The Cramps
were an American punk band, formed in 1976. [1] Their line-up rotated much over their existence, with the husband and wife duo of lead singer Lux Interior and lead guitarist Poison Ivy as the only permanent members. Guitarist Bryan Gregory and drummer Pam Ballam rounded out the first complete lineup in April 1976.
They were part of the early CBGB punk movement that had emerged in New York. By being the first known band to blend punk rock with rockabilly and gothic rock, The Cramps are widely recognized as innovators of psychobilly/gothabilly, as well as garage punk and horror punk.
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THE CRAMPS TICKETS
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Style
Their music is mostly in
rockabilly form, played at varying tempos, with a very minimal drumkit. An integral part of the early Cramps sound is dual guitars, without a
bassist. The content of their songs and image is
campy,
Americana,
sexual fetishism, humor, and
retro horror/sci-fi
b-movie clichés.
Their sound was heavily influenced by early
rockabilly,
rhythm and blues, and rock and roll like
Link Wray and
Hasil Adkins, 1960s
surf music acts such as
The Ventures and
Dick Dale, 1960s
garage rock artists like
The Standells,
The Gants,
The Trashmen,
The Green Fuz and
The Sonics, as well as the post-
glam/early
punk scene from which they emerged. They also were influenced to a degree by
The Ramones and
Screamin' Jay Hawkins, who is often credited for having pioneered their style of theatrical horror-blues.
In turn, they have strongly influenced subsequent punk and rockabilly revival bands, even creating a genre in their wake. "
Psychobilly," a style played by bands like
The Meteors is a term coined
1 by the Cramps, although
Lux Interior maintained that the term did not describe their own style.
[2] The Cramps also influenced or anticipated acts as varied as
Black Lips,
The Birthday Party,
The Dwarves,
Flat Duo Jets,
The Fuzztones,
The Gun Club,
Spacemen 3,
Butthole Surfers,
The Misfits (band),
The Mars Volta,
The Horrors,
Inca Babies,
James Chance and the Contortions,
The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion,
The Jesus and Mary Chain,
The Raveonettes,
Reverend Horton Heat,
My Bloody Valentine,
The Molting Vultures,
The Horrorpops,
The Intelligence, The Specimen and
The White Stripes.
- Note 1: It is debatable that The Cramps coined the phrase psychobilly. It is perhaps mentioned for the first time in Johnny Cash's song "One Piece at a Time," released in 1976.
History
1970s
Lux Interior (born
Erick Lee Purkhiser) and
Poison Ivy (born
Kristy Wallace) met in
Sacramento, California in 1972. Due to their common artistic interests and shared devotion to record collecting, they decided to form The Cramps.
Lux took his
stage name from a car ad, and Ivy claimed to have received hers in a dream (she was first
Poison Ivy Rorschach, taking her last name from that of the inventor of the
Rorschach test). In 1973, they moved to
Akron, Ohio, and then to New York in 1975, soon entering into
CBGB's early punk scene with other emerging acts like
The Ramones,
Patti Smith, and
Television. The lineup in 1976 was
Poison Ivy Rorschach,
Lux Interior,
Bryan Gregory (guitar) and his sister Pam "Ballam" Gregory (drums).
In a short period of time, the Cramps changed drummers twice;
Miriam Linna (later of
Nervus Rex,
The Zantees, and
The A-Bones) replaced
Pam Ballam, and
Nick Knox (formerly with the
Electric Eels) replaced Linna in September 1977. In the late 1970s, the Cramps briefly shared a rehearsal space with
The Fleshtones, and performed regularly in New York at places like
CBGB's and
Max's Kansas City, releasing two independent singles produced by
Alex Chilton at
Ardent Studios in
Memphis in 1977 before being signed by
Miles Copeland to the young
I.R.S. Records label.
In June 1978 they gave a free concert for patients at the
California State Mental Hospital in Napa, recorded on a
Sony Portapak video camera by the San Francisco collective
Target Video and later released as
Live at Napa State Mental Hospital
. They released the two singles again on their 1979
Gravest Hits EP, before Chilton brought them back that year to Memphis to record their first full length album,
Songs The Lord Taught Us
, at
Phillips Recording, operated by former
Sun Records label owner
Sam Phillips.
1980s
The Cramps relocated to Los Angeles in 1980 and hired guitarist
Kid Congo Powers of
The Gun Club. While recording their second LP,
Psychedelic Jungle
, the band and Miles Copeland began to dispute royalties and creative rights. The ensuing court case prevented them from releasing anything until 1983, when they recorded
Smell of Female
live at New York's
Peppermint Lounge; Kid Congo Powers subsequently departed. Mike Metoff of
The Pagans (cousin of Nick Knox) was the final second guitarist - albeit only live - of the Cramps' pre-bass era. He accompanied them on an extensive European tour in 1984 (that had been cancelled twice because they couldn't find a suitable guitarist) which included four sold out nights at the legendary Hammersmith Palais. They also recorded performances of "The Most Exalted Potentate of Love" and "You Got Good Taste" which were broadcast on the acclaimed UK music show The Tube (the mid-summer night special).
In 1985 the Cramps recorded a one-off track for the horror movie
The Return of the Living Dead
called "Surfin' Dead", on which Ivy played bass as well as guitar. With the release of 1986's
A Date With Elvis
, the Cramps permanently added a bass guitar to the mix, but had trouble finding a suitable player, so Ivy temporarily filled in as the band's bassist. Fur joined them on the world tour to promte the album. Their popularity in the UK was at its peak as evidenced by the six nights at Hammersmith in London, three at the Odeon (as well as many other sell out dates throughout the UK) and then three at the Palais when they returned from the continent. Each night of the tour opened with the band coming on one at a time each: Knox, Fur, Ivy and then Lux before launching into their take on Elvis' "Heartbreak Hotel". The album featured what was to become a pre-dominating theme of their work from here on: a move away from the B-movie horror focus to an increased emphasis on sexual double entendre. The album met with differing fates on either side of the Atlantic: in Europe, it sold over 250,000 copies, while in the U.S. the band had difficulty finding a record company prepared to release it until 1990.
[3] It also included their first
UK Singles Chart hit: "Can Your Pussy Do The Dog?"
[4]
It was not until 1986 that the Cramps found a suitable permanent bass player: Candy del Mar (of
Satan's Cheerleaders), who made her recorded debut on the raw live album
RockinnReelininAucklandNewZealandxxx
, which was followed by the studio album
Stay Sick
in 1990.
1990s
Knox left in 1991. The Cramps hit the top 40 singles chart in the UK for the first and only time with "Bikini Girls with Machine Guns"; Ivy posed as such both on the cover of the single and in the
promotional video for the song. The Cramps went on to record more albums and singles through the 1990s and 2000s, for various labels and with varying degrees of success.
In 1995 The Cramps appeared on the TV-series
Beverly Hills, 90210
in the Halloween episode "Gypsies, Cramps and Fleas."
[5] They played 2 songs in show: "Mean Machine" and "Strange Love." Lux started the song by saying "Hey boys and ghouls, are you ready to rise the dead?".
In honor of the excess of The Cramps, the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame has on display a shattered bass drum head that Lux's head went through during a live show.
2000s
On January 10, 2001, Bryan Gregory died at Anaheim Memorial Medical Center of complications following a
heart attack. He was 46.
On February 4, 2009 at 4:40 AM PST, Lux Interior died at the Glendale Memorial Hospital after suffering an
aortic dissection which, contrary to inital reports about a pre-existing condition, was "sudden, shocking and unexpected".
[6] He was 62.
[7]
Personnel
Final line-up
- Lux Interior (Erick Purkhiser) – vocals, March 1973 to February 2009
- Poison Ivy (Kristy Wallace) – lead guitar, March 1973 to February 2009
- Harry Drumdini – drums, February 1993 – July 2003 and August 2006 to February 2009
Former members
- Bryan Gregory (Greg Beckerleg) – guitar, April 1976 – May 1980
- Pam Ballam (Pam Beckerleg) – drums, April 1976 – September 1976
- Miriam Linna – drums, October 1976 – June 1977
- Nick Knox – drums, July 1977 - January 1991
- Julien Grindsnatch – guitar, July 1980 – September 1980
- Kid Congo Powers (Brian Tristan) – guitar, December 1980 – September 1983
- Mike Metoff (as Ike Knox) – guitar, October 1983 – November 1983; January 1984 – July 1984
- Click Mort - guitar, December 1983
- Jim Sclavunos – drums, 1991
- Touch Hazard (Tim Maag of The Mechanics) - bass, 1985
- Fur (Jennifer Dixon) - bass, March 1986 - May 1986
- Candy del Mar – bass, July 1986 – January 1991
- Slim Chance – bass, March 1991-August 1998
- Nickey Alexander – drums, June 1991 – January 1993
- Doran Shelley – bass, 1998 - 1999
- SugarPie Jones – bass, 2000
- "Jungle" Jim Chandler – "Laid down the primal beat" for the European tour 2004
- Bill "Buster" Bateman – drums, June 2004 – August 2006
- Scott "Chopper" Franklin – bass & guitar, January 2002 – September 2006
- Jen Hanrahan - castanets June 2000 - August 2000.
- Sean Yseult (Shauna Reynolds) – bass, October/November 2006
Discography
Studio albums
- Songs the Lord Taught Us
(1980, Illegal)
- Psychedelic Jungle
(1981, I.R.S.)
- Smell of Female
- (live at the Peppermint Lounge) 6-track mini album (1983, Big Beat)
- A Date with Elvis
(1986, Big Beat)
- Stay Sick
(1990, Enigma)
- Look Mom No Head!
(1991, Enigma)
- Flamejob
(1994, Creation)
- Big Beat from Badsville
(1997, Epitaph)
- Fiends of Dope Island
(2002, Vengeance)
Compilations
- Off the Bone
(1983, Illegal)
- Bad Music for Bad People
(1984, I.R.S.)
- How to Make a Monster
(2004, Vengeance)
- The Secret Life of the Cramps
(2006)
References
- Wild Wild World of The Cramps: Ian Johnston, Omnibus Press 1990
- SuicideGirls > Interviews > The Cramps
- Cramps, A Short Rock n Roll History: Dick Porter, Plexus 2007; pg 111
- The Great Rock Discography
- IMDb.com
- Thecramps.com
- Thedailyswarm.com