April 26, 2024
Visual artists

Remembering Michael Reidy, Musician and Visual Artist


Michael Reidy, visual artist and rock singer from the 1970s D.C. band Razz, died on March 5 from complications of a stroke.

This energetic, charismatic musician’s local fame came largely from his fronting role in Razz, which existed on and off from 1971 to ’79. Reidy co-wrote many of the band’s original songs that showed off his irreverent humor and book smarts, and he gained attention for designing eye-catching artwork for the band’s records and gig advertisements. The Razz opened for the likes of the Ramones, Devo, and Patti Smith, but their own sound was more pre-punk, mixing Rolling Stones swagger with the garage rock and power pop approach of bands such as San Francisco’s Flamin Groovies, whose songs they sometimes covered. Razz’s self-released records received airplay on local radio stations that no longer exist—WGTB and WHFS. Onstage, Reidy commanded attention not only for his strong vocals, but with his distinctive movements, whether moving with the mic stand or swinging his body around. There was also that one time he cut open the band’s bass drum and crawled inside, never missing a note.

The late-’70s iteration of the band featured Doug Tull on drums, Ted Nicely on bass, and guitarists Bill Craig and Abaad Behram. Behram left the band in 1978 and Tommy Keene took his slot on guitar. Razz auditioned for major labels, but they were never signed. Although their 1979 song “You Can Run” was included on the compilation album Declaration of Independents, the acclaim never truly reached beyond the D.C. area. (Though their local impact remains evident: Last year, Jeff Krulik and Richard Taylor’s RAZZ (the) Documentary screened for one night at AFI Silver to a packed house.)

Reidy’s decades-long impact on the local music scene has been well-documented since his death—he played with MWWW in the early ’80s, and with the Howling Mad in the mid-2000s. But he was also a talented visual artist. Over the years, his art was featured in various D.C. galleries. In 2016, American University’s Katzen Art Center opened Twisted Teenage Plot, a group exhibit featuring artworks from visual artists who played in local bands during the late ’70s and early ’80s. Sound recordings and memorabilia from the bands were also included. Reidy was one of the featured artists in an exhibit that documented the interrelationship of D.C.’s visual art and rock music scenes in the 1970s. 

From Unicorn Times, January 1979 issue, Michael Reidy’s ad for the Razz: bottom right

Reidy created provocative ads and flyers for his bands—most famously his Razz gig announcements from the late 1970s that were published in the monthly local arts publication the Unicorn Times. Reidy also created work for punk-rock fanzines The Infiltrator and Capitol Crisis in the late ’70s and early ’80s, in addition to working as an illustrator for City Paper from 1987 to 1996.    





Source link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *