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"Colorado was influenced by what was going on in the rest of the world -- London, in particular," he says from his office in New York City, where he moved after graduating from the University of Colorado at Boulder twenty years ago and has remained ever since. "But Colorado, being somewhat isolated, had its own interpretation of the music that made it somewhat unique. I'm not saying it was great music, or great art, but it is worth documenting."
On the site, Gammage, who played in Boulder punk bands including Joey Vain and the Scissors and the Corvairs during his time as a CU student in the late '70s, pays homage to the Ravers, the Front, the Jonny 3 and the Young Weasels, bands that may not have included gifted musicians but that held their own against records coming out of more established punk-rock provinces. He also credits the then-new Wax Trax as being Denver's first retailer to recognize punk's staying power and long-gone Denver venues Ebbets Field and Malfunction Junction as the ramshackle epicenters of the scene. The last two provided 3.2 beer and loud, beautifully simplistic punk to the people of Capitol Hill; some of them loved it, while others ran screaming for their Fleetwood Mac records, wondering why anyone would stick safety pins through his ears. Which was, of course, the desired effect.
"I would say most of us were inspired amateurs," Gammage says. "A lot of us were reacting to the kind of jammy/hippie stuff that was prevalent at the time. What we were doing was a direct reaction to that.
"It was a very open scene," he adds. "We weren't criticized if we couldn't play very well. For me and a lot of other people, it was a social thing, and it was about just getting into playing music."
Since moving to New York, Gammage has maintained his interest in playing music, though he's cooled on punk. He's released four bluesy-rock records on the French label Last Call, and he fronts a jump-swing band called the Scarlet Dukes. Many of the people whose punk past he hopes to preserve on his site have long since moved out of Colorado as well, and some of those relocations resulted in fairly successful ends: The Ravers recorded two releases for RCA and penned the tune "88 Lines About 44 Girls," which has expanded its once-cultish audience to include viewers of television Mazda commercials; Jonny 3 guitarist Kenny Vaughan moved to Nashville, where he's a session musician and tours with Lucinda Williams, among others; and the Young Weasels' Steve Knutson is an executive with Tommy Boy Records ("A Weasel No More," January 28, 1999).