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New York Dolls

New York Dolls were an American rock band formed in New York City in 1971. Along with the Velvet Underground and the Stooges, they were one of the first bands of the early punk rock scenes.[4] Although the band never achieved much commercial success and their original line-up fell apart quickly, the band's first two albums—New York Dolls (1973) and Too Much Too Soon (1974)—became among the most popular cult records in rock.[1] The line-up at this time consisted of, vocalist David Johansen, guitarist Johnny Thunders, bassist Arthur Kane, guitarist and pianist Sylvain Sylvain, and drummer Jerry Nolan; the latter two had replaced Rick Rivets and Billy Murcia, respectively, in 1972.[5] On stage, they donned an androgynous wardrobe, wearing high heels, eccentric hats, satin,[6] makeup, spandex, and dresses.[7][8] Nolan described the group in 1974 as "the Dead End Kids of today".[6]

New York Dolls
New York Dolls on TopPop in 1973. From left to right: Johnny Thunders, Sylvain Sylvain, Jerry Nolan, Arthur Kane, and David Johansen.
Background information
OriginNew York City, U.S.
Genres
Years active
Labels
Past membersDavid Johansen
Sylvain Sylvain
Johnny Thunders
Arthur Kane
Billy Murcia
Rick Rivets
Jerry Nolan
Peter Jordan
Blackie Lawless
Chris Robison
Tony Machine
Bobby Blaine
Steve Conte
Gary Powell
Sami Yaffa
Brian Koonin
Frank Infante
Jason Hill
Jason Sutter
Aaron Lee Tasjan
John Conte
Kenny Aaronson
Earl Slick
Brian Delaney
Claton Pitcher

According to the Encyclopedia of Popular Music (1995), the New York Dolls predated the punk and glam metal movements and were "one of the most influential rock bands of the last 20 years".[5] They influenced rock groups such as Kiss, The Ramones, the Sex Pistols, Guns N' Roses, The Damned, and The Smiths, whose frontman Morrissey organized a reunion show for the New York Dolls' surviving members in 2004.[9] After reuniting, they recruited new musicians to tour and record. They released three more albums—One Day It Will Please Us to Remember Even This (2006), Cause I Sez So (2009) and Dancing Backward in High Heels (2011).[1] Following a 2011 British tour with Alice Cooper, the band once again disbanded.[2]

History

Formation

Sylvain Sylvain and Billy Murcia, who went to junior high school and high school together, started playing in a band called "the Pox" in 1967. After the frontman quit, Murcia and Sylvain started a clothing business called Truth and Soul and Sylvain took a job at A Different Drummer,[10] a men's boutique that was across the street from the New York Doll Hospital, a doll repair shop. Sylvain said that the shop inspired the name for their future band. In 1970 they formed a band again and recruited Johnny Thunders to join on bass, though Sylvain ended up teaching him to play guitar. They called themselves the Dolls. When Sylvain left the band to spend a few months in London, Thunders and Murcia went their separate ways.

Thunders was eventually recruited by Kane and Rick Rivets, who had been playing together in the Bronx. At Thunders' suggestion, Murcia replaced the original drummer. Thunders played lead guitar and sang for the band Actress. An October 1971 rehearsal tape recorded by Rivets was released as Dawn of the Dolls. When Thunders decided that he no longer wanted to be the front man, David Johansen joined the band. Initially, the group was composed of singer David Johansen, guitarists Johnny Thunders and Rick Rivets (who was replaced by Sylvain Sylvain after a few months), bass guitarist Arthur "Killer" Kane and drummer Billy Murcia.

The original line-up's first performance was on Christmas Eve 1971 at a homeless shelter, the Endicott Hotel. After getting a manager and attracting some music industry interest, the New York Dolls got a break when Rod Stewart invited them to open for him at a London concert.

In the band's early days, the New York Dolls performed at the Mercer Art Center, where Ruby and the Rednecks opened for and were influenced by them.[11]

Billy Murcia's death

While on a brief tour of England in 1972, Murcia was invited to a party, where he passed out from an accidental overdose. He was put in a bathtub and force-fed coffee in an attempt to revive him.[12] Instead, it resulted in asphyxiation. He was found dead on the morning of November 6, 1972, at the age of 21.[13]

Record deal: 1972–1975

 
New York Dolls, 1973

Once back in New York, the Dolls auditioned drummers, including Marc Bell (who was to go on to play with Richard Hell, and with the Ramones under the stage name "Marky Ramone"), Peter Criscuola (better known as Peter Criss, the original and former drummer of Kiss), and Jerry Nolan, a friend of the band. They selected Nolan, and after US Mercury Records' A&R man Paul Nelson signed them, they began sessions for their debut album. In 1972, the band took on Marty Thau as manager.[14][15]

New York Dolls was produced by singer-songwriter, musician and solo artist Todd Rundgren. In an interview in Creem magazine, Rundgren says he barely touched the recording; everybody was debating how to do the mix. Sales were sluggish, especially in the middle US, and a Stereo Review magazine reviewer in 1973 compared the Dolls' guitar playing to the sound of lawnmowers. America's mass rock audience's reaction to the Dolls was mixed.[16] In a Creem magazine poll, they were elected both best and worst new group of 1973. The Dolls also toured Europe, and, while appearing on UK television, host Bob Harris of the BBC's Old Grey Whistle Test derided the group as "mock rock," comparing them unfavorably to the Rolling Stones.[17]

For their next album, Too Much Too Soon, the quintet hired producer George "Shadow" Morton, whose productions for the Shangri-Las and other girl-groups in the mid-1960s had been among the band's favorites.

Dissolution: 1975–1976

By 1975, the Dolls were playing smaller venues than they had been previously. Drug and alcohol abuse by Thunders, Nolan, and Kane, as well as artistic differences added to the tensions among members. In late February or early March, Malcolm McLaren became their informal manager. He got the band red leather outfits to wear on stage and a communist flag as backdrop. The Dolls did a five-concert tour of New York's five boroughs, supported by Television and Pure Hell. The Little Hippodrome (Manhattan) show was recorded and released by Fan Club records in 1982 as Red Patent Leather. It was originally a bootleg album that was later remixed by Sylvain, with former manager Marty Thau credited as executive producer. Due to Kane being unable to play that night, roadie Peter Jordan played bass, though he was credited as having played "second bass". Jordan filled in for Kane when he was too inebriated to play.

In March and April, McLaren took the band on a tour of South Carolina and Florida. Jordan replaced Kane for most of those shows. Thunders and Nolan left after an argument. Blackie Lawless, who later founded W.A.S.P., replaced Thunders for the remainder of the tour after which the band broke up.[18][19][20]

The band reformed in July for an August tour in Japan with Jeff Beck and Felix Pappalardi. Johansen, Sylvain and Jordan were joined by former Elephant's Memory keyboardist Chris Robison and drummer Tony Machine. One of the shows was documented on the album Tokyo Dolls Live (Fan Club/New Rose). The material is similar to that on Red Patent Leather, but notable for a radically re-arranged "Frankenstein" and a cover of Big Joe Turner's "Flip Flop Fly." The album is undated and has no production credit, but was issued circa 1986.

After their return to New York, the Dolls resumed playing shows in the US and Canada. Mercury dropped the Dolls on 7 October 1975, their contract with Mercury having expired on 8 August 1975[21] - five months after Thunders' and Nolan's departures from the band. Their show at the Beacon Theatre, on New Year's Eve, 1975 met with great critical acclaim. After a drunken argument with Sylvain, Robison was fired and replaced by pianist/keyboardist Bobbie Blaine formerly a member of Street Punk.[22][18][23] The group toured throughout 1976, performing a set including some songs with lyrics by David Johansen that would later appear on David Johansen's solo albums including "Funky But Chic", "Frenchette" and "Wreckless Crazy." The group played its last show December 30, 1976 at Max's Kansas City; on the same bill as Blondie.[18]

Individual endeavors: 1975–2004

Shortly after returning from Florida, Thunders and Nolan formed The Heartbreakers with bassist Richard Hell, who had left Television the same week that they quit the Dolls. Thunders later pursued a solo career. He died in New Orleans on 23 April 1991, allegedly of an overdose of both heroin and methadone.[24] It also came to light that he suffered from t-cell leukemia. Nolan died on 14 January 1992 following a stroke, brought about by bacterial meningitis. In 1976, Kane and Blackie Lawless formed the Killer Kane Band in Los Angeles. Immediately after the New York Dolls' second breakup, Johansen began a solo career. By the late 1980s, he achieved moderate success under the pseudonym, Buster Poindexter. Sylvain formed The Criminals, a popular band at CBGB.

A posthumous New York Dolls album, Lipstick Killers, made up of early demo tapes of the original Dolls (with Billy Murcia on drums), was released in a cassette-only edition on ROIR Records in 1981, and subsequently re-released on CD, and then on vinyl in early 2006. All the tracks from this title – sometimes referred to as The Mercer Street Sessions (though actually recorded at Blue Rock Studio, New York) – are included on the CD Private World, along with other tracks recorded elsewhere, including a previously unreleased Dolls original, "Endless Party." Three more unreleased studio tracks, including another previously unreleased Dolls original, "Lone Star Queen," are included on the Rock 'n' Roll album. The other two are covers: the "Courageous Cat" theme, from the original Courageous Cat cartoon series; and a second attempt at "Don't Mess With Cupid," a song written by Steve Cropper and Eddie Floyd for Otis Redding, and first recorded independently for what was later to become the Mercer Street/Blue Rock Sessions.

Sylvain formed his own band, The Criminals, then cut a solo album for RCA, while also working with Johansen. He later became a taxicab driver in New York.

Johansen, meanwhile, formed the David Johansen Group, and released an eponymous LP in 1978, recorded at the Bottom Line in NYC's Greenwich Village,featuring Sylvain Mizrahi and Johnny Thunders as guest musicians.

In May, 1978, he also released "David Johansen," on Blue Sky Records, a label created by Steve Paul, formerly of The Scene. Johansen continued to tour with his solo project and released four more albums, In Style, 1979; Here Comes the Night, 1981; Live it Up, 1982; and Sweet Revenge, 1984.

During the later 1980's, Johansen, ever-evolving, decided to try to liberate himself from the expectations of his New York Dolls perceived persona, and, on a whim, created the persona Buster Poindexter.

The success of this act led him to be invited to appear in multiple films: Scrooged,[25] Freejack, and Let it Ride, among others.

He also formed a band called David Johansen and the Harry Smiths, named after the eccentric ethnomusicologist, performing jump blues, Delta blues, and some original songs.

During this period, in the early 1990s, Sylvain moved to Los Angeles and recorded one album Sleep Baby Doll, on Fishhead Records. His band, for that record, consisted of Brian Keats on drums, Dave Vanian's Phantom Chords, Speediejohn Carlucci (who had played with the Fuzztones), and Olivier Le Baron on lead guitar. Guest appearances by Frank Infante of Blondie and Derwood Andrews of Generation X were also included on the record. It has been re-released as New York A Go Go,.

Reunion, return to recording, second dissolution: 2004–11, and death of Sylvain

 
The New York Dolls in 2006

Morrissey, having been a longtime fan of the band and head of their 1970s UK fan club, organized a reunion of the three surviving members of the band's classic line-up (Johansen, Sylvain and Kane) for the Meltdown Festival in London on June 16, 2004. The reunion led to a live LP and DVD on Morrissey's Attack label, as well as a documentary film, New York Doll, on the life of Arthur Kane. However, future plans for the Dolls were affected by Kane's sudden death from leukemia just weeks later on July 13, 2004. Yet the following month the band appeared at Little Steven's Underground Garage Festival on August 14 in New York City before returning to the UK to play several more festivals through the remainder of 2004.[1]

In July 2005, the two surviving members announced a tour and a new album entitled One Day It Will Please Us to Remember Even This. Released on July 25, 2006, the album featured guitarist Steve Conte, bassist Sami Yaffa (ex-Hanoi Rocks), drummer Brian Delaney and keyboardist Brian Koonin, formerly a member of David Johansen and the Harry Smiths. On July 20, 2006, the New York Dolls appeared on Late Night with Conan O'Brien, followed by a live performance in Philadelphia at the WXPN All About The Music Festival, and on July 22, 2006, a taped appearance on The Henry Rollins Show. On August 18, 2006, the band performed in a free concert at New York's Seaport Music.

In October 2006, the band embarked on a UK tour, with Sylvain taking time while in Glasgow to speak to John Kilbride of STV. The discussion covered the band's history and the current state of their live show and songwriting, with Sylvain commenting that "even if you come to our show thinking 'how can it be like it was before,' we turn that around 'cos we've got such a great live rock 'n roll show".[26] In November 2006, the Dolls began headlining "Little Steven's Underground Garage Presents the Rolling Rock and Roll Show," about 20 live gigs with numerous other bands. In April 2007, the band played in Australia and New Zealand, appearing at the V Festival with Pixies, Pet Shop Boys, Gnarls Barkley, Beck, Jarvis Cocker and Phoenix.

On September 22, 2007, New York Dolls were removed from the current artists section of Roadrunner Records' website, signifying the group's split with the label. The band played the O2 Wireless Festival in Hyde Park, London on July 4, 2008, with Morrissey and Beck and the Lounge On The Farm Festival on July 12, 2008. On November 14, 2008, it was announced that the producer of their first album, Todd Rundgren, would be producing a new album, which would be followed by a world tour. The finishing touches on the album were made in Rundgren's studio on the island of Kauai.[27] The album, Cause I Sez So, was released on May 5, 2009 on Atco Records.[28]

 
The New York Dolls, performing at the Burlington Sound of Music festival in 2010

The band played at South by Southwest in Austin, Texas on March 21, 2009, and a show at London's 100 Club on May 14, 2009 supported by Spizzenergi. On March 18, 2010, the band announced another two concert dates at KOKO in Camden, London and the Academy in Dublin on April 20. In December 2010, it was announced the band would release their fifth album which had been recorded in Newcastle upon Tyne.[29] The album, Dancing Backward in High Heels, featuring new guitarist Frank Infante (formerly of Blondie) was released on March 15, 2011.[30]

On March 1, 2011, it was announced the New York Dolls would be the opening act for a summer tour featuring Mötley Crüe and Poison. They announced a new lineup for the tour, featuring guitarist Earl Slick, who held previous stints with David Bowie and John Lennon, bassist Kenny Aaronson, who had toured with Bob Dylan, and drummer Jason Sutter, formerly of Foreigner.

In a 2016 interview, Earl Slick confirmed the band was over. "Oh, yeah, it's long gone. There was no point in doing it anymore and it was kinda spent. You know, David really does enjoy the Buster thing. He's so good at it. I've seen him do it a couple of times this last year, and man! He's got it down, you know."[2]

Sylvain Sylvain died on January 13, 2021, at age 69, leaving David Johansen as the last surviving original member of the band.

Musical style

Certainly neither great nor punk in any of its variations were words applied to the Dolls when they began performing late in 1971 – awful and ugly were more like it. Moreover, at the time, the Dolls were associated with glam-rock and David Bowie in his most flamboyantly gay period, an understandable mistake.

Ken Tucker[8]

According to AllMusic editor Stephen Thomas Erlewine, the New York Dolls developed an original style of hard rock that presaged both punk rock and heavy metal music, and drew on elements such as the "dirty rock & roll" of the Rolling Stones, the "anarchic noise" of the Stooges, the glam rock of David Bowie and T. Rex, and girl group pop music.[1] Erlewine credited the band for creating punk rock "before there was a term for it."[1] Ken Tucker, who referred to them as a proto-punk band, wrote that they were strongly influenced by the "New York sensibility" of Lou Reed: "The mean wisecracks and impassioned cynicism that informed the Dolls' songs represented an attitude that Reed's work with the Velvet Underground embodied, as did the Dolls' distinct lack of musicianship."[8]

When they began performing, four of the band's five members wore Spandex and platform boots,[7] while Johansen—the band's lyricist and "conceptmaster"—[31] often preferred high heels and a dress occasionally.[8] Fashion historian Valerie Steele said that, while the majority of the punk scene pursued an understated "street look", the New York Dolls followed an English glam rock "look of androgyny—leather and knee-length boots, chest hair, and bleach".[32] According to James McNair of The Independent, "when they began pedalling [sic] their trashy glam-punk around lower Manhattan in 1971, they were more burlesque act than band; a bunch of lipsticked, gutter chic-endorsing cross-dressers".[33] Music journalist Nick Kent argued that the New York Dolls were "quintessential glam rockers" because of their flamboyant fashion, while their technical shortcomings as musicians and Johnny Thunders' "trouble-prone presence" gave them a punk-rock reputation.[34]

By contrast, Robert Christgau preferred for them to not be categorized as a glam rock band, but instead as "the best hard-rock band since the Rolling Stones".[35] Robert Hilburn, writing for the Los Angeles Times, said that the band exhibited a strong influence from the Rolling Stones, but had distinguished themselves by Too Much Too Soon (1974) as "a much more independent, original force" because of their "definite touch of the humor and carefreeness of early (ie. mid-1950s) rock".[36] Simon Reynolds felt that, by their 2009 album Cause I Sez So, the band exhibited the sound "not of the sloppy, rambunctious Dolls of punk mythology but of a tight, lean hard-rock band."[37]

Band members

Former members

Timeline

Discography

Studio albums

Chart placings shown are from the Billboard 200 US Albums chart.[38]

Demo albums

Live albums

  • Red Patent Leather (1984)
  • Paris Le Trash (1993)
  • Live In Concert, Paris 1974 (1998)
  • The Glamorous Life Live (1999)
  • From Paris with Love (L.U.V.) (2002)
  • Morrissey Presents: The Return Of New York Dolls Live From Royal Festival Hall (2004)
  • Live At the Filmore East (2008)
  • Viva Le Trash '74 (2009)
  • French Kiss '74 (2013)

Compilation albums

  • New York Dolls / Too Much Too Soon (1977)
  • Very Best of New York Dolls (1977)
  • Night of the Living Dolls (1985)
  • The Best of the New York Dolls (1985)
  • Super Best Collection (1990)
  • Rock'n Roll (1994)
  • Hootchie Kootchie Dolls (1998)
  • The Glam Rock Hits (1999)
  • Actress: Birth of The New York Dolls (2000)
  • Endless Party (2000)
  • New York Tapes 72/73 (2000)
  • Great Big Kiss (reissue of Seven Day Weekend and Red Patent Leather, 2002)
  • Looking For A Kiss (2003)
  • Manhattan Mayhem (2003)
  • 20th Century Masters – the Millennium collection: the best of New York Dolls (2003)

Singles

  • "Personality Crisis" / "Looking for a Kiss" (1973)
  • "Trash" / "Personality Crisis" (1973)
  • "Jet Boy" / "Vietnamese Baby" (1973)
  • "Stranded in the Jungle" / "Don't Start Me Talkin'" (1974)
  • "(There's Gonna Be A) Showdown" / "Puss 'n' Boots" (1974)
  • "Jet Boy" // "Babylon" / "Who Are the Mystery Girls" (1977, UK)
  • "Bad Girl" / "Subway Train" (1978, Germany)
  • "Gimme Luv and Turn On the Light" (2006)
  • "Fool for You Baby" (2011)
  • "Dolled UP" (2014)

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "New York Dolls". AllMusic. from the original on September 10, 2013. Retrieved June 24, 2013.
  2. ^ a b c "Bowie guitarist Earl Slick on his years with The Thin White Duke, working with Lennon and the making of Station To Station – Getintothis". March 25, 2016.
  3. ^ Stephen Thomas Erlewine "New York Dolls – Discography (Compilations)" "AllMusic.com" Retrieved October 30, 2017
  4. ^ Ferris, William R. (2004). The Greenwood Encyclopedia of American Regional Cultures: The Mid-Atlantic Region. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 349. ISBN 978-0-313-32954-8. Retrieved June 24, 2013.
  5. ^ a b Larkin, Colin, ed. (1995). Encyclopedia of Popular Music. The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music. Vol. 4 (2nd ed.). Guinness Publishing. p. 3022. ISBN 978-1-56159-176-3.
  6. ^ a b "The New York Dolls: 'More Than a Band'". The Beaver County Times. February 20, 1974. p. C-14.
  7. ^ a b Ward, Stokes & Tucker 1986, p. 549.
  8. ^ a b c d Ward, Ed; Stokes, Geoffrey; Tucker, Ken (1986). Rock of Ages: The Rolling Stone History of Rock & Roll. Rolling Stone Press, Fireside Books. p. 549. ISBN 978-0-671-54438-6.
  9. ^ Smith, Chris (2009). 101 Albums That Changed Popular Music. Oxford University Press. p. 106. ISBN 978-0-19-537371-4. Retrieved June 24, 2013.
  10. ^ Antonia, Nina (2000). Johnny Thunders: In Cold Blood. Cherry Red Books. pp. 8, 257. ISBN 978-1-901447-15-6.
  11. ^ "Ruby and the Rednecks at the Mercer Arts Center". Dsps.lib.uiowa.edu. September 3, 2018. Retrieved June 20, 2021.
  12. ^ "The Dolls: Get It While You Can". The Village Voice. December 28, 1972. p. 28.
  13. ^ Richard Nusser (November 16, 1972). "Once More, Death in Threes". Village Voice. p. 52.
  14. ^ "Marty Thau, Manager in Early New York Punk Scene, Dies at 75". New York Times, February 23, 2014. Ben Sisario
  15. ^ Antonia, Nina (2011). Too Much, Too Soon The Makeup Breakup of The New York Dolls: Too Much Too Soon. Omnibus Press; 3rd Revised edition. p. 73. ISBN 9780857126733.
  16. ^ Bill Mann (September 30, 1974). "New York Dolls Music a Blast". Montreal Gazette.
  17. ^ Stevie Chick (June 13, 2011). "The New York Dolls play 'mock rock' on British TV". The Guardian.
  18. ^ a b c "From The Archives -New York Dolls- Concert Chronology / Gigography/ Timeline". Fromthearchives.com. Retrieved September 30, 2017.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on October 13, 2011. Retrieved September 30, 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  20. ^ "Malcolm McLaren Obituary By New York Dolls' Sylvain Sylvain". The Quietus. Retrieved September 30, 2017.
  21. ^ TRASH! The Complete New York Dolls, Kris Needs & Dick Porter, Plexus p. 126
  22. ^ "Chris Robison New York Dolls". Chrisrobison.net. Retrieved September 30, 2017.
  23. ^ "I was a teenage Street Punk: Peter Rossi, NY's glitter-punk underground and 5 bands you should know about".
  24. ^ "Johnny Thunders Dies of Overdose". The Hour. April 25, 1991.
  25. ^ "Scrooged - Google Search". Google.com. Retrieved June 20, 2021.
  26. ^ [1][dead link]
  27. ^ . Roadrunnerrecords.com. Archived from the original on February 24, 2009. Retrieved July 15, 2011.
  28. ^ . Archived from the original on June 13, 2010.
  29. ^ . Shakenstir. Archived from the original on October 20, 2013. Retrieved January 28, 2014.
  30. ^ a b mitchopolis (December 10, 2010). . Consequence.net. Archived from the original on December 13, 2010. Retrieved July 15, 2011.
  31. ^ Christgau, Robert (1998). Grown Up All Wrong: 75 Great Rock and Pop Artists from Vaudeville to Techno. Harvard University Press. p. 194. ISBN 978-0-674-44318-1.
  32. ^ Steele, Valerie, ed. (2010). The Berg Companion to Fashion. Berg Publishers. p. 583. ISBN 978-1-84788-592-0. Retrieved June 24, 2013.
  33. ^ "New York Dolls: Anarchy from the USA". The Independent. Archived from the original on June 18, 2022. Retrieved December 3, 2018.
  34. ^ Kent, Nick; et al. (2006). Blake, Mark (ed.). Punk: The Whole Story. Dorling Kindersley. p. 14. ISBN 978-0-7566-2359-3.
  35. ^ Lindberg, Ulf, ed. (2005). Rock Criticism from the Beginning: Amusers, Bruisers And Cool-Headed Cruisers. Peter Lang. p. 158. ISBN 978-0-8204-7490-8. Retrieved June 24, 2013.
  36. ^ Hilburn, Robert (May 7, 1974). "Touch of Stones in Dolls' Album". Los Angeles Times. p. C12. Retrieved June 23, 2013. (subscription required)
  37. ^ Reynolds, Simon (2011). Retromania: Pop Culture's Addiction to Its Own Past. Macmillan. p. 42. ISBN 978-1-4299-6858-4. Retrieved June 24, 2013.
  38. ^ "New York Dolls". Billboard.

External links

  • New York Dolls at AllMusic  
  • New York Dolls discography at Discogs  
  • New York Dolls at IMDb
  • "Private World: New York Dolls Manager Marty Thau on His Days with the Band" - Interview in Rocker Magazine 2012

york, dolls, self, titled, debut, album, album, were, american, rock, band, formed, york, city, 1971, along, with, velvet, underground, stooges, they, were, first, bands, early, punk, rock, scenes, although, band, never, achieved, much, commercial, success, th. For the self titled debut album see New York Dolls album New York Dolls were an American rock band formed in New York City in 1971 Along with the Velvet Underground and the Stooges they were one of the first bands of the early punk rock scenes 4 Although the band never achieved much commercial success and their original line up fell apart quickly the band s first two albums New York Dolls 1973 and Too Much Too Soon 1974 became among the most popular cult records in rock 1 The line up at this time consisted of vocalist David Johansen guitarist Johnny Thunders bassist Arthur Kane guitarist and pianist Sylvain Sylvain and drummer Jerry Nolan the latter two had replaced Rick Rivets and Billy Murcia respectively in 1972 5 On stage they donned an androgynous wardrobe wearing high heels eccentric hats satin 6 makeup spandex and dresses 7 8 Nolan described the group in 1974 as the Dead End Kids of today 6 New York DollsNew York Dolls on TopPop in 1973 From left to right Johnny Thunders Sylvain Sylvain Jerry Nolan Arthur Kane and David Johansen Background informationOriginNew York City U S GenresHard rockproto punkglam rockpunk rockYears active1971 1976 1 2004 2011 2 LabelsMercuryRoadrunnerAtcoCleopatra 3 429Past membersDavid JohansenSylvain SylvainJohnny ThundersArthur KaneBilly MurciaRick RivetsJerry NolanPeter JordanBlackie LawlessChris RobisonTony MachineBobby BlaineSteve ConteGary PowellSami YaffaBrian KooninFrank InfanteJason HillJason SutterAaron Lee TasjanJohn ConteKenny AaronsonEarl Slick Brian DelaneyClaton PitcherAccording to the Encyclopedia of Popular Music 1995 the New York Dolls predated the punk and glam metal movements and were one of the most influential rock bands of the last 20 years 5 They influenced rock groups such as Kiss The Ramones the Sex Pistols Guns N Roses The Damned and The Smiths whose frontman Morrissey organized a reunion show for the New York Dolls surviving members in 2004 9 After reuniting they recruited new musicians to tour and record They released three more albums One Day It Will Please Us to Remember Even This 2006 Cause I Sez So 2009 and Dancing Backward in High Heels 2011 1 Following a 2011 British tour with Alice Cooper the band once again disbanded 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation 1 2 Billy Murcia s death 1 3 Record deal 1972 1975 1 4 Dissolution 1975 1976 1 5 Individual endeavors 1975 2004 1 6 Reunion return to recording second dissolution 2004 11 and death of Sylvain 2 Musical style 3 Band members 3 1 Timeline 4 Discography 4 1 Studio albums 4 2 Demo albums 4 3 Live albums 4 4 Compilation albums 4 5 Singles 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditFormation Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Sylvain Sylvain and Billy Murcia who went to junior high school and high school together started playing in a band called the Pox in 1967 After the frontman quit Murcia and Sylvain started a clothing business called Truth and Soul and Sylvain took a job at A Different Drummer 10 a men s boutique that was across the street from the New York Doll Hospital a doll repair shop Sylvain said that the shop inspired the name for their future band In 1970 they formed a band again and recruited Johnny Thunders to join on bass though Sylvain ended up teaching him to play guitar They called themselves the Dolls When Sylvain left the band to spend a few months in London Thunders and Murcia went their separate ways Thunders was eventually recruited by Kane and Rick Rivets who had been playing together in the Bronx At Thunders suggestion Murcia replaced the original drummer Thunders played lead guitar and sang for the band Actress An October 1971 rehearsal tape recorded by Rivets was released as Dawn of the Dolls When Thunders decided that he no longer wanted to be the front man David Johansen joined the band Initially the group was composed of singer David Johansen guitarists Johnny Thunders and Rick Rivets who was replaced by Sylvain Sylvain after a few months bass guitarist Arthur Killer Kane and drummer Billy Murcia The original line up s first performance was on Christmas Eve 1971 at a homeless shelter the Endicott Hotel After getting a manager and attracting some music industry interest the New York Dolls got a break when Rod Stewart invited them to open for him at a London concert In the band s early days the New York Dolls performed at the Mercer Art Center where Ruby and the Rednecks opened for and were influenced by them 11 Billy Murcia s death Edit While on a brief tour of England in 1972 Murcia was invited to a party where he passed out from an accidental overdose He was put in a bathtub and force fed coffee in an attempt to revive him 12 Instead it resulted in asphyxiation He was found dead on the morning of November 6 1972 at the age of 21 13 Record deal 1972 1975 Edit New York Dolls 1973Main articles New York Dolls album and Too Much Too Soon album Once back in New York the Dolls auditioned drummers including Marc Bell who was to go on to play with Richard Hell and with the Ramones under the stage name Marky Ramone Peter Criscuola better known as Peter Criss the original and former drummer of Kiss and Jerry Nolan a friend of the band They selected Nolan and after US Mercury Records A amp R man Paul Nelson signed them they began sessions for their debut album In 1972 the band took on Marty Thau as manager 14 15 New York Dolls was produced by singer songwriter musician and solo artist Todd Rundgren In an interview in Creem magazine Rundgren says he barely touched the recording everybody was debating how to do the mix Sales were sluggish especially in the middle US and a Stereo Review magazine reviewer in 1973 compared the Dolls guitar playing to the sound of lawnmowers America s mass rock audience s reaction to the Dolls was mixed 16 In a Creem magazine poll they were elected both best and worst new group of 1973 The Dolls also toured Europe and while appearing on UK television host Bob Harris of the BBC s Old Grey Whistle Test derided the group as mock rock comparing them unfavorably to the Rolling Stones 17 For their next album Too Much Too Soon the quintet hired producer George Shadow Morton whose productions for the Shangri Las and other girl groups in the mid 1960s had been among the band s favorites Dissolution 1975 1976 Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources New York Dolls news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message By 1975 the Dolls were playing smaller venues than they had been previously Drug and alcohol abuse by Thunders Nolan and Kane as well as artistic differences added to the tensions among members In late February or early March Malcolm McLaren became their informal manager He got the band red leather outfits to wear on stage and a communist flag as backdrop The Dolls did a five concert tour of New York s five boroughs supported by Television and Pure Hell The Little Hippodrome Manhattan show was recorded and released by Fan Club records in 1982 as Red Patent Leather It was originally a bootleg album that was later remixed by Sylvain with former manager Marty Thau credited as executive producer Due to Kane being unable to play that night roadie Peter Jordan played bass though he was credited as having played second bass Jordan filled in for Kane when he was too inebriated to play In March and April McLaren took the band on a tour of South Carolina and Florida Jordan replaced Kane for most of those shows Thunders and Nolan left after an argument Blackie Lawless who later founded W A S P replaced Thunders for the remainder of the tour after which the band broke up 18 19 20 The band reformed in July for an August tour in Japan with Jeff Beck and Felix Pappalardi Johansen Sylvain and Jordan were joined by former Elephant s Memory keyboardist Chris Robison and drummer Tony Machine One of the shows was documented on the album Tokyo Dolls Live Fan Club New Rose The material is similar to that on Red Patent Leather but notable for a radically re arranged Frankenstein and a cover of Big Joe Turner s Flip Flop Fly The album is undated and has no production credit but was issued circa 1986 After their return to New York the Dolls resumed playing shows in the US and Canada Mercury dropped the Dolls on 7 October 1975 their contract with Mercury having expired on 8 August 1975 21 five months after Thunders and Nolan s departures from the band Their show at the Beacon Theatre on New Year s Eve 1975 met with great critical acclaim After a drunken argument with Sylvain Robison was fired and replaced by pianist keyboardist Bobbie Blaine formerly a member of Street Punk 22 18 23 The group toured throughout 1976 performing a set including some songs with lyrics by David Johansen that would later appear on David Johansen s solo albums including Funky But Chic Frenchette and Wreckless Crazy The group played its last show December 30 1976 at Max s Kansas City on the same bill as Blondie 18 Individual endeavors 1975 2004 Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Shortly after returning from Florida Thunders and Nolan formed The Heartbreakers with bassist Richard Hell who had left Television the same week that they quit the Dolls Thunders later pursued a solo career He died in New Orleans on 23 April 1991 allegedly of an overdose of both heroin and methadone 24 It also came to light that he suffered from t cell leukemia Nolan died on 14 January 1992 following a stroke brought about by bacterial meningitis In 1976 Kane and Blackie Lawless formed the Killer Kane Band in Los Angeles Immediately after the New York Dolls second breakup Johansen began a solo career By the late 1980s he achieved moderate success under the pseudonym Buster Poindexter Sylvain formed The Criminals a popular band at CBGB A posthumous New York Dolls album Lipstick Killers made up of early demo tapes of the original Dolls with Billy Murcia on drums was released in a cassette only edition on ROIR Records in 1981 and subsequently re released on CD and then on vinyl in early 2006 All the tracks from this title sometimes referred to as The Mercer Street Sessions though actually recorded at Blue Rock Studio New York are included on the CD Private World along with other tracks recorded elsewhere including a previously unreleased Dolls original Endless Party Three more unreleased studio tracks including another previously unreleased Dolls original Lone Star Queen are included on the Rock n Roll album The other two are covers the Courageous Cat theme from the original Courageous Cat cartoon series and a second attempt at Don t Mess With Cupid a song written by Steve Cropper and Eddie Floyd for Otis Redding and first recorded independently for what was later to become the Mercer Street Blue Rock Sessions Sylvain formed his own band The Criminals then cut a solo album for RCA while also working with Johansen He later became a taxicab driver in New York Johansen meanwhile formed the David Johansen Group and released an eponymous LP in 1978 recorded at the Bottom Line in NYC s Greenwich Village featuring Sylvain Mizrahi and Johnny Thunders as guest musicians In May 1978 he also released David Johansen on Blue Sky Records a label created by Steve Paul formerly of The Scene Johansen continued to tour with his solo project and released four more albums In Style 1979 Here Comes the Night 1981 Live it Up 1982 and Sweet Revenge 1984 During the later 1980 s Johansen ever evolving decided to try to liberate himself from the expectations of his New York Dolls perceived persona and on a whim created the persona Buster Poindexter The success of this act led him to be invited to appear in multiple films Scrooged 25 Freejack and Let it Ride among others He also formed a band called David Johansen and the Harry Smiths named after the eccentric ethnomusicologist performing jump blues Delta blues and some original songs During this period in the early 1990s Sylvain moved to Los Angeles and recorded one album Sleep Baby Doll on Fishhead Records His band for that record consisted of Brian Keats on drums Dave Vanian s Phantom Chords Speediejohn Carlucci who had played with the Fuzztones and Olivier Le Baron on lead guitar Guest appearances by Frank Infante of Blondie and Derwood Andrews of Generation X were also included on the record It has been re released as New York A Go Go Reunion return to recording second dissolution 2004 11 and death of Sylvain Edit The New York Dolls in 2006 Morrissey having been a longtime fan of the band and head of their 1970s UK fan club organized a reunion of the three surviving members of the band s classic line up Johansen Sylvain and Kane for the Meltdown Festival in London on June 16 2004 The reunion led to a live LP and DVD on Morrissey s Attack label as well as a documentary film New York Doll on the life of Arthur Kane However future plans for the Dolls were affected by Kane s sudden death from leukemia just weeks later on July 13 2004 Yet the following month the band appeared at Little Steven s Underground Garage Festival on August 14 in New York City before returning to the UK to play several more festivals through the remainder of 2004 1 In July 2005 the two surviving members announced a tour and a new album entitled One Day It Will Please Us to Remember Even This Released on July 25 2006 the album featured guitarist Steve Conte bassist Sami Yaffa ex Hanoi Rocks drummer Brian Delaney and keyboardist Brian Koonin formerly a member of David Johansen and the Harry Smiths On July 20 2006 the New York Dolls appeared on Late Night with Conan O Brien followed by a live performance in Philadelphia at the WXPN All About The Music Festival and on July 22 2006 a taped appearance on The Henry Rollins Show On August 18 2006 the band performed in a free concert at New York s Seaport Music In October 2006 the band embarked on a UK tour with Sylvain taking time while in Glasgow to speak to John Kilbride of STV The discussion covered the band s history and the current state of their live show and songwriting with Sylvain commenting that even if you come to our show thinking how can it be like it was before we turn that around cos we ve got such a great live rock n roll show 26 In November 2006 the Dolls began headlining Little Steven s Underground Garage Presents the Rolling Rock and Roll Show about 20 live gigs with numerous other bands In April 2007 the band played in Australia and New Zealand appearing at the V Festival with Pixies Pet Shop Boys Gnarls Barkley Beck Jarvis Cocker and Phoenix On September 22 2007 New York Dolls were removed from the current artists section of Roadrunner Records website signifying the group s split with the label The band played the O2 Wireless Festival in Hyde Park London on July 4 2008 with Morrissey and Beck and the Lounge On The Farm Festival on July 12 2008 On November 14 2008 it was announced that the producer of their first album Todd Rundgren would be producing a new album which would be followed by a world tour The finishing touches on the album were made in Rundgren s studio on the island of Kauai 27 The album Cause I Sez So was released on May 5 2009 on Atco Records 28 The New York Dolls performing at the Burlington Sound of Music festival in 2010 The band played at South by Southwest in Austin Texas on March 21 2009 and a show at London s 100 Club on May 14 2009 supported by Spizzenergi On March 18 2010 the band announced another two concert dates at KOKO in Camden London and the Academy in Dublin on April 20 In December 2010 it was announced the band would release their fifth album which had been recorded in Newcastle upon Tyne 29 The album Dancing Backward in High Heels featuring new guitarist Frank Infante formerly of Blondie was released on March 15 2011 30 On March 1 2011 it was announced the New York Dolls would be the opening act for a summer tour featuring Motley Crue and Poison They announced a new lineup for the tour featuring guitarist Earl Slick who held previous stints with David Bowie and John Lennon bassist Kenny Aaronson who had toured with Bob Dylan and drummer Jason Sutter formerly of Foreigner In a 2016 interview Earl Slick confirmed the band was over Oh yeah it s long gone There was no point in doing it anymore and it was kinda spent You know David really does enjoy the Buster thing He s so good at it I ve seen him do it a couple of times this last year and man He s got it down you know 2 Sylvain Sylvain died on January 13 2021 at age 69 leaving David Johansen as the last surviving original member of the band Musical style EditCertainly neither great nor punk in any of its variations were words applied to the Dolls when they began performing late in 1971 awful and ugly were more like it Moreover at the time the Dolls were associated with glam rock and David Bowie in his most flamboyantly gay period an understandable mistake Ken Tucker 8 According to AllMusic editor Stephen Thomas Erlewine the New York Dolls developed an original style of hard rock that presaged both punk rock and heavy metal music and drew on elements such as the dirty rock amp roll of the Rolling Stones the anarchic noise of the Stooges the glam rock of David Bowie and T Rex and girl group pop music 1 Erlewine credited the band for creating punk rock before there was a term for it 1 Ken Tucker who referred to them as a proto punk band wrote that they were strongly influenced by the New York sensibility of Lou Reed The mean wisecracks and impassioned cynicism that informed the Dolls songs represented an attitude that Reed s work with the Velvet Underground embodied as did the Dolls distinct lack of musicianship 8 When they began performing four of the band s five members wore Spandex and platform boots 7 while Johansen the band s lyricist and conceptmaster 31 often preferred high heels and a dress occasionally 8 Fashion historian Valerie Steele said that while the majority of the punk scene pursued an understated street look the New York Dolls followed an English glam rock look of androgyny leather and knee length boots chest hair and bleach 32 According to James McNair of The Independent when they began pedalling sic their trashy glam punk around lower Manhattan in 1971 they were more burlesque act than band a bunch of lipsticked gutter chic endorsing cross dressers 33 Music journalist Nick Kent argued that the New York Dolls were quintessential glam rockers because of their flamboyant fashion while their technical shortcomings as musicians and Johnny Thunders trouble prone presence gave them a punk rock reputation 34 By contrast Robert Christgau preferred for them to not be categorized as a glam rock band but instead as the best hard rock band since the Rolling Stones 35 Robert Hilburn writing for the Los Angeles Times said that the band exhibited a strong influence from the Rolling Stones but had distinguished themselves by Too Much Too Soon 1974 as a much more independent original force because of their definite touch of the humor and carefreeness of early ie mid 1950s rock 36 Simon Reynolds felt that by their 2009 album Cause I Sez So the band exhibited the sound not of the sloppy rambunctious Dolls of punk mythology but of a tight lean hard rock band 37 Band members EditFormer membersDavid Johansen vocals harmonica 1971 1976 2004 2011 Sylvain Sylvain guitar bass piano vocals 1971 1976 2004 2011 died 2021 Arthur Kane bass guitar 1971 1975 2004 died 2004 Johnny Thunders guitar vocals 1971 1975 died 1991 Billy Murcia drums 1971 1972 died 1972 Rick Rivets guitar 1971 died 2019 Jerry Nolan drums 1972 1975 died 1992 Peter Jordan bass 1975 1976 Tony Machine drums 1975 1976 Blackie Lawless guitar 1976 Chris Robison keyboards 1975 Bobby Blaine keyboards 1976 Steve Conte guitar vocals 2004 2010 John Conte bass 2004 Gary Powell drums 2004 Brian Delaney drums 2005 2011 Sami Yaffa bass 2005 2010 Brian Koonin keyboards 2005 2006 Aaron Lee Tasjan guitar 2008 2009 Frank Infante guitar 2010 2011 Jason Hill bass 2010 2011 Jason Sutter drums 2011 Kenny Aaronson bass 2011 Earl Slick guitar 2011 Claton Pitcher guitar 2011 Timeline EditDiscography EditStudio albums Edit Chart placings shown are from the Billboard 200 US Albums chart 38 New York Dolls 1973 US 116 Too Much Too Soon 1974 US 167 in UK 165 One Day It Will Please Us to Remember Even This 2006 US 129 Cause I Sez So 2009 US 159 Dancing Backward in High Heels 2011 30 Demo albums Edit Lipstick Killers The Mercer Street Sessions 1972 1981 Seven Day Weekend 1992 Actress Birth of the New York Dolls 2000 Endless Party 2000 Private World The Complete Early Studio Demos 1972 1973 2006 Live albums Edit Red Patent Leather 1984 Paris Le Trash 1993 Live In Concert Paris 1974 1998 The Glamorous Life Live 1999 From Paris with Love L U V 2002 Morrissey Presents The Return Of New York Dolls Live From Royal Festival Hall 2004 Live At the Filmore East 2008 Viva Le Trash 74 2009 French Kiss 74 2013 Compilation albums Edit New York Dolls Too Much Too Soon 1977 Very Best of New York Dolls 1977 Night of the Living Dolls 1985 The Best of the New York Dolls 1985 Super Best Collection 1990 Rock n Roll 1994 Hootchie Kootchie Dolls 1998 The Glam Rock Hits 1999 Actress Birth of The New York Dolls 2000 Endless Party 2000 New York Tapes 72 73 2000 Great Big Kiss reissue of Seven Day Weekend and Red Patent Leather 2002 Looking For A Kiss 2003 Manhattan Mayhem 2003 20th Century Masters the Millennium collection the best of New York Dolls 2003 Singles Edit Personality Crisis Looking for a Kiss 1973 Trash Personality Crisis 1973 Jet Boy Vietnamese Baby 1973 Stranded in the Jungle Don t Start Me Talkin 1974 There s Gonna Be A Showdown Puss n Boots 1974 Jet Boy Babylon Who Are the Mystery Girls 1977 UK Bad Girl Subway Train 1978 Germany Gimme Luv and Turn On the Light 2006 Fool for You Baby 2011 Dolled UP 2014 References Edit a b c d e f Erlewine Stephen Thomas New York Dolls AllMusic Archived from the original on September 10 2013 Retrieved June 24 2013 a b c Bowie guitarist Earl Slick on his years with The Thin White Duke working with Lennon and the making of Station To Station Getintothis March 25 2016 Stephen Thomas Erlewine New York Dolls Discography Compilations AllMusic com Retrieved October 30 2017 Ferris William R 2004 The Greenwood Encyclopedia of American Regional Cultures The Mid Atlantic Region Greenwood Publishing Group p 349 ISBN 978 0 313 32954 8 Retrieved June 24 2013 a b Larkin Colin ed 1995 Encyclopedia of Popular Music The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music Vol 4 2nd ed Guinness Publishing p 3022 ISBN 978 1 56159 176 3 a b The New York Dolls More Than a Band The Beaver County Times February 20 1974 p C 14 a b Ward Stokes amp Tucker 1986 p 549 a b c d Ward Ed Stokes Geoffrey Tucker Ken 1986 Rock of Ages The Rolling Stone History of Rock amp Roll Rolling Stone Press Fireside Books p 549 ISBN 978 0 671 54438 6 Smith Chris 2009 101 Albums That Changed Popular Music Oxford University Press p 106 ISBN 978 0 19 537371 4 Retrieved June 24 2013 Antonia Nina 2000 Johnny Thunders In Cold Blood Cherry Red Books pp 8 257 ISBN 978 1 901447 15 6 Ruby and the Rednecks at the Mercer Arts Center Dsps lib uiowa edu September 3 2018 Retrieved June 20 2021 The Dolls Get It While You Can The Village Voice December 28 1972 p 28 Richard Nusser November 16 1972 Once More Death in Threes Village Voice p 52 Marty Thau Manager in Early New York Punk Scene Dies at 75 New York Times February 23 2014 Ben Sisario Antonia Nina 2011 Too Much Too Soon The Makeup Breakup of The New York Dolls Too Much Too Soon Omnibus Press 3rd Revised edition p 73 ISBN 9780857126733 Bill Mann September 30 1974 New York Dolls Music a Blast Montreal Gazette Stevie Chick June 13 2011 The New York Dolls play mock rock on British TV The Guardian a b c From The Archives New York Dolls Concert Chronology Gigography Timeline Fromthearchives com Retrieved September 30 2017 Archived copy Archived from the original on October 13 2011 Retrieved September 30 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Malcolm McLaren Obituary By New York Dolls Sylvain Sylvain The Quietus Retrieved September 30 2017 TRASH The Complete New York Dolls Kris Needs amp Dick Porter Plexus p 126 Chris Robison New York Dolls Chrisrobison net Retrieved September 30 2017 I was a teenage Street Punk Peter Rossi NY s glitter punk underground and 5 bands you should know about Johnny Thunders Dies of Overdose The Hour April 25 1991 Scrooged Google Search Google com Retrieved June 20 2021 1 dead link Roadrunnerrecords com Roadrunnerrecords com Archived from the original on February 24 2009 Retrieved July 15 2011 Nydolls org Archived from the original on June 13 2010 New York Dolls Interview Shakenstir Archived from the original on October 20 2013 Retrieved January 28 2014 a b mitchopolis December 10 2010 New York Dolls announce new album Dancing Backward in High Heels Consequence of Sound Consequence net Archived from the original on December 13 2010 Retrieved July 15 2011 Christgau Robert 1998 Grown Up All Wrong 75 Great Rock and Pop Artists from Vaudeville to Techno Harvard University Press p 194 ISBN 978 0 674 44318 1 Steele Valerie ed 2010 The Berg Companion to Fashion Berg Publishers p 583 ISBN 978 1 84788 592 0 Retrieved June 24 2013 New York Dolls Anarchy from the USA The Independent Archived from the original on June 18 2022 Retrieved December 3 2018 Kent Nick et al 2006 Blake Mark ed Punk The Whole Story Dorling Kindersley p 14 ISBN 978 0 7566 2359 3 Lindberg Ulf ed 2005 Rock Criticism from the Beginning Amusers Bruisers And Cool Headed Cruisers Peter Lang p 158 ISBN 978 0 8204 7490 8 Retrieved June 24 2013 Hilburn Robert May 7 1974 Touch of Stones in Dolls Album Los Angeles Times p C12 Retrieved June 23 2013 subscription required Reynolds Simon 2011 Retromania Pop Culture s Addiction to Its Own Past Macmillan p 42 ISBN 978 1 4299 6858 4 Retrieved June 24 2013 New York Dolls Billboard External links EditNew York Dolls at AllMusic New York Dolls discography at Discogs New York Dolls at IMDb Private World New York Dolls Manager Marty Thau on His Days with the Band Interview in Rocker Magazine 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title New York Dolls amp oldid 1144809512, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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