This was his second single. 1987. This version is the unavailable MAXI single so don’t worry about re-starting it. Rick has a great voice. I met his wife. We worked together in Africa on a movie project. How weird.
I love this song. The production of PWL is like highly glossed and polished popcorn. I love popcorn.
I hope you’re saving all these mp3’s. Who knows what will happen to this blog after I go to jail for posting them.
Check out the PWL website. If you love the sound and if you need to know even more about every little thing, you will love the archive.
I realize my fashion styling aesthetic owes almost everything to Ray. The pictures Ray styled is where I learned a little thing called “how to.” His looks seem very relevant today. But what do I know about fashion these days? I’m old school…and I love it (eyebrow raise) I think of Ray’s Buffalo Style when I put a suit jacket over a hooded sweatshirt. That’s a good look. Ray made it right to try my souvenir African beaded necklace with my new Prada masterpiece that I found for under 5 on 14th street.
All these years later the end of Ray’s too short reign as a style vanguard remains a rotten and sad thing. I think – “I hate AIDS.”
I wish he was still alive because if he was, whatever he would be doing today would be correct, inspired, inspiring and one hundred percent real (a quality you rarely see in fashion.) Truth be told, I would most likely be doing the same as Ray stylistically because when there is a genius you follow him. That’s called devotion. I honor Ray Petri with every pushed up sleeve, every good hat tilted to the back and every attempt at some new conceptual look that fails miserably and I do so with the grateful knowledge of where the impetus to try for greatness comes from. Ray left us a very high mark to aim at.
Now, stop crying over dead stylists, get out your Doc Martins and LEARN.
Buffalo is one of the most influential styles in fashion; the founders were essentially Ray Petri, photographers Jamie Morgan, Cameron McVey and Mark Lebon, and Mitzi Lorens. And later on includes Nick Kamen (of Levi ad fame) and his brother Barry, as well as Neneh Cherry and Naomi Campbell and Ray Petri was the vision leader of the gang. Petri brought street fashion into the mainstream when before it was just all about power dressing. Ray turned his back on designer clothes. He pioneered the DIY post-punk styling. Ray believed that you can re-create all of these looks from thrift shop clothes and stuff that you’ve borrowed from your grandparents. Petri’s look took bits and pieces of Britain’s post-punk ’80s: East Indians, blacks, punk whites, rude boys, mods, ragamuffin Jamaicans, New Romantics and boxers, and tossed them into an exotic whole. His revolutionary ideas spawned a generation of designers.
The Buffalo phenomena infiltrated pretty much everything, from ad campaigns to style magazines, all the way from the street to high fashion.
Photographer Jamie Morgan in one of his interviews on Showstudio said “What Buffalo did was to try to create its own agenda outside the fashion system. We were interested in the images and the attitude. Yes, we loved the style and the fashion but that was just part of it. We would use an Armani jacket because we liked the cut, not because of the label. What Buffalo helped to create was a force outside the establishment.”
Who would forget the image of Nick Kamen in a leather skirt, boys in Doc Martens and their underpants, ring-scarred black boxers in nursery-pink bobble hats, Armani suit jackets, boxing gear, and flags wrapped as sarongs, headlines ripped out and pinned to lapels. It was fashion with an attitude.
Ray Petri pioneered an aesthetic that brought the natural style of men of African descent to the forefront of fashion, adding sensuous androgyny with hardcore urban survival edgy-ness. Petri brought black models into the limelight, discovering Naomi Campbell at 14 and Neneh Cherry before her first recording. In fact using black models and models of other races was something pioneered by Ray, “no one had done it before.” “It was about the face, as they would say, ‘Start with the face and the rest falls into place” said Mitzi Lorenz one of the founder of Buffalo.
Unfortunately Ray Petri died from AIDS in 1989. Fashion may come and go, but style, as Buffalo will show you, lives forever.
Photos by Jamie Morgan
Photos by Viramontes
Photos by Eamon McCabe, Styling by Stephan Linard
“the harder they come – the better”
Ray Petri, The Face, March 1985
Here are some of the current photographers that have been greatly influence by Petri’s Buffalo style:
Alasdair Macllelan
Photos by Carter Smith
Photos by WillyVanderperre
So to end this post I will leave you with 2 videos that I think sums up the Buffalo Style- Nenneh Cherry’s Buffalo Stance and Nick Kamen’s “Each Time You Break My Heart”.
This has always been a dancefloor favorite of mine. After watching the video I remembered that I did the make-up for it. Wondress – an unsung talent. Kurtis Mantronik? – well, let’s just say I used to get very nervous around him. I mean, look at him…
It has come to our attention here at Billy Beyond Dot Com that the entire musical catalog of Malcolm Mclaren deserves a thorough re-listening to. The time is now. Remember when Hip-Hop was fun? Personally I was wopping and cabbage patching to this stuff at sorority dances in Ohio before my relocation to the Capitol of The World ( …sigma, sigma,sigma!.) I imagine Cleveland girls still know what time it is. The World Famous Supreme Team was hours of endless inspiration and my personal fave act in Mclaren’s stable of talent.
It’s the sound I like, so I’m not complaining. This is the Scott Storch sound from Girls Like Shoes. This track is called Angel. If you’re #lookingforlyrics you may be #slightlydisappointed. #justenjoythefeeling
Please don’t ask what the lyrics mean. Nobody asks what the odd language in the Bible means, people just act like they know and assume it means something very deep and meaningful.
Brown girl in the ring
Tra la la la la
There’s a brown girl in the ring
Tra la la la la la
Brown girl in the ring
Tra la la la la
She looks like a sugar in a plum
Plum plum
Show me your motion
Tra la la la la
Come on show me your motion
Tra la la la la la
Show me your motion
Tra la la la la
She looks like a sugar in a plum
Plum plum
All had water run dry
Got nowhere to wash my cloths
All had water run dry
I got nowhere to wash my cloths
I remember one Saturday night
There we sat down. There’s something so unique about lyrics in English as a second language. I wish I could forget English and learn it again. Click the pic and see them in their Ancient Greek look.
This is what you have been waiting for. It is not entirely what you remember. It is quite a bit of fluff and fanfare before we get to “rah rah ras-pyoo-teen.” Ohhhh but after we do……..