to its one and a half chord basics". Apparently they used to be booed off stage when they played outside New York City. Baker, they did play longer shows by simply playing their entire set and then repeating it.

According to a bio by Australian Musicologist/Guru Glenn A. There are some super-8 movies of these shows, present in a couple of the band's videos. Ramones concerts at CBGB's became legendary, due in part to their brevity: Most concerts were twenty to thirty minutes long, much shorter than their contemporaries', and are often described by their witnesses as extremely fast, crude, energetic and desperate. These bands formed a very interesting musical scene of creative people who played very different styles of music that later were called punk rock, perhaps due in part to a fanzine called Punk Magazine.

Other bands from this period include the New York Dolls, Tom Verlaine's Television, Blondie, Richard Hell and the Voidoids, Patti Smith Band, Suicide, and the Talking Heads. In the early '70s, many New York bands started to play in rock clubs such as the famous Max's Kansas City and CBGB (which stands for "country, bluegrass and blues" and was not originally intended to be a rock club) in the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Their early songs were very fast and very short, most clocked in at about two minutes. Tommy Ramone was then an employee of the studio, and after several times helping Joey to get some beats straight, ended up joining the band, while Joey took over the lead vocals since Dee Dee had problems singing for an (although brief) entire set while continually playing.

The Ramones started with Joey Ramone on drums, Johnny Ramone on guitar and Dee Dee Ramone on bass and vocals. Joey Ramone has stated the Ramones were rather taken with the Bay City Rollers' hit song "Saturday Night," and set out to imitate its catchy, sing-a-long quality. It heralded a raw, loud, fast and direct sound often reminicent of 1950s-early 1960s rock and roll or bubblegum pop. The Ramones pioneered a back-to-basics sound that avoided complicated progressive rock and the bloated, meandering guitar solos that 1970s rock music had become known for.

Colvin (Dee Dee Ramone) suggested the name, inspired by the fact that Paul McCartney used to call himself Paul Ramon when he was in the Silver Beatles. "Here lies Ritchie Ramone" can be seen on a cartoon drawing of a gravestone on the innersleeve of the 'Rocket to Russia' album. An earlier member, Ritchie, left the band before the first recording (not related to the Richie Ramone, above). Later band members also adopted the name:.

The original band members all adopted Ramone as a surname although they were not actually brothers:. They led the New York punk movement and are often credited with forming the musical foundation of punk (see protopunk). The Ramones were a hugely influential punk rock band formed in Forest Hills, Queens, New York in March 1974. Download sample of "Sheena is a Punk Rocker" from Rocket to Russia.

We're Outta Here, 1997. Greatest Hits Live, 1996. Loco Live, 1991. It's Alive, 1979.

We're A Happy Family, 2003 tribute album. Loud, Fast Ramones: Their Toughest Hits (The Best Of 1975-1996), 2002. Hey Ho! Let's Go: The Anthology (The Best Of 1975-1996), 1999. All The Stuff Volume 2, 1990.

All The Stuff Volume 1, 1990. Ramones Mania (The Best Of 1975-1988), 1988. "Spider-Man", 1996. "I Don't Want To Grow Up", 1995.

"Substitute", 1994. "Strength To Endure", 1992. "Poison Heart", 1992. "Merry Christmas (I Don't Want To Fight Tonight)", 1990.

"Can't Get You (Outta My Mind)", 1989. "I Believe In Miracles", 1989. "Pet Cemetery", 1989. "I Wanna Live", 1988.

"Bop 'Til You Drop", 1987. "Something To Believe In", 1986. "Bonzo Goes To Bitburg", 1986. "Howling At The Moon", 1984.

"Psycho Therapy", 1983. "Time Has Come Today", 1983. "It's Not My Place (In The 9 To 5 World)", 1982. "She's A Sensation", 1981.

"The KKK Took My Baby Away", 1981. "We Want The Airwaves", 1981. "Chinese Rock", 1980. "Danny Says", 1980.

"I'm Affected", 1980. "Baby, I Love You", 1980. "Rock & Roll High School", 1979. "Needles And Pins", 1979.

"Don't Come Close", 1979. "I'm Against It", 1978. "I Wanna Be Sedated", 1978; a sample in OGG format is available. "Sheena is a Punk Rocker", 1977.

"Beat On The Brat", 1976. "Judy Is Punk", 1976. "53rd & 3rd", 1976. "Blitzkrieg Bop", 1975.

    . Adios Amigos!, 1995. Acid Eaters, 1993. Mondo Bizarro, 1992.

    Brain Drain, 1989. Halfway to Sanity, 1987. Animal Boy, 1986. Too Tough to Die, 1984.

    Subterranean Jungle, 1983. Pleasant Dreams, 1981. End Of The Century, 1979. Road to Ruin, 1978;.

    Rocket to Russia, 1977, number 105 of Rolling Stone magazine's Top 500 albums. Leave Home, 1977. The Ramones, 1976, number 33 on Rolling Stone magazine's 2003 list of Top 500 albums. Johnny Ramone died of prostate cancer on September 15, 2004 in Los Angeles, California.

    Dee Dee Ramone was found dead at his Hollywood home on June 5, 2002 following a drug overdose. (At a June 2001 concert in Boston, Bono remarked that the song was originally about a hangover, but Joey turned it into a gospel song.). Joey Ramone died of lymphoma on April 15, 2001 in New York. The last song he ever heard was U2's "In A Little While". 1965) (real name Christopher John Ward) (Later replaced Dee-Dee on bass).

    C-Jay Ramone (b. 1955) (real name Clem Burke) (Later replaced Richie on drums). Elvis Ramone (b. 1957) (real name Richard Beau) (Later replaced Marky on drums).

    Richie Ramone (b. 1956) (real name Marc Bell) (Later replaced Tommy on drums). Marky Ramone (b. Tommy Ramone (January 29, 1949 - ) (real name Thomas Erdelyi) (drums).

    Dee Dee Ramone (September 18, 1952 - ? June 5, 2002) (real name Douglas Glenn Colvin) (bass guitar). Johnny Ramone (October 8, 1948 - ? September 15, 2004) (real name John Cummings) (guitar). Joey Ramone (May 19, 1951 - ? April 15, 2001) (real name Jeffrey Hyman) (vocals).