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GypsySoul
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« on: November 18, 2004, 10:10:06 AM »

BOB STINSON (1959 ? 1995)
GOD REST HIS SOUL



Vintage Guitar (mag) January 2005 Vol.19 No.03
By:? Ralph Heibutzki
Photos:? Ken Settle.

There goes A regulAr
BOB STINSON?S SECRET LIFE AFTER THE REPLACEMENTS


THE MEMORY OF BOB STINSON still exerts a tidal pull on those who worked with him, even a decade after his passing.? Singer/guitarist Ray Reigstad is no exception.

?If I met someone who was like Bob Stinson now, I would still be in a band ? it?s like driving a Ferrari on acid,? Reigstad laughs.? ?Nothing compares.?

Stinson played in numerous bands after leaving the Replacements in June, 1986, but none released an album with him.? Live gigs ? mostly around the Minneapolis area, where he was born and raised ? would remain Stinson?s primary exposure until his death in February, 1995.

As a result, few people outside of Stinson?s stomping grounds heard his post-Replacements music.

Feeling the late guitarist deserved better, in 2000, Reigstad and drummer John Reipas issued Stinson Boulevard, a collection of demos recorded by their ?art blues? band Static Taxi.

Reigstad and Reipas met Stinson in May, 1985, as the Replacements were recording Tim, their first Warner Brothers album.? The trio hit it off instantly, and spent the summer jamming on Golden Earring and Guess Who covers.

The reality check came as Stinson slept off a hangover on their couch, and his new 19-year-old cohorts spotted an ad for a Replacements gig.

?It was 7:30: ?Oh, ****, he?s supposed to be down right there now!? Reigstad recalls.

Stinson made the gig ? barely.? But such hijinks lent an inevitable air to his departure, even if many diehard fans felt he?d been made a scapegoat for the band?s dissolute ethic.

Life With Sonny
In 1987, Stinson formed Model Prisoner with Sonny Vincent, a veteran of New York?s ?70s punk scene who had moved to Minneapolis in 1981.

Stinson?s symphonic approach to guitar parts distinguished his style, though his unpredictable streak ?probably alienated people who wanted a more classic approach in their guitar heroes,? Vincent acknowledges.

Stinson didn?t have a guitar after leaving the Replacements, so he borrowed Vincent?s 1970 Les Paul Custom black beauty, while Vincent made do with a ?69 Les Paul.? They played through 100-watt Marshalls, (Stinson sometimes used Dean Markley amps).

When Stinson?s drinking problems persisted, Vincent proposed an unusual solution.

?People thought it was funny ? a band going to therapy together ? but we tried it,? Vincent said.? ?It kept us together for awhile, but still, the crazy **** didn?t stop.? In fact, it got worse.?

Model Prisoner imploded in ?88.? But the fallout didn?t deny Stinson from taking a role in Vincent?s next band, Shotgun Rationale.

Life With Ray
Between all these experiences, Stinson formed Static Taxi in 1988, with Reigstad, Reipas, and bassist Chris Corbett.

Static Taxi was supposed to break from the past, which meant playing no Replacements songs.? Stinson also mothballed the dresses and diapers of yore for scarves and vests.? To further duck comparisons to the ?Mats? twin-guitar spitfire, Reigstad concentrated on vocals.

Stinson?s guitar choices were equally eclectic:? he favored Univoxes, a Gibson Melody Maker, and a Les Paul.

?I think he paid $1,200 for it,? Reigstad said.? ?It was white and had gold inlaid seals on the fretboard.?

Stinson routed a Yamaha bass amp through his trusty Dean Markley.? He used no effects except the odd pedal or Crybaby distortion box, which had weathered a fire and often shorted out.? The sputter is audible at the start of ?Modern Joy.?

Rehearsals were also a unique experience.? After run-ins with several local studios, the band settled in a railroad boxcar, where they?d play for girlfriends, coworkers, and anyone else who?d listen.

Or they?d practice for hours, with Stinson sometimes having everyone play their parts one note at a time.? Reigstad has more than 30 rough versions of ?Modern Joy? to prove it; four months passed before Stinson felt satisfied with the results.

?That was typical.? He steered everybody down a path he?d already worked out,? Reigstad said.

The same held true for recording, such as the double-tracked solo Stinson laid down for the cabbies? lament ?We Do.?? Just when everyone pronounced the track finished, Stinson ordered the engineer, ?Patch me into an open channel and let me do it again.?

?[The engineer] put his hands over his face: ?I can?t believe this!? The guy just did exactly the same thing twice, note for note,?? Reigstad said.

Aside from one trip to Las Vegas, Static Taxi remained a well-kept secret at house parties and local clubs.? But the band had a hard time getting gigs.

?Bobby?s fans were loyal,? said Stinson?s mother, Anita Stinson Kurth.? ?You?d see the same people at the shows, no matter how small the show was.

?But he?d been there, done that.? And he didn?t want to do it again,? she added, recalling her son?s yearning for the big leagues.

But Static Taxi found no takers for its demo tapes.? Although he never missed a gig and worked as a line cook, Stinson?s reputation gave people reason to avoid him.

?The weird thing is, 1986 to 1991 was probably his most calm time,? Reigstad said.? ?He was very clear, and knew what he wanted to do.?

Stinson quit Static Taxi in early ?91, after a falling out with Corbett.? The band continued without him for eight months.

?He always said he had demons,? Reigstad said.? ?Apparently, the booze and the coke held those demons for many years.? But eventually, it took age to hold?em back.?

The Bleeding Heart Life
Despite these problems, Stinson joined Vincent once more in 1992 for a poorly-paid European tour.

?Bob practiced hard before the tour,? Vincent said.? ?He wanted it to be great, and it was.? But it came with every sort of madness imaginable!?

Following the experience, Stinson formed his last band, the Bleeding Hearts, after an encounter with 21-year-old singer/guitarist Mike Leonard.? At the time, Stinson was using an imported Fender Stratocaster or black Gibson Explorer through a Roland Spirit 10A amp.? Leonard used a ?59 Les Paul Junior and a 50-watt Hi-Watt amp for gigs, and a Supro amp for recording.? In keep with the Bleeding Hearts? rootsy ethic, they shunned effects.

The band played locally for a year before beginning an album at Terrarium Studios.

Being a ?small amp, bigger sound? advocate, Leonard cringed when Stinson insisted on bringing a full Marshall stack, but everything went fine and the band nailed down eight songs in three days.

But Stinson?s new band would offer no more refuge from his past.? In July ?93, Spin magazine published an article that focused on Stinson?s post-?Mats troubles, including his divorce and the birth defects of his son, Joey.

A group photo, with Stinson looking all of his 34 years and then some, compounded the article?s drift that he that he was marking time in an average band.

?Dan Corrigan did the photos,? Leonard said.? ?He?s a nice guy, but I remember he said, ?You?ll never be the Replacements.??

The album was finished in August, 1993.? And for reasons that remain murky, the owner of Fiasco Records took the tapes, and never released them.

The next month, Stinson quit after a gig at the 7th Street Entry.? The door only came to about $25, but ?Bob took it upon himself to get paid for the band and go home,? Leonard said.

By then, they no longer lived together.? ?He had moved in, basically, with the dealers, so it was pretty much impossible to have [his addiction] be under control.?

The day before he died, Kurth recalls seeing her son at the Uptown Bar, where she has worked for more than 20 years.

?The last words he said to me was, ?I?m tired of screwing up relationships.? I?m? going for help.?? And of course that never happened.?

Out Of The Black
On the surface, Stinson?s death finalized his descent from the rock and roll radar, seemingly resigned to drifting, with no stable home or income.? But the outpouring of emotion that greeted Stinson?s death told its own story.? The funeral drew 250 people, including all of the former Replacements.? Kurth took pains to set the record straight about his death; the medical examiner indicated Stinson had no drugs or alcohol in his system when he died.

?His organs just quit, and that was the end of it.? His body said, ?No more.Huh She also worked to raise money for a memorial park bench at Stinson?s favorite fishing spot, Lake of the Isles.

Although the Replacements gave Stinson his greatest story, Vincent feels there is more to the story.

?Whenever and wherever there are young musicians looking for real role models of the true rock and roll feeling and spirit, Bobby will be there for them to discover and be inspired by,? he said.

After the Bleeding Hearts, Leonard joined another Twin/Tone act, the Magnolias.? He continues to play around Minneapolis, and would like a proper release for the Bleeding Hearts? album.? He also toys with releasing the dozen or so practice tapes laying around.

?Might as well get his stuff out there, ya?know?? It?s not like we?re going to make a million dollars off it or anything,? he said.

Reigstad has kept busy sending CDs to Japan, where audiences never saw the Replacements.

?People are just starting to realize what he was trying to do,? Reigstad said.? ?That?s all I can really say.? He was just in the wrong time.?
- Ralph Heibutzki
Special thanks to Patty Dean, Anita Stinson Kurth, Mike Leonard, Ray Reigstad, and Matt Tomich. VG


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« Reply #1 on: November 18, 2004, 10:12:00 AM »

Vintage Guitar (mag) January 2005 Vol.19 No.03

MY FAVORITE THING
THE BOB STINSON DISCOGRAPHY


The Replacements
Sorry Ma, Forgot To Take Out The Trash? Twin/Tone Records TTR 8123? 1981
Stink? Twin/Tone Records TTR 8228? 1982
Hootenanny? Twin/Tone Records TTR8332 1983
Let It Be? Twin/Tone Records TTR8441 1984
The Shit Hits The Fans? Twin/Tone Records TTR8443 1985 (Cassette only, recorded live at The Bowery, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, 11/11/84
Tim? Sire 25330 1985

Singles
?I?m In Trouble? / ?If Only Was Lonely?? Twin/Tone Records TTR 8120 1981
?I Will Dare? / ?20th Century Boy? / ?Hey Good Lookin?? (12" single) Twin/Tone Records TTR8140 1984

W/Sonny Vincent/Shotgun Rationale
?Time Is Mine? / ?Wheel Of Fortune? / ?Eerie Responsible? Dog Meat Records (DOG021) 1991 (Bob plays guitar solo on ?Time Is Mine?)
Beyond Rebellion
D.D.R. Records/RTD 1991 (German only)
7" single: Flight 13 Records 1997 (German-only: B-side is mid-?80s Model Prisoner lineup of Bob and Sonny, plus Mike Henderson, Jim Michels, Jeff Rogers, Eric Magistad)

Static Taxi
Stinson Boulevard (Rock X-Change Music: RXM004, 2000)
Closer 2 Normal (Birdman Records: BMR043, 2003)
Outtake City (Rock X-Change 005, 2003) As the title says: rough mixes, including three otherwise unreleased songs: ?Wet Candy,? ?Noon Am,? and ?Ditch Me.?

The Bleeding Hearts
The Bleeding Hearts 1993 (Unreleased)

(Gypsy note: I edited out two sections - ?Replacements Tribute Albums? & ?Related Websites?)

-Ralph Heibutzki VG


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« Reply #2 on: November 18, 2004, 10:18:33 AM »

Vintage Guitar (mag) January 2005 Vol.19 No.03
Photos:? Ken Settle.



Music Is My Life
THE STORY OF THE REPLACEMENTS

BY RALPH HEIBUTZKI

THE MEETING BEGAN WITHOUT ANY EXPECTATIONS.? Jim Dickinson vaguely realized his production of Big Star?s final album, Sister/Lovers, seemed to impress the band now courting his services over breakfast in Memphis ? the Replacements.? * ?Paul [Westerberg] was, of course, drinking a screwdriver at 9:30 in the morning,? Dickinson laughs.? ?I was wearing one of my flannel shirts, and Tommy says, ?Look, he?s just like us.?? Paul said, ?He?d better be wearing a flannel shirt.? But he?s not like us.??

The band?s major label debut, Tim, has crashed and burned at #185.? Fans wondered if lead guitarist Bob Stinson had quit or been booted from the band he?d started in 1979 with his brother, bassist Tommy Stinson, drummer Chris Mars, and singer/guitarist Westerberg.

For Dickinson, the sessions that yielded Pleased To Meet Me (1987) gave the band a blast of self-confidence when it needed one most.

?Westerberg told me later, when they started,? Dickinson beams.? ?They were gonna break up, and they got trapped into the songs.?

Patty Dean keeps in touch with the excitement as supervisory curator for the Minneapolis Historical Society?s music collection.? One of her recent projects involved posting fliers and handbills donated by Mars and former manager Peter Jesperson onto the society?s website.

The band?s legend has grown exponentially since its breakup in 1991, but the interest isn?t only being fueled by the old guard.

?It?s neat to see that a lot of their fans are in their early twenties, or teens.? It?s pretty ageless stuff,? said Dean.

Read About Your Band?
Bob Stinson (born December 17, 1959) began playing at 12 when his mother, Anita Stinson Kurth, got him an acoustic guitar for Christmas.

?He did it all by ear; never had a lesson, or anything,? Kurth recalls.? ?It was something he wanted to do, and he did it.?

Kurth also recalls her son showing eclectic tastes:? ?I think he used Chet Atkins, basically, as his teacher.? He would listen to him, and pick up his stuff from there.?

But no guitarist stood taller in Bob?s lexicon than Steve Howe.? He saw nothing unusual in embracing technical fluency with the left-field garage punk sound that characterized his style.

?What I sound like and listen to are two different things,? he said.

The connection prompts an affectionate memory from Sonny Vincent, who played with Stinson in two bands, Model Prisoner and Shotgun Rationale.? Howe happened to be playing in Minneapolis.? Stinson somehow hustled his way backstage, hoping to get his idol?s autograph.? He?d even brought a Replacements album as a gift.

But Stinson?s perennially haggard looks triggered an unexpected reaction.

?Steve looked at Bob for five seconds, then yelled, ?Security!?? Vincent said.? ?Bob got thrown out, and missed the concert.? I asked him, ?Were you angry about that??? Bob said, ?Oh, no.? I?m a fan!??

Stinson?s attempts to enter the rock and roll world would prove somewhat more successful, at least in the beginning.? Worried about seeing his 11-year-old brother, Tommy, follow him into drink and delinquency, Stinson decided to take matters into his own hands.

?Tommy told me, ?I never even made a conscious decision to be a bass player ? Bob put the bass in my hands and hit me in the face until I played it,?? Dickinson laughs.? ?But that?s real rock and roll, man, those guys were the real thing.?

Kurth welcomed the awkward energy blasting from her basement.

?We all just settled into a routine.? The police told us we had to shut down by 10 {p.m.}, which was fine by us.?

Stinson would sing when nobody else felt brave enough, but the boys lacked a front man ? prompting Mars to suggest the 19-year-old Westerberg.? His arrival helped the band shed its punkier monickers (the Impediments; Dogbreath), and bring his rootsy, more literate originals to the fore.

From day one, Minneapolis? Unfab Four quarried the image of being lovable losers, an impression fostered by their unpredictable, often alcohol-soaked live shows.

The Stink EP had originally been called Too Poor To Tour, while Hootenanny?s slapdash acoustic reverie, ?Treatment Bound,? made its case more bluntly:? ?The label wants a hit, and we don?t give a ****.?

By the time of Let It Be (1984) and Tim (?85), acoustic, slide, and lap steel guitars dueled with Bob?s gloriously unhinged lead style for priority.? In hindsight, though, plaintive solo numbers like ?Here Comes A Regular? and the minor-key ballad ?Swingin? Party? held the real key to the future.

But Stinson would not be along for the ride; he and Jesperson were gone by June, 1986.? Bob ?Slim? Dunlap, known for his humility and ability to fit any musical situation, became the new guitarist.

?I was devastated, but more devastated for Bobby, because it was his baby,? Kurth said.? ?He showed Slim how to play his music, then they hired him.? He was just that ready to say, ?I don?t care anymore.?

Gypsy note:? I had to split this article into two parts because it exceeded the maximum allowed length.
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« Reply #3 on: November 18, 2004, 10:20:04 AM »

Where?s Bob?? (Don?t Ask)
Work began at Memphis? Ardent Studios, where Sister/Lovers had been recorded.? When they started, Dickinson joked about calling it Where?s Bob?? After all, wouldn?t the fans ask, anyway?

?I told the manager, ?Bring me Bob, I like him here, he doesn?t scare me.?? But they?d shake their heads and make the sign of the cross,? Dickinson said.

Jokes aside, Dickinson felt the Replacements could create a great-sounding album, if only they?d let someone help them ? a quality he found lacking in earlier albums, like Let It Be.

?They had never even played with their amps separated,? Dickinson said.? ?Obviously, the people they had worked with had just thrown up their hands, and said, ?Okay,? and, of course, the records sounded awful.?

The band had matured as players, but even at this stage of the game, consistency remained an issue.? ?They tried to play sober, and they couldn?t do it,? Dickinson said.? ?There really had to be a certain amount of ?buzz?; that?s the way they learned to play.?

Westerberg already had a ?56 Les Paul.? To stack more of the sonic deck in their favor, Dickinson found him a ?71 plexiglass Dan Armstrong; ironically, it didn?t arrive until the final week of recording.

?I?ve got one myself, but never seen one that had the interchangeable pickups,? Dickinson said.? ?The one we got him had three pickups you could slip in and out.? It was really a beautiful piece.? I don?t know what he did with it.?

Tommy brought a late-?60s Thunderbird and a Rickenbacker that he?d spraypainted fluorescent green, but his homemade amp stayed in the closet.? ?I didn?t use a note of it, I took him direct,? Dickinson laughs.? ?He insisted on using it.? He?d say, ?I?ve got 600 watts at home!?? And I?d tell him, ?Glad you left it there!??

Recording a trio provided an undeniable fringe benefit:? Dickinson had plenty of space to overdub.

?Westerberg was a way better guitar player than anybody was giving him credit for,? Dickinson said.? ?I?m playing rhythm here and there, but all the solos, except for ?[Shooting] Dirty Pool,? are Westerberg.?

?Shooting Dirty Pool? went through the Westerberg tuning ringer ? in this case, an A string turned up to B.

However, adding the left-field metal crunch to the middle section took longer.? The band let different people try the solo, and combined the results ? but the playback made everyone reconsider the notion.

?Everybody had done basically the same thing ? it was spooky to hear how un-random it sounded,? Dickinson laughs.

That?s when he broached deputizing his son, Luther:? ? ?Okay, Paul, why not?? I?ve got a 14-year-old son who?s into Steve Vai.? Let him come in here and make his sound effects and see what happens.??

For the solo number, ?Skyway,? Westerberg tuned the D string of his Ovation acoustic up an octave.? ?Again, if you listen through earphones, you can hear the high string on the wrong side,? Dickinson said.

In hindsight, Pleased To Meet Me signaled a more drastic makeover than anyone, including Dickinson had imagined.? He remembers the group attempting an unreleased song, ?Run For The Country,? which to him sounded like a Marlboro ad.

The airbrushed sheen of Don?t Tell A Soul ? which teems with ?80s trademarks like processed keyboards and click tracks ? caught diehard fans offguard.

?After the hell they put me through, they went in there and did what somebody told ?em!? Dickinson laughs.

Dickinson had less time for the click tracks, which he didn?t allow on his watch.

?It?s so regimented,? he said.? ?Where is the idea of the Replacements?? It?s so boring? and it makes the beat such a tiny thing.?

The last album, All Shook Down (1990), reverted to a stripped-down sound built on Westerberg?s Guild acoustic, paradoxically augmented by session players (the band in its entirety appears on only one track, ?Attitude?).

However, Pleased To Meet Me remains one of Dickinson?s top five recording experiences, partly because it superseded the Big Star connection in bringing people to his door.

?[Westerberg] gave me the reputation for working with problem artists, and I got a couple,? Dickinson laughs.? ?But that?s okay.? I think I?m good with ?em.?

At 300,000 copies, Pleased To Meet Me is the Replacements? best-seller.? Dickinson had hoped for an anthem like ?Bastards Of Young,? but he?s hardly complaining.

?I got some real emotion out of the guy that he didn?t want to give me.? And that?s a good deal of what makes the record survive ? you hear a person actually delivering emotion on that record,? Dickinson adds.? ?Reluctantly, maybe.?? VG
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« Reply #4 on: October 30, 2010, 04:59:12 PM »

Sonny Vincent -My Times With Bobby Stinson- Part 1

Bobby Stinson, The only band member I ever went to a psycho therapy session with! There is a lot to tell and I want to make it clear that the words you are about to read are the truth the whole truth and nothing but the truth! This album is dedicated to the memory of Bob Stinson my friend of many years who just happened to be one of the greatest guitar players of all time. I present this album to you in his memory. For those who don?t know, I am happy to introduce this. Bob was the lead guitarist from the group ?The Replacements? and after they booted him out he joined my band. Along with being a genius guitarist Bob was also one of the strangest, sweetest and nuttiest characters I have ever met. I could write a whole book about him, really! Here are a few notable elements of an intense, highly charged and funny story. 

First off, some background, I moved from New York City to Minnesota around 1980 where I eventually met Bob. After my N.Y.C group ?TESTORS? had broken up I put together a new band in NY  called ?The Primadonnas?  (couldn't have been a better name for us), this consisted of the bassplayer from Testors (Kenny) along with Luigi who played with Johnny Thunders and Bo Diddley and Joey Alexander who believe it or not did a stint with the Shirelles!!! Anyway, in some ways this was more of a ?Drug deal? than a band!! Someone would drop something at rehearsal like a guitar plectrum or a drum stick and that meant we would have to make a pause for drugs. Then we would go out on the town and party till 4:00 . It was pretty chaotic but the music was actually pretty good. The guys in this band were all well known characters on the NY scene so it was an insane event everywhere we went. Always to the point of overload. At this time I also had a girl living with me who was from Minnesota, we were living across the street from C.B.G.B.?s. Exciting times but eventually the scene in New York began to go soft, I got tired of people?s concentration on parties and I was missing the intensity in the music of the previous years. I also noticed a decadent trend when the art crowd started inviting the ?Punk? people from downtown to uptown disco clubs. Well that was getting too much for me. The girl I was living with was asking me to move to Minnesota with her and she was telling me all about her hometown Minneapolis. Finally after ?The Primadonnas? self destructed we packed up and drove to Minnesota!
The date was around 1980... Man! You will never know what it was like for me back then to move from the downtown area of New York City to Minneapolis, Minnesota. It was a real shock! Beautiful but different, these people were inviting me to go ice fishing for gods sake.... AND I was wearing Beatle Boots!!! In shopping malls kids pointed at me and said ?Devo?. I guess that's the only ?Punk? thing they knew back then, at the time, because I think Devo was one of the first to get any airplay there and they had a video out. But a wonderful part about moving there was that the people were incredibly friendly. Quite open and different from the snotty NY attitude. After I got used to the slow driving and slow talking natives, being there became a little bit easier on me.
When I arrived I right away went to the cooler small clubs to see what was happening on the local scene. The first band I saw was Husker Du and I was very impressed. Husker Du right away reminded me of my former band Testors. I saw it all as a kind of ?Brotherhood? or shared vision, groups and artists who obviously were more interested in being ?real? than in commercial concessions. I was happy to see this was happening in Minnesota. Later I became friends with the guys in Husker Du, and eventually the bassplayer (Greg Norton) was touring in my band for a while. To me it was amazing that they even knew of the bands in New York because everything was so underground then, style and news traveled slower. The media did not have this ?global? machine like we have these days. Anyway I was very very pleased and excited to see bands in Minnesota that had a similar spirit and energy. It was great because that?s exactly where my head was at. I wound up staying there in Minneapolis with my girlfriend and I eventually found guys to form a band with. We called it ?Sonny Vincent and The Extreme? ( Mike Phillips, Mort Baumann, Jeff Rogers). We did tours of the U.S and recorded some songs in recording studios (songs that only much later saw the light of day). Every few months we would play a show in Minnesota either in Minneapolis or St. Paul. At one of these shows, it was at a club called the ?Upper Deck?, I met Bob Stinson.
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« Reply #5 on: October 30, 2010, 05:00:39 PM »

Sonny Vincent - My Times With Bobby Stinson- Part 2

It was a double bill with my band and The Replacements. After the show Bob came up to me and said ?I want to join your band?. He said he would leave his band and him and I could make a band together. Bob seemed sincere but I had to consider a few things?Bob was in a band that had done a lot of work, they had a very cool album out and just that week they had a fantastic review in my favorite ?New York? newspaper the ?Village Voice?. I figured Bob was probably pretty drunk and I told him ?Hey Bob at this point I?m pretty much screwing around business wise and to me it looks like something is ready to break and go good for you guys, why the hell would you want to quit now??  Bob said, ?Because I want to play your music? - well of course I didn?t go for it and I didn?t encourage Bob to quit his band. I thought the Replacements were a fantastic band, and they deserved everything they were working for. So of course I didn?t take Bobby?s offer and just said ?You?re nuts!!? That was the start of our long friendship...
Later the Replacements kicked Bob out of the band and at that point me and Bob started talking seriously about putting something together. Bob was in various band ?formations? with me (as well as playing and jamming with other Mn. outfits such as ?Static Taxi? and ?The Bleeding Hearts?). In all the formations we put together the dynamic between our playing was usually the same. I was the singer and also played guitar, Bob was the lead guitarist. I would play the basic root chords while Bob would play most of the leads and fills as well as cranking on the chords. His playing was amazing, often genius. But there is a whole story to his playing. To say it in a short form -when he was on- it was unbelievable. Stuff you never heard before. But when he was off he would often not even hit the notes in the right key! This being said, I have to make it clear again that Bob was a guitar genius and a major ?shredder?. Although sometimes inconsistent he played in a way that was magical and ?transcendental?. Big words, but true. The main thing was his feeling and realness within the song. He also played with a ferocious amount of concentrated energy, that would more often than not send a song right over the top.
And another thing that set him apart was his natural kind of ?symphonic? approach when structuring his parts. This set him apart from most players, although his other side of ?chaos? and unpredictability probably alienated people who wanted a more classic conservative approach in their guitar heroes. Playing with Bob was a kind of ?schizo? experience because sometimes it would really be great and other times it could be pretty awfull. A lot of this had to do with alcohol and some of it was just classic ?Bobby??. This legacy of ?Savant-ness? as we called it, and the behavior involved of course existed when he was in The Replacements. Bob told me one story about them playing New Orleans and on this occasion he somehow separated from the group and went to a bar. He got very drunk and then was lost. He didn?t know the name or address of the venue and had to call his girlfriend all the way in Minnesota and say ?Baby, I?m separated from the band and I don?t know where the club is?. So she looks at her copy of the tour schedule and says ?Bob get a taxi right NOW!! You are VERY late for the show!! Get in a taxi and go to number 125 Bourbon Street!!? So Bob does that. He gets in a taxi and the taxi drives him two blocks (a couple hundred meters at the most) and Bob gets out, walks into the club/concert hall where the band is already playing. The audience sees Bob and goes completely crazy, clapping their hands and cheering. He gets up onstage and the audience is ecstatic as Bob plays his incredible killer guitar magic. But people were unaware that the band hated him for this kind of shit. Anyway, this is the baggage I inherited and we formed a band, my adventure with Bob was about to begin! Challenging to say the least.
We formed the group ?Model Prisoners? that went through two lineups. The first thing I noticed was that when Bob was way drunk he often played guitar like he was a beginner so I convinced and even forbid him from drinking before a show. Bob was kinda looking up to me like a sort of big brother figure and he liked it when I laid out rules for him. The problem with Bob not drinking was that when he was completely sober and straight he played even worse!!! I soon found out that Bob was one of these special types of geniuses that could unlock his immense talent only when he had the right amount of alcohol ?lubrication?. If he drank too much it was terrible , if he didn?t drink at all is was worse , but with the right amount of drinks under his belt he was doing brilliant stuff on the guitar that was never heard before. Like as if he was wandering around in the cosmos and bumping into new planets. The second formation of ?Model Prisoners? was myself, Eric Magistad and Jeff Rogers (Jeff had also been in Sonny Vincent and The Extreme with me). Eric was a kid from Minnesota who was totally thrilled to be playing in the band. He was a huge Replacement fan and even carved up his desk in High School with a knife writing-?The Replacements? ?so you can imagine he was on cloud nine when we asked him to play bass! But soon he was becoming very disillusioned... Bob like I said was brilliant and bringing a special element to my music but at the same time he was also showing up drunk to rehearsals. We usually had to drive to his place and wake him up to get him to the rehearsal  room. The routine would go like this. I would drive and pick up Eric first, then Jeff and we would drive to Bobs place. Then we would send Eric up to Bob?s apartment. Bob was usually sleeping off a hang over or watching TV and at first he would tell Eric to ?Fuck Off!!?. He knew if he didn?t come downstairs Eric would have to get me and I would go up there and motivate Bob by either giving him cold coffee or making some action that would irritate him so much that he would figure its easier to get up than be tortured. So usually rather then let Eric get me, Bob would yell at Eric for a few minutes, even sometimes punch him, but he would finally come downstairs. This was always the best scenario because when Bob showed up on his own he was usually pretty tanked.
We played a number of shows together, mostly in the Midwest areas like Minnesota, Wisconsin and places like Chicago. Normally after a show Bob would stay for hours in the girls bathroom (toilet). At first I would say ?Hey, where?s Bob??? Then I would see him later and say ?Hey man, where were you all night?? and he would reply ?In the girls bathroom, that?s were they all go?. That was one of Bobs ?cracked? methods of meeting a girl. Unusual for mankind - but perfect for Bob. Hanging around in the girl?s room saying whacky things! And if he met a girl in the main social area of the club, more often that not he would say as a first sentence of introduction ?Could you lift up your shirt?? Although this never really got much response from women other than disbelief or disgust, sometimes Bob would hit the jackpot and I would observe him from across the room with a wild girl in front of him lifting up her shirt and showing him her tits!! Amazing!!! Something I want to make clear at this point is that I am telling you stories about my friend Bob and being forthright and accurate in order to give you a little glimpse of this man. But in no way am I trying to put him in a bad light or try to make him seem unattractive to his fans or people reading this. I Loved Bob dearly in my heart and I miss him so very much? To be honest you have to know that he was like so many other damaged people in this world?but for all his mistakes and screw ups I can tell you he had a golden soul and a quality of innocence that you rarely find.
Anyway, that being said... Bob also had many juvenile tricks. In the begining, directly after shows he would go to the promoters of the show we and collect the money ?Yeah, Sonny told me to get the cash??before any of us knew what he was doing, he would run off with our gig money and we wouldn?t be able to find him for a week!!! Soon everyone wanted to kick Bob out of the band (Not me but mostly Eric!). I finally had to call Bob and tell him the sad news that the other guys wanted to kick him out. Bob started crying on the telephone saying that we can?t kick him out. He said he loved playing the music and he was sorry for everything... ?But please don?t kick me out?. I got off the phone and decided I would be a fool to kick out a brother who was literally crying tears because he loved music so much. I called everyone in the band and I made a plan for us to go to a therapist together to try to get Bob more healthy and easier to work with. People thought that was pretty funny... a band going to therapy together! But we tried it? It kept us together for a while but still the crazy shit didn?t stop - in fact it got worse. One night after a show in Milwaukee we all took some L.S.D called ?Rambo?; of course suddenly Bob was missing and we had to drive around for 3 hours to find him.  Finally we did and started our journey back to Minnesota. It was the most bizarre drive you can imagine. Bob was grabbing his throat the whole time screaming ?My Adams Apple is in the wrong place but my Mom will fix that with the Devil!!!?.  While we were driving through the vast farmland areas of Wisconson we bagan to calm down a bit.  Bob said: ?Sonny if you can write a song that farmers will listen to while milking cows, it will be a big hit!!?. We started getting crazy again and came up with a lot of perfect ?Cow Milking Songs? as well as all singing every Elvis Presley song for hours. Completely nuts and over the top. We arrived home in Mpls at ?Lyle?s? bar just in time to drink all day. The whole band was BECOMING Bob!!


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« Reply #6 on: October 30, 2010, 05:02:13 PM »

Sonny Vincent - My Times With Bobby Stinson- Part 3


Eventually we simply stopped rehearsing as it was becoming more and more difficult to get Bob out of bed and Eric had become a shattered person. Instead of practicing me and Eric  just started hangin around as pals for a few months going out to clubs and stuff. Then I put together a new line up called ?Shotgun Rationale? as well as joining Moe Tuckers band as her guitarist. My band ?Shotgun Rationale? was doing a lot of tours in the U.S., Canada and Europe and at that point I had given up on the ?Band? concept and we had a ?rotating? line?up ( Bob, Cheetah, Greg Norton, Mort, and many others). I liked it this way because I could invite people into it without any long-term expectations. Later I moved to Europe but still recruited various musicians from New York and Minnesota to join me on Euro tours with ? Shotgun Rationale?. At the time I also did U.S. tours and sometimes visited Minnesota from time to time. Whenever I went to Minnesota I would contact Bob and we would hang out together. He always said ?Hey Sonny you bring all these guys with you to tour Europe but you never ask me!! Come on I wanna tour with ya?!? Finally I invited Bob. We did a tour of Europe together somewhere in the mid 90?s and sure enough it was totally insane. To Bobs credit he really practiced the music hard before the tour, he wanted it to be great..and it was?but it came complete with every sort of crazy madness imaginable!

There are so many examples and I can only name a few here. Everything from Bob copping drugs from an audience member while on stage during our show, to him going into a whorehouse to drink because he would be out of our reach and control in there. Police, puking, broken guitars, blood, nakedness, tears and insane shows. I often get together with friends from those times and I even have to double check with them to see if I am imagining some of the preposterous things.
A mutual friend of mine and Bob?s was Jamie Garner. Jamie actually at one time lived in the same apartment with Bob and years later and I found myself asking Jamie questions like ?Hey Jamie do you remember Bob always ate his meals with two chairs, one chair to sit on and one to put his plate on?? Jamie said ?yeah he did that all the time?  you see I often have to recheck these memories because sometimes they seem too bizarre. Bobby never ate his meals at a table, it was ALWAYS two chairs!!! Bob also had the ability to pull many beers out of his pockets at the best moments. In fact the first day I went out drinking with Bob he even pulled a fried chicken leg out of his pocket and ate it. That?s not so strange but in Bobs case there was always a twist. He pulled an UNWRAPPED fried chicken leg out of his trouser pocket. It was just in there next to his keys and stuff... I guess he was saving it for the perfect moment. There he sat at the bar with me, chomping on that chicken leg. It had pocket fuzz and old tissue on it! Bob was a strange Motherfucker and I guess to an extent so am I, so we got along fine. He was a rare person and I miss him. Sometimes I?m doing something fun and I often think of him and wish he could be there with me. We did many things together, we had side jobs painting houses, we were constantly being pulled over for speeding in my ?59 Cadillac and we were ALWAYS in trouble with the police, but throughout all of this Bob would crack very funny dry jokes.

When Bob first started playing with me he didn't have a guitar. After the Replacements told him he was out,, he sold his guitar and he got a job washing dishes at a dinner on Lake Street. Eventually Tommy his brother lent him  a vintage Gibson SG but after a month or so Tommy needed it back. So for the remainder of our playing together Bob used my second guitar which was a vintage 1970 Les Paul Black beauty, the one I played was a 1969 ( also a black beauty ?Fretless Wonder?). Bob used Dean Markley Strings and I used Ernie Ball. For amps we both had a MARSHALLS (100 WATTS). One time back then I called an old pal, Cheetah Chrome, in New York. I told him about the band I had with Stinson in Minnesota and invited Cheetah to come out and join. I knew it would be a short lived line-up, because both of those guys were on a kind of short fuse at the time, but I also knew it would be a real unique ?once in a lifetime? event getting those two playing in the same band for a while.
So Cheetah came out to Minnesota from N.Y..  He brought a strange white guitar. I don?t remember but I think it was maybe a  modified strat. I could also write a book about Cheetah in Minneapolis, what a crazy mixture that was. In personal matters Cheetah was always a sweetheart but when he went out he would get completely ?off the hook? and cause all kinds of trouble, I stopped letting him borrow my clothes after a while because he would come home to my place after a night of debauchery with my fine ?threads? all chewed up and destroyed!!! Anyway, the rotating line- up of ?Shotgun Rational? rotated it?s way into including both Cheetah from the ?Dead Boys? AND Bob from the ?Replacements?. You can only imagine the mayhem. I remember way before Cheetah arrived in Mpls. Bobby was constantly calling me and asking me ?shop? questions. Bob- ?Oh! What kind of guitar will he bring??  ?Oh, what gauge strings does he use?? Oh, what kind of plectrums does he use??  Finally Cheetah arrived in Minnesota at the rehearsal studio where he stood in front of Bob for the first time, I said ? Bobby Stinson here is Cheetah Chrome?. The first thing Bobby said to Cheetah was ?Bend over!!!? Cheetah really liked that kind of humor and they got along famously. At shows they would reach over each others guitars and then play on each others guitars. What I mean is that they would reach over and would be fingering the chords on the others guitar -while kissing each other on the lips!  No lie!! Very funny stuff and quite a sight to behold!

There isn?t much mentioned in the various writings on the Minnesota music scene about the collaboration between Bob and I. Bob always attributed this to the fact that I was from New York and thus designated as an outsider. To me this is simply another case of journalists trying to re-write history to suit themselves somehow. I guess they are probably boxed inside their own heads and want to write their own version of things. Also at the time I didn?t wear those plaid shirts that everyone and their mothers uncle were wearing in Seattle and Minnesota (Hee! Hee! Now the bands in Minnesota dress like I do!). Anyway, it?s the music that speaks the loudest. Here it is after years in the closet! Certainly it doesn?t feel good to know that without this album release perhaps people would never know of our times together. Bobby and me were really close ?brothers? and he opened his heart to me. I knew for sure how much he loved music because he always expressed that. He once asked me ?Sonny would you die for music?? I didn't know exactly what he meant but from my point of view I said ?no?. Bob then looked at me with a very deep, soulful, yet sarcastic look and said ?Yeha, well I would?. And in some universe where that would be required I knew that Bobby would have died for music. Bobs playing had and will always have a profound effect on music fans and musicians. Whenever and wherever there are young musicians who are looking for real role models of the true RocknRoll feeling and spirit...Bobby will be right there for them to discover and be inspired by.

The last time I saw Bobby was in  a club in Minneapolis called First Avenue. I was on tour as Moe Tucker?s (Velvet Underground) guitarist and I put Bobby on the guest list. A few months before that I had been on tour with Bobby in Europe with one of our ?Shotgun Rationale? line-ups. The last show of our European tour was in a place called Enger, Germany. At this show Bobby was singing with me, together on my microphone, which he knew from past shows was something I didn't prefer. The main reason is that sometimes the singing he was doing didn?t have much to do with the song we were playing. Once in Chicago I warned Bob to never do that again ...and now here he was again, bellowing? like crazy in Enger, Germany. Anyway I swung at him and connected to his neck (later some audience members said they thought that was part of our act, fighting). After I slugged him Bob stayed away from my microphone. But shortly after a few more songs Paul (Paul Smith - Guitar) came up to me and said ?Bobbys naked again!? I looked over to Bob?s side of the stage just in time to see him running naked into the audience. Madness all around but a high octane show never the less.
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« Reply #7 on: October 30, 2010, 05:03:58 PM »

Sonny Vincent - My Times With Bobby Stinson- Part 4
Anyway, back to our last meeting at First Avenue. For some strange reason when we saw each other we ran to each other like a friggin Hallmark greeting card commercial. We embraced and I gave Bob a kiss on the side of his neck (coincidentally right on the same spot where I punched him in Germany!). Then Bob said ??Hey, when is the next round in Europe?? (?round? as in boxing, and ?round? as in touring- the dry humor always), Meaning he was ready for another tour even though the last one was grueling and crap for money. After that show at ?First Avenue? with Moe and Sterling I said goodbye to Bobby, I didn?t know it would be the last time I would see him. Sometimes I get the idea that there must be an Angel up there somewhere that made sure that the last encounter I had with Bob was sweet. It?s so strange that that my kiss landed right where I had previously punched him onstage! Bob was really unique and special, I have tons and tons of sweet, funny and wild of stories about him, he was special and I?m sure all his fans and anyone who knew him as a friend always miss him. God bless you, Bobby.
- Sonny Vincent

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