Do you think they asked you maybe because you had been cast by Cynthia Plaster Caster? Jello, I've heard reports that you have the biggest "helmet." You have the biggest "helmet," Cynthia Plaster Caster - did you?
Um, I would be surprised at that. If you want sheer girth, take a look at the casting of Jon Langford of the Mekons.
She actually said that you were of an average casting when I asked her. When did you get cast by Cynthia Plaster Caster? How did she approach you? Did she "plate" you herself?
Um, she "plated" me herself, although I had a little help because it didn't work the first time around. So I had to go back and do it again. It's weird to try and get all erect nervously in front of someone else and then have this cold stuff put on you and you have to stay hard with this cold stuff all around you. But the second time I guess I must have succeeded.
What year was that?
God, I don't know. '89 maybe. It must have been when we were working on the Lard Last Temptation of Reid album.
Jello, I've interviewed Joey Shithead a few times and I've always asked him about a famous incident between Jello and Watty, but he will never shed any light on it. What is the deal on that, Jello? Jello versus Watty of the Exploited.
I've never met Watty in my life. I've never said anything to him, rarely even said anything about him, but in order make his band big and make money, he started ragging on Dead Kennedys in about 1981. And later he some of his gooney road crew down along with some British Movement members - which is the British equivalent of the Ku Klux Klan - to try and bash heads at one of our shows in Leicester, England in 1982. MDC was opening and they pushed Dave the singer off the stage and the skinheads split his head open with their boots and sent Dave to the hospital. They never quite got me but that gives you the kind of picture of the kind of person Watty is. He didn't go there himself to beat people up; he sent other people. And yet, we never did anything to him. I even bought his records at one point.
Jello, so, yeah, and like, you probably like the Nuns too. Why is Jennifer - you mentioned this on the phone to me about Jennifer of the Nuns not really - in that James Stark book, there is that book called Punk '77, all about the San Francisco punk scene - and Jennifer of the Nuns doesn't have too many kind things to say about the Dead Kennedys.
I think she only says one thing about Dead Kennedys. Granted it is not kind, but we came along after the Nuns, and, well, Dead Kennedys are remembered one way and the Nuns are, well, maybe they're remembered.
Did you like the Nuns? Were they pretty good?
I moved to town after they became a really, really big band and kind of threw their weight around and weren't in the communal spirit like the Avengers and the Dils and the others who were trying to build a unified force of bands. The Nuns - like, when I got to town, Negative Trend opened for them, and the Mabuhay Gardens did an unheard of to that point 2000 door, so many people showed up at 4 dollars a head. And the Nuns took 65 percent of that, and paid Negative Trend 50 bucks. That was not exactly camaraderie in my opinion. Apparently Alejandro protested that but.... Anyways, so it was kind of - we were on a different wavelength. The Nuns and Crime were much more of the old school competitive rock and roll band and we've got to fuck over other bands to keep our place, that kind of counterproductive thing that left Crime with very few friends by the end of their existence.
How about the Avengers? You really liked the Avengers and a lot of people still like the Avengers. What do you think of them now, listening back to them? Do they still stand up, do you think, over the test of time? Did you really like them yourself?
Um, the Avengers were one of the major reasons why I started Alternative Tentacles. Here I saw one of the best bands I had ever seen in my life again and again and again go through so much material no one would record. The big record companies wouldn't touch them. Nobody on our label had any money so three great albums were lost. One was later cobbled together that is still pretty damn good. They were one of the best bands America ever produced in its whole history of any kind of music. I miss them more than just about any other early punk band except maybe the Screamers.
How about Crime? Do you know Mike Lucas of the Phantom Surfers at all?
Yeah.
He was a big Crime fan. He always talks about a big fam. Do you remember him back then being a little kid on the Crime scene - or were Crime that important in your scheme of things? You said they were kind of older, like the Nuns and Crime were competitive....
Um, they were not that big a part of my thing because I came a little later in a little bit more - as I say, people stood up more for each other with the later bands, and so I didn't meet Mike Lucas until a little later. I never got to see the Junior Executives unfortunately.
Was that one of his bands?
It was a really crude Flipper-tempo - but much earlier than Flipper - teenage band where they all dressed in film noir detective suits with hats. The A-side of their single is "Capital Gains Tax Increase Blues." They couldn't be Crime so they got this crooked executive schtick together instead. And I think the record was sold in only one store: Rather Ripped in Berkeley.
Did you ever see the Hitmakers with Ron Silva at all?
No.
Do you know Ron Silva at all?
No.
He was like in the Nashville Ramblers. He was also in the Crawdaddies, a band out of San Diego. I saw one of their pictures in the James Stark book. I guess I'm just grasping at any picture I see in James Spark's book and go, "Oh, Jello must know Ron Silva!"
Uh, no.
What do you remember about the Pointed Sticks, Jello, playing with them? I mean, how would they go over: the Dead Kennedys and the Pointed Sticks playing together? It seems really odd!
Well, by today's standards, Pointed Sticks would be considered a punk band, a pop-punk band. Back then, they were a really high energy new wave pop band who played high energy enough music that they would do well on punk bills, at least down in San Francisco. I guess we befriended each other when we went to their show in Seattle the night before we played. I knew Dimwit a little bit from the Subhumans earlier. And so they didn't know any other bands in San Francisco so they called us up. Steve Macklam, who I guess manages K.D. Lang now, got on the ball like a good manager should, and called up Dead Kennedys. "Oh, sure, come on down. All the other Canadian bands play with us. Why not you too?" So we forged a friendship from there.
Did they go over? Like what did you think? How did the crowd like them? How did the crowd like the Pointed Sticks? I mean, 'cause, you know, keyboards and stuff....
Keyboards were not necessarily considered bad then. Keep in mind the Screamers were keyboards and no guitars. And we even tried to get a keyboard player, to add another Dead Kennedy, but we could never find the right one. You could just do that much more that way. So the keyboards didn't really bother people, and they were a little more charismatic and intense than the San Francisco new wavy pop bands like the Readymades and Pearl Harbour & The Explosions or S.V.T., all of whom openly scorned being co-billed with punks, whereas the Pointed Sticks had no problem with that.
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