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Joey Ramone and his band, the Ramones, have been credited with founding the punk rock movement - a gift of sound to a new generation. Now Joey is giving his fans, young and old, another poignant gift of sound: his first solo album. It will be released Feb. 19, nearly a year after Joey's death, at 49, from lymphatic cancer. The album is called Don't Worry About Me, a title contrarily unsettling and comforting - a lot like the music genre it represents. During the past year, Joey Ramone has been remembered in ways both fittingly natural and sweetly surprising: a street very near the NYC punk stronghold CBGB has been named "Joey Ramone Place" after the late singer, a Ramone's tribute album being produced by Rob Zombie will appear next month, and the Ramones' song "Blitzkrieg Bop" has been included on the soundtrack of the newly released children's movie, Jimmy Neutron. The diversity of those remembering Joey and the Ramones is affirmation of the Ramones potent influence during their years as champions of punk rock, and still. spoke recently with Daniel Rey - friend, bandmate and producer to Joey Ramone. Rey played guitar on and produced Don't Worry About Me. In the following interview he shares a little bit about the album, and the history behind it.
Daniel Rey: Did you get the record?
R: I heard somewhere that the Ramones never had a gold record. Is that accurate?
R: What was Joey like on a personal level, as a friend?
R: Why did it take years to do this record? I heard it was started in '96 or '97 after the Ramones broke up.
R: As far as the recording situation, was it just you two guys when you started or did you have a full band the whole time?
R: There's a couple different drummers?
R: Now when you brought Mark in, did you guys have to rehearse?
R: With Joey's ailing health condition, did he expect to be around for the completion of the album and the release and everything?
R: Now, as far as the Ramones band I heard it put as such that they retired. Was the split a planned thing or what?
R: How much did you work with Joey after the split as far as gigs and so forth?
R: How did that go? |
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