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‘Nightclubbing: The Birth of Punk Rock in NYC’ Review: A Punk Nostalgia Documentary Captures How Max’s Kansas City Was as Seminal as CBGB

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Punk-rock nostalgia has an oxymoronic quality. Ah, the toasty, cozy good old days…of shooting up in the bathroom at CBGB as the Dead Boys lay waste to Western Civilization onstage! Sid Vicious, we hardly knew ye! Yet the nostalgia for punk, as much of a contradiction as it can seem, has only grown with the decades. That’s partly because punk, with its assaultive immediacy and defiant not-niceness, now seems like the quintessence of the pre-digital world. In these pandemic and social-media times, direct human contact is something many of us are starved for, and punk was a bumper-car ride of human contact. The bands were in your face, you were in their face, and everyone was in the face of the beer-guzzling stooge next to them. It’s no surprise that this is what some people now crave. 

If you’re a person who gets misty-eyed when you think back on what it was like — or must have been like — to stumble out of a dingy rock club at 4:00 a.m. after having your eardrums blasted by a band of unwashed anarchists who may or may not have been able to play their instruments, you’ll want to make every effort to see “Nightclubbing: The Birth of Punk Rock in NYC.” It’s the first documentary about Max’s Kansas City, and it’s doing a summer road-show tour of America venues, as well as a few European ones (here’s the schedule of dates); after that, it will be accessible online. Directed by Danny Garcia, who over the last decade has been assembling a canon of punk music docs (he’s made films about Johnny Thunders, Stiv Bators, the last days of Sid and Nancy, and the last days of the Clash), “Nightclubbing” is a raw inside slice of punk nostalgia and punk history. (It’s being shown along with the 20-minute documentary “Sid Vicious: The Final Curtain.”)

It’s also the perfect film for anyone who thinks that CBGB was 10 times more important than any other punk club — a misperception it’s easy to have, because that’s how it’s generally been portrayed. Since 1977 or so, every aspect of CBGB has been not just chronicled but mythologized. The fact that it started out as a biker bar and was located along the Bowery, a boulevard of legendary sketchiness where there was a kind of karmic continuity between the bums on the street and the dissolute CBs patrons. The fact that the club was a sweaty claustrophobic rectangle described by the critic James Wolcott as a “subway train to hell.” The fact that the bathrooms were squalid bacteria pits with apocalyptic spews of graffiti.

And, of course, there was the fabled roster of great bands who played there, like the Ramones and Talking Heads and Blondie and Television and Patti Smith, along with the not-so-great but even more devotedly raucous bands that helped set the club’s tone of destructive psychosis, like the Dead Boys and the Plasmatics. When I first walked into CBGB, the place was so iconic that I felt like I was entering the Cavern Club. In its unpresentable fuck-the-mainstream way, CBGB came along at just the right moment to become a meme of the media.

Max’s Kansas City was different. In New York, it was every bit as formative and famous as CBGB, but it opened its doors in December 1965, when the media and rock ‘n’ roll were still strange bedfellows. And so even as the club became a magnet for hip celebrity, it retained its underground quality. As “Nightclubbing” captures, Max’s was like CBGB with some of the exclusivity of Studio 54 — which may sound like the ultimate contradiction, but one can’t begin to understand punk unless one recognizes how snobby it was. You had to be the right kind of wastrel to fit in. Located on Park Avenue South, a block up from Union Square, Max’s was a restaurant with a garish exterior. But the VIP action was in the fabled back room, and to get in there you had to have the approval of the club’s owner and proprietor, Mickey Ruskin. That the first punk club basically had a velvet rope is essential to what punk was. Max’s was about the aristocracy of debauchery. 

Once inside, you could see anyone, from Frank Zappa to Elizabeth Taylor to Janis Joplin to Jack Nicholson, and most importantly Andy Warhol (the Factory was located just three blocks away), who brought his entourage every night, doing much to establish Max’s as a nexus of fame that would draw from the now-merging worlds of art, fashion, music, and movies. This was incarnated in Warhol’s shepherding of the Velvet Underground, who became fixtures at Max’s (in 1970, they recorded a live album there). Forget the MC5, who had the spirit of wrecked abandonment without the talent; punk was born in the shadow of the Velvets’ throttle and drive.

In “Nightclubbing,” Jayne County, the transsexual singer, DJ, and tart-tongued raconteur who was a fixture at Max’s (she’s like a John Waters character), tells us that the fundamental fact about the club is that every person there was high, all the time. Yet once they were in the back room, they talked. The place is described as a squalid counterculture version of the Algonquin Round Table, which sounds like a stretch — but Max’s didn’t host musical acts until 1969, and just imagine how much you would like to have been a fly on the wall for some of those conversations, even as David Bowie once remarked, “I met Iggy Pop at Max’s Kansas City in 1970 or 1971. Me, Iggy, and Lou Reed at one table with absolutely nothing to say to each other, just looking at each other’s eye makeup.”

There was a cross-pollination going on. Bowie, after all, wasn’t a punk. But Max’s was the Petri dish where “rock” became “punk” and “punk” infused “rock,” all by passing through the warp drive of glam. Iggy played there, and so did the glam rocker Marc Bolan and the electronica pioneers Suicide, as well as Alice Cooper and Bob Marley and Phil Ochs and Aerosmith and the 22-year-old Bruce Springsteen. (Bruce and Aerosmith were signed by Clive Davis at Max’s.) Alice Cooper is interviewed extensively in “Nightclubbing,” and he testifies to how the club was an epicenter of cool that broke down categories even as it was creating them.

By the time the New York Dolls came along, in their freakish gender-bending reckless glory, they were like an organism created in the Max’s laboratory. Malcolm McLaren met the Dolls at Max’s and took his first stab at punk Svengali image management by trying to showcase them so that they would wear the fashion he was marketing. The plan went bust, but McLaren learned from his mistakes, returning to London to package the Sex Pistols, who he envisioned as the Dolls meets the Ramones in Richard Hell’s clothes. It’s part of Max’s lore than Debbie Harry was a waitress there, which sounds like the remnant of a sexist world, but Harry, trying to break into a rock establishment that consisted entirely of men, had found a way to do it. Everyone there knew she was destined for more.

“Nightclubbing” is full of grainy amazing archival footage as well as interviews with a host of Max’s musicians, managers, and survivors that make it a vibrant oral history. After the break-up of the Sex Pistols, Sid Vicious played gigs there, and I’d always assumed (based mostly on a scene from “Sid and Nancy”) that his performances were dissolute washouts. But we see extended clips of his final gig there, when he was backed by a band that included Mick Jones and Arthur “Killer” Kane, and guess what? Not only was the band tight; Sid was good! I came away thinking that had he not destroyed himself with heroin he could have had a career.

But the glamor of self-destruction was part of the texture of Max’s, and so was a certain do-what-you-please entitlement. The film is full of priceless anecdotes that testify to both impulses. We hear about Brigid Berlin, the Warhol superstar, shooting amphetamine through her jeans. We hear about how George Harrison would bring a pouch full of rubies and place one in front of a woman he wanted to hook up with. “If she picked up the ruby,” recalls Alice Cooper, “that was a done deal.” We hear about Iggy walking around on tables and rolling around in smashed glass until he was dripping blood all over the club, at which point he needed to be taken to the hospital. We hear about how the club closed down, in 1974, for unpaid bills and how after Tommy Dean reopened it a year later, Max’s became a crazier place, with Dean running a counterfeit-money operation out of the basement.

By this point CBGB was now grabbing the headlines. Yet Max’s and CBs became the yin and yang of punk performance, with the famed CBGB bands shuttling back and forth between the two clubs, many of them actually preferring to play at Max’s, where Hilly Kristal wasn’t skimming their proceeds. Max’s closed down for good in 1981, though not before helping to launch the movement that would become ’80s hardcore, with seminal gigs by bands like Bad Brains. The club had spanned 16 years; in rock time, it straddled three or four revolutions. What the witnesses of “Nightclubbing” all testify to is that you had to be there. You had to feel the noise.



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Music

Adele Adds 34 Dates to Las Vegas Residency, Sets June Return

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What happens in Vegas is staying in Vegas. Adele has announced that she has extended her Caesars Palace residency, with performances planned through November.

The singer made the announcement Saturday evening during what was originally set to be the final performance of the series. The residency will face a hiatus for three months, returning in the summer on the date of June 16. From there, nearly five months of dates will follow, with a final performance slated for Nov. 4. Registration is currently open for ticket sales.

“Playing to 4,000 people for 34 nights is not enough. I know that, so I am coming back,” Adele told the Caesars Palace audience on Saturday.

The singer also announced that upcoming performances in June will be filmed, with footage being released to the public later on.

“I’ll be back for a few weeks in June, and I’m going to film it,” the singer continued. “I’m going to release it to make sure that anyone who wants to see the show [can].”

The second round of performances comes as a welcome surprise following the residency’s turbulent journey to Caesars Palace. Originally slated to kick off in January 2021, the series was delayed nine months, amid reports that the singer was dissatisfied with the project’s original staging and complications due to COVID-19. Rumors circulated that the residency would shift venues or even be canceled altogether. But after strong reviews and a series of sold-out performances, the singer is ready to double-down on her residency.



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BTS’ Jimin Snags U.K. Top 40 Hit With ‘Set Me Free Pt 2’

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First J-Hope, now BTS’s Jimin has a U.K. top 40 hit as “Set Me Free Pt 2” (via BigHit Entertainment) blasts to No. 30 on the national chart.

The South Korean singer is now the standard-bearer of BTS’s solo members – on the U.K. chart, at least.

As the K-pop superstars’ seven members explore their respective solo careers, he’s the fifth to snag a U.K. top 100 solo hit. Previously, Jungkook’s “Stay Alive” (No. 89), Jin’s “The Astronaut” (No. 61), and RM’s “Indigo” (No. 45) impacted the Official U.K. Singles Chart, while J-Hope’s “On The Street,” a collaboration with J. Cole, recently hit No. 37, until now the high point for a solo single from a BTS band member.

“Set Me Free Pt 2” is lifted from Jimin solo album FACE, which dropped last Friday (March 24).

As a group, BTS has scored nine top 40s, including four U.K. top 10 singles: “Dynamite,” “Butter” and Coldplay collaboration “My Universe” all going to No. 3, and “Life Goes On” hitting No. 10.

On the U.K. albums chart, J-Hope, Jin, Suga, RM, Jimin, V and Jungkook have together landed eight top 40s, including two Official U.K. Albums Chart leaders, with 2019’s Map of the Soul – Persona and 2020’s Map of the Soul – 7.

“Set Me Free Pt 2” is the among the highest debuts on the current chart, published last Friday (March 24). Honors go to Taylor Swift, whose Lover era song “All of the Girls You Loved Before” bows at No. 11. At the top of the survey, Miley Cyrus rides a 10-week streak with “Flowers”.

ARMY will no doubt keenly watch for the debut chart position of Jimin’s FACE. All will be revealed when the national singles and albums charts are published this Friday, March 31.



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Lana Del Rey’s Albums, Ranked

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“Did You Know That There’s a Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd,” Lana Del Rey’s just-released eighth studio album, is a captivating addition to one of music’s most iconic discographies. And, like the seven records that came before it, it’s a beautiful, occasionally confounding mystery that promises to unfurl slowly over the next couple of years.

So, how do you decipher a body of work as multi-layered and mercurial as Del Rey’s — let alone rank it? The short answer is: with great difficulty and a boulder-sized grain of salt.

With a catalog as consistently great as Del Rey’s, it’s not so much about picking the best album. Rather, the goal is measuring ambition, impact on pop culture and influence on peers. As such, the freshly minted “Did You Know That There’s a Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd” is at a distinct disadvantage. Time will tell if it spawns a whole generation of clones a la 2012’s “Born to Die” or feels as integral to the musical landscape as 2019’s “Norman Fucking Rockwell.” (For a separate Variety review of the new album, click here.)

In the meantime, here’s a best attempt at ranking Del Rey’s studio albums, excluding pre-fame releases such as the semi-official “Lana Del Ray aka Lizzy Grant” and extended plays like 2012’s “Paradise.”

[Editor’s note: An earlier version of this list had an incorrect ranking for the albums.]



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