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Posts tagged ‘tattoo’

The New Werewolf of London is on the Prowl: Gilly, Fresh Ink & Warren Zevon

Good friends are just like good songs; you never get tired of ‘em. Whenever you hang with an old friend or hear a old fave rave song you get that same good timey, play it all night long feeling. A very good friend, actually one of my oldest and best friends, Gilly, just visited me in London. Cue the music…

Gilly and I go way, way back. We’ve shared some crazy experiences and some big moments in our lives (best man at my wedding). We share lots of likes: music, authors, scenes, habits and pastimes. We also share a love of tattoos. We love the idea of getting them and the act of getting them. Gilly has more than I do…many more…but we have equal appreciation for good skin-ink. Here is mine: 
You can check out when I got my full ink done in Sydney, Australia.

When Gilly travels around the globe or in the States, he likes to collect ink in almost each location he visits. While he was here he was hellbent on getting some London Ink. I was a bad wingman this time around; I opted not to get any. I have a master plan for acquiring more ink, but I’m not yet ready to kick it off. 

I made Gilly an appointment at a parlor in Soho called, Diamond Jacks.  On the day he was to meet the ink slinger I had to do a bit of work and said I would stop in halfway through his session. I jumped on the tube and made my way to Piccadilly Circus and then walked through the streets of Soho up to the parlor. 

Buried deep in the subconscious of every serious music fan is a vault of lyrics, stories, song titles and experiences associated with music. The littlest thing can start the synapse-a-firing and conjuring these random bits. Case in point: whenever I walk through London’s Soho, I can’t help but think of Warren Zevon’s “Werewolves of London”. I am a massive Zevon fan. “Werewolves” is not even in my top twenty fave rave Zevon tracks…but in this scenario, it is top of the list. 

As I was walking up the alleyway to the shop (singing “werewolves”), I see this guy standing outside. It was one of those double take moments: “is that…nah, no wait…it is!”. There’s my old pal Gilly, shirt off, tatts blazing and just chilling in the alley. He was out there on a break from getting inked. No shit. I started to laugh out loud. It was a brilliant sight. 

You had to be there. In this alley outside the tattoo parlor are a dozen or so sex shops, live girl/guy shows,drug dealers, freaks, pimps, dopers and scroungers. Here was a guy I have known since the sixth grade, a guy I have walked in step with for near twenty-six years, standing half naked outside a tattoo shop in the middle of London’s seediest of seedy spots. Epic. Strange. Shit Hot Cool.

Gilly’s fresh ink

Seeing Gilly there as he was in that scene was priceless. A werewolf in London, indeed. I’ll never get tired of thinking about that. I’ll never get tired of hanging with Gilly. And, I’ll never get tired of hearing a great Zevon song. 

Ah, Zevon…I miss you Warren Zevon. Fuck You cancer. 

Balls call here, but this is my fave rave Zevon track: The French Inhaler. The music is full of tempo changes, brilliant guitar fills, crescendos and lush, sweeping harmonies. The true genius…and that is no exaggeration…is found within the lyrics. Wow. What a story teller. You can taste the story and how the scenes play out. This is not a song, it is a movie and soundtrack all in one. This is cinematic as fuck. The way the lyrics build with the song at 2:52 and crash into what maybe one of the most perfectly placed guitar lines/fills ever. I have the chicken-skin just thinking about it. Listen for the “kiss-off” at the end. Genius, indeed.

You’ll want to check this out: 

Warren’s ex-wife, Crystal, wrote a jarringly honest, brutal and touching book on Warren’s life called, “I’ll Sleep when I’m Dead: The Dirty Life & Times of Warren Zevon”. Why did she write it? He told her she had to. He told her to be gut-wrenchingly honest. She was. Wow…I had no idea his shit was THAT fucked up. Whew. As tragic as it was, I couldn’t put the damn thing down. If you are looking for a good read, flip those pages. 

Here is an interview with Crystal. She talks about how she came to write it and also does a reading from it. It is a six minute vid, but well worth the time spent. 

Here is the song Crystal was talking about, “Mohammed’s Radio” from a 1972 performance. Jackson Browne is playing with Warren. If you don’t know Warren’s story, you don’t know that Jackson championed Warren in the earliest days of Warren’s career. Jackson saw the talent and helped Warren get the breaks. 

OK, since I mentioned it…even though Warren would leave the room if he heard it again… we have to hear it: “Werewolves of London”…live and unhinged. 

Fresh Ink…

Photo

Final Ink: The 6149 Tattoo

My tattoo is finally healed.  That took a lot longer than I expected.

The story of the “6149″ tattoo can be found here and here:

Welcome to My Life Tattoo 

Welcome to My Life Tattoo Part II: Final Ink…for now

Here is the finished goods:

  • Inside arm: Highway 61 & 49 signs
  • Back of arm: gramophone & 45 rpm record spindle
  • Outside of arm: Heart with wife’s name, roses, decorated skull
http://picasaweb.google.com/s/c/bin/slideshow.swf

Welcome to My Life Tattoo Part II: Final Ink…for now

(Click here for Part I of “Welcome to My Life Tattoo”.  And, since I published the these pics in this post, the tattoo has completely healed.  Go to this post for the real-deal healed pics)

Whew.  Five and a half hours of tattooing.  By hour number four I was singing to myself,  ”have mercy, have mercy on me…”, a line from the Don Covay tune, “Mercy Mercy” (I was actually singing The Stone’s version off of “Out of Our Heads”).

That is a lot of time to be under the needle…without stopping!  I wanted to finish the job in one go no matter how long it took. The guy responsible for inflicting the pain and the great ink work is Heath Nock (check this out for some of his photos).  Heath works at Steel Lotus in Sydney.  If you are looking for a top notch, passionate-about-what-he-does ink slinger, go see Heath. 

Heath and I met a month or so before this inking session took place.  I was actually supposed to have the work done at that session, but we both didn’t feel great about where the design was at.  Good lesson here…if you aren’t sure don’t do it.  Instead of tattooing we talked about the design for an hour or so.  Heath drew some designs on my arm until we got the right feel for what we wanted, how big it needed to be and if it would compliment the great work he had already done on the outside of my arm.

I left feeling really good about the design.  When I showed up four weeks later, Heath had the stencils ready to go.  One was the Highway 61 and Highway 49 road signs.  Another was of the gramophone. That was Heath’s idea and he was spot on with that one. The final one was the old 45 RPM record spindle. Each one was really a separate tattoo that we would weave together with a little shading and fill magic. 

The designs…what are they all about?  

The Highway 61 and Highway 49 signs were the mandatories.  I’m not so dedicated to this blog that I needed to get a tattoo about it.  It is the other way around.  I love music, the blues especially.  I’ve waxed on many times about how it is not just the music I love, but the stories and the characters and the folklore, etc. that really gets me. The signs are a part of all of that…the crossroads, the Mississippi Delta, the well traveled road on the way up to Chicago…I love the symbolism. 

The signs, as they relate to the “crossroads” also represent “choice” to me. From an existential bent…we make choices and we need to own the responsibility that goes with them.  I am “deep-end” believer of this and the signs represent that for me as well.

The phonograph turned out great.  It still has a bit of healing to do, but I love it. I like old time-y music. Gramophones harken way back when to when my favorite music first started to get recorded.  If I could have got a Charley Patton tune written on the label I would have (“High Sheriff Blues” would have been my choice)

The record spindle was just something I wanted there.  It too is an ancient piece of record playing history.
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I’m very happy about the ink work.  I love the whole thing.  If you are going to get a tattoo…small or massive…you have to make sure it means something to you and that you are going to like it.  Make sure you find someone who does great work and that you are comfortable with.  Protect your investment as well.  I make sure I drench my arm in 50 proof sun block when ever I go out. 

I think I am done. At least for the foreseeable future.  I have a few other ideas, but I will wait until the time is right. Plus, I’m still feeling that five and half hour job.  Youch…

(still a bit of healing to go, but all is going well…)

The6149 in Technicolor

The6149 is under my skin. More pics on the way. Almost healed. Lots of ink and a story behind each piece soon…

6149_tattoo

(inside biceps on left arm)

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The Ink Slinger Strikes Again! (f@#ing-A…this one hurt)

The new tattoo (or addition to the current set) is still killing me. Five and a half hours straight will do that to you.  My arm is still swollen like a pig just back from the trough. 

Once it is healed I'll get some good snaps of the new additions…and now, complete "short sleeve" of tattoo.  There may be a few touch up spots, but for the most part it is finished.  

See any resemblance in my "in-process" tattooing work from yesterday and a little ol' symbol on this site?  Yeah, I can walk it as much as I talk it.  There is also a snap of the original stencils (sneak-peek).  More to come soon.

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