"I was a Long Island kid that graduated college in 1976 and moved to Greenwich Village. Two years later, I was working The Mudd Club door. Standing outside, staring at the crowd, it was "out there" versus "in here" and I ...

Buy Now From Amazon

"I was a Long Island kid that graduated college in 1976 and moved to Greenwich Village. Two years later, I was working The Mudd Club door. Standing outside, staring at the crowd, it was "out there" versus "in here" and I was on the inside. The Mudd Club was filled with the famous and soon- to- be famous, along with an eclectic core of Mudd regulars who gave the place its identity. Everyone from Jean-Michel Basquiat, Jeff Koons, and Robert Rauschenberg to Johnny Rotten, The Hell's Angels, and John Belushi: passing through, passing out, and some, passing on. Marianne Faithful and Talking Heads, Frank Zappa, William Burroughs, and even Kenneth Anger― just a few of the names that stepped on stage. No Wave and Post- Punk artists, musicians, filmmakers, and writers living in a nighttime world on the cusp of two decades. This book is a cornucopia of memories and images, and how this famed wicked downtown club attained the status of midtown and uptown. There was nothing else like it― I met everyone, and the job quickly defined me. I thought I could handle it, and for a while, I did. "―Richard Boch



Similar Products

Punk Avenue: Inside the New York City Underground, 1972-1982Stranded in the Jungle: Jerry Nolan's Wild Ride -A Tale of Drugs, Fashion, the New York Dolls, and Punk RockEverything Is Combustible: Television, CBGB's and Five Decades of Rock and Roll: The Memoirs of an Alchemical GuitaristVanishing New York: How a Great City Lost Its SoulStudio 54Inside Studio 54Club 57: Film, Performance, and Art in the East Village, 1978–1983Point of View: Me, New York City, and the Punk Scene