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Joey Lanz of the Bullys |
In 1997, Johnny Heff
of the Rockaways was a firefighter in the East Village's Ladder 11 and
moonlighted as the leader of a second generation punk rock band, the Bullys. The band recorded two albums
and played local clubs. Heff was not
scheduled to work on September 11, 2001, but was called help at the World Trade Center. He died there saving others. The remaining members of the band continued in Heff's honor and
recorded a third album called BQE
Overdrive in 2006. The band is presently comprised of Joey Lanz on vocals, Walt
Stack on lead guitar, Danny Nez on
rhythm guitar, Todd Feyh on bass and
Gerry Tuohy on drums.
At the Bowery
Electric tonight opening for the Dictators
NYC, the Bullys seemed to proudly wave the flag of an early punk rock scene
born some 35 years ago. The Bullys married the raw fiber of the garage-rock
songs of the New York Dolls or the Dead Boys to the hard and driving power
punch of the MC5 and the Ramones. The set included no love songs
or reflections on relationships; instead, Lanz snarled working class songs
about money (or the lack of it), lousy jobs, jail, and the traditional calls for sex, drugs and rock and
roll. These dumb-it-down lyrics were designed to be fun, not poetry; while they
were not meant to be taken too seriously, they worked well to rally the audience
into an occasional shout-along. The music behind the lyrics was a strong
collection of guitar riffs backed by a jackhammer rhythm section. The Bullys'
energetic performance signaled an implied but important message, that if you
came to the show you deserve to transported to an epoch where rock and roll was
all about having a good time.
Visit the Bullys at www.thebullys.com.
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