Showing posts with label Viva Las Vegas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Viva Las Vegas. Show all posts

Monday, 26 August 2019

Las Vegas Grind! Viva Las Vegas Rockabilly Weekender 2019



2019 was the year I learned that age is not just a number. I’ve been attending the Viva Las Vegas Rockabilly Weekender off and on since 2003 and now – aged 49 – it genuinely felt like a struggle to keep up. (Plus - as I’ve written elsewhere - I've been suffering with ongoing intermittent nerve pain).

It didn’t help that this year I had a punishing epic flight via AeroMexico. It was the cheapest option available (travelling over Easter equals ultra-expensive peak prices), but it meant flying from Heathrow to Mexico City – about 10 ½ hours – with a painfully long stop-over in Mexico, then a roughly four-hour flight from there to Las Vegas. I never fully recuperated from the flight, my body clock never quite switched to American time and trying to manage the late nights (when the red-hot action was!) was a battle. Frustratingly and bafflingly, the organizers of this year’s Viva Las Vegas scheduled some of the best bands – the ones I most wanted to see! – at crazy times like 2:30 am (including Los Straightjackets and The Rip ‘Em Ups). There was no way I could stay up that late. Speaking to fellow VLV veterans who’ve also hit middle-age, I wasn’t the only one finding it a challenge this time. What was it The Rolling Stones once sang? “What a drag it is getting old!”

So rather than attempting to cram everything in, the emphasis was on simply hanging out and catching up with friends. Anyway, here is my wild, wild Viva Las Vegas round-up / scene report. I took significantly less photos than usual this year (my geriatric digital camera has pretty much bit the dust) and the ones I did take are desultory. And really, it’s taken me so long to cobble-together this post, my memory has gone misty (I suspect I’ve forgotten loads of stuff). This will probably read like disjointed bullet points.  For better or for worse, here is my Viva Las Vegas scene report.



/ That's me (in the black sweatshirt) checking-in at The Orleans. Photo by Sean Law, the mogul behind Vancouver-based independent label Rockin' Records /

I arrived on Wednesday morning and promptly crashed-out in my room at The Orleans. I wish I’d seen Pachuco Jose y The Diamonds – but they were on at 1:30 am and I just couldn’t rouse myself from my jetlagged stupor!



/ Sheilah, Kevin and Ritch and The Hooch'n'Smooch /


/ Sharon, Patrick and Natelle at The Hooch'n'Smooch /

By Thursday my friend Kevin from New Orleans had arrived (as per tradition we were splitting a room). The first official day of Viva always means Sweet Pea’s ice-breaking Hooch’n’Smooch shindig: the ideal way to ease your way into the weekend and an opportunity to greet everyone. Later that night: the premiere LGBT meet-up in the Deluxe Club. Kudos to my friends Jr and Andre from Los Angeles for doing such a brilliant job organizing and suavely hosting this soiree. This was the first official LGBT club on the Viva Las Vegas schedule: I’m one of the elites who used to go to them when they were informal parties in Jr and Andre’s hotel room! Anyway, the event was a triumph and it was divine to hang out and have a few drinks with some some queer “fellow travelers” on the rockabilly scene.



/ No idea what day this shot (of Kevin, Sharon and I) was taken, so I'm sticking it here /

We made a point of catching The Desperados. I’ve raved about this ferociously rampaging sexy young quartet from Santa Ana, California before. To me The Desperados neatly exemplify what modern rockabilly should be – they attack their songs with the fervor of a punk band.


 / Kevin and I /

Friday: Visiting the sublime Frankie’s Tiki Room when in Las Vegas is always de rigueur. We wound up having a nice long afternoon drinking session there with Canadian friends Sean, Natelle and Sharon (who smuggled in a Canadian delicacy unavailable in the UK: ketchup-flavoured Pringles. One bite was Proust-ian, instantly conjuring-up my 1970s Canadian childhood). Of course, I sampled Frankie’s impeccable signature Mai Tais – and then tried my first Sea Hag. My head was swimming by the time I emerged from the gloom of Frankie’s blinking into the sunlight. (We didn’t make it to The Golden Tiki this trip).



/ Above: my Mai Tai and Kevin's Two Dots and a Dash /


/ Sharon - with a Canadian delicacy! /



/ Above: photo by Sean Law /


/ Above: my first-ever Sea Hag /


/ Above: Kevin /


/ Sean Law and I (I'm always chewing a wasp, in every damn photo) /

Then, back to The Orleans for the first slideshow presentation of the weekend by undisputed Ambassador of Mid-Century Americana Charles Phoenix. (He always does two). Damn, Phoenix knows how to work the room (as a raconteur he ranks up there alongside John Waters) and his lovingly assembled slideshows are pure catnip for aficionados of atomic-era kitsch.  



Speaking of John Waters … the people’s pervert and perennial filth elder was one of the emcees of the Burlesque Showcase later that night. He received the rapturous hero’s welcome you would anticipate from the attendees of Viva Las Vegas. I wish I could have recorded or taken notes during Waters’ introduction, because the Pope of Trash was on lacerating form. Clearly knowledgeable and passionate about the history of burlesque, he had loads of hilarious and insightful points to make. Waters was especially eloquent reminiscing about The Block in Baltimore – the notoriously tawdry neon-lit district of East Baltimore once synonymous with porn shops, peep shows and burlesque houses. He recounted how lax those establishments were with checking IDs and how in the 1960s he and Divine used to routinely sneak in as underage teenagers, illicitly ogling iconic striptease queens like Tempest Storm, Lili St Cyr, Irma the Body and Baltimore’s own Blaze Starr. Inspired by Viva Las Vegas, he free-associated a soliloquy about rockabilly luminaries moonlighting as male strippers, asking us to imagine being “tea-bagged” by Elvis, Gene Vincent or Eddie Cochran. And everyone roared in agreement when Waters declared, “The best strippers are old strippers!” Which made me think of that great Peaches video featuring the likes of Satan’s Angel (RIP) and Kitten Natividad. The ensuing burlesque performers themselves were the absolute crème de la crème and sensational to watch, but I was keeping track of the time on my watch because I knew that Messer Chups were playing in the Piano Bar …


Look, I know it’s still painful to accept, but voodoobilly royalty The Cramps are gone and they ain’t never coming back. Lux Interior, Bryan Gregory and Nick Knox from the definitive line-up are dead. Now 66-years old, surviving member Poison Ivy is as reclusive as Greta Garbo and hopefully enjoying a serene retirement. In that spirit – all hail Messer Chups, heirs to The Cramps! Seriously – the time is now to embrace the Russian surf trio as the 21st century Cramps. Messer Chups were by far the biggest musical revelation of Viva Las Vegas 2019. Suffice to say, Kevin and I were both awe-struck.  The name had always been on my radar and I’d given some of their tracks a cursory listen online but seeing them in person was mind-blowing.  


/ Above: Kevin and I watching Messer Chups. Photo by Sean Law /


/ Above: the only decent shot I took of Messer Chups /

A brief history: hailing from St Petersburg, Messer Chups have been around since the early 2000s and undergone multiple incarnations. Their early work is more experimental, featuring copious Theremin and snatches of sampled dialogue from horror movies – interesting, but markedly different from what they do now. Present-day Messer Chups specialize in minimalist deeply twang-y, menacing surf-noir played with real aggression and imbued with a profound and impressive comprehension of old horror and exploitation movies and low-brow trash culture.  (Viva Las Vegas always features surf bands at the pool parties, but both were underwhelming this year. Thank god for Messesr Chups).


Full credit to exemplary musicians Oleg Gitaracula (guitarist) and Rockin Eugene (drummer), but the undisputed focus and breakout star of the band is impossibly magnetic and inscrutable ice princess bassist Zombierella (real name: Svetlana Nagaeva). Call it sangfroid or froideur, Zombierella positively exudes it from beneath her Bettie Page bangs and no one could tear their eyes from her. She even got to sing a few times (although you wouldn’t describe what Zombierella does as “singing”. She delivered the song “They Call Me Zombie” with frosty aplomb, shuttling between a hiccough and a shriek). Kevin and I were exclaiming, why isn’t this woman a star? Why isn’t her pin-up on every available wall? Weirdly, just as Kevin queried, “When is David Lynch going to discover her?” Messer Chups lashed-into their surf version of the Twin Peaks theme! (Their interpretation is entitled “Twin Peaks Twist”).


Saturday at Viva Las Vegas means the car show. Top tip: the car show is the my favourite venue for shopping, and you find more interesting bargains than at the pricey indoor vendors.  But what do I know? I’m usually hunting for black t-shirts with skulls on them. 



/ My t-shirt haul: Vampira, Siouxsie and Elvira! /

Later, Kevin and I made a point of watching some of Aileen Quinn & the Leapin’ Lizards’ set. We’d first encountered Ms Quinn in 2015. Yes, she is that Aileen Quinn – the former moppet who starred in the 1982 film adaptation of the perky musical Annie directed by John Huston. So she has major kitsch appeal. Which compensates for a lot: I’m trying to pick my words diplomatically – she takes a kind of suburban soccer mom approach to rockabilly, and her stage school jazz hands are still very much in evidence. But she radiates genuine sweetness and enthusiasm (and plenty of people in the crowd clearly loved her). And once again, when we ambushed her for a quickie photo session Quinn was the epitome of graciousness. And later that night Kevin and I re-visited another camp icon …




When I attended the Viva Las Vegas Rockabilly Weekender in 2015 my friends Kevin, Mitch and I made a religious pilgrimage to see diminutive 1980s exploitation movie sex kitten-turned-credible and resilient jazz chanteuse Pia Zadora’s one-woman cabaret revue in an Italian restaurant called Piero's. It was a riot! Clad in hot pants, she belted jazz standards like “Come Rain or Come Shine” and “The Lady is a Tramp” in front of a Warhol portrait of herself. Zadora strode past our table several times that night pre-show, but never made eye contact and we never plucked up the courage to speak to her.


Flash forward four years later. When Kevin and I went to Viva Las Vegas again in April 2019, we made another trip to Piero’s, this time Pia did make eye contact – and the pictures speaks for themselves! She said hello, introduced herself, pulled up a chair, hung out with us – and was charm personified. The adorable Zadora happily consented to photos and even introduced us to her husband and son. I informed Zadora her old pal John Waters was in town and she gasped, “He is? He didn't tell me! I’m going to text him!” (Kevin pointed out it’s likely the Viva Las Vegas team flew him in and out just to emcee the burlesque showcase). She regaled us with anecdotes about the making of Hairspray (did you know Waters originally intended her for the part of Amber von Tussle?).


/ Below: Pia Zadora pouting through the pain in Lonely Lady (1983) /



Now a preternaturally youthful 66, Zadora has weathered the vagaries of fame (or should that be infamy?), the kind of bad press and horrendous reviews for her notorious flop films like Butterfly (1982), Lonely Lady (1983) and Voyage of the Rock Aliens (1984) that would devastate anyone else, shrugged it off and re-invented herself as a durable jazz diva. A truly wry, witty and self-deprecating tough cookie, whether joking between songs onstage or shooting the breeze with us, Zadora displayed impeccable deadpan comedic delivery. (Shame that quality was never properly exploited in a film). Anyway, meeting Pia Zadora was truly one of the highlights of the trip and I think I have a crush on her now!


/ "When I'm high, I am Odetta. Let's get naked and smoke!" Pia Zadora as Beatnik Chick in John Waters' Hairspray (1988) /



/ Liza Minnelli and Pia Zadora - together at last! Could it get more Las Vegas than this? Yes, Liza dropped by for a guest appearance the night we saw Pia. This is actually superstar female impersonator Sammy Gonzales, one of the featured performers in Frank Marino’s Divas Las Vegas revue. Don't you love how they coordinated their black sequined outfits? /

Sunday was, of course, the pool party. My expectations are always high for the Viva Las Vegas party – they’re usually a highlight. This one felt a bit tepid – maybe because the weather was overcast and the surf bands were disappointing. But I was just happy to stretch out on the Astroturf drinking Bloody Marys and talking to friends. 



/ Above: me at the pool party /


/ Above: Ejole and Chris /


/ Glamazons at the pool party on Sunday /

We split in time to see the second Charles Phoenix slideshow of the weekend (another killer set). The rest of the day was spent zig-zagging back and forth between the ballrooms watching bands. By Sunday night, I was ready to stop partying. After guzzling can after can of beer all weekend, it had become like aversion therapy and I literally couldn’t take another sip. It was time to go home!




/ Above: Charles Phoenix rocking the house /



/ Stylish couple /



/ Treasures at the vendors /



/ Last minute bargains at the vendors on Sunday! /

Monday: I flew back that morning – to do that agonizing AeroMexico journey in reverse!

Further reading:

Blogs from my previous Viva Las Vegas weekenders: 20102011201220132015 and 2017.



Monday, 20 April 2015

15 April 2015 Cockabilly DJ Set List


As promised / threatened on Facebook:

"Drag a comb through your quiff, swallow a fistful of bop pills and rock around the cock – at COCKABILLY! 

COCKABILLY returns to the louche surroundings of The George & Dragon in Shoreditch this Wednesday night (15 April 2015)! Gay greasers, leather boys, cry-babies, prison wives and juvenile delinquents of all ages are welcome at Cockabilly - London’s only regular queer rockabilly night! With DJ Mal Practice and I spinning all your favourite rancid vintage sleaze classicks! FREE admission. 8 - Midnight."


/ Esquerita (1935-1986) - the human face of Cockabilly /

This post will be another quickie. Much as I want to document the most recent Cockabilly, I got back from my American misadventures on 11 April (I went to the annual Viva Las Vegas rockabilly weekender – first time since 2013 – followed by a few days bar-hopping in decadent New Orleans) and devoting an epic tell-all blog to that soon while the putrid details are still relatively fresh in my addled mind is top priority.

Happily, this was one of the best Cockabilles in ages. I had friends in attendance (Pal and Christopher) and no one behind the bar gestured to Mal and I to turn the volume down once all night. (Trust me – there is no greater buzz kill for a DJ!). It definitely made for a more liberating and raucous atmosphere. (Well, that and copious beer).


/ "Blacky" as captured by the great homoerotic Swiss photographer Karlheinz Weinberger. Zurich 1962 /

Musically in my tight and succinct hour-long set I whipped together greasy rhythm and blues, frenzied rockabilly white trash rockers, some twisted atomic-era kitsch pop inspired by Kenneth Anger and David Lynch soundtracks (I've Told Every Little Star” unforgettably features in Lynch’s Mulholland Drive), then brought things to a punk-y conclusion. (The Bobby Bare track was my tribute to 1950s horror movie hostess Maila Nurmi (1922 - 2008) - I bought not one but two Vampira t-shirts in Las Vegas!). 

My best new recent discovery (via my friend Kevin in New Orleans) is The Ramonetures, who do tough, twang-y instrumental surf versions of punk songs by The Ramones and X. (The Ramonetures aren't new: their debut Ramones cover album came out in 2000 and their X-related follow-up Johnny Walk Don’t Run Pauline in 2001 – but they’re new to me! And destined to become a staple in my sets). 


/ Adorable young Etta James - bad girl of rhythm and blues /

Let's Go, Baby - Billy Eldridge
Your Phone's off the Hook - The Ramonetures
Vampira - Bobby Bare
Beat Girl - ZZ en De Maskers
Beat Generation - Mamie Van Doren
Believe What You Say - Ricky Nelson
Killer - Sparkle Moore ("screaming" version)
Woo-hoo - The Rock-A-Teens
Red Hot Car - Bobby Verne
Train to Nowhere - The Champs
The Flirt - Shirley and Lee
Welfare Cheese - Emanuel Laskey
Party Lights - Claudine Clark
What Do You Think I Am? Ike and Tina Turner
Maybe Baby - Esquerita
Rip It Up - Little Richard
Little Darlin' - Masaaki Hirao
I Will Follow Him - Little Peggy March
How Much Love Can One Heart Hold? Joe Perkins and The Rookies
I've Told Every Little Star - Linda Scott
Roll with Me, Henry - Etta James
Hearts Made of Stone - Rudy Gray
Wiped Out - The Escorts
Action Packed - Ronnie Dee
Whistle Bait - The Collins Kids
Rock Around the Clock - The Sex Pistols
Blitzkrieg Bop - The Ramonetures
What's Inside a Girl? The Cramps

Further reading:

Read about the sordid antics at previous Cockabillies hereherehereherehereherehereherehereherehere,  here, hereherehere and here.

Follow me on tumblr for all your retro, kitsch and homoerotic vintage sleaze needs! 


If you like this kind of thing (and who doesn't?): see a treasure trove of sexy 1950s biker imagery redolent of Kenneth Anger's Scorpio Rising or Marlon Brando in The Wild One here. The jeans, biker caps, engineer boots and leather jackets are to die for!

Monday, 30 March 2015

Lobotomy Room 21 March 2015 DJ Set List


The cover girl for the 21 March 2015 Lobotomy Room is the enigmatic Gertrude Forstner (stripper name: Lady Chinchilla). Between burlesque engagements (she was famous for her savage “cage act”) she was French sex kitten Brigitte Bardot's screen stand-in. Read more about Lady Chinchilla here / 

As described in the Facebook events page:

Skulk in the depths of drunken depravity - at LOBOTOMY ROOM!

At last - a club night for the hillbilly beau monde! LOBOTOMY ROOM! Where sin lives! A punkabilly beer blast! A spectacle of decadence for the permissive Continentally-minded! A Mondo Trasho evening of Beat, Beat Beatsville Beatnik Rock’n’Roll! Rockabilly Psychosis! Wailing Rhythm and Blues! Twisted Tittyshakers! Punk Cretin Hops! Kitsch! Exotica! Curiosities and other Weird Shit! Think John Waters soundtracks, or Songs The Cramps Taught Us, hosted by Graham Russell (of Dr Sketchy and Cockabilly notoriety). Expect desperate stabs from the jukebox jungle! Savage rhythms to make you writhe and rock!

Gay greasers, cry-babies, prison wives and juvenile delinquents of all ages are welcome at LOBOTOMY ROOM! The semi-regular cult club night returns to the suitable environs of a low-ceilinged subterranean sex dungeon basement in Dalston (aka downstairs at Hysteria)! No musical guests this time – just me playing all your putrid vintage sleaze favourites until you’re losing your mind!

All this and admission is gratuit. (That’s French for FREE!)

Lobotomy Room: Faster. Further. Filthier. 

A tawdry good time guaranteed!



/ This Lobotomy Room coincided with the birthday of "King of the Nudies", breast-fixated maverick film director Russ Meyer (21 March 1922 - 18 September 2004). I interpreted this as a good omen - and was right! Here is the delicious Lorna Maitland shakin' it in Meyer’s boob-tastic 1966 masturpiece (sic) Mondo Topless /

Wow! Saturday was dramatic! As revealed in my previous installment, the day started on a considerable high: seeing The Bob Mizer Foundation’s red hot vintage physique film The Golden Age of the American Male at The British Film Institute’s Flare Festival – and then encountering Fifties beefcake incarnate Tab Hunter (sigh!) backstage.

When I got home, I was puttering around getting ready to DJ later and gradually started feeling increasingly, dramatically rough. It kept getting worse until next thing I knew I was hugging the toilet bowl dry-heaving - and then projectile vomiting my lungs out! So odd, as I rarely get sick. (In retrospect I can confirm it was a sudden bout of the flu rather than food poisoning – Pal caught it within days!).

And what suck-y timing: not a great state to be in the night I had a Lobotomy Room scheduled! Cancelling wasn't an option – it would definitively burn a bridge with the venue if I cancelled with such short notice. I would never be able to approach Hysteria again! So – dashing to the bathroom to vomit every few minutes right up until I had to leave the house to head for Dalston - I sucked it up and carried on like normal. It was a long night and I was shivering and sweating profusely behind the DJ booth the whole time – but I stuck it out!

About the venue Hysteria: everyone seemed to love the ultra-minimalist soot-black basement. On the night it turned out the DJ booked for the bigger ground-level bar cancelled so I had the option of re-locating Lobotomy Room upstairs – but I infinitely preferred the dark and squalid S&M dungeon with exposed bricks illuminated by just a few red light bulbs – perfect for my purposes!




Hysteria was also my first ever venue with a proper late licence: on weekends it’s open until 3 am. That was definitely a learning curve. Between 10:30 pm until 12:30 the crowd was worryingly sparse and I was reconciling myself to a poorly attended night. But then at about 12:45 the place exploded with people and stayed frantically busy right up until chucking-out time. It was a big consolation to glance up and see throngs of people dancing! So the tenth-ever Lobotomy Room (and the first of 2015) was a painful night in some ways (by 3 am I was so drained I was virtually hallucinating), but ultimately successful.





/ Craig and Christopher /



/ Pal and Charlie (note Pal's beautiful La Rocka! t-shirt. I got him that for Christmas) /



/ Italian Barbara and I (I'm chewing a wasp, like usual - every damn photo every taken!)



/ Nell and Chris /


/ Hedonism - Lobotomy Room-style! /



/ Ginger beards unite: Christopher and Pal /



/ Stylish new face /



/ Pal and Sarah /



/ The adorable Sarah /



/ Mal (Cockabilly) and Christopher /



/ David, Vanessa and Sean / 

Wimoweh - Yma Sumac
Fever - Edith Massey
These Boots Are Made for Walkin' - Mrs Miller
Mama's Place - Bing Day
The Sneak - The Towers
That's a Pretty Good Love - Big Maybelle
The Slouch - Ray Gee and His Orchestra
Little Miss Understood - Connie Stevens
I Will Follow Him - Little Peggy March
How Much Love Can One Heart Hold? Joe Perkins and The Rookies
Wiped-Out - The Escorts
Let's Go, Baby - Billy Eldridge
Poor Little Baby - Billy Crash Craddock
Wailin' - The Fabulous Wailers
Jailhouse Rock - Masaaki Hirao
Rip It Up - Elvis Presley
Action Packed - Johnny Dollar
Hoy Hoy - The Collins Kids
Run Chicken Run - Link Wray
Chicken Rock - Fat Daddy Holmes
Chicken - The Cramps
Chicken Walk - Hasil Adkins
Chicken Grabber - The Nite Hawks
Beat Generation - Mamie Van Doren
Vesuvius - The Revels
Johnny Lee - Faye Adams
Here Comes the Bug - The Rumblers
Comin' Home, Baby - The Delmonas
Beat Party - Ritchie and The Squires
He's the One - Ike and Tina Turner
I Live the Life I Love - Esquerita
Sick and Tired - Lula Reed
Lover Boy - Gene Wyatt
Love Me - The Phantom
I'm a Juvenile Delinquent - Ronnie Allen
I'm Not a Juvenile Delinquent - Frankie Lymon and The Teenagers
Funnel of Love - Wanda Jackson
Intoxica - The Centurions
Scratching on My Screen - Ric Cartey
Lucille - Masaaki Hirao
The Girl Can't Help It - Little Richard
I Walk Like Jayne Mansfield - The 5,6,7,8s
That Makes It - Jayne Mansfield
Batman - Link Wray
Goo Goo Muck - Ronnie Cook and The Gaylads
Torture Rock - The Rockin' Belmarx
Party Lights - Claudine Clark
Welfare Cheese - Emanuel Lasky
Roll with Me, Henry - Etta James
Jim Dandy - Sara Lee and The Spades
Whistle Bait - Larry Collins
Dirty Robber - The Fabulous Wailers
Khrushchev Twist - Melvin Gayle
Viens danser le twist - Johnny Hallyday
Peter Gunn Twist - The Jesters
Peter Gunn Locomotion - The Delmonas
Boss - The Rumblers
Tina's Dilemma - Ike and Tina Turner
Blockade - The Rumblers
Fools Rush In - Ricky Nelson
Devil in Disguise - Elvis Presley
Wipe-Out - The Surfaris
Margaya - The Fender Four
She Wants to Mambo - Johnny Thunders and Patti Palladin
Mambo Baby - Ruth Brown
De Castrow - Jaybee Wasden
Dragon Walk - The Noblemen
Breathless - X
Rock Around the Clock - Sex Pistols
Let's Have a Party - Wanda Jackson
Tongue Tied Jill - Charlie Feathers
C'mon Everybody - Sid Vicious
Dance with Me, Henry - Ann-Margret
Sweetie Pie - Eddie Cochran
Honolulu Rock'n'Roll - Eartha Kitt
Rock-a-Hula Baby - Elvis Presley
Beat Girl - Adam Faith
Tornado - Dale Hawkins
No Good Lover - Mickey and Sylvia
Cry-baby - The Honey Sisters
The Big Bounce - Shirley Caddell
Ain't That Lovin' You, Baby - The Earls of Suave
You're Driving Me Crazy - Dorothy Berry
Hanky Panky - Rita Chao & The Quests
Bombora - The Original Surf-aris
Pussycat Song - Connie Vannett
Sweet Little Pussycat - Andre Williams
Can Your Pussy Do the Dog? The Cramps
Revellion - The Revels
Little Darlin' - Masaaki Hirao
I Want Your Love - The Cruisers
Fujiyama Mama - Annisteen Allen
Jim Dandy - LaVerne Baker
How Does That Grab You, Darlin'? Nancy Sinatra
Somebody Put Something in My Drink - The Ramones
Nothing Means Nothing Anymore - The Alley Cats
Year 1 - X
I Stubbed My Toe - Bryan "Legs" Walker
Save It - Mel Robbins
Shortnin' Bread - The Readymen
Muleskinner Blues - The Fendermen
Surfin' Bird - The Trashmen
Willie Joe - The Mystery Trio
Wild, Wild Party - Charlie Feathers
Rock-A-Bop - Sparkle Moore
Lucille - Little Richard
Shout - Johnny Hallyday
My Boy Lollipop - Sakura and The Quests
Handclapping Time - The Fabulous Raiders

Further reading:

Read about all the Lobotomy Rooms to date herehereherehereherehereherehere and here.

See the rest of the photos - raw, uncensored and uncut - from this Lobotomy Room on the flickr album

Lobotomy Room is kindly sponsored by the frou frou and chi chi Vivien of Holloway - for all your faux vintage bad girl glamour needs!

Lobotomy Room flyer designed by the muy guapo and muy talented Ego Rodriguez.

Follow me on tumblr for all your rancid kitsch and homoerotic vintage sleaze needs!


On 1 April 2015 I split for the annual Viva Las Vegas rockabilly weekender, followed by a few days in New Orleans. My blog about Viva Las Vegas 2010My blog about Viva Las Vegas 2011My blog about Viva Las Vegas 2012 (and trip to San Francisco). And finally, Viva Las Vegas 2013. 


/ From the 1965 Doris Wishman sexploitation film Bad Girls Go to Hell /