 The Worley Gig,
Christmas 2000
By Gail Worley
A
Christmas Exclusive: Toys In The Attic
This week I did
something you wont see me do again, at
least for another year. I went to Toys R Us
with an envelope full of cash, bumping asses with
insane strangers and swearing under my breath as
my office-friend, Maria, and I bought gifts for
our companys Toys For Tots drive. We had collected
enough cash from our fellow employees to make our
getaway with three enormous bags stuffed with
toys of all kinds. It was actually kind of a
rush. Today my arms still hurt from dragging
those heavy bags of dolls and cars and puzzles
and Star Wars figures back to the office.
As much as I hate frenzied crowds, and wont
be breeding in this lifetime, the toy drive is
something nice to do for kids who otherwise
wouldnt get any toys and it makes me feel
like less of a selfish cow. I hope those toys
make a lot of kids happy this Christmas.
I know I had
toys as a child, but since the majority of my
childhood memories have been voluntarily
obliterated, no toys I ever owned stand out in my
mind as favorites. In fact, the only vivid
memories I have in that area are hours spent
playing with my Barbies. The first Barbie I owned
was the old fashioned, brunette-haired,
stiff-body Barbie who didnt bend or talk to
do anything. Then I got a Skipper
(Barbies Little Sister) who I immediately
destroyed by cutting all her hair off. Living
Barbie was invented about that time, so I had
to have one of those. Living Barbie was
like the Aryan Race Uber Barbie or something. She
had long, platinum-blonde hair and wore a silver
metallic swim suit. I remember she had bendable
knees and elbows and jointed wrists and ankles.
The fucked up thing was, her wrist and ankle
joints werent seamless bendable joints --
like her knees and elbows -- but ball and socket
joints, and where her skin met those joints, it
was like she was wearing a skin-suit -- I mean,
the skin actually ended at that point on
her body -- gross! Living Barbie has
hopefully graduated to full-on seamless joints by
now. Talking Barbie was the next Barbie I
got. She said things like "Lets go
visit PJ!" (PJ was Barbies
Hippie friend, I had one of her too) and
"Help me get ready for the party!" Come
to think of it, it would have been cool if she
said "Lets go party!" instead,
but this was maybe the late 60s or early
70s, I think, and everything was so tame
and lame. It almost isnt worth remembering.
I also remember making dresses for my Barbie
dolls out of Kleenex.
But my favorite
thing as a child, however, was not a toy at all:
it was my robe. I was about 5 or 6 and I had a
little red and white cotton robe that I carried
around with me everywhere as a sort of security
blanket. I am told I was a thumb-sucker but I
have no recollection of that. What I remember
about my security robe, "Robey," is
cuddling it up to my face and rubbing it in spots
until it was threadbare. I loved that fucking
robe. Much to my chagrin, my well-meaning parents
must have thought I was becoming too attached to
the robe and, one night while I was fast asleep,
they threw Robey in the garbage (actually, I can
only speculate on Robeys fate, as I never
was able to extract a full confession from
anyone). When I awakened the next morning, I
searched for Robey everywhere, but it had
vanished. When I asked my parents where Robey
was, they looked at me like they had no idea what
I was talking about. (Memo to self: Bill parents
retroactively for years of trauma-induced
therapy).
Anyway, this
column is about toys.
As a Christmas
present to all my readers, I thought it might be
fun to collect memories from musicians in answer
to the following two questions:
What was Your
Favorite Toy as a Kid?
And
What Present
Did You Always Want But Never Get?
People
interpreted these questions in a variety of ways,
and it was fun to collect the responses as they
poured in over the course of a couple months.
Some folks told me about a favorite Christmas
present they received or favorite Birthday gifts
or memories of toys they inherited from parents
or older siblings. Some stories are really funny
and others, like the story of Robey, above, are
kind of sad and fucked up. Some answered only one
question, but most answered both, and most
everyone put some real thought and effort into
this. Im really excited with the results. I
did have one piece of criteria: No One Word
Answers or responses shorter than one
complete sentence. I made one exception however,
because of who it came from, because this is just
the way this guy is (I know, I interviewed him
once).
Token One
sentence answer:
"What was
you favorite toy as a kid?"
My Pecker.
"What
present did you always want but never got?"
A .44 magnum
Smith and Wesson.
-- From Josh
Silver, Keyboards, Type O Negative
And now, on
to our regularly scheduled column.
My favorite toy
was Mr. Machine, but that is too obscure for
people to know. Mr. Machine was a dorky goddamn
robot toy. I did get a tiger drum set when I was
five, which could have jump-started my musical
career in a different direction, had all the
neighborhood kids not beat the shit out of it.
I can't remember what I never got. I was
pretty spoiled as an only child.
-- Bruce Duff,
Bass, The ADZ
My favorite toy
was a whirly bird and I always wanted a
functional submarine to use in the woods of Lake
Cumberland, Kentucky.
-- Joey Osbourne
drummer for Acid King, Altamont (w/ Dale from the
Melvins) and Men of Porn
I guess my
favorite toy was the boy doll that I got when my
parents took me to Denmark. I was 6. It was a boy
dolly, dressed in denim, freckly faced with a
penis and it could pee if you put water in it and
squeezed it. I had all the kids on the block come
over and witness it and we all got very giddy.
The gift I always wanted but never got...I wanted
to be sent to boarding school.
-- Debbie
Diamond, Vocalist, The Januaries
My fave toy as a
kid would have to be this chrome-plated, one foot
high plastic piece of nonsense called "Rudy
the Robot." Stuffed full of D batteries, it
was equipped with red blinking eyes, and swung
it's arms like Frankenstein at a hoedown -- an
ideal way to chase your baby sister around the
house on Christmas morning...
For some reason
one year I became obsessed with the need for a
remote controlled Helicopter. After lugging
around the Sears catalog in a vain effort to be
noticed, I received a rather crappy (what I
thought at the time) plastic model of said
Helicopter (The batteries spun the blades but it
didn't fly). "Geeeeeeee, thanks
Santa..." Years later, after the model had
found its way to the bottom of the toy chest, the
batteries promptly leaked all over my '72 Detroit
Tiger baseball card collection. Ain't Karma a
bitch?
-- AJ Dunning,
Guitarist, The Verve Pipe
My favorite toy
as a kid was anything with Superman. My Mom once
made me a red cape and I would wear that with
Superman Underoos over blue tights. Then I would
go run around my neighbors lawns until they
threatened to sue my parents.
-- Jake
Zavracky, Lead vocals/Guitar for Boston glam
rockers, Quick Fix.
My favorite toy
was a cardboard box the new refrigerator came in.
It was a space ship sometimes, other times a
cave.
As for gifts I
never received, I've found that you can pretty
much get just about anything you desire if you
just ask for it enough. Drugs always make a nice
gift.
-- Jack
Terricloth, World Inferno
My favorite toy
had to have been my Evil Kneivel wind-up
motorcycle with 12" action figure. You'd put
the cycle in the wind-up launch thing, crank the
handle as fast as you could, and watch as Evil
took off down the sidewalk pulling a wheelie the
whole way. I'd build launch ramps and make Evil
jump things. That toy made me want to jump trash
cans on my bike.
When it broke, I
was so bummed. I tried to Super Glue it together
to no avail. I finally got so pissed, I doused it
in lighter fluid and burned it in the fire pit in
the back yard. Mom was angry. So much for Evil.
I was fortunate
to receive a lot of cool presents as a kid. I was
lucky to have parents who would sacrifice
themselves so that us kids had a great Christmas.
If there was one toy that I wanted but never
received, it had to be "Stretch
Monster." If you know anything about that
toy, it was Part 2 of the Stretch series of
Action Figures that could stretch for miles when
pulled on. I had "Stretch Armstrong"
but was not allowed to get its counterpart,
because Stretch had allowed his arm to tear off,
spewing a gooey chemical substance all over mom's
new carpeting. The parents had to have the entire
living room re-carpeted. Superman had nothing on
Stretch.
-- John Scott,
Lead Vocals, Downer
My favorite toy
as a kid was The Micronauts. They ruled! Deep
down, I believe that was the first band I truly
put together.
The toy I never
got was a "Remote Control Car."
Instead, I got a Seventies car called
"Harry." It was "voice"
controlled. In the end, all it did was go in
circles no matter what sound you made! I cried
for days!
-- Waymon Boone,
Lead Vocals, Splender
It is hard to
say what my favorite toy was, as I had many
beloved toys over the years...still do! I
remember particularly being into my Corgi toy Space
1999 spaceship (a live action show created by
Gerry Anderson of Thunderbirds fame,
starring Martin Landau). For that matter, I had a
Thunderbirds ship I loved too...and those
puppets still crack me up!
I always loved
animals and nature and I was constantly wanting
exotic pets as a kid. Although I made it from Sea
Monkeys (brine shrimp) to Sea Horses and small
lizards, I never got the Kinkajou (a supposedly
docile monkey-like creature) or Spider Monkey I
really wanted! The carnivorous plants, giant
millipedes, tarantula, and various family cats
just didn't make up for it...maybe this is why I
take such pleasure in stories about Elvis and his
pet chimp, Scatter. Of course, now I just feel
bad for most exotic animals in captivity.
-- Matthew Sweet
The present I
always wanted but never got was a mini bike by
far. Ever since I was a little tike, I wanted a
mini bike. For some reason, my parents never let
me get one. I think they were worried that I'd
crash it and hurt myself. So, when I grew up and
moved to LA, the first thing I did was buy a
motorcycle, which I immediately crashed, and hurt
myself.
-- James
Michael, singer/guitarist
Christmas was
always a lot of fun for me and my brother. I
think that I was a little more into it than my
brother was. I always had problems going to sleep
that night and I was always the first one
to wake up that morning. There are a number of
Christmas gifts that I received that stick out in
my mind vividly. I remember getting KISS Destroyer
and opening it before everyone else was awake and
then rewrapping it so that I could open it with
my brother. We were given KISS Alive II
another Christmas but I didn't go through the
rewrap thing. But one gift that I remember being
absolutely crazy about was an Evil Kneivel toy.
It was a doll of Evil on his motorcycle. You
would wind up the bike and he would take off
doing wheelies and jump whatever you could put in
his way. At the time. the toy was a very popular
one. I remember seeing commercials for it on TV
along with a million other Evil Kneivel toys. A
lot of people would remember his rocket, but that
didn't interest me: the motorcycle was it
for me. Another toy that stands out, now that I'm
thinking about this, was my Six Million Dollar
Man Doll. That toy was awesome! I thought it
was so cool how you could roll up his skin on his
arm to see his bionics. You could click on his
back and he would lift an engine that came with
him. It was almost as cool as the TV show itself.
The one thing
that I always wanted for Christmas but never was
given was a drumset. My family didn't have the
money for something like that. My mother was also
not big on the idea of having her son making
noise like that in her house. Now that I've
written about this, I'm looking forward to
Christmas!
-- Johnny Kelly,
Drums, Type O Negative
My favorite toy
was a little thumb-size lorry (Dump Truck) that
was red and yellow enamel. I was but 3 or 4 years
old. Just to look at it gave me absolute
unadulterated joy. It's so weird, even to this
day I see this toy and feel such ecstasy. The
band, Red Lorry Yellow Lorry, must have had the
same experience.
What I always
wanted but never got was a Tottenham Hotspur
football kit (Uniform) and Puma or Adidas
shoes. Instead, I got A Wolverhampton Wanders kit
and generic shoes. I was crushed and the impact
on my sense of self-worth is still miserably
shadowing my life. There was also the crushing
teenage years of poverty and want. We were a
large catholic family in the midst of protestant
well-to-doers. The adolescent years were painful,
as clothes and disposable incomes were crucial
during the sexual revolution. Still, I must
confess I've had my share of nooky since and am
completely healed!
-- Michael Aston
of Gene Loves Jezebel
My favorite toy
as a kid probably was the "Electronic
Quarterback," a little hand held football
game with tiny red blips on the screen that just
moved from one side to the other -- kind of like
the football equivalent of "Pong." My,
how technology has changed!
I was a spoiled
brat (so I'm told), so I think I pretty much got
the stuff I really wanted.
-- Tommy
Stewart, Drums, Godsmack
My favorite toy
was my Big Wheel. The toys I always wanted
but never got were Giant Tinker toys and Giant
Lincoln Logs. Nobody I talk to ever remembers
those. You could build cool club houses out of
them.
-- Mark Carr,
Bass & Vocals, Admiral Twin
My favorite toy
turned out to not to be a toy at all, or at least
not for kids. My parents had a 3 foot hookah that
they told my innocent and pre-adolescent brain
was a replica of an old fashioned firehose.
Sounded good to me. Id put on a metal Jello
mold for a helmet and fill that
"firehose" with enough water to put out
a small newspaper fire Id light in my
backyard, saving the lives of GI Joe, Princess
Leia, and my 50 piece army-guy set. I was the
best firefighter on the block! Unfortunately, my
parents decided to sell the firehose replica at
our garage sale and, boy, was I happy when one of
the older neighborhood kids bought the firehose
and I knew Id still be able to save lives
by fighting fires. Much to my surprise, I found
my friend filling my firehose with grass or weeds
or something. Ive been a pothead ever
since.
-- Billy Spunke,
lead vox, Blue Meanies
My favorite toy
was Pierre (I named him) the pirate marionette. I
would spend hours untangling his strings -- I was
always a good at untying knots. Pierre was
swarthy and looked very much like a sunbaked
Frenchman and/or an Arab. Black pirate hat,
Gallic nose, eyepatch, nose and earrings,
knee-pants, blouson-type shirt, buckle shoes.
Oversize head and hands. About a foot tall. He
resembled a scale model of a New Romantic -
a member of Bow Wow Wow from the early 80's.
Perhaps thats one reason I got into that
genre for a while. He was made of wood too
no plastic. So he had a bit of heft to him.
My Mom - a
single mother going to school - had a bunch
of her friends over one day and I put on a show.
I constructed a little theater out of chairs and
sheets with a stage and a big Magic Marker-drawn
sign. "Presenting The Great Pierre!"
- or something like that. I was really into
Aerosmith I was about 9 or 10 and
Pierre performed "Walk This Way" for
the assembled. I prided myself on being able to
make his mouth sync up pretty well with Steven
Tylers rapid-fire delivery. It was a
moveable mouth he was pretty
sophisticated. I think he also did Peter
Framptons "Do You Feel Like We
Do?" complete with talk-box solo. If memory
serves, it was hilarious and everyone was in
stitches. I had made a cassette of the songs
taped in front of the stereo - and of
Pierre talking, variety-show style, a la Flip
Wilson, Sonny & Cher, etc
this was the
heyday of that type of entertainment. I
cant imagine what type of accent I gave
him. Probably sounded like a cross between
something from Dr. Demento and Fat Albert, with a
little goofy 9-year-old Southern kid thrown in. I
found an old handmade dolls chair in my
grandmothers basement it had
belonged to one of my aunts and had been put
together in the 40's. It was painted red and
Pierre fit in it perfectly. I sat him there and
eventually there he remained. A few years ago I
came across Pierre and the red chair languishing
next to the dehumidifier in my grandmothers
basement. One of these days I will get around to
untangling his strings again.
-- Robert Burke
Warren, Singer/songwriter/guitarist
My favorite toy,
hands down, was Rock 'Em Sock 'Em Robots. Instead
of actually beating the crap out of my little
brother, I could beat the crap out of his Rock
'Em Sock 'Em Robot and not get in trouble. I'd
just visualize his punk face on the robot and I'd
go to town. I can still hear the sound of the
robot head rising up to indicate that indeed, my
little brother's block got knocked off (or
probably mine did more often than not, but I've
got the gift of a selective memory).
The present I
always wanted but never got was a guitar.
Musicians were deemed 'sissy' in Redneck, USA.
So, as soon as I was old enough to drive, I drove
myself and all of my belongings to Blueneck, USA,
bought a guitar and rented a flat and never
looked back (except to relish the days of Rock
'Em Sock 'Em Robots).
-- Randal
Prater, Singer/Guitarist, Creeping Myrtle
I never got toys
for Christmas. Toys were not practical, according
to my parents. My favorite gift was a bicycle. It
enabled me to get out of the neighborhood, and
explore new parts of the city.
The toy I always
asked for, and never got was a laser gun. That
was understandable. The other toy I always asked
for was a "Radio controlled airplane".
I never got one...oh well....
-- Burton C.
Bell, Vocalist, Fear Factory
When I was 11
years old I got a Yamaha DT100J for Christmas.
That's an enduro motorcycle (for all you non-dirt
riders). I think that was the one present that
had the most impact on me to this day. I still
ride dirt bikes. I just tore up the mud on my
Yamaha YZ490 yesterday. It was a fuckin
blast!
-- Adam Duce,
Bass, Machine Head
Our favorite
toy, which Tegan and I just discussed recently,
was our "Barbies." Except that we
didn't have Barbies, we had Heart Family.
Heart Family was a family of dolls. We hated the
parents and we rarely used them, mostly only for
Park Ranger or Orphanage Leader, if that was the
story of the day. Mostly we played with the
little kids, who we gave hair cuts to be cool,
like us. Tegan and I always made the kids run
away and camp out. These were, like, two year old
kids, but in our heads it was totally fine that
they lived by themselves amongst our Stepdad's
work-out equipment in the basement. Occasionally,
the grown ups of Heart Family would make a guest
appearance, usually in roles, as I said earlier,
like a park ranger or orphanage leader with a
police man come to take us back to jail or the
orphanage. What the hell was my mother thinking?
Why couldn't we have just had regular Barbies? We
were eight, eight.
There was this
bike at Toys R Us, a red one, and
Tegan wanted it so bad. My grampa, Dad, Step-Dad,
and my Mom all came and looked at it, but Tegan
wanted it so bad that she insisted we buy it that
day, without looking at any more bikes.
Everyone assured Tegan that if she didn't see
another bike that she liked, she could come back
the next day and get the red bike. The next day
we went back to get the bike and it was gone. No
more in stock. Tegan still talks about that bike
and every time my mother, or anyone, suggests
leaving something behind and coming back another
day, Tegan says "Red Bike."
-- Tegan &
Sara, 20 year old identical twin sisters, armed
with acoustic guitars and two incredibly strong
voices.
My favorite toy
when I was a child was a clock that talked. When
my family moved from one house to the next they
forgot the toy...But I never forgot about it. I
always wanted an elephant.
-- KaRIN,
vocalist, Collide
I guess I was a
lucky kid. I always had pretty much all the toys
I could handle... more than I deserved, actually.
Probably my favorite toy, though, was this sort
of shotgun thingy for Matchbox cars. Now,
remember, this was long before the days of child
safety precautions, so companies were free to
create any type of toy -- even ones which would
shoot small objects at high rates of speed. In
short, it was a good time to be a kid. This
plastic shotgun propelled your favorite cars - at
what seemed like warp speeds -- from a metal
shell. The idea was, I suppose, to shoot the cars
at a little plastic ramp and make them jump and
do stunts. Yeah, right. To me, this was a sniper
weapon. I'm pretty sure I shot the dog with it. I
don't think the dog was hurt or anything, but I'm
sure that poor pup got wanged in the head or ass
more than once. I think the car shotgun lasted
just long enough for me to shoot my Dad in the
foot once or twice. Then it mysteriously wouldn't
work anymore. I haven't seen it in a few years,
and there's no way anyone will ever make anything
like it again. The funniest thing to me, though,
is that I also distinctly remember getting
aluminum foil and crayons as a birthday present
one year and loving them more than almost any toy
I could have gotten that year.
As far as stuff
I wanted but never got, I think I wanted a
machete. I can't imagine why I wanted one, but I
remember being pissed that my folks wouldn't get
me one. In light of the way I misused the car
shotgun, I guess it was probably for the best
that I never got that machete. I also suppose a
machete isn't really a toy, anyway.
-- Erik Caplan,
Guitarist for Philadelphias Cottonmouth dn
As a child, I
didn't really have many toys. At one point I did
play with Barbie dolls a lot. But I think as a
very small child I enjoyed having my blanket the
best. Never went anywhere without it.
I always wanted
a horse. I just loved Palomino's. I used to dream
about them and had some of the most awesome
posters on my bedroom wall. I never did get one
so instead I took riding lessons. I still love
horses to this day but you can't really have one
in NYC.
-- Sharon
Middendorf, Motorbaby
My Favorite toy
has got to be my Aurora Model Motoring HO gauge
road racing set. Dangerously, every so often I'll
have a childhood flashback on an L.A. freeway,
then it's me on that racetrack all over again! I
always wanted my own BB gun. I guess my folks
knew that...
-- Patrick
"Pooch" Dipuccio, Guitars and vocals
for LA based Americana-rockers, The Condors, and
co-founder of Flipside magazine.
My favorite toy
was a stuffed tiger which I was given as a baby
and totally tortured. I was an only child so I
used to make up all kinds of weird games to keep
myself entertained. When I was four, one game
entailed poking poor Tiger with pins which left
little holes in his forehead. Most of my play was
much more affectionate though. I used to sleep
with Tiger and bring him everywhere. Eventually,
I cuddled him so much that his head was left
dangling from his body by a bunch of threads. I
then resorted to carrying him around inside a
pillowcase to keep him in one piece. I guess I
basically loved him to death. Any man who's ever
been involved with me probably feels he's had a
similar experience.
The one present
I always wanted, but never got, was a dog. I used
to beg my parents for a dog constantly, but they
always had an excuse. Judging from what happened
to Tiger, maybe I'm better off with animals of
the stuffed variety. I'm allergic anyway.
-- Jana Peri,
Lead vocals and guitar, The Jana Peri Band
My best friend
as a kid was my 45 RPM record player, the kind
you never see any more. That thing played the
Turtles' "Happy Together" (complete
with crayon marks) and "Peter and the
Wolf" and "High Hopes" and
"King of the Road" and I'm sure a
Monkees hit or two, endlessly. And, unlike my
sisters, it never complained once.
-- Mary Lorson
of Saint Low and Madder Rose
My favorite toy
was Rock 'Em Sock Em Robots; not the stupid
terminator reissue but the original with the very
50's-looking robots. They made the coolest noise
when you punched the head. (My brother and I had
originally found the Rock 'Em Sock Em
Robots in the attic of the house we grew up
in...a remnant from one of our relatives toy
collections).
For some
unknown reason, I always wanted a Green
Machine, which was made by the company that made
the Big Wheel, but it had these two
handles that controlled steering as opposed to
the more traditional handle bar type steering.
-- Matt Fuller,
Guitarist for LAs glam rockers, City
Girls Boys
When I was a
real little kid, my folks got me this
Fisher-Price school bus that came with this
little wooden family. Needless to say, I trashed
the bus. After that, I wouldn't go anywhere
without stuffing every member of my new wooden
family in my pocket! If we got in the car and
went somewhere, they'd have to turn around and go
back if I forgot one. "My family!" The
implications are chilling if not obvious. The
freakin things eventually turned into
pieces of colorless, chipped nubs before they
became chew toys for my dog. I can't wait to pass
them on to my kids one day.
-- Rob Loopy,
Guitarist, Hansel Und Gretyl
Unquestionably,
my fave toy was my penis. For an occasional
diversion, however, I enjoyed Rock 'Em Sock 'Em
Robots.
What present did
I always want but never got? I prayed for Marcia
from The Brady Bunch, wrapped in a bow.
-- Sean Altman,
composer of the "Where in the World is
Carmen Sandiego?" theme song and local NYC
Rock God
My favorite toy
as a kid was my plastic KISS electric guitar. It
had plastic strings too, so you couldn't really
play it but it had a big picture of Kiss on it so
it looked really cool. The only problem was that
my brother and I couldn't wait for Christmas
morning, so we snuck out and opened all the
presents ever so slightly so we could see
what was inside, under the wrapping. Then we
placed the torn side face down under the tree so
our parents wouldn't see all the rips and tears.
Needless to say we got totally busted and had
many presents taken away from us....but I held
onto the Kiss guitar!!
I ALWAYS wanted
one of those cool Spiderman webshooters.
They strapped onto your wrist and you could
actually shoot this silly string kinda stuff that
to me, as a kid, seemed about as close to
shooting actual webs as possible. To this day, I
still want one of those!
-- Frank Meyer,
Vocalist, Street Walkin Cheetahs
My favorite toy
as a kid was probably a big sack of toy army men.
You could always amuse yourself for a couple
hours with those. I think I finally ended up
destroying them with firecrackers or melting them
down into a big plastic puddle. I was fairly
destructive as a kid. This would be before I
discovered girls.
I always wanted
a surfboard! I grew up in Hawaii and I did have a
ratty, dinged-up old board that I had scammed
some place or other. But I always wanted a nice,
new, shiny twinfin miniboard with some stylin'
graphics. I was a pretty crappy surfer, but I
figured a better board would make me better on
the waves. Too expensive though.
-- Jeff Dahl,
Triple X solo artist and ex-lead singer of the
Angry Samoans
I had lots of
favorite toys as a kid: Micronauts, SST racers,
TCR racing set, vibrating football game, Legos,
my Millennium Falcon, my die cast U.S.S
enterprise and my Six Million Dollar Man.
I always wanted
but never had an Atari 2600, so I would go to the
mall and hang out for hours playing the demo
model that they had in Sears.
-- Ahrue Luster,
Guitarist, Machine Head
My favorite toys
growing up were probably any kind of transformer
toy, like the Autobots or Decepticons. It was
like having two toys in one.
There were too
many things that I wanted growing up that I never
got, not because of my mom saying no, but
probably because I was a greedy kid. I was kind
of an asshole when it came to toys. Hopefully I
grew out of that....maybe?
-- Matt Wong,
Bass, Reel Big Fish
Being an only
child, I got a lot of toys! Don't let these
modest only children tell you otherwise....we ARE
spoiled! So, knowing that I had a rather large
collection to choose from, my favorite toy by far
was the James Bond 007 Silver Sports car, made by
Coby, taken from the movie Goldfinger. It
came with the gun shield you triggered by
pressing the exhaust pipe, changeable license
plates, head light machine gun cannons, and the
infamous ejector seat (complete with TWO
ejectees, 'cause they knew you were gonna
lose at least one)! I think my James Bond car
even included an official spy contract, that made
me an international expert on espionage or
something like that.
I never got a Big
Wheel tricycle toy, whose equivalent these
days is probably the SUV. You know, pretty much
the most dangerous vehicle on the sidewalk to
everyone else except the guy behind the wheel,
the Big Wheel that is. Yeah, intimidating
and menacing all right, until ya took a sharp
turn, then it was off to tumbling class ya go
(hey, sounds like the SUV again....hmmmm). This
was in the days before bicycle (or tricycle)
safety was on the top of our elected officials
agendas. In those days, if you wore a helmet when
you rode a bike, you probably took the short bus
to school. So yes, I owe it to my over protective
Mom, who never got me a Big Wheel, for me being
the cerebral smart-ass that I am today.
-- Ryan Roxie,
Guitarist for Alice Cooper, Glamnation and Dad's
Porno Mag
Just like the
song, all I really wanted for Christmas were my
two front teeth. Unfortunately, by Christmas they
hadn't arrived. I'm still waiting. It's been a
long time. I recently accepted they were never
coming - I've bought a bridge. It's rough.
-- Theo G.,
Guitars/Vocals, Gob
I really wanted
a Kawasaki motorcross bike. My mom said "No
way." I begged, pleaded, took pictures out
of magazines and taped them to the refrigerator
to remind her and still nothing. I never got that
bike.
-- Jon Bunch,
Sense Field
One of my
all-time favorite toys has to be the Mattel
Vertibird. It was a fire rescue chopper that flew
around the room on a cable.
The one present
I never got was a pony. I always used to hear
about how my great-grandpa used to ride a big red
& white pinto, so I wanted a kid sized
version. I think my mom is working on it now
though.
-- Alvin
Youngblood Hart, Blues Guitarist
My favorite toy
(well one of them at least) was an erector set
that my dad got when he was a kid in the 40's.
You could build all kinds of shit while you
watched Bugs Bunny.
When I was a
kid, I wanted to get a Green Machine, but
I never got one. If you don't know what that is,
it's kinda like a high tech Big Wheel that you
would steer with two handles. Definitely a lot
faster than a regular Big Wheel and lower to the
ground, so you could skid around the corners
faster than the other kids. When I was 16, I
bought a Honda CB350 motorcycle and that made up
for it. Unfortunately, you can't skid around
corners quite like you can in a Green Machine and
now my knees hurt when it rains from crashing so
much.
-- Dave Lund,
Bass, Blue Meanies
When I was 5 or
6, my favorite toy was a police car that would
talk when you pushed the siren light on the roof.
It was given to me by my kindergarten girlfriend.
My family had to hide it from me because all I
would do is press the button and drive them crazy
with its constant, "Give yourself up! You
are surrounded by policemen!"
Actually the
only gift I seem to remember that I had always
wanted was a Bugs Bunny doll. I asked for it in
2nd grade, and then again the following years. I
didn't get it until I was 25.
-- Eric
Alexandrakis, singer/songwriter
I got this
machine called the Creepy Crawler, which was my
favorite toy. It made all these weird bugs and
spiders. I used to sit and play with it for days.
When I ran out of the goo to make more, I just
melted anything I could in it with real bugs. I
got in a lot of trouble feeding them to the kids
that lived around me.
I wanted Santa
to bring my pet squirrel, "Elvis," back
from the dead, but that never happened. I was
bummed out for a long time wishing for his big
Come Back!
-- Evil Presley,
Vocals, The Independents
My favorite toy
as a kid was Lincoln logs. I used to get sent to
my room a lot for doing bad things and I had a
set of logs there. They were a great way to
forget that I was supposed to be being punished!
I always wanted
a stable family life... I still haven't received
that yet...
-- Paxton,
singer/songwriter/guitarist
My favorite toy
as a kid was Stretch Armstrong. He was my
ideal guy. Even though he looked tough, he was
all soft inside. You could pull him and twist him
into any shape you liked. Total manipulation,
total power. That's my kind of love.
The present that
I always wanted but never got - hmmm. I pretty
much got everything, I was a very spoiled kid,
but I always wanted a doll of myself. I knew a
lady who lived locally who made special
made-to-order dolls. I never could quite convince
my mother or my friends to order a Susan Hyatt
doll. To this day, the need to own one is strong.
Anyone who was anyone was a Barbie Doll -
Wonder Woman, The Bionic Woman, KISS. It is a
dream that has yet to be fulfilled.
-- Susan Hyatt,
singer/guitarist/songwriter for London-based
band, Pillbox
I had a toy
called "Say It, Play It." It was
basically a little cassette recorder. I used to
record EVERYTHING.... including my parents'
private conversations. One time I forgot that I
left it in record, and I got in a fight with our
babysitter. My parents came home and the evidence
was right there on tape, so I was found guilty,
with no defense. I think that I was grounded for
a week for that one.
I always wanted
a BB gun but my parents didn't allow me to have a
gun as a kid. A good idea, especially since I cut
myself the first time they ever gave me a pocket
knife. That one got me six stitches.
-- Bill Leverty,
Guitar, Firehouse
My favorite toys
were my army men, tanks, jeeps, planes, etc. I
would have never ending re-creations of the
Battle of Navarone, and the liberation of France.
-- Jeffrey
Hirschberg, Lead singer of Speedealer
I remember my
brother and I got "Fred & Barney"
(Flintstones) Dolls for Christmas! Those were so
cool. We still have many family pictures of us
playing with those things. We also got The
Beatles dolls!
I always wanted
a pet monkey. My brothers and I would bug our
parents all the time for one. Of course, the
closest we ever got was a stuffed toy.
-- Eric Singer,
Drummer God (Kiss, Black Sabbath, Alice Cooper)
*******
Ok that wraps up
another year of The Worley Gig, I hope
everyone had fun reading this -- I know it was
pretty long but it was worth it right?
Thanks to all
the great musicians who shared their memories
with us and special thanks to Jamie and Maria
from Roadrunnner, Mike Cubillos from Earshot
Media and Ilka Pardinas from Fly PR for helping
me get so many fun responses from all their great
artists.
The Worley
Gig: "Knives, Needles, Bullets, Blood, Rope,
Razors, Heavy Metal and God."
Congratulations
to Andy Hamlin of Seattle WA, who won some CDs
when he correctly identified lyrics from
Fleetwood Macs "Dreams" from the
Alice Cooper column. Send guesses for this month
lyrics to pandomag@rocketmail.com
Coming in
January: Y2K Rocks! All of Gails favorite
records, lots of Rock Star quotes and stuff like
that.
Email Gail Worley
Visit The
Worley Gig Archives
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