The final chords
reverberated off the black, sticker-covered walls of
CBGB as the grungy, iconic club toasted the end of its
33-year residence in New York. Rock poet Patti Smith
headlined the Sunday night concert, CBGB's last before
eviction by its landlord, the Bowery Residents
Committee, a homeless advocacy group that owns the property.
The club will close October 31.
Hundreds of music
fans packed the small downtown club Sunday, while
reporters hovered outside. The mood was both somber and
raucous at CBGB, hailed by many as the birthplace of
punk.
"This place is
not a...temple," Smith said during the concert. "It is
what it is." She refused to wax nostalgic, instead
claiming at a preshow news conference that doubled as a
sound check that "CBGB's is a state of mind" that will
carry on elsewhere for a new generation. She later
noted with relish that CBGB, at 33, was the same age
as Jesus.
Red Hot Chili
Peppers bassist Flea surprised the audience, joining
Smith's band for much of her second set. Having turned 44 at
midnight, he was treated to a loud, enthusiastic
"Happy Birthday" by the band and crowd.
Much of the
concert was filled with reminders of changed times. Sirius
Satellite Radio broadcast the show live, and digital cameras
populated the audience. Nevertheless, Smith
often struck a '60s vibe, urging change and awareness
of issues such as the disputed treatment of prisoners
at Guantanamo Bay. She sang covers of the Who's "My
Generation" and the Rolling Stones' "Gimme Shelter" with
obvious parallels to CBGB.
The club was
founded by Hilly Kristal in 1973 and over the years helped
spawn the careers of such acts as the Ramones, Blondie, the
Talking Heads, and Television. Though its glory days
are long gone, it has remained a symbolic fixture on
the Manhattan music scene.
The crowd paid
tribute to many of the bands forever connected to the
club, including several chants of "Hey ho, let's go!" from
the Ramones' classic "Blitzkrieg Bop." Chris Frantz
and Tina Weymouth of the Talking Heads were on hand,
as was E Street Band guitarist Little Steven Van
Zandt, who had battled to keep the club open during the
protracted dispute over its future.
The Bowery
Residents Committee's decision not to renew CBGB's lease
when it ran out in August 2005 sparked protests,
tributes, and vigils for more than a year. Kristal
recently gave up his legal fight to stay. Though weary
from his battle with lung cancer, he remains combative about
his club's exodus from the Bowery and said Sunday he
was "very disappointed" in Mayor Michael Bloomberg for
not saving the club. Still, he says, he remains
focused on "generating the energy" for CBGB, which he
plans to move to Las Vegas. It's very much alive as a
brand too. Kristal will transplant its store, CBGB Fashions,
to a new location a few blocks away on November 1.
"I'm thinking about tomorrow and the next day and the
next day, and going on to do more with CBGB's,"
Kristal said Sunday.
Frantz said he
and his wife, Weymouth, had to attend the finale because
CBGB is like the "center of gravity for us." He reflected on
the club where the Talking Heads got their big break.
"It just had a super cool ambiance or electric
vibe...even though it was pretty much a dump," Frantz
said.
With a capacity
of barely 300, CBGB was founded as a place of freedom for
different musical acts. Smith said Kristal "always gave us a
job, just like tonight. He was our champion, and in
those days there were very few," she added.
Though its letters stand for the music Kristal
originally planned to present there--country,
bluegrass, and blues--it quickly came to
represent the physical epicenter of early punk and the
storied downtown scene of 1970s New York City.
Smith's final
encore was a quiet poem listing many of the musicians who
have died in the years since they played CBGB, but perhaps
the more fitting send-off came right before it. The
band played the punk staple "Gloria," verging back and
forth between choruses of "Gloria! G-L-O-R-I-A!" and
"Hey ho, let's go!"
The crowd shook
its fists high for the Ramones' classic, an anthem to
CBGB and so much more. (Jake Coyle, AP)