The property is the former home of Ramones' lead singer Joey and bassist Dee Dee and hosted one of the band's earliest shows. Nearby Albert's Garden is where the band paid $125 in 1976 for a black-and-white picture [ed note — taken by longtime EV resident Roberta Bayley] from Punk Magazine, featuring a brick-wall background, for their debut album titled ... This image on East 2nd Street is considered one of the most important and definitive music images of the 1970s. Situated in one of the most desirable pockets in Lower Manhattan, the Property presents a unique opportunity for an investor or owner-user to obtain a cash-flowing asset with potential for tremendous upside.
Wednesday, October 9, 2024
East Village building with Ramones history is back on the sales market
Friday, August 16, 2024
50 years of the Ramones
Details about Ramones-themed rides to Rockaway Beach today and tomorrow
Also, tonight, you can catch a screening of "End of the Century: The Story of the Ramones" with a post-film Q&A in Queens. Details here.
Friday, July 5, 2024
Ramones revelry: Punk Magazine's John Holmstrom hosts art and cartoons bash at Metropolis
Friday, May 17, 2024
A Celebration of Joey Ramone this weekend at Metropolis Vintage
Saturday, April 17, 2021
ICYMI: Pete Davidson to play Joey Ramone in Netflix biopic
The first reaction I heard was that Pete Davidson was too short for the role. He's 6-3. Joey Ramone was 6-6. 🙄Pete Davidson will produce and star in I SLEPT WITH JOEY RAMONE, a new biopic chronicling the life of the king of punk — whom we lost 20 years ago today.
— NetflixFilm (@NetflixFilm) April 15, 2021
The film, directed by Jason Orley from a treatment by Davidson and Orley, is based on Mickey Leigh's memoir of the same name. pic.twitter.com/4r49gZfsmo
Thursday, April 15, 2021
Joey Ramone died on this day in 2001
Monday, July 6, 2020
ICYMI: 6 E. 2nd St., home of Ramones history, is for sale
As Jennifer Gould recently reported at the Post, 6 E. Second St. is now on the market for $7.25 million.
A loft in the four-level building just east of the Bowery — at Joey Ramone Place — was the longtime home of Arturo Vega, the artistic director for the Ramones who created the band's iconic logo.
The listing via B6 Real Estate Advisors is now online:
The four (4) story property consists of one (1) retail store, along with three (3) residential units. The current residential units consist of three (3) full floor loft apartments. All three (3) of the loft apartments are fair market.
The property has 26 feet of frontage on East 2nd Street and has a depth of 63 feet. Additionally, the property is comprised of approximately 6,408 square feet broken down as follows: 4,806 SF residential and 1,602 SF retail.
The retail tenant, the John Derian Company, apparently also owns the building.
There isn't any mention of Vega or the Ramones in the listing. Other onetime residents here include Fayette Hauser, John Flowers and Pam Tent of the Cockettes.
As for the Ramones, plenty has been written about their relationship with the space (Joey and Dee Dee lived here early on, the band signed their first contract on Vega's coffee table, etc.)... and here's footage of the band playing in the loft in February 1975...
Vega died in June 2013 at age 65.
[Above the front door at No. 6]
Friday, June 28, 2019
Last chance to see 'The First Time I Saw The Ramones' at 72 Gallery
"The First Time I saw the Ramones" wraps up its residency on Sunday at 72 Gallery.
This solo show features photos by Tom Hearn, who documented a Ramones show up in New Haven on July 22, 1976.
You can see the exhibit from noon to 8 p.m (to 6 p.m. on Sunday) in the gallery space at The Great Frog, the rock 'n' roll ring shop and boutique at 72 Orchard St. between Broome and Grand. (And while you're down there, you can check out The Cast next door or Jimmy Webb's I Need More across the street.)
And as for some of Hearn's photos...
[The Dee Dee door]
Previously on EV Grieve:
'The First Time I Saw The Ramones' at 72 Gallery
Tuesday, May 14, 2019
'The First Time I Saw The Ramones' at 72 Gallery
There's another Ramones-related exhibit opening at 72 Gallery.
Here's what to expect at "The First Time I saw the Ramones," a solo show by Tom Hearn:
The exhibition showcases photography from the very early New York Punk scene and explores how your life can be changed when you find the band that defines your youth.
The show chronicles the night of July 22 1976 when Hearn was asked by his friend Legs McNeil to see the Ramones play at the Arcadia Ballroom in New Haven.
The opening reception is Thursday night from 6-9 at the The Great Frog, 72 Orchard St. between Broome and Grand. After tonight, you can check out the exhibit from noon to 8 p.m Tuesday through Sunday until June 6.
The folks behind The Great Frog created the gallery space in their rock 'n' roll ring shop and boutique.
View this post on InstagramGiant Joey is on his way to the lower east side NYC #72gallery #tomhearnphoto #greatfroglondon
A post shared by Tom Hearn (@tom_hearn_photo) on
Friday, February 8, 2019
All tomorrow's rooftop parties
[EVE]
Hey! Ho! Let's Go ... look at this new marketing campaign for EVE, the 8-floor residential building at 433 E. 13th St. with a landscaped roof deck and BBQ pits (at the site of the former Peter Stuyvesant Post Office property here between Avenue A and First Avenue).
Multiple EVG readers shared EVE's new ad, which notes "First we had the Ramones... and then the Velvet Underground... And now there’s Eve East Village: Designer studio, one and two bedroom rental residencies."
[Whistling]
Gothamist and SPIN both took note of the Ramones/Velvet Underground campaign this week.
Per Andy Cush at SPIN:
The problem — besides the idea that the kind of gentrification that killed the East Village as a fertile arts community is somehow actually a happy continuation of that community’s legacy — is that the Velvet Underground came first, releasing their first album in 1967, nine years before the Ramones’ self-titled debut in ’76. This is common knowledge for anyone with even a passing interest in this music: the Velvets, with their loud noises, daring subject matter, and repeatedly slammed guitar chords, are often cited as an important predecessor to the punk rock scene that the Ramones exemplified in the following decade.
In the grand scheme of things, this is a petty but pretty hilarious mixup, especially coming from a place that claims close association with the culture of the neighborhood.
And here's Ben Yakas writing at Gothamist:
At a time when there are so many horrible things happening in the world that deserve to be called out, the questionable aesthetic choices of a new East Village condominium really shouldn't amount to a hill of beans. Having said that: there is gross, capitalistic artistic appropriation, like how Target coopted CBGB or how developers have exhumed and defiled the corpse of 5 Pointz and steam-pressed its branding onto a new building in Long Island City. And then there is gross, capitalistic artistic appropriation that gets everything embarrassingly wrong.
This is a variation of a campaign that dropped late last summer...
Got an email this morning for a new building opening in the EV. It reads:
— John Norris (@Jonnynono) September 1, 2018
First the East Village had The Velvet Underground
Then The Ramones
Coming Soon
EVE
Designer Studio, One and Two Bedroom Rental Residences
I'll just leave that there and cc: @evgrieve
And we can all remember when they played at TRGT just down 14th Street.
Anyway, EVE isn't the first luxury rental around here of late to cash in on any rock history to move units. Ben Shaoul's Bloom 62 on Avenue B featured framed photos of Joey Ramone, Grace Jones and Debbie Harry in its model homes in 2017. Then there was this copy from the Bloom website:
It sounds impossible: a fully-appointed luxury building has sprouted in the beating heart of the East Village. A 24-hour doorman greets you before work in the morning, after returning from a cafe in the evening and when heading out to Tompkins Square Park on the weekends. You'll have every modern convenience, from a gym to a roof deck to in-unit laundry, on the same streets where names like The Ramones, Warhol and Hendrix and [sic] paved the history of this neighborhood for years to come.
Shaoul sold the building last fall for $85 million.
Previously on EV Grieve:
All about EVE, the Peter Stuyvesant Post Office-replacing rentals on 14th Street
EVErything about the new luxury rentals at the former Peter Stuyvesant Post Office
Looks like there's a Trader Joe's coming to 432-438 E. 14th St. after all
Tuesday, September 12, 2017
Ramones Ramp mural damaged in Queens
[Ori Carino with Mickey Leigh in June 2016]
On June 5, 2016, East Village-based artist Ori Carino unveiled a new mural at the Thorneycroft Ramp in Forest Hills, Queens. The ceremony was part of a day of events organized by the Queens Museum, which was showing "Hey! Ho! Let’s Go: Ramones and the Birth of Punk" at the time.
Carino painted the image of the four Ramones at the ramp based on a 1975 photograph by photographer Bob Gruen.
Marc H. Miller, the curator of that Ramones show, wrote in to report that the mural has been damaged...
Michael Perlman, a historian who lives in Queens, believes that maintenance workers at the Thorneycroft Ramp at Fanwood Estates painted around artist the mural, possibly before it rained ... sending red, vertical streaks down the mural...
"Everyone loves the mural out there in Forest Hills," Miller told me. "I’m optimistic that the real-estate company that owns the ramp will get it restored. It's just a question of allocating some money for Ori to fix it."
Monday, May 8, 2017
Details on the 17th annual Joey Ramone Birthday Bash
Via the EVG inbox today...
Before succumbing to lymphatic cancer on April 15, 2001, Joey Ramone had been planning another of his infamous bashes for his 50th birthday. He'd asked his mother, Charlotte Lesher, and brother Mickey Leigh to promise they'd throw a huge party to celebrate the occasion, regardless.
The Joey Ramone Birthday Bash has since become an annual tradition. This year's Bash will take place on Friday, May 19, Joey's actual Birthday, beginning at 7 p.m. at the Studio at Webster Hall.
Headlining this year's event: Joey's former bandmates, drummer Richie Ramone and bassist CJ Ramone, will be playing in a trio formed just for this occasion called The Love Triangle, with Mickey Leigh on guitar. They'll perform several select songs from the seminal Ramones albums Leave Home and Rocket to Russia, both of which turn 40 this year.
Also being honored is David Peel, who passed away earlier this year and whose band David Peel & The Lower East Side had performed at previous Bash events. The Accelerators, Joff Wilson, Bill Connor and Koshek Swaminathan will take part in his Bash tribute. Performances from The Cuts and LES Stitches will also round out the night.
You can find ticket info here.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Mickey Leigh on his brother Joey Ramone's 'New York City' video
Friday, June 17, 2016
It might get Loud
The Ramones with "Loudmouth." (H/T Alex.)
Meanwhile, the "Hey! Ho! Let’s Go: Ramones and the Birth of Punk" exhibit is at the Queens Museum through July 31.
Sunday afternoon at the Museum, co-curator Marc H. Miller moderates two conversations around the theme, "Pop to Punk: Ramones and Visual Art." Guests include Chris Stein of Blondie and John Holmstrom, co-founder of PUNK magazine. Details here.
And on June 25, the Museum is hosting Ramones Mania, which will include book signings, film screenings, a flea market, live music and more. Details here.
Also this next Friday at noon...
SPECIAL: Friday (6/24) @evgrieve hosts w/guest 'punk curator' Marc H. Miller, 12p-2pm ET | 9a-11am PT, live on East Village Radio. #ramones
— East Village Radio (@EVRadio) June 17, 2016
Tuesday, June 7, 2016
East Village-based artist Ori Carino unveils Ramones mural in Forest Hills
[Ori Carino with Mickey Leigh]
On Sunday afternoon, East Village-based artist Ori Carino unveiled a new mural at the "Thorneycroft Ramp" in Forest Hills, Queens. The ceremony was part of a day of events organized by the Queens Museum, which is currently showing "Hey! Ho! Let’s Go: Ramones and the Birth of Punk."
Carino painted the image of the four Ramones at the ramp based on a 1975 photograph by photographer Bob Gruen.
Presiding over the unveiling was musician and author Mickey Leigh (brother of Joey Ramone), who recalled times spent at the ramp in his 2009 memoir, I Slept with Joey Ramone: "We’d always wind up at Thorneycroft, the apartment complex across the street from John's [Johnny Ramone] building...Invariably everyone would meet up at the Ramp to shoot the shit, pull pranks, hide from the cops, and of course get high."
[Carino]
[Marc H. Miller, curator of "Hey! Ho! Le's Go" and artist-musician Claudia Tienan, partner of Tommy Ramone]
The exhibition "Hey! Ho! Let’s Go!" is on view at the Queens Museum through July 31.
H/T Marc H. Miller and Bowery98 for the information
Friday, February 5, 2016
'Ramones and the Birth of Punk' coming to the Queens Museum in April
[Image via]
In case you didn't see this yesterday. As The New York Times first reported:
On April 10 the Queens Museum will present “Hey! Ho! Let’s Go: Ramones and the Birth of Punk,” a retrospective exhibition that will examine the group’s influence on both music and art, as part of a spate of spring programming under the museum’s new director, Laura Raicovich, that focuses on Queens as a Petri dish of global culture.
The Ramones show, organized with the Grammy Museum in Los Angeles, where a second part of the exhibition will open on Sept. 16, will include more than 350 objects, from the band’s archives and those of Arturo Vega, who designed the band’s logo; from artists like Shepard Fairey and Yoshitomo Nara; and from Mad magazine and Punk magazine, to demonstrate, as the museum says, how the Ramones “served as both subject and inspiration for many visual artists, resulting in a large body of works.”
Here's the Museum's official news release on the exhibit.
And via "Too Tough to Die" from 1984 ...
Thursday, September 3, 2015
A Joey Ramone-CBGB 40th anniversary mural for the Bowery
A new mural featuring Joey Ramone is going up today on Bleecker at the Bowery... across the way from the former CBGB... EVG reader Lola Sáenz says that the mural is by Solus and John CRASH Matos...
The mural is via The L.I.S.A. Project to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the Ramones debuting at CBGB.
[Top photos by Lola Sáenz]
Here was the view around noon...
Tuesday, July 14, 2015
Meanwhile, in Riverdale...
Comics Alliance had this exclusive over the weekend:
Yes, it’s true. In 2016, Riverdale’s typical teenagers will be teaming up with New York City’s original punks in a musical crossover for the ages ... a special comic that brings together the formerly disparate worlds of CBGB’s and Pop’s Chocklit Shop in a hyperspeed bubblegum battle of the bands.
Here's writer Matthew Rosenberg speaking about the project at ComicCon:
“It might seem strange to some people to combine these things, but there’s really no divide for me… Archie is what got me into comics, the Ramones are what got me into punk rock, and those two things have always been connected for me. The Ramones are my punk rock heroes, they’re really very comic booky, and Archie has a long history of being connected to music, and being willing to try new things and do cool new stuff, so to me, this makes perfect sense.”
Saturday, January 17, 2015
[Updated] Win tickets to see Marky Ramone tonight
Here is the latest clue via @MarkyRamone to the whereabouts to that golden ticket...
#NYC scavenger hunt winner still up for grabs! Find my book & win tix to my show 1/17 @GramercyTheatre MIght be here: pic.twitter.com/GSq2nG1U1i
— Marky Ramone (@MarkyRamone) January 15, 2015
Updated 1:18 p.m.
We're told that someone has claimed the tix…
Saturday, August 30, 2014
Somebody Put Something in My Pledge
Thank you to Dangerous Minds for unearthing this video... The Ramones playing on the Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon in September 1989.