Dee Dee Ramone
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| Dee Dee Ramone | |
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Dee Dee Ramone, performing with the Ramones, 1979.
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| Background information | |
| Birth name | Douglas Glenn Boot |
| Also known as | Dee Dee King, Dee Dee Ramone |
| Born | September 18, 1951 Fort Lee, Virginia |
| Died | June 5, 2002 (aged 50) Los Angeles, California, USA |
| Genre(s) | Punk rock |
| Occupation(s) | Musician Songwriter |
| Instrument(s) | Bass guitar Vocals |
| Years active | 1974–2002 |
| Label(s) | Sire, Wanker Rec, World Service, Other People's Music, Corazong |
| Associated acts |
Ramones |
| Website | Official Dee Dee Site |
Dee Dee Ramone (Douglas Glenn Colvin) (September 18, 1952[1] - June 5, 2002) was a German American songwriter and bassist, best remembered as a founding member of punk rock band The Ramones.
Dee Dee is also known for his distinctive count-in style, used to start off many Ramones songs.
Though nearly all of the Ramones' songs were credited equally to all the band members, Dee Dee was the group's primary lyricist, penning songs such as "53rd & 3rd", "Commando", "Rockaway Beach" and "Poison Heart". He was the bass guitarist for the group from their formation in 1974 through 1989, although at first he wanted to play the guitar. He then left to pursue a short-lived career in rap music under the name Dee Dee King. Afterwards, Dee Dee returned to his punk roots and released three little-known solo albums featuring brand new songs (many were used later on Ramones records). Dee Dee also got married to Argentinian teenager Barbara Zampini, toured the world playing his songs, Ramones songs and some old favorites in small clubs and continued to write songs for the Ramones until 1996, when the band retired.
Dee Dee struggled with drug addiction for much of his life, especially heroin; he began using drugs as a teenager, and continued to use for the majority of his adult life. He seemed to clean up his act in the early 1990s and to remain clean for most of that decade until 2002, when he was found dead from a heroin overdose.
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Colvin was born in Fort Lee, Virginia and raised in Berlin, Germany, the son of an American soldier stationed there and a German woman. His parents separated around his late childhood/early teens, and he lived in Berlin until the age of 15, when he, his mother and sister moved to the Forest Hills section of New York City's borough of Queens. There he met John Cummings and Thomas Erdelyi (later dubbed Johnny and Tommy "Ramone"), then playing in a band called The Tangerine Puppets, named after a Donovan song of the same name.
Colvin and Cummings quickly became friends, as they were both outcasts in their heavily middle class neighborhood. After an unsuccessful guitar audition for Television, Cummings and Colvin formed the Ramones with then-drummer Jeffrey Hyman (soon to be Joey Ramone) in 1974. Hyman took over vocal duties after Colvin decided that he could not sing lead vocals for longer than a few songs as his voice shredded. Joey Ramone also suggested that Dee Dee could not sing and play bass well at the same time.
Dee Dee was the one who thought to name the band the Ramones; he read that Paul McCartney often signed into hotels under the alias "Paul Ramon". He added an 'e' to the end of that surname and the band members all adopted the name Ramone.
Colvin wrote or co-wrote most of the Ramones' repertoire, such as "53rd and 3rd" (a song about male prostitution at 53rd Street and 3rd Avenue in Manhattan, allegedly based on personal experience), "Glad to See You Go" (written about his then-girlfriend, Connie, a stripper and fellow drug user with a volatile personality), "It's a Long Way Back to Germany", "Chinese Rock" (originally recorded by Johnny Thunders & The Heartbreakers, as guitarist Johnny Ramone was not enthusiastic about the Ramones doing songs about drugs) and "Wart Hog" (a song Colvin wrote in rehab). After he quit the Ramones, Dee Dee continued to write songs for them, contributing at least three songs to each of their albums.
According to Mondo Bizarro, for example, the Ramones bailed him out of jail in exchange for the rights to "Main Man", "Strength to Endure" and "Poison Heart", a minor hit for the Ramones. The Adios Amigos album is molded around the strength of several of Dee Dee's solo songs, for example "I'm Makin' Monsters for My Friends" and "It's Not for Me to Know" from the album I Hate Freaks Like You.
In 1989, after leaving the Ramones, Colvin started a brief career as rapper "Dee Dee King" with the album Standing in the Spotlight. (Colvin had recorded "Funky Man" as Dee Dee King in 1987, before leaving the Ramones.) Critic Matt Carlson writes that the album "will go down in the annals of pop culture as one of the worst recordings of all time. Which, of course, makes it one hell of a great collector's item."[1] After the album failed, he returned to punk rock with various bands like Sprokkett and The Spikey Tops.
In 1991, Colvin was briefly involved with transgressive punk rock performance artist GG Allin, playing second guitar with Allin's backup band The Murder Junkies. Colvin's involvement lasted a week, enough for him to be briefly interviewed during the filming of the Allin documentary Hated: GG Allin And The Murder Junkies; rehearsal recordings of him with Allin appear on the Hated soundtrack, and on the posthumous live Allin compilation Res-Erected; while video footage of rehearsals is available on DVD through Allin's estate's website [2].
In 1992, Colvin formed a new band called The Chinese Dragons, which was followed by the group ICLC from 1994 to 1996. With ICLC, he also did an EP and a full-length album, I Hate Freaks Like You.
In November 1994, Dee Dee was searching for his stolen guitar on the street outside a venue in Argentina when he met 16 year old Barbara Zampini. She was a Ramones fanatic and had been playing bass for 2 years. [3] Together they moved to Holland, where Dee Dee and Nina Hagen presided over the Inter-Celestial Light Commune (ICLC) farm, harvesting marijuana fields by day and recording music by night. Immigration problems with the Dutch authorities forced Colvin to return to America. [4] Dee Dee and Barbara were married in a simple ceremony in New York City in September 1996.
Dee Dee was a special guest at the final Ramones show at The Palace in Los Angeles on August 6th, 1996, performing the lead vocals for "Love Kills". (C. J. Ramone was by then the group's bassist.) He missed two verses (even though he wrote the song), sang out of tune, started earlier and resorted to talking cheerfully.
Even before the Ramones retired, Colvin formed a Ramones tribute band called The Ramains (later The Ramainz) with his wife Barbara ("Barbara Ramone", bass) and former Ramones bandmates CJ (guitar) and Marky (drums). He also recorded several solo albums under his old name Dee Dee Ramone: Zonked/Ain't It Fun (1996), Do the Bikini Dance (2002), Hop Around (1999) and Greatest & Latest (2000). Dee Dee Ramone's voice is audible on the Nina Hagen album Freud Euch (1995) and on the Furious George EP Goes Ape! (1996).
In new millennium, Colvin teamed up with Paul Kostabi, leader of the hardcore punk band Youth Gone Mad and former guitarist for White Zombie. An established artist, Kostabi was instrumental in getting Dee Dee's new career as a painter off the ground. Together with Barbara, the trio collaborated on several hundred works that sold quickly for a few hundred dollars each.
In 2000, he formed the Dee Dee Ramone band with guitarist Christian Martucci (Christian Black), who is now the singer for Black President. This lineup consisted of Colvin (vocals and guitar/bass), Christian Martucci (vocals and guitar), Anthony Smedile (drums), Chase Manhattan (drums), and Stefan Adika (bass). With the exception of one show at the Spa Club in NYC and a club Makeup performance, this was Dee Dee's last touring band. Martucci appeared as "Chris the Creep" in Colvin's last book, Legend of a Rock Star, A Memoir: The Last Testament of Dee Dee Ramone.
Colvin moved to the West Coast partly to pursue an acting career. He landed a major role as The Pope in Bikini Bandits (2002) [5] and contributed the song "In A Movie" to the soundtrack which features wife Barbara on lead vocal.
His next album was supposed to be a live album produced by Gilby Clarke (ex-Guns N' Roses), taking place on June 12, 2002, at Hollywood’s Key Club Hollywood. There are several bootlegs of this line-up (Dee Dee Ramone Band), including Live in Milan, Italy. Dee Dee's final studio recordings were released on the album Youth Gone Mad featuring Dee Dee Ramone (trend is dead! records in USA 2002) and Wanker Records in Germany (www.wanker-records.de) 2002).
Colvin was found dead on the evening of June 5, 2002, by his wife Barbara at his Hollywood, California apartment. An autopsy established heroin overdose as the official cause of death and is available for viewing at The Smoking Gun [6].
Dee Dee was buried at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Hollywood, California. His headstone features the Ramones seal surrounded by the line "I feel so safe flying on a ray on the highest trails above" taken from his song "Highest Trails Above", from the Ramones album Subterranean Jungle (1983). At its base is the quote "Ok...I gotta go now".
Under the name Dee Dee Ramone, Colvin wrote two books: Poison Heart: Surviving the Ramones (aka Lobotomy) and Legend of a Rock Star, a daily journal of commentary on his last, hectic European tour in the spring of 2001. Both were released as "non-fiction" autobiographies, despite the fact that "Legend of A Rock Star" features a sequence in which Dee Dee murders a border guard.
Dee Dee also penned a novel, titled Chelsea Horror Hotel, in which he and his wife move into New York City's famous Chelsea Hotel and believe they are staying in the same room where Sid Vicious killed his girlfriend Nancy Spungen. In the book, Dee Dee is visited by Sid, as well as other dead punk rock friends such as Johnny Thunders, Stiv Bators, and Jerry Nolan.
- Ramones (1976)
- Leave Home (1977)
- Rocket to Russia (1977)
- Road to Ruin (1978)
- End of the Century (1980)
- Pleasant Dreams (1981)
- Subterranean Jungle (1983)
- Too Tough to Die (1984)
- Animal Boy (1986)
- Halfway to Sanity (1987)
- Brain Drain (1989)
- Standing in the Spotlight (1989) (used the name Dee Dee King)
- I Hate Freaks Like You (1995)
- Zonked (1997)
- Hop Around (2000)
- Greatest & Latest (2000)
- Too Tough To Die Live in NYC (2003)
- I (still) Hate Creeps Like You (2007)
- "Blitzkrieg Bop" (1976)
- "I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend" (1976)
- "I Remember You" (1977)
- "Swallow My Pride" (1977)
- "Sheena Is a Punk Rocker" (1977)
- "Rockaway Beach" (1977)
- "Do You Wanna Dance?" (1978)
- "Don't Come Close" (1978)
- "Needles and Pins" (1978)
- "She's the One" (1979)
- "Rock 'n' Roll High School" (1979)
- "Baby, I Love You" (1980)
- "Do You Remember Rock 'n' Roll Radio?" (1980)
- "We Want the Airwaves" (1981)
- "She's a Sensation" (1981)
- "Psycho Therapy" (1983)
- "Time Has Come Today" (1983)
- "Howling at the Moon (Sha-La-La)" (1984)
- "Chasing the Night" (1985)
- "My Brain Is Hanging Upside Down (Bonzo Goes to Bitburg)" (1985)
- "Somebody Put Something in My Drink" (1986)
- "Something to Believe In" (1986)
- "Crummy Stuff" (1986)
- "A Real Cool Time" (1987)
- "I Wanna Live" (1987)
- "Pet Sematary" (1989)
- "Funky Man" (1987) (used the name Dee Dee King)
- "What About Me?" (1993)
- "Chinese Bitch" (1994)
- "Do The Bikini Dance" (2002)
- "Bikini Bandits" (2002) the theme from Bikini Bandits Experience
- Dee Dee Ramone / Terrorgruppe split single (2002)
- "Born To Lose" (2002)
- "Dee Dee Ramone" (2002)
- Monte A. Melnick Ramones Tour Manager "On The Road With The Ramones"[7]
Categories: BLP articles lacking sources | Articles lacking reliable references from June 2007 | 1951 births | 2002 deaths | American punk rock bass guitarists | American rappers | German-Americans | Ramones members | The Murder Junkies members | Deaths by heroin overdose in the United States | Burials at Hollywood Forever Cemetery | Rockaway, Queens | People from Virginia | People from Queens | People from New York City