PART I
The Rise of Peoria Punk Rock:
1956â1986
As a midsized city in the rural, conservative Midwest, Peoria was an unlikely setting for a countercultural arts scene. Its proximity to Chicago and St. Louis, however, had long made it a convenient add-on date for entertainers of various stripesâa low-stakes proving ground for new material. During the 1960s and â70s, Peoria was a regular stop for musical acts who needed dates in smaller cities to sustain their tours between bigger gigs. It was well steeped in rock and roll but mostly missed the punk rock wave of the late 1970s. Peoriaâs connection to bands like the Ramones, the Clash, and the Sex Pistols was largely limited to a minute selection of albums at local record stores.
When a real punk scene finally emerged in Peoria in the mid-1980s, it was guided not by the comparatively listenable music of that earlier period but rather by hardcoreâa new iteration of punk rock that was both more aggressive and more bluntly political. Just as DIY torchbearers like Minor Threat, Black Flag, and the Dead Kennedys flatly rejected corporate attempts to monetize punk, hardcore fans made their own magazines (âzinesâ), and bands put out records on their own labels and booked their own tours.
Paralleling the rise of hip-hop during this period, hardcore bands also lashed out against the reactionary politics embodied by President Ronald Reagan. Flyers for early hardcore shows routinely featured anti-Reagan images, and in cities like San Francisco (home of the Dead Kennedys), Washington, DC (Minor Threat and the Bad Brains), and Los Angeles (Black Flag and the Circle Jerks), bands offered a broader political critique. In central Illinois, however, Reaganism was the well-accepted norm. Not only did the area vote overwhelmingly for the Reagan-Bush ticket, but âThe Gipperâ was an Illinois native and graduate of nearby Eureka College, just a twenty-minute drive from downtown Peoria.
Peoriaâs early punks were united less by politicsâor even specific musical tastesâthan by a broader disdain for mainstream culture. The Reagan Revolution, after all, represented much more than public policy. To the young people of the 1980s, it reflected the uptight conservatism of their grandparentsâ generationâa throwback to the conformity, sexual repression, and unquestioning patriotism of the 1950s.
Peoriaâs early punk scene was also far from monolithic, drawing influence from both the anti-drug, âstraight-edgeâ Minor Threat and the shock rock of heavy metal pioneers like Black Sabbath and Alice Cooper. It began as just a handful of aspiring musicians and skateboarders. But within a few short years, Peoriaâs punk rebellion was a veritable youth counterculture with its own social spaces and even its own unique slang terms.
CHAPTER 1
Heebie Mesolithic Eon Drizzle
Midwesterners were distinguished by their lack of distinguishing characteristics. Anything but flamboyant, they supposedly had no discernible accent or clothing or customs. Their culture, like their history and their landscape, was linear and straightforward, without major drama, without peaks or valleys.
âRichard Sisson, Christian Zacher, and Andre Cayton,
The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia
We all know that Illinois ainât such hot shit, right? ⌠In fact, about all the Land of Lincoln does have going for it is its all-star dirt, squoozed out of the bedrock by some heebie Mesolithic eon drizzle and laying there a few million years waiting for the first soybean seed.
âRick Johnson Reader
Itâs a working-class river town built on manufacturing and agricultureâthe now-former home of Caterpillarâs world headquarters, an ancestral hub of midwestern vaudeville, and perpetual purveyor of the old phrase âWill it play in Peoria?â Musically speaking, Peoria, Illinois, may be best known as the hometown of soft-rock singer-songwriter Dan Fogelberg or REO Speedwagon guitarist Gary Richrath (of East Peoria, across the Illinois River). At times Peoria has seemed stuck in the past, depressingly static as a steady stream of bar bands served up watered-down imitations of Ted Nugent or Cheap Trick, rock and roll covers with a side of the blues. Artists whose work was not middle-of the-roadâthe cityâs most talented native son, comedian Richard Pryor, for exampleâtended to be studiously ignored, if not ardently reproached. Such was the consequence of a deeply rooted heartland conservatism, a widespread lack of stomach for anything remotely âedgy,â and, in Pryorâs case at least, a formidable mountain of institutional racism.
Ever lagging behind the times, the self-described âHeart of Illinoisâ was certainly an unlikely incubator for the punk rock revolution slowly making its way inland in the 1980s. But rewind a few decades to the supposed peak years of the cityâs cultural homogenyâto the early days of rock and rollâand the Peoria region had a lively and active music scene âŚ
* * *
On February 7, 1957, the Peoria Journal Star made the announcement with deft alliteration: âProfessional Presleyans Put On Peoria Premiere.â Despite the fears of parents across the nation, rock and roll had landed in middle America. A series of âshindigsââPeoriaâs âfirst public rock ânâ roll dancesââwere held at the Itoo Hall on South Adams Street, a gathering place for the cityâs sizable Lebanese immigrant population. Admission to local impresario Bill Reardonâs âTeen-Age Frolicsâ (featuring â2 sensational rock-n-roll singersâ and âa red hot 7 piece bandâ) was just ninety cents. Advertisements in the newspaper touted the unique events:
Dancingâentertainment country style âŚ
Everyone invited!
No age limit
No intox. allowed.
Police protection.
Dancing starts 8 p.m.
Snack bar open.
Elvis mania had arrived one year earlier. By the fall of 1956, following the performerâs dazzling first appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show, hundreds of enthusiastic teenage admirers lined the block outside Peoriaâs downtown Rialto Theater for a special matinee showing of Presleyâs film debut, Love Me Tender. In a typical headline, the local newspaper questioned this new development: âRock nâ Roll: Is It a Menace or Harmless Teen-Age Fun?â The same would be asked of subsequent generationsâand their own musical innovationsâin the years to come.
In 1959, the Rockinâ Râs from the nearby village of Metamora, Illinois, took their swinginâ rockabilly rhythms all the way to Dick Clarkâs American Bandstand on ABC-TV. The bandâs hit instrumental, âThe Beat,â spent eight weeks on the national charts and earned them gigs opening for their idols, Jerry Lee Lewis and Gene Vincent. They were eventually inducted into the Rockabilly Hall of Fame.
The following year, another early pioneer of rock and roll settled in Peoria. Byron âWild Childâ Gipson was the lone African American in one of Americaâs first integrated rock bands, Freddie Tieken and the Rockers, from Quincy, Illinois. Prior to that, he had been a sideman and road manager for Little Richard. Wild Child was well acquainted with Peoria, having played many gigs at Haroldâs Club, where an up-and-coming Richard Pryor polished his stand-up act in between sets. Gipson tore up Peoria stages throughout the sixties and would be a fixture on the local jazz and blues scene for decades.
Though overshadowed by its proximity to Chicago, one of the worldâs premier blues cities, Peoria was plentiful with blues talent of its own. Most prominently, Luther Allison enjoyed a decades-long musical career and was renowned for his soulful guitar work, even as he plugged away at day jobs in Peoria, working for Caterpillar and Keystone Steel and Wire. Both Eddie King and Emmett âMaestroâ Sanders played guitar for Chicagoâs âQueen of the Blues,â Koko Taylor, and both died relatively unheralded, overdue legacies buried amid their hometownâs underappreciated blues scene.
In the mid-sixties, teenage rock and roll bands like the Coachmen, the Wombats, and the Shags started popping up in Peoria-area garages, playing school dances, and battling it out in high school gymnasiumsâjust like everywhere else in the country. As the British Invasion gave way to the psychedelic era, local groups like Suburban 9 to 5, Abaddon, and Zimmoâs Thanatopsis began taking cues from Hendrix, Cream, and the Jefferson Airplane. Shaggy-haired teenagers were pushing the boundaries and remaking American culture for a new age.
The Kinks, the Hollies, the Yardbirds, and the Who were among the wave of prominent Brits who found their way across the Atlantic to play in Peoria. All four bands took the stage at Exposition Gardens, home of the Heart of Illinois Fairâthat prototypical celebration of livestock competitions, amusement rides, and motor contests. With multiple buildings available for rent to the public, it was one of the areaâs top concert venues, though the conservative Midwest was not an especially welcoming place for the emerging sixties counterculture.
The Kinksâ 1965 visit to Peoria, for example, was shaped by widespread aversion to the âlong-haired British invaders,â including one frightening encounter with âa redneck punk who [drove] the band around for the promoter, brandishing a gun in the process.â The incident left such an impression on Kinks singer Ray Davies that he recounted the anecdote in both his 1995 autobiography and his subsequent stage show.
Three years later, the Strawberry Alarm Clock found their Expo Gardens concert canceled following a midnight-hour raid on their East Peoria hotel room. All five members of the California band were arrested, and two were charged with drug possession. In Peoria, the scandal was front-page news. But when a prominent San Francisco attorney flew into town to advocate for the musiciansâclaiming they were framed by local authorities hostile to their long hair and hippie attireâthe charges were dropped.
In September 1967, the Doors managed to avoid arrest when they played a high school gymnasium in the small town of Canton, about thirty miles southwest of Peoria, just four days before their notorious Ed Sullivan debut. While âLight My Fireâ hit the top of the charts that summer, the band âcame and went with almost no fanfare, noticed mostly for their long hair in a conservative burg still struggling with widespread cultural change.â
When the Who took the stage at Expo Gardens on March 10, 1968, a BBC crew was on hand filming a documentary about popular music that examined the revolutionary possibilities of rock and roll at a time when cultural revolution was very much in the air. To this day, footage of Pete Townsend and bandmates trashing their gear after a particularly scorching rendering of âMy Generationâ remains a touchstone of Peoria musical lore. But the Whoâs three-hour late arrival angered promoter Hank Skinner, who refused to pay the remainder of their $1,500 guaranteeâand the band was not happy about it. âThey wanted their $750!â exclaims Craig Moore, frontman of Iowa garage-rock legends GONN, Ilmo Smokehouse, and a string of other bands, who moved to Peoria in the mid-seventies and became an agent for Skinnerâs Peoria Musical Enterprises. â[Hank] told them ⌠to pack up their shit and get out.â The promoter allegedly swiped Pete Townsendâs white Beatle boots before running the band out of townânotwithstanding Townsendâs threats of legal action, which ultimately proved hollow.
Incidentally, two of the local acts that opened for the Who at Expo GardensâSuburban 9 to 5 and the Coachmenâcounted among their ranks Gary Richrath and Dan Fogelberg, respectively. Three years later, when Black Sabbath played the same room, it was Richrathâs REO Speedwagon that opened the showâthe hometown boy making good.
Across town in the preârock and roll era, a large horse stable on the northern outskirts of Peori...