Saturday, February 14, 2026

COMIC BOOK COVER GALLERY: Superhero love stories in comics acquired in the '60s, '70s, and '80s

Valentine's Day! Let's read comics. Today's gallery collects a few superhero comic book covers depicting (or, often, pretending to depict but outright fibbing about) love, romance, passion, a-huggin', a-kissin', and at least one shotgun marriage. Mazel tov!

And yes, Bat Lash is a superhero, or close enough to one anyway.

As always, we'll be sticking exclusively to the '60s-'80s era of acquisition I've established for these galleries. Today's selection includes books I bought new, back issues I acquired after the fact (but within the timeline), and B-stock contraband originally purchased without their covers. These aren't actual photos of comics in my collection; most images are courtesy of the Grand Comics Database, which is grand indeed. But I did have each and every one of 'em at some point in time.

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider a visit to CC's Tip Jar. You can also become a Boppin' booster on my Patreon page.

I compiled a various-artists tribute album called Make Something Happen! A Tribute To The Flashcubes, and it's pretty damned good; you can read about it here and order it here. My new book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1) is now available, and you can order an autographed copy here. You can still get my previous book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones from publisher Rare Bird Books, OR an autographed copy here. If you like the books, please consider leaving a rating and/or review at the usual online resources.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, streaming at SPARK stream and on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. You can read about our history here.

Friday, February 13, 2026

10 SONGS: 2/13/2025

10 Songs is a weekly list of ten songs that happen to be on my mind at the moment. The lists are usually dominated by songs played on the previous Sunday night's edition of This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl. The idea was inspired by Don Valentine of the essential blog I Don't Hear A Single

This week's edition of 10 Songs draws exclusively from the playlist for This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio # 1323

BALLZY TOMORROW: Double Our Numbers

Our Featured Performer this week was the late, great Parthenon Huxley, and I think we managed an effective and loving tribute to this wonderful artist. We played a lot of Parthenon's music, including material under his own nom de bop, with his group P. Hux, fronting latter-day Electric Light Orchestra incarnation the Orchestra, as a member of Veg, as Rick Rock, with 3KStatic, collaborating with Jeffrey Foskett, and as part of his "pretty good band" with Rusty Anderson, Jen Condos, and Rob Ladd. It was Hux to the max, all in memory of a TIRnRR idol.

For all that, we deliberately skipped my favorite Parthenon Huxley song: "Double Our Numbers," from his brilliant 1988 album Sunny Nights. Our pal Robbie Rist is one of the biggest P. Hux fans we know, so we wanted our P. Hux tribute to include Robbie's cover of "Double Our Numbers," marketed under Robbie's alter ego Ballzy Tomorrow. From a previous edition of 10 Songs:

We have said this many times, yet it bears repeating: Enthusiasm is its own reward.

Enthusiasm drives our individual fandom, and I mean that in a good way. It certainly drives this little mutant radio show. Sure, there can be something said on behalf of detached objectivity...but ferchrissakes not in pop music, or at least not when we're listening to pop music. Objectivity? No. Not on our watch.

Robbie Rist occasionally feigns detachment, but he's never afraid to let his enthusiasm be known. Robbie loves pop as much as anyone loves pop; he loves it unashamedly, proudly. As a performer, Robbie will not hesitate to share his own enthusiasm with the audience

Case in point: Robbie Rist loves the music of Parthenon Huxley, particularly the music on Parthenon Huxley's 1988 album Sunny Nights, and most particularly the Sunny Nights track "Double Our Numbers."

Robbie is right about all of that. "Double Our Numbers" is exquisite, and the subject of one of my Greatest Record Ever Made! rants (and a seeming shoo-in for the hypothetical GREM! Volume 2). The song never became the rockin' pop staple it deserved to be, and I don't think it's available on any current streaming service.

So Robbie's kept the song alive, with a faithful rendition released under his Ballsy Tomorrow dba, all the while tipping his hat and dutifully applying heart to sleeve in recognition of Parthenon Huxley's original.

If you love a song, you wanna play that song, sing that song, dance to that song. And you want to introduce that song to your friends. 

Double our numbers. Triple our numbers. Robbie Rist has the right idea. Greater strength in numbers. Enthusiasm rewards and renews.

We'll hear Parthenon Huxley's original version of "Double Our Numbers" on our next show. We're enthused. And we're doubling down.

THE CYNZ: You Wreck Me

We're also enthusiastic about the music of the Cynz, and we've been playing selections from the group's new album Confess with zealous, righteous conviction. This week, we turn to their absolutely ace cover of Tom Petty's "You Wreck Me," and we may have wrecked a speaker trying to crank this one up to proper volume. So worth it. We'll circle back to a previous Pick Hit from Confess on Sunday night.

TOM PETTY AND THE HEARTBREAKERS: American Girl


From an American girl singin' a Tom Petty song into Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers singing "American Girl." I tell ya, sometimes the segues just program themselves.

SORROWS: Just One Fool To Blame

I continue to be amazed at the gift of Sorrows' 2025 release Parting Is Such Sweet Sorrow, a previously-unreleased 1981 one-night-studio-stand that serves as the group's in-era farewell but sounds like it was recorded tomorrow. The album was a consistent fixture on our playlists last year, and we just debuted its epic John Lennon salute "Cricket Man" on our January 25th show. Two weeks later, we return to the well of constant Sorrows for "Just One Fool To Blame," which turns out be just one more winner from an album overflowing with post-teenage heartbreak of the sweetest kind.  

THE FLASHCUBES: I Won't Wait Another Night

In the course of my work curating my passion project Make Something Happen! A Tribute To The Flashcubes for Big Stir Records in 2025, I had a series of communications with Parthenon Huxley about the possibility of him recording a Flashcubes cover for the compilation. His schedule didn't allow him a lot of opportunity to get this done, but he was friendly and open to the idea, and settled tentatively on doing a solo acoustic 12-string rendition of 'Cubes guitarist Arty Lenin's lovely ballad "I Won't Wait Another Night." 

Our conversation began in February of 2025. I then sent Parthenon several possibilities for him to evaluate from the Cubic catalog, and after considering another Arty tune ("Cycle Of Pain"), he picked "I Won't Wait Another Night" as his preference. He had a lot of working and gigging commitments, including a cruise. In March, he noted that he was closing in on an arrangement of the song. In April, he moved his Make Something Happen! participation status from tentative to "I will participate."

A downturn in Parthenon's health prevented that participation. He remained friendly and engaged in subsequent messaging, but I told him that it was more important for him to get better and feel better than it was to for him to risk damaging his vocal chops while trying to recover from a persistent cough. I expressed appreciation and gratitude for his interest and indulgence, and he expressed hope that we might meet in person some day.

This week, we played the Flashcubes' own original version of "I Won't Wait Another Night." A toast to absent friends, and a toast to what might have been.

P. HUX: Better Than Good

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

And yes, I did indeed repurpose much of this for my subsequent GREM! celebration of "Double Our Numbers." Serving the greater good, and that's much better than good.

HOLLY AND THE ITALIANS: Tell That Girl To Shut Up

Holly and the Italians' 1981 debut long-player The Right To Be Italian is a perfect record from start to finish. The 'tude classic "Tell That Girl To Shut Up" is the best-known among the original LP's ten tracks, but they're all great, presenting an irresistible oomph-a-thon of girl-group pop, New York punk, and undeniable rock 'n' roll climbing in the back seat and pulsating to the backbeat. One of my all-time favorite albums.

ELVIS COSTELLO: (The Angels Wanna Wear My) Red Shows

I saw Elvis Costello and the Attractions perform on campus when I was a Freshman at Brockport in early 1978, and I wrote an extended reminiscence of that experience here. The performance did not include the 1977 My Aim Is True track "(The Angels Wanna Wear My) Red Shoes," but we did hear (but not see) Declan and the lads run through the tune that night. Let's look back at that part of my in-concert recollection:

"...Costello's debut album, My Aim Is True, featured studio backing by a group called Clover; he formed the more raucous, willfully chaotic Attractions after that. My Aim Is True was well-received by critics; I suspect a few critics may have embraced it because it was tangentially punk, but not really, and endorsing it might make such critics seem slightly hipper than they actually were. But My Aim Is True was a terrific album, deserving of accolades regardless of the unconscious reasons prompting such praise.

"Still, it was surprising to return to Brockport and discover that Elvis Costello was scheduled to perform on campus. Although there was some underground support for punk and new wave among a beleaguered minority of students (and a very small handful of DJs on the student-run radio station WBSU), Brockport was simply not a hip place. The predominant musical taste of Brockport students was embodied by the Grateful Dead, Southern rock, and similar shit-kickin' and/or stoner stuff. It was either that, or dat ole debbil disco. The campus newspaper The Stylus had dismissed the Sex Pistols' album in a fit of blind, frothing fury: "Simply put, this album sucks." This was not a CBGB's crowd...

"...This was only my third rock concert. I'd seen KISS in 1976, and (yechh!) the Charlie Daniels Band in '77. More importantly, though, I'd seen my first club show and my first punk or new wave or trend du jour show in January, when I witnessed Syracuse's own power pop powerhouse the Flashcubes for the first time. I already knew that was a life-changing experience; why not hope for another revelation, with Elvis Costello and the Attractions?

"As we waited outside the ballroom before showtime, Costello rushed sullenly and silently past us, en route to his soundcheck. We heard run-throughs of 'Alison' and '(The Angels Wanna Wear My) Red Shoes' coming from behind the closed doors of the ballroom. It would be the only time we'd hear either of those songs that night...."

So, a question for the armchair pundits in our audience: This was my only Elvis Costello show; are "Alison" and "Red Shoes" a part of my virtual ticket stub gallery, or not? The well-shod angels in our midst await your decision.

THE BEATLES: Here Comes The Sun [Take 9]

Listen, man: Here in Syracuse, we're still waiting for proof of this elusive "sun" of which you speak. We'll believe it when we see it.

PARTHENON HUXLEY: Beautiful

Another one of the biggest P. Hux fans we know is loyal TIRnRR listener Eleanor Cook. Our Eleanor has guest-programmed a couple of shows for us, and one of those shows included "Beautiful,"  a go'geous tune from Parthenon Huxley's 2013 album Thank You Bethesda. Beautiful. And a beautiful way to conclude our tribute. Godspeed, Parthenon.

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider a visit to CC's Tip Jar. You can also become a Boppin' booster on my Patreon page.

I compiled a various-artists tribute album called Make Something Happen! A Tribute To The Flashcubes, and it's pretty damned good; you can read about it here and order it here. My new book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1) is now available, and you can order an autographed copy here. You can still get my previous book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones from publisher Rare Bird Books, OR an autographed copy here. If you like the books, please consider leaving a rating and/or review at the usual online resources.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, streaming at SPARK stream and on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. You can read about our history here.

Thursday, February 12, 2026

LAZARUS LIVES! [opening sequence from a proposed novel]

Although it's a bit far down on my current to-do list, I have a novel-in-progress called Lazarus Lives. I shared the eventual book's opening sequence with my paid patrons in December. This is its first public appearance. 

Though people who've known me for a very long time may recognize some bits 'n' pieces inspired by my own experiences, this is very much a work of fiction. The art teacher Mr. D is the only real-life person depicted. Here's to you, Mr. D: You made a positive difference in my life. We'll follow this one up very soon with a glimpse at what our then-young creators were attempting in the 1970s.

For now: Lazarus Lives.

LAZARUS LIVES

I had some miles to cover. Heavy snowfall had cancelled my evening flight, leaving me stranded on a layover in Detroit. I said to myself, "Steve, you've gotta get home." Man, whenever I talk to myself in that tone of voice, it never works out for the best.

I hated flying. It was fun when I was a kid, but it was just drudgery now in this brain-dead post-9/11 world. I was tired and frustrated and done. I was able to cancel the final leg of my trip. I may have implied a legal threat that did not technically exist, but I did get a refund. "Karen," you say? That's MISTER Karen to you. I made a belligerent beeline to the car rental desk, found an available sedan, and took off into the wild gray yonder.

Common sense? Never had it. Never will.

Before 9/11, my fastest route would have been via London, Ontario. Hassling with border security did not seem like the best possible waste of my time. A domestic drive from Detroit Metro to North Syracuse would take seven hours in clear weather, without pit stops, presuming the driver knew what he was doing. Yeah, factor in the flurries, the ice, and the driver's documented volatility, and we may as well double that estimated drive time. 

But I didn't care. Frayed nerves had beaten my exhaustion into submission. I was awake and alert. I needed to get home. The calendar said so.

It was that damned calendar driving me on. I know it now, I knew it then. The awareness didn't matter. All I knew was that I couldn't bear to be away from home tomorrow, on the fiftieth anniversary of the last time I saw my best friend alive.

Let's not be coy about this. My friend's name was John. He killed himself, put a bullet in his head when we were still teenagers. Call me a drama queen for not ever getting over it, for still obsessing over it five decades later. That's the irony of suicide. Its memory never dies.

The rental had satellite radio, but I wasn't interested in hearing anything I didn't program myself. I plugged in my iPod--old school! Never thought I'd live to see an iPod considered old school, like an 8-track player or a stone tablet. 

Then again, I never thought I'd live at all.

The iPod shuffled through favorites and obscurities, neck-snappin' segues from the Ramones to Dizzy Gillespie to the Girls From Petticoat Junction. My mind wandered--eyes still on the road, GPS guiding me, my path straight and true--but the past was present in my head. Fifty years. Damn you, John. Damn you for damning yourself.

We were an odd pair. Steve and John! Both outsiders, both intent on creating...something. I was a writer. John fancied himself a poet. His poetry was...well, let's not speak ill of the dead. But he had a gift for concepts, big ideas. All he and I really wanted to do was to write comic books.

This wasn't a common career choice among teens in the '70s. Seems weird to look back from this gleaming, far-flung future world of the 21st century and remember a time when superheroes were not the darlings of popular culture, but evidence of unforgivable nerdery. The comic book industry was dying in the '70s. John and I wanted in on it anyway.

And as much as we wanted to work for DC or Marvel or Warren, our true passion was our own co-creation: Lazarus. Lazarus! A mortal man who'd given up hope and decided to end his own life, his attempted suicide thwarted by an angel and a demon working together, Heaven and Hell combining forces to select Lazarus as an Earthly agent to act on behalf of both realms.

Corny? Man, never question the purple-prose passion of kids determined to create something of their own.

And we worked hard on Lazarus. We never gave him a civilian name; the collaborative angel and demon gave him a new identity as wealthy philanthropist Trevor Simons, who donned the dark hood and crimson cloak of Lazarus, a soul not quite damned and not quite saved. Lazarus prowled the dark and dismal streets of Eden City, guiding the worthy toward salvation, condemning the sinful to the fiery pits.

I'm Jewish. John was an atheist. But with Lazarus, our calling was flat-out evangelical.

Our cast of characters included Lazarus himself, still haunted by the ache that had pushed him toward suicide in the first place. The other regulars were the angel Becca and her sister, the demon Toxina; we implied that they were lovers. We had a recurring antagonist, Erin Settle, a beautiful but amoral billionaire businesswoman with more than enough personal wealth to buy immunity from being punished for her crimes, at least on the mortal plane. We had a super-villain, Torquemada, who was like an extreme version of Lazarus, a guy whose wife had died and now he was solely interested in declaring all people in Eden City as sinners, and bringing a deadly burning to every last one of them. We had a vague endgame, looking to conclude our epic saga with a final chapter called "Paradise Does Not Believe In Tears." We had...

...We had nothing.

No, that's not quite fair. We had ideas, and maybe we even had a little talent. But we didn't have discipline. We didn't have the ability to get shit done. I'm sure some teens did have that ability. These teens did not.

It was snowing harder now. As I passed Cleveland, I seemed to be the only driver on the road. My visibility was diminished, but I could still see the emptiness in front of me. Um...I meant the literal emptiness viewed through my windshield, the solitude of sharing the highway with Old Man Winter and no one else. It wasn't, like, an existential statement.

Though I guess that would have applied as well.

Neither John nor I had the artistic talent to pull off our creation's graphics...a pretty important point if you're working in a visual medium like comics. Initially, I think we hoped a publisher would connect us with an artist, like the next Neal Adams or Paul Gulacy, and we'd all be on our way to newsstands, Shazam awards, and eventual stardom. 

Then we met Darlene.

Darlene was like a freaking unicorn in the '70s: A girl who was into comic books. Unheard of! We met her in art class, hit it off, discovered our mutual interest in superhero storytelling, and we were off to the freaking wacky races. Darlene could pencil and ink, she could paint, she could letter, and--sorry, John!--her poetry was pretty good, too. She was the one who convinced our art teacher that the three of us should work on a comic book as our group project. The crush I developed on her was instant and absolute.

I didn't tell her that, of course. By then, she was already with John. They would sneak off to hold hands, make out, share a cigarette, make out some more. It's what teenagers in love do. Or so I assumed. 

As an art project, something we had to get done rather than merely dream about doing, Lazarus began to take shape. Darlene's talent made our efforts look better, and our writing skills developed just so we could keep up with her. We managed to complete just enough of Lazarus to present as our senior art project, which earned...a B. I'm biased, sure, but I think it was clearly A+ work. Our teacher didn't share our appreciation of panelology, I guess. 

Then: Graduation. John got me a summer job working with him at 'Wichburger, Darlene bagged groceries at Rocky's Supermarket, and we all hung out as often as possible, my three's-a-crowd status be damned. Nothing could separate us! Nothing but...college.

I went away to Buffalo State, an English major with an eye on joining the campus radio station. Darlene had an art scholarship at a private school downstate. John did not apply to any colleges. He was done with school, emphatically, irrevocably. We all vowed to keep in touch. And we did. Until, y'know, what happened...happened.

As the snow kept falling, I knew I needed to take a break. An all-night donut shop in Ashtabula had remained open even amidst all of this lake effect tsuris. A pit stop, more coffee, a French cruller, and more coffee seemed the perfect pick-me-up. And yeah, I started to doze within minutes of setting my weary carcass into the booth.

I jolted awake. The donut shop was gone. I was in North Syracuse, at 'Wichburger, the fast food joint where I worked with John one single last, lost summer, fifty years ago. I pinched myself. I rubbed my eyes and pinched myself again, with enough force to make me flinch. I wasn't dreaming. The North Syracuse 'Wichburger closed in 1983; the building was later leveled and there's a goddamned Chik Fil-A there now. The whole 'Wichburger chain went belly-up by the late '80s. I could not possibly be at a 'Wichburger outside of a dream or a delusion. 

This was neither.

I got up from the booth, borderline panicking. I headed straight to the rear exit door, knowing that I ferchrissakes shouldn't, knowing what I would find even though I knew I didn't want find it:

A cemetery. The cemetery. The cemetery that  sprawled behind 'Wichburger back then. It sprawled behind goddamned Chik Fil-A in the present. It was where John was buried.

It was also where we'd created Lazarus.

John and I were 14 when we met as freshmen, a little more than three years before senior year brought Darlene into our lives. Two years before I discovered pot; John had a head start on me there. "Head start?" Ugh. The pun was unintentional.

We had the same freshman homeroom, the same freshman English class, the same freshman art class. Our freshman art teacher Mr. Dean had been a huge fan of '40s and early '50s Captain Marvel Adventures comics when he was a kid, and he encouraged his students to bring in examples of popular art and pop culture that meant something to them. Kids brought in rock ‘n’ roll albums and 45s, teen novels, baseball journals, posters, fan magazines, what have you. Esther Simon brought in a copy of Leaves Of Grass. Sandy Wilkins brought in a Bible. Don LoCastro brought in a recent issue of Penthouse; Mr. D asked him to put that away, please.

John and I brought comic books....

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider a visit to CC's Tip Jar. You can also become a Boppin' booster on my Patreon page.

I compiled a various-artists tribute album called Make Something Happen! A Tribute To The Flashcubes, and it's pretty damned good; you can read about it here and order it here. My new book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1) is now available, and you can order an autographed copy here. You can still get my previous book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones from publisher Rare Bird Books, OR an autographed copy here. If you like the books, please consider leaving a rating and/or review at the usual online resources.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, streaming at SPARK stream and on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. You can read about our history here.

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

THIS IS ROCK 'N' ROLL RADIO: Another updated list of Featured Performers


This is a (presumably) complete list of all groups, singers, musicians, and/or pop wunderkind that have ever been a Featured Performer or Personality on This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl. When we have a Featured Performer, that performer is played at least once per set in that week's show, which generally means a minimum of eight or nine tracks in a three-hour show (and often more than that). Our first Featured Performer was the Kinks, who remain the only act to ever take over an entire episode of TIRnRR; in fact, we have now done TWO all-Kinks shows. This list will continue to expand as we program more Featured Performers and Personalities on future shows.


TIRnRR FEATURED PERFORMERS/PERSONALITIES

1.4.5.
Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass
The Animals
The Archies
Paul Armstrong
Burt Bacharach and Hal David
The Bandwagon/Johnny Johnson and the Bandwagon
The Bangles
Syd Barrett/Pink Floyd
Jim Basnight
The Bay City Rollers [2 times]
The Beach Boys
The Beatles [3 times]
Jeff Beck
Chuck Berry
The Bevis Frond
Big Star
Simone Berk
Hal Blaine
Joe Bompczyk
David Bowie
Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart
Clem Burke
The Buzzcocks
Glen Campbell
Eric Carmen
Ducky Carlisle
The Catholic Girls
Alex Chilton
The Dave Clark Five [3 times]
The Clash
Gene Clark/The Byrds
Cocktail Slippers
Paul Collins


Justine Covault
Cotton Mather
The Cowsills
The Creation
Steve Cropper
David Crosby
Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich
Devo
The Dickies
Dog Party
Micky Dolenz

Fats Domino
Tommy Dunbar
The Dukes of Stratosphear
The Easybeats
The English Beat
The Equals
The Everly Brothers
The Flamin' Groovies
The Flashcubes [9 times]
The Fleshtones
Flo & Eddie
Ace Frehley
Gary Frenay
The Bobby Fuller Four
Game Theory
Go Home Productions
The Go-Go's
Lesley Gore
Rachael Gordon
The Grip Weeds [2 times]
George Harrison [3 times]
The Half/Cubes
Herman's Hermits
John Hiatt
The Hollies
Buddy Holly
The Hoodoo Gurus
Parthenon Huxley/P. Hux [2 times]
In Deed
The Isley Brothers
Joe Jackson [2 times]
The Jam
Jefferson Airplane [2 times]
The Jellybricks

Joan Jett
David Johansen
Davy Jones
Tommy Keene
Scott Kempner
Greg Kihn
The Kinks [3 times]
KISS [3 times]
The Knack [2 times]
The Knickerbockers
Arthur Lee/Love [2 times]
John Lennon [5 times]
Circe Link
Roy Loney and the Phantom Movers
Nick Lowe
Lyres
Mad Monster Party
The Marlowes
Adam Marsland/Cockeyed Ghost
Norm Mattice [1.4.5./The Richards/Dress Code]
Paul McCartney [4 times]

Joey Molland
The Monkees [8 times]
Michael Nesmith [2 times]
Peter Noone
Andy Paley
The Pandoras
The Partridge Family
Irene Peña
The Pengwins
Pezband
Wilson Pickett
Gene Pitney
Pop Co-Op
The Poptarts
The Pretenders
Prince
Suzi Quatro
C. J. Ramone
Joey Ramone
Johnny Ramone
Marky Ramone
The Ramones [2 times]
The Raspberries
Lou Reed/The Velvet Underground

Paul Revere and the Raiders
The Rolling Stones
The Romantics
The Rubinoos
The Runaways
Kelley Ryan/astroPuppees
Screen Test
The Searchers
Bob Seger
The Sex Pistols
Kim Shattuck
The Shocking Blue
Shoes
The Small Faces
The Smithereens [2 times]
Squeeze [2 times]


Ronnie Spector
The Spinners
The Spongetones
Ringo Starr
Gary Stewart
Steve Stoeckel
Sweet
Shel Talmy
Johnny Thunders
Peter Tork
The Tragically Hip
The Trend
The Turtles
Dwight Twilley
The Dwight Twilley Band
Fritz Van Leaven
Vegas With Randolph
Chris von Sneidern

Mary Weiss/The Shangri-Las [2 times]
Lou Whitney/The Skeletons/The Morells
The Who
John Wicks/The Records [2 times]
Brian Wilson [2 times]
X-Ray Spex [2 times]
XTC
The Zombies [2 times]

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider a visit to CC's Tip Jar. You can also become a Boppin' booster on my Patreon page.

I compiled a various-artists tribute album called Make Something Happen! A Tribute To The Flashcubes, and it's pretty damned good; you can read about it here and order it here. My new book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1) is now available, and you can order an autographed copy here. You can still get my previous book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones from publisher Rare Bird Books, OR an autographed copy here. If you like the books, please consider leaving a rating and/or review at the usual online resources.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, streaming at SPARK stream and on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. You can read about our history here.