TuneIn

Tuesday, May 10, 2022

Howie Pyro, The Eternal Teenager


 

Howie Pyro, The Eternal Teenager

Deep Breath:

It’s only been a few days since Howie passed and it has been very difficult to wrap my head around it. Howie was SUCH an incredible person. He was filled with childlike wonder and excitement about so many things. He was the eternal teenager.  We developed a strong bond over the years that I will treasure always. Thoughts and events have been banging around in my brain since his passing and I’m not sure how I’ll be able to deal without my almost daily communications with him.

I connected with Howie back in the early 2000’s via Myspace of all things.  Our friendship sort began as “frenemies” as we were constantly bidding on the same things on eBay. I would send him a pic of something I won and he would freak out saying “you beat me on that one!” The reverse was also true just as many times. My wife would hear me shout out at the computer and she would check to see if I had fallen or maybe stubbed my toe; nope, just losing some auction to Howie!

One of the first times we met in person was at one of the WFMU record fairs. We chatted for a long while, but then we both had to get to business; he was selling records and I was buying. He also did a fair amount of buying himself.

While at this fair it was always imperative to shop at Todd Abramson’s table. After flipping through the records and amassing a pile I cashed out, but not before I saw a long time want. It was the Mad Mike Favorite by The Youngsters - ZEBRA on Sho-Biz records!  I thought the price was a little high, so I put it in the back of the box thinking, “well if I have any money left at the end of the day, I’ll come back!” That never works out the way you want it to. Right on cue, Howie comes over and starts flipping through the box. Of course he finds Zebra almost immediately, and with a loud exultation he yanked it from the box! “YOINK!”

Foiled again by that infernal PYRO! Side note, I did find that record years later for half the price!

As everyone knows, Howie LOVED records of all kinds. One listen to his show INTOXICA and you’ll hear everything under the sun. From some insanely rare garage fuzz monster from Europe to some dollar record you somehow missed while digging your local roadside junk shop.  He was always on the hunt for records. Whenever I went to a record show he insisted that I send him pictures of my finds. It was a ritual. A ritual that makes me smile to this day. Many messages would end with “I HATE YOU!” and a little laugh emoji. Just as many of my messages to him ended the same way, or with a simple, “UGH!”  Hardcore record collectors rib their friends like the most hardened comic roasting a pal at the Friars Club. 

In his 61 years Howie lived a life most of us would take 200 years to live. I swear he only slept a few hours a night. I would be up at 5:30 or 6:00 east coast time and we’d be messaging back and forth. Mrs Kogar would exclaim; “who are you talking to at this hour?!” Before she asked the question she knew who it was, it was Howie. Stephanie was always concerned with Howie’s health telling me to tell him go to bed, eat a sandwich or drink some water.

When I was in Los Angeles for the Norton Records fundraiser we spent a fair amount of time together. My first day there I don’t think I slept for 24 hours (including the flight over). It was go go-go, go, go go-go, (ya know?) in Howie’s world. Eventually, a few days after the fundraiser I was all set (I thought) to appear on his show. It was a crazy time. I met him at the station at the appointed time and when he got there about 15 minutes before the show, he shouted, “oh no! I forgot all my stuff!” Since I was supplying the records he had it in his head that he wouldn’t need to bring anything. But what he forgot was all his cd’s that featured those iconic samples and station ID’s he would use during the show.

We raced back to his house and then made it back to the station a few seconds before he was to go on the air. In a rush, he gets all set up and moments before hitting the “on air” button he looks over at me and says: “Allright! Ready? I only want you to play records that I don’t have or that have never been played on the show!”  I wish I could’ve seen the look on my face, as Howie gleefully hit the button to start the show! This is the guy who has EVERYTHING! What was I going to do?!  The next two hours were complete insanity in the best possible way. I never expected that kind of curveball.  After losing it for a few seconds, I regained my composure and for the next two hours it was “do you have this? Yes. Do you have this? No!” After the show the adventure continued as we met some guy at a Denny’s so Howie could look through his records. There was never a dull moment in Howie Pyro’s (Sick Sick) world.

After I posted the show on my blog he made this comment over there:

“Thank you! Only a few certain people "rate" to have my blind trust to just throw records down live on the air, but obviously, you are one of them. Thanks so much for "reeling" with me! Haha Reeling brings REALing, and my show, like much of my public life is fueled by chaos, which is why i throw a curve ball to a guest sometimes before the show...to make it as electric & alive as possible. You were a total pro & I truly appreciate it.”

I could go on and on about various tales and cool times with him, but I’ll save that for other posts.

When Howie started getting sick we would talk on the phone and try to diagnose his ailments. Howie did not like doctors and told me that he was so afraid of hospitals because of experiences in NYC in the 70’s. He told me vivid stories of blood on the floor in hallways and other stuff right out of horror movies. I tried to tell him that not all hospitals were like the hospitals in NYC in the 70’s!

I was so happy when he found the right place to help him, but happiness turned to despair when I found out it was his liver that was giving him those pains in his side. I had issues with my gall bladder years ago and was hoping it was something related to that. Sadly, it wasn’t.

I will leave it to his family to describe anything else of what he went through these past months. There were so many ups and downs. So much hope as well as despair. One of the times I talked to him on the phone he had “gotten his voice back” and he sounded so strong. He sounded like the Howie of old, or like what he sounded like on his radio show.  We talked for hours like the old days. We talked briefly of his experiences, but we mainly focused on the usual stuff. What an absolute joy.

Back at the beginning of April I was in California for the memorial service of another friend, Steve Pallow. This allowed me to call on Howie at the apartment where he was convalescing.  I can’t describe how good it was to see him. He looked good, but he was weak from his previous battle with Covid related Pneumonia. We did what we usually did. We talked about stuff that we are into. We talked about Haunted George, and the memorial, and what a brilliant and amazing guy he was. We talked about Howie’s struggles, his ups and downs. It was just like he wasn’t recovering from a liver transplant. If you didn’t know he had been through that it was pretty much just like our average conversations.

He had a new pile of stuff to go through, which he did with glee. He showed me that new Vampira book and it was like he was seeing it for the first time. That was the teenager in him. Constantly there, excited by something new and cool. I imagine nearly every day was like Halloween morning for him. The Great Rat Fink had visited the night before and left packages of books, records, posters and photographs. A common refrain from him was “what about the paper?” He was fascinated with paper. Books, posters, comic books, monster cards, fanzines, magazines. Paper, paper, paper.

I didn’t want to tire him out (usually it was the other way around!), so after about 4-5 hours I had to leave. He gave me some magazines that he had doubles of and said “you’ve gotta check these out!”

That was thing; he was always so generous with stuff, especially information. He got off on and hearing stuff he didn’t know, and always flooded others with information THEY didn’t know. We shared some of the most amazing conversations over the years.

EVERY conversation with Howie led to some movie, book, comic, record that you didn’t know, or that you HAD to check out IMMEDIATELY. I will forever miss that amazing fount of unbelievable knowledge of everything cool, weird and interesting.

I will miss our frequent messages about something new that was coming out. The “oh my god! Did you see this?!” type of messages. Sometimes it got to the point where when I heard my messenger ping, I would instinctively reach for my wallet. But whatever it was that he “made” me check out, it was like a drug for my ears, my brain or my eyes.

Howie, I love you and will miss you for the rest of my days. I will always look back and remember fondly our time spent together and the conversations we shared.  Thanks for allowing me in to your world and being part of mine.  There will never be another like you…

 

 

Weird Country Vol. 3

 


With Mark Ehmcke

1. I Am The Grass - Dee Mullins
2. Lonely Comin' Down - Porter Wagoner
3. The Drunken Driver - Granpa Joe
4. Six Feet Down - Eddie Noack
5. Satan's Chauffeur - Jimmy Minor
6. The Slave - Buck Ritchey
7. You Picked Up a Stranger - Sterling Blythe
8. Paralyzed - Cal Veale
9. Let Me Go, Devil! - Johnny Bond
10. The Needle - Harry Snyder
11. My Evil Mind - Jack Cook
12. One's On The Way - Norma Jean
13. Julie - Porter Wagoner
14. I Cast A Lonesome Shadow - Hank Thompson
15. Birmingham Mistake - Sammi Smith
16. It Took An Older Woman - Jimmie Dawson
17. My Neighbor the Firefighter - Paul Barton
18. The Gates of Hell - Sorrell Pickard
19. Devil get Away From Me - Roy and Georgia and the So and So's
20. Barbara Joy - Eddie Noack
21. The Pain Will Go Away - Henson Cargill
22. Wild She Devil - Lynn Cramer with the Blue Sky Ramblers
23. The Road - Waylon Jennings
24. When I've Learned - Bobby bare

Monday, May 9, 2022

Debbie Does Rock 'n' Soul Ichiban

 


Archive May 28, 2015

The Belairs - Mr. Moto  
The Scotsmen - Beer Bust Blues  
Astronauts - Kuk  
The Trashmen - A-Bone  
The Animals - Outcast  
Clarence Carter - Tell Daddy  
The Es-Shades - Never Met A Girl Like You Before  
Pendletons - Itchy Bon Mash  
The Chicks - The Rebel Kind  
The Daughters Of Eve - Help Me Boy  
The Easybeats - Saturday Night  
Sam The Sham & The Pharaohs - Big City Lights  
The Colonials - Crawdad  
Gene Pitney - She's A Heartbreaker  
Nick & the Jaguars - Ichi-I-Bon #1  
The Drongos - Under My Thumb  
The Prophets Of Old - Just Can't Wait  
The Brood - Let's Talk About Boys  
The Pleasure Seekers - What A Way To Die  
Tommy Boyce & Bobby Hart - Teardrop City  
The Belairs - Mr. Moto  
Otis Redding - Direct Me  

Saturday, May 7, 2022

Fist City

 


With Debbie D

Loretta Lynn - Fist City
Wanda Jackson - My Big Iron Skillet
Bat Girl - Equal Pay PSA
Julia Bates - You Done Messed Around And Made A Mean Woman Mad
Julie Durocher - Bad News 
Brenda Lee - Thanks A Lot
Shirley Jean - I'll Get Even With You
George Jones - Lend An Ear
Tammy Wynette - He Loves Me All The Way
Judy Brackin - Mama's Baby Again
Billie Jo Spears - Mr. Walker, It's All Over
Lynn Anderson - I Never Promised You A Rose Garden
Bobbie Gentry - Seasons Come, Seasons Go
Dusty Springfield - You Don't Own Me
Dee Dee Sharp - Don't Call Me Any More
Barbara West - You're No Good
Sound Of The City - New Orleans
Louis Prima & Keely Smith - That Old Black Magic
Etta James & Sugarpie DeSanto - Do I Make Myself Clear
Angeliques - Sunshine Boy
Jean Shepard - He's My Baby
The New Bangs - Go Go Kitty
Mary Weiss with Reigning Sound - Cry About The Radio
Patti Whipp - Walkin'

Friday, May 6, 2022

Intoxica Radio

 


R.I.P to fellow radio nut, Howie Pyro.  

Tuesday, May 3, 2022

 


With Mark Ehmcke

1. Kiss Me Honey - The Del Monas
2. Besame Mucho - Dean Martin
3. Let Me Kiss Ya - Nick Lowe
4. Kiss Me On The Bus - The Replacements
5. Passionate Kisses - Lucinda Williams
6. Then I Kissed Her - The Beach Boys
7. Kiss An Angel Good Morning - Charley Pride
8. A Kiss To Remember You - Paul Revere and the Raiders
9. Give Him A Great Big Kiss - The Shangri-Las
10. Give Me More More More Of Your Kisses - Lefty Frizzell
11. Molly's Lips - The Vaselines
12. Kisses Sweeter Than Wine - Bongwater
13. Gimme A Little Kiss Will Ya Huh? - Dean Martin
14. It's In His Kiss - Merry Clayton
15. Kiss Goodbye - The Bopcats
16. Kissin' Cousins - The Saints
17. Goodbye Kisses - Cowboy Copas
18. Kiss Away - Brenda Lee
19. First Kiss - Tom Waits
20. Soul Kiss - Joe Jackson
21. Kiss Off - Violent Femmes
22. Love And Kisses - Altered Images

Friday, April 29, 2022

Anesthesie Total

Maurizio Bianchi: Sordide Sentimental

Pastor T.L. Barrett & The Youth For Christ Choir: Nobody Knows

Slave: The Lover, The Madman And The Poet

Andrew Tibbs with Cherokee Conyer Orch.: Mothers Letter

Andrew Tibbs with Sax Mallard Sextet: AchinHeart

Andrew Tibbs with Cherokee Conyer Orch.: Rock Savoy, Rock

Eugene Pitt & The Jyve Fyve: Come Down In Time

Rolling Stones: Miss Amanda Jones

Kenny Price: You Almost Slipped My Mind

Bella & Me: Whatever Happened To The Seven-Day Week?

Bella & Me: Help Me Break This Habit

Mike & John & Bill (feat. Mike Nesmith): How Can You Kiss Me

Mike & John & Bill (feat. Mike Nesmith): Just A Little Love

American Zoo: Back Street Thoughts

American Zoo: Magdalena

American Zoo: Mr.Brotherhood

American Zoo: What Am I

Plague: Face Of Time

Sun Ra & His Arkestra, feat. Pat Patrick: The Blue Set

Larry Young: Saudia

Peter Perrett: Take Me Home

Nelson Slater: We (pr. Lou Reed)

Maurizio Bianchi: Anesthesie Total

Frenzy!

 


With Spookshow Serenade

1. "He's absolutely harmless." – Vernon Dent (Dialogue from "Idle Roomers")
2. Goofin' Around – Bill Haley and His Comets
3. Geronimo – The Renegades (from "The Ghost of Dragstrip Hollow")
4. Trouble Up the Road – Jackie Brenston with Ike Turner's Orchestra
5. Bad Motorcycle – The Storey Sisters
6. 21 Days in Jail – Magic Sam
7. My Baby Left Me – Vince Taylor et Le Bobby Clark's Noise
8. Don't Monkey with Tarzan – The Pygmies
9. Mogul Monster – The Rangers
10. Who Do You Love? (mono) – The Preachers
11. "She's very upset." – Sheila Burrell and Oliver Reed (Dialogue from "Paranoiac")
12. Loco – The Terrifics
13. Texas Twister – Ernie Fields
14. Radioactividad – Los Zombies
15. Quiet Dad – The Puddle Jumpers
16. Solid Rock – El Pauling and The Royalton
17. To-bango – The 4 El Moroccos
18. Worried 'Bout You Baby – Roy "Mr. Guitar" Gaines
19. Kill My Baby – Nick Curran and The Lowlifes
20. Bim Bam – Don & Dewey
21. Riding By – The Majestics
22. "Very, very dreadfully nervous." – Vincent Price (Dialogue from "An Evening of Edgar Allan Poe")
23. Wolf Call – Lord Dent and His Invaders
24. The Thing – Curtis and the Creepers
25. Al's State Line – Doug Bowman and The Road Runners
26. Nightmare – The Sinners
27. Frenzy – Screamin' Jay Hawkins
28. Got My Mo-Jo Working (But It Just Won't Work on You) – Ann Cole with the Suburbans and Orchestra
29. Raw-Hide – Link Wray and The Wraymen
30. Try Me – Bob Luman
31. Babba Diddy Baby – The Heart Attacks
32. You Made a Boo-Boo – Bob & Earl
33. Hoy Hoy – The Collins Kids
34. The Wobble – Jimmy McCracklin
35. Full House – The Spades with the Dell Rays
36. Hello Little Boy – Ruth Brown with Orchestra
37. "Poor woman." – Dialogue

Wednesday, April 27, 2022

This Week In '66 - Hedy Lamarr's Sticky Fingers

 


With Lynn Peril

The news for the week of April 25 was a microcosm of 1966’s repeating themes, some frivolous, one definitely not: UFOs, long hair, the topless, and Vietnam. Of course, even those seemingly lightweight stories reflect the era’s fears about gender roles and modernity. Another story in the news this week involved a star of old Hollywood who appeared adrift now that she was “too old” for the industry that made her. P.S. I'm taking a break from podcasting during the month of May, the better to deal with some other writing deadlines. We’ll pick up with the week of June 6, 1966! 

SHOW NOTES

“Balloonist Hurt as Oxygen Fails in Record Try,” The Philadelphia inquirer, May 2, 1966, 1. 

“Burns, Newsmen See Them; Mystery Lights Trail Burns Campaign Plane,” Pensacola News Journal, April 27, 1966, 1. 

“End of War in 1967 Forecast,” San Francisco Examiner, April 26, 1966, 62. 

“Fading Beauty Troubled Mother, Hedy’s Teen-age Son Testifies,” The Desert Son, April 23, 1966, 1. 

Gashel, Leonard, “Musical Long-Hairs Sacrifice Schooling and Barbershops,” The Philadelphia Inquirer, August 4, 1966, 1. 

“Gov. Burns Plane Party Races UFO,” Fort Lauderdale News, April 26, 1966, 13. 

“Hedy’s Fate Goes to the Jury in Shoplifting Case,” San Francisco Examiner, April 26, 1966, 12. 

“Hedy Lamarr Arrested for Shoplifting,” The Shreveport Journal, January 28, 1966, 1. 

“Hedy Lamarr Escapes Shoplifting Charges,” The Atlanta Constitution, October 25, 1991, 73. 

“Honor Student Ousted Because of Long Hair,” The Daily American (Somerset, Pennsylvania), April 17, 1966, 1. 

“Jury Out 5 Hours; Hedy Lamarr Acquitted of Shoplifting,” The Philadelphia Inquirer, April 27, 1966, 1. 

“Never Intended to Steal, Smiling Hedy Tells Jury,” The Pasadena Independent, April 26, 1966, 3. 


“Oust Hedy Lamarr; Exhausted Star in Hospital,” Los Angeles Evening Citizen News, February 3, 1966, 1. 

“Psychiatrist Calls Hedy Tense and Confused,” The Sacramento Bee, April 22, 1966, 14. 


“Shoplifting Arrest Mistake Says Star,” The San Francisco Examiner, January 28, 1966, 1. 

“Topless Girls Drop Suits, Snakes Left Dangling,”  The San Francisco Examiner, June 2, 1966, 20. 

“Topless Pair Snakedance in Row at City Hall,” The San Francisco Examiner, April 29, 1966, 1. 

“U.S. Lands 4000 More GIs in Vietnam, Total at 250,000,” The Philadelphia Inquirer, April 29, 1966, 1. 

Villasenor, Rudy, “She Was Broke and Sick When Arrested, Hedy Lamarr Says,” The Los Angeles Times, April 26, 1966, 3. 

Villasenor, Rudy, “She’ll Get a Good Night’s Sleep; Hedy Lamarr Freed of Shoplifting Charge,” The Los Angeles Times, April 27, 1. 

Tuesday, April 26, 2022

Boss 30

 


With Robert W. Morgan

Burnin' Rubber!

 


With Mark Ehmcke

1. G.T.O. - Ronny & the Daytonas
2. Little Deuce Coupe - The Beach Boys
3. Mad 'Vette - Mr. Gasser & the Weirdos
4. Go Go Ferrari - Untamed Youth
5. R.P.M.'s - The Four Speeds
6. Phantom Dragster - Bobby Fuller Four
7. Move Out Little Mustang - Jan & Dean
8. Trans Am - The Skeletons
9. Hot Rod High - The Knights
10. Draggin' Wagon - The Surfer Girls
11. Hot Rod Lincoln - Commander Cody and the Lost Planet Airmen
12. Custom Machine - The Beach Boys
13. Mace Has Got a Hot Rod Dart - Untamed Youth
14. The Fastest Shift Alive - Mr. Gasser & the Weirdos
15. Dead Man's Curve - Jan & Dean
16. Hey Little Cobra - The Rip Chords
17. Hot Rod USA - The Rip Chords
18. Rocket 88 - Jackie Brenston and his Delta Cats
19. My Stingray - The Four Speeds
20. Mercury Blues - David Lindley
21. Custom Caravan - The Pyramids
22. This Car Of Mine - The Beach Boys
23. King of the Wheels - Bobby Fuller Four
24. 1947 Avanti - Mr. Gasser & the Weirdos
25. Voodoo Cadillac - Southern Culture on the Skids
26. Full Blown 426 Hemi - Untamed Youth
27. Competition Coupe - The Astronauts
28. 409 - The Rip Chords
29. Burnin' Rubber - Gene Moles & the Softwinds

Monday, April 25, 2022

Boss Sounds Every Day!

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