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Nineteen seventy-seven. New York City. Dark. Dangerous. Thrilling.
Punk Rock. Blondie. David Bowie. Drinking. Drugs. Happening at the
speed of light.THSeventeen-year old Laura quaking within her skin
while the bursting punk rock revolution explodes around her starts
a band with her teenage friends called the Student Teachers. She's
the drummer. They play legendary clubs a CBGB Max's Kansas City
Hurrah a they rehearse madly write songs and tour the East
Coast.THAll between final exams at school.THIn comes Jimmy Destri
from Blondie. He thinks the Student Teachers are terrific! And then
a he falls in love with Laura. He pulls her into the glamorous life
of Blondie and introduces her to David Bowie. Bowie takes an
interest in Laura's band attends their rehearsals and sets them up
to open for Iggy Pop at the Palladium on Halloween 1979. It's
exhilarating! It's the beginning of amazing success in rock 'n'
roll!THUntil it all comes to a stunning stop.THAfter playing a show
at Town Hall in 1980 Laura is diagnosed with multiple sclerosis.
Does it all fall apart?THLater at a dinner with Bowie he whispers
something to Laura. And it helps her save her life.THIn prose that
flows like music Laura Davis-Chanin presents a rich work of
narrative nonfiction that is not only deeply personal but also
revealing of the punk rock heyday in New York City. Infused with
rare photographs this book is a journey through a unique ephemeral
life experience.
Musician, nightlife impresario, record label executive,
photographer, and author, Michael Alago takes readers through this
amazing journey that is his life. Alago grew up in Brooklyn, New
York, in a large, spirited, and devoted Puerto Rican family.
Through his early passion for music, art, theater, and photography,
he soon found himself rubbing elbows with many downtown NYC scene
makers, from Stiv Bators to Jean Michel Basquiat, Cherry Vanilla
and Wayne County to Deborah Harry and Robert Mapplethorpe. As an
underage teenager going to Max's Kansas City, CBGB, and various art
galleries, Alago also began running The Dead Boys fan club. A few
years later, he became the assistant music director for legendary
nightclubs the Ritz and the Red Parrot. At age twenty-four, he
began a storied career as an A&R executive at Elektra Records
that started with signing Metallica in the summer of 1984, changing
the entire landscape of rock 'n' roll and heavy metal. Alago
continued to work in A&R for both Palm Pictures and Geffen
Records. He was thrilled to executive-produce albums by Cyndi
Lauper, Public Image Ltd, White Zombie, and Nina Simone. In the
late 1980s, he was diagnosed with HIV, which manifested into
full-blown AIDS ten years later. He survived to continue his music
career, but in 2005, he left music to pursue his other love:
photography. Alago went on to publish three bestselling books:
Rough Gods, Brutal Truth, and Beautiful Imperfections with
German-based publisher Bruno Gmunder. He has since overcome his
longtime addiction to drugs and alcohol. In his clean and sober
life, he has reconnected with his family, continues to be a working
photographer as well as record producer, and only through the grace
of his 12-Step program is he able to live this big, beautiful life.
In 2017, a documentary directed by Drew Stone and produced by
Michael Alex on Alago's wildly successful career in music was
released in theaters and on Netflix, entitled Who the Fuck Is That
Guy? The Fabulous Journey of Michael Alago.
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