The Cramps – Summer 1980, & Summer 1981

Two of My Favorite Shows – The Cramps – Summer 1980, & Summer 1981

(above – stage plot & set list from Summer 1980 show)

The Cramps played Scorgies twice. In the summer of 1980 after their first album Songs the Lord Taught Us came out, and a year or so later for their 2nd album, Psychedelic Jungle.

Several weeks before the 1st show, their fuzz-lead guitarist Bryan Gregory had backed a truck up, loaded all the equipment into it, and disappeared into the night to join a cult in San Francisco. I think it was a long time before they saw him again.

They replaced their equipment and recruited a woman guitarist for the tour named Julian Griensnatch. The Scorgies show was her second gig in the band. The set list is reproduced here, along with the stage plot for their equipment. You’ll notice that the name of the lead guitarist is left blank, she probably wasnt hired yet when they drew it out.

New Math opened the show. Once the Cramps hit the stage, they lived up to all the rumors that had preceded them. Wild & furious, they played songs from the album as well as their Gravest Hits EP & indie singles.

At one point I yelled out a request, “Surfin Bird…!!”

“Surfin Bird??!” Lux immediately shouted back, “I’ll show you a Surfin Bird!!” and with that he pulled out his dick & swung it around for a second before tucking it back into his stretch pants. Pretty much shut me up from requesting anything else that nite.

Don Scorgie had just recently hung a new suspended ceiling in the whole club. Onstage however, the new ceiling was within striking distance of anyone raising their hands above their head. Lux punched straight up into the air once, and his fist went straight thru the ceiling, breaking a tile. That was all the invitation Lux needed & he began slowly pulling sections of it down by its thin metal frame while he sang.

Don stood at the side of the stage turning red with anger. He began punching the brick back wall of the club with his bare hands. The Cramps ended their show & Don bounded up onto the stage with fists clenched, daring anyone to applaud. Then he started punching the Cramps tom tom drums, trying to put his fists thru them. There was no encore.

Shortly after, Don removed the section of the suspended ceiling over the stage, which made it easier to hide the front stage lights.

That nite, Kevin & Gary from New Math invited the Cramps back to the house they had apts in on Merriman St. True to the Cramps legend, a bat flew into the apt while they were there. Lux caught it & humanely released it out the kitchen window. True story.

Eric Nelson got in touch after reading this, & emailed me the following great pic from the show. He reminded me that Lux had smashed 2 beer bottles together, shattering them & cutting himself on the chest. I remembered it immediately, and even recalled asking Ivy after the show if Lux was alright, with her replying “oh, he does that stuff all the time…” Thanks Eric.

Eric Nelson's Cramps pic 1980

Eric Nelson

++++++++++++

The second show, a year later in 1981, was another crazy event. I think the way it happened was Danny had originally booked the Cramps into some bar restaurant out in Henrietta that was starting to have bands. Something happened at the last minute and that place cancelled. Danny moved the show to Scorgies (I think he was also booking Scorgies at the time). Don wasnt very happy about The Cramps coming back to his club. The Cliches opened that show.

Having met them the year earlier, Kevin & I went down to Scorgies in the afternoon to see them soundcheck. They had arrived & their equipment was set up but the band was nowhere to be found. We stood in front of the club trying to decide what to do when the funniest site emerged. The Cramps had been up the hill & over on St Paul, so they were walking back to the club. During the Psychedelic Jungle tour, Lux wore his jet black hair combed & sprayed straight up like a voodoo god from a 1930s horror movie. It stood up over a foot above his scalp. The first thing we saw, looking up the hill from Scorgies, was Lux’s hair bopping up & down as they crossed St Paul. Everything else was out of view. We stared at it for a few seconds as the rest of Lux & the band appeared.

Their new guitarist was Kid Congo Powers, and he was sick. Not only in the Cramps sicko-rockabilly way, but intestinally as well. The stage was covered with fake cobwebs, burning votive candles, and deep green & blue light. There were skulls sprinkled around the drum kit. The brightest thing on the stage, tho, was Kid Congos bottle of Pepto-Bismal which was glowing bright pink as it sat on his amp. He was swigging it all nite.

The show was great, with that heavy druggy “Sit right down and make yourself uncomfortable” swamp vibe. Lux’s hair standing straight up & Kids hair standing straight out. Both effects courtesy of the case of industrial beauty parlor spray I saw in the dressing room. Big cans, like spray paint, totally toxic looking with a generic gray label. Ivy said they found them in a beauty supply wholesale place in the south.

They opened with Don’t Eat Stuff off the Sidewalk, and played most of Psychedelic Jungle, including The Natives are Restless, which they never play anymore. They did Drug Train, & a lot of earlier stuff.

That second show was also not without incident. Someone stole the bands new digital guitar tuner, and then their next day transportation plans to Ohio (the next gig) evaporated, leaving the band stranded in Rochester. Kevin let them use his credit card to rent a car and I took them shopping at a 1950s interior furnishings store I knew down by Bulls Head. That day cemented what became a long term friendship that resulted in Kevin signing The Cramps to his Medicine Label at Warner Records, when I worked there with him in the early 90s. We made the album Flamejob with them.

If anyone has great pix from this show, email one to me at info@click2vu.com & I’ll post it here.

Duane

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  1. JLaben’s avatar

    Both Cramps shows at Scorgies were outstanding…

    The second one, when The Cliches opened the show, was one of my favorite all-time gigs. The energy in the bar was something that I don’t ever recall experiencing on stage prior to that night’s gig. It made for a great vibe and a great show. Someone later wrote in the T-U (Dave Stearns?) that it was “the show of the year”. Heh.

    And it’s kind of funny that you recall the “Missing Guitar Tuner” controversy after the second Cramps show. Obviously, Don did not have a great taste in his mouth regarding The Cramps after the FIRST show…and there he was, in it AGAIN after the second show.

    Post gig….I look over on the mini-side stage- where tables were set up for your viewing pleasure – and Scorgie, Lux, maybe someone else from the band, and two of my bandmates are screaming at each other, as The Cramps were accusing US of taking their guitar tuner.

    Anyone that had ever listened to The Cliches for more than 10 seconds realized that we were never IN tune, so it couldn’t have been us. The bar was full of musicians…it could have been anyone in the club that night.

    Well, I was liquored up at this point, so I came flying in to defend the honor of my band mates…this got Scorgie more fired up and it did briefly get physical on that mini-stage. I’m not sorry that I started it.

    And I have to look for them but I’m pretty sure that I have some pictures from that night’s gig.

    One of the highlights of our rock n’ roll days…A wrestling match with Lux and a few others on a sweaty night for rock n’ roll, downstairs at Scorgies. Thanks for the memories, Duane.

    Reply

  2. John Pusateri’s avatar

    I have to say, Duane is pretty much “my memory” these days. So much comes back when we get together.

    That first Cramps gig was so amazing – until the ceiling tile came flying at me and whacked me in the head missing my eye by centimeters. I was standing on a chair in the middle of the floor (not being very tall everyone is always in my way) and then I saw stars for what seemed like an eternity. It happened so fast and the crowd going nuts, hardly anyone noticed. I don’t think Gary saw and he was next to me. Oh well, that was the end of the show and they were incredible (as they aways were). I was still smarting when we all went over toGary & Kevin’s apartments. By then my head was killing me. That was pretty amazing when Lux captured the bat.

    (BTW – Hey Jeff !)

    Reply

  3. JLaben’s avatar

    Another Record Theater alumni shows up on this website…My first boss at Record Theater, Gates. Everything that has happened to me since 1979 is HIS fault.

    How are you doing, John Pusateri? Good to “see” you.

    Reply

  4. joe hendrick’s avatar

    I remember that first Cramps show with the singer cutting his chest up. That’s about all I remember of the details !!!lol
    Joe Hendrick
    Scorgies regular

    Reply

  5. Mike Weidner’s avatar

    Great show, and I remember him cutting his chest up too. I was right up front when the glass was flying. All fired up, I yelled out “More blood!” At which point, Lux picked up the broken bottle and said “you want more blood? Come on up here.” That pretty much shut me up. I did manage to swipe the set list, and my friend Greg claims I also stole the drumsticks (but I don’t remember that).

    If I can figure out how to do it, I’ll post some set lists from the dB’s, X, and the Cramps, plus a poster for the Waitresses show.

    Reply

  6. joe hendrick’s avatar

    The Waitresses !!! I remember them I think I saw them at Scorgies!!!

    Reply

  7. Mike Weidner’s avatar

    In the “where are they now” category, Bryan Gregory died in 2001 (in relative obscurity, according to Wikipedia), and the Cramps still tour occasionally, with Lux and Poison Ivy still married (a true hollywood romance).

    I was at the Waitresses show too, and what little I remember was good. The lead singer, Patti Donahue died of lung cancer cancer a few years ago as well. “Christmas Wrapping” is still in my top two all time favorite Christmas songs, along with “Father Christmas” by the Kinks.

    Reply

  8. DS’s avatar

    And now, on Feb 4th 2009 comes the sad news that Lux Interior has passed away.

    His sense of humor was legendary.
    As shown in this classic lyric from Drug Train:

    “I’m gonna teach you how to get aboard the Drug Train…”
    “You put one foot up… You put another foot up…”
    “You put another foot up, and you’re on board the Drug Train!”

    Reply

  9. mikhalis’s avatar

    lolz It’s hilarious how this story becomes more exaggerated and outrageous as the years go by. Someday some guy in a nursing home will swear that Lux had sex with a live donkey on stage.
    Yes, I was there too. I was the one who persuaded Danny to book the group.
    But really, is this the most important event that happened in Rochester in the last 30 years? You would think so reading all of these posts and tributes.

    Reply

  10. Mikhalis’s avatar

    how many years does it take for my comment to get posted???

    Reply

  11. John Davies’s avatar

    I was on Holiday in the USA in 1980 and in Rochester for that gig. I remember the ceiling tiles very well.

    Reply

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