
JOHNNY RAMONE: Rebel in a rebel's world
by Steve Miller
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
For
100 nights a year over three decades, punk-rock guiterrorist Johnny Ramone
stood with his head down, face in an intense scowl of concentration, legs
shoulder-width apart, hammering at his blue Mosrite with a blurry right
hand. The cacophony was pure bliss, a white noise ringing that punched
holes in all that was peaceful, shards of the power chords busting into
little aural stars, like the lights you see when you smack your head,
only in your ears.
It was such good, loud pain.
Johnny dropped his job as a construction worker in 1974 and held down
stage right for 22 years as the guitarist for the most influential rock
band of the last 30 years. The Ramones fertilized the punk-rock scene
first in their hometown of New York City, then in England. Eventually
— who knew? — that sound would form the chassis for what the
corporate rock industry later dubbed "alternative" and, eventually,
infiltrated top 40.
He was a rebel in a rebel's world, though. Johnny Ramone was a fiercely
Republican-voting, NRA-supporting musician in a milieu that is remarkable
for its embrace of all things left.
Johnny went worldwide public with his partisanship in 2002, when the Ramones
were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. At the microphone to
give props to the people who made it all possible, he offered his own
version of a Michael Moore moment.
"God bless President Bush, and God bless America," he said,
clad in his trademark T-shirt, ripped blue jeans and leather jacket.
"I said that to counter those other speeches at the other awards,"
Mr. Ramone says in a phone interview. "Republicans let this happen
over and over, and there is never anyone to stick up for them. They spend
too much time defending themselves."
Johnny Ramone is at an easy point in his life, where "Blitzkrieg
Bop" can be heard at sporting events as rev music and where the Ramones
are widely cited as one of the most influential bands in the history of
rock 'n' roll.
They never had a hit single, and none of their 14 original studio albums
ever went gold. The Ramones did it because they loved it and had something
to say.
"It was a job, and I was just doing my job," Mr. Ramone says
now.
The Ramones were so far ahead of their time that Johnny Ramone makes more
money each year, thanks to Ramones tunes used in advertisements, discerning
record buyers paying their debt to history and the increasing number of
Ramones reissues.
"I'm just honored that people still like us and people are still
nice to me," he says, 55 years old and very retired in Los Angeles,
where he lives with his wife, Linda, and their three cats.
He sold his guitars and amps when the Ramones finally got out of the van
after 2,263 live shows.
L.A. is 3,000 miles from Queens, N.Y., where he was raised as John Cummings,
but he is never far from his legacy. People still know him when they see
him, even though he disputes his own celebrity.
"I really can't believe that my career has gone like it has,"
he says. "I don't need much more money, and I thought that when I
retired that nobody would want to talk to me anymore. Then I did, and
people still want to talk to me." He pals around with Pearl Jam's
Eddie Vedder and John Frusciante from the Red Hot Chili Peppers, tooling
about in his black Cadillac DeVille, "a good American car,"
Johnny says proudly.
He is an avid film buff, and he watches two flicks a day — sci-fi,
horror or anything intense — and his private collection numbers
4,000.
He reads mostly books on film and baseball. He still buys music, "old
rock 'n' roll, '50s is my favorite," he says. "I also get some
early '70s stuff, punk stuff, but I think I'm scraping the bottom of the
barrel now." He won't play any Ramones, but Linda does.
"Constantly," he says, with a weary resignation.
"Yeah, the first five albums," she says. The two click on politics
though.
"I grew up a Republican," she says. "My family was the
only Italian family in Queens that voted for Nixon instead of Kennedy."
Johnny
was driven right by a youthful revulsion against, um, face-ism. "It
was in 1960, the Nixon-Kennedy election," he says, recalling his
first inclination toward the right. He was an only child of Irish heritage
in a working-class neighborhood. Families on his block voted left, pro-union.
"People around me were saying, 'Oh, Kennedy's so handsome,' and I
thought, 'Well, if these people are going to vote for someone based on
how he looks, I don't want to be party to that.' "
For his news now, he hits the Drudge Report and Newsmax.com, Fox News'
"Hannity and Colmes," and "The O'Reilly Factor." He
listens daily to Rush Limbaugh and Michael Medved. In L.A., people spend
a lot of time in their cars, and he uses that time to educate himself,
he says.
His list of favorite Republicans should humble the Republican National
Committee, or at least get him invited to a GOP fund-raiser: Ronald Reagan,
Richard Nixon, Charlton Heston, [actor and close friend] Vincent Gallo,
Ted Nugent, Messrs. Limbaugh and Hannity, Arnold Schwarzenegger, John
Wayne and Tom DeLay.
He relishes agitating his left-wing peers — and has since the band
started in 1974.
"Oh yeah, they really get upset," Johnny says. "I remember
in 1979 doing an interview for Creem magazine with [famed rock and roll
scribe, now deceased] Lester Bangs and telling him that Ronald Reagan
will be the next president. He was really mad that I liked Reagan, who
was the greatest president of my lifetime. So I turned it around on him
and asked to see his commie card. In fact, ever after that, I would ask
him for his card. I think he had one, really."
The other day, when Stray Cats bassist Slim Jim Phantom was complaining
about his tax bill, Johnny reminded him that the charges would be higher
if President Bush hadn't gotten his tax cuts passed. "I told him
he needs to vote Republican to keep his taxes lower ... and donate to
President Bush's campaign," he says.
"I try to make a dent in people when I can," he says. "I
figure people drift toward liberalism at a young age, and I always hope
that they change when they see how the world really is."
He has found few allies in show business, but one stands out as a fellow
renegade and conservative: Mr. Gallo, an actor, director and musician.
"What's radical about saying you are for the poor?" Mr. Gallo,
41, demands. "Johnny Ramone has never been like that. He is incredibly
authentic as both a musician and a person. I respect him not because we
agree on a lot of things but because he is an individual." They bonded
over [former New York Yankees star pitcher] Ron Guidry, cinema and politics.
Not that Mr. Ramone's friends must pass an ideological litmus test. He
still holds ideological hopes for the relentlessly liberal Mr. Vedder.
When the Pearl Jam singer impaled a mask of Mr. Bush and slammed it to
the stage at a Denver concert on the heels of the Iraq invasion last April,
Johnny Ramone let him know that he thought it was a stupid move.
"I got serious with him and told him that he was alienating people,"
Johnny says. "And I got him to see the point." When Johnny Ramone
tells you something is uncool, well, it is.
Harnessing chaos, humor and danger, the Ramones created the template of
the rock 'n' roll revolution that was punk rock.
Even then, though, Johnny's conservative side showed. When the band wanted
to record "Chinese Rocks," a song co-written by bassist Dee
Dee Ramone, Johnny disapproved of the reference to a strain of dope that
was prevalent at the time.
Ditto when the other guys in the band came up with "Bonzo Goes to
Bitburg," a tune disparaging Johnny's beloved Mr. Reagan. (Sample
lyric: "You're a politician / Don't become one of Hitler's children.")
Both times, he lost. After all, a band is a democracy.
"But I really enjoyed upsetting them," Johnny says of his former
bandmates. "They called me the Rush Limbaugh of rock 'n' roll one
time in a Village Voice interview. But, hey, they were just old hippies."
Two are dead now: Singer Joey succumbed to cancer in 2001 and Dee Dee
to a heroin overdose in 2002. Longtime (but not original) Ramones drummer
Marky still plays around in the underground scene.
Like so many other right-wingers. who are fed up with the media establishment,
Johnny tunes in to the radio every day for some roiling rhetoric and to
the Web for some news that doesn't seem to make the local newspaper.
"Hey," he says, perusing Newsmax.com as he speaks on the phone,
"what's going on with these illegal aliens now?"
|