| Rodney Bingenheimer | |
|---|---|
| Born | Rodney Bingenheimer Mountain View, California, U.S.A. |
| Occupation | Radio Personality |
Rodney Bingenheimer is a radio DJ on the Los Angeles rock station KROQ. He is often referred to as The Mayor of the Sunset Strip,[1] a nickname given to him by actor Sal Mineo during his years as prominent personality in the Los Angeles music scene.
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Bingenheimer was born December 15 in Alameda County and grew up in Mountain View, California. His mother, Marion Taylor Bingenheimer, was involved in obtaining celebrity autographs and obsessed with the world of fame. She dropped a teenage Rodney in Los Angeles and essentially abandoned him. He gravitated to the Sunset Strip around 1965. He auditioned for the Davy Jones part in the Monkees. While he did not get the part, he later doubled Davy Jones in the episode "Prince and the Pauper".
When Bingenheimer arrived in Los Angeles he soon became so well known around Hollywood that actor Sal Mineo dubbed him “The Mayor of the Sunset Strip.” He formed close friendships with the cream of the LA social scene including many top pop stars of the day such as The Byrds and Sonny & Cher, for whom he was a live-in publicist. In his own words, Bingenheimer “became the talk of the town because I had the perfect Brian Jones ‘do’ (hairstyle).”
Many events and incidents contributed to Bingenheimer’s notoriety—he and Sonny Bono were reportedly asked to leave the Hollywood restaurant Martoni’s because of their hippie appearance (prompting Bono to write the song “Laugh at Me”), Bingenheimer brought Brian Wilson to the legendary recording session for Tina Turner’s lead vocal on the Phil Spector classic “River Deep, Mountain High,” and he was ridiculed in a dialogue by the all-girl band The GTOs on their Frank Zappa-produced LP Permanent Damage.
In the late Sixties he was hired by Nik Venet to do publicity for Linda Rondstadt’s group The Stone Poneys, but he became so disenchanted by the LA music scene during this period that he moved to London. It was there that he discovered the nascent British glam rock scene and met emerging stars David Bowie and Rod Stewart.
It was Bowie who suggested that Bingenheimer return to Los Angeles and open a new music club. Originally called The E Club, it opened in October 1972 at 8171 Sunset, near his various West Hollywood apartments,and Bowie was one of the club’s first guests. It subsequently moved to 7561 Sunset and was renamed “Rodney Bingenheimer’s English Disco.” In this guise it became a favorite hangout for many rock stars (and a favored haunt for young female groupies) and through the Disco Bingenheimer introduced much of the Los Angeles music scene to glam rock.
The English Disco also featured occasional live performances, including now-legendary appearances by The New York Dolls and The Stooges in 1973, and it was here that Iggy Pop staged his infamous concert on 11 August 1974, during which he performed an improvised “play” called Murder of the Virgin (in which he was whipped by guitarist Ron Asheton, who was dressed in a Nazi uniform) and which climaxed with Iggy repeatedly slashing his chest with a knife. In October 1974, Jerome T. Youngman and the band Punk performed here with fellow Detroit band Mighty Quick.
Speaking of this period, David Bowie later recalled:
When the club closed in 1975, it was thought that Bingenheimer was so disenchanted with the stylized dance genre disco that he abruptly abandoned his “English Disco,” so as not to be associated with the popular movement. The real reason was less provocative, as Bingenheimer would later clarify:
Due to his far-reaching connections within the burgeoning Hollywood music scene, Bingenheimer was given a show on the then relatively unknown Pasadena FM and AM radio station KROQ, called Rodney on the ROQ, which began in August 1976 and continues to the present day, albeit with some changes in time slots.
His radio show strongly influenced the emergence of the Los Angeles punk scene in the late 1970s and was at odds with the prevailing country-rock style that dominated the West Coast music scene at the time. The show featured the latest punk and New Wave releases from London and New York, alongside “anybody brave or stupid enough to put out a record in Los Angeles,” and Bingenheimer later summed up his programming philosophy:
Bingenheimer is one of the very few DJs on commercial radio in Los Angeles who has autonomy over what he plays. As a result, he has been the first to play many up-and-coming bands, including The Runaways, Blondie, The Ramones, Social Distortion, Van Halen, Duran Duran, Oasis, The Donnas, No Doubt, Dramarama, The Offspring, The Go-Gos, The Germs, The B-52s, X, The Vandals, Buck Brothers, the Sohodolls and others. Many bands, such as Lippy’s Garden knocked on the parking lot door of KROQ’s old studio in Pasadena and handed Rodney a copy of their music. A Lippy’s track was played before they left the tiny Pasadena parking lot.
So it became known in Los Angeles that if he found a track he liked such as Agent Orange’s 1979 hit “Bloodstains,” he would play that song within the hour. In 1978 guitarist Eddie Vincent and drummer Tad of The Hollywood Squares gave Rodney a copy of their just released 45 single at his studio door. Within minutes Bingenheimer introduced the mysterious group to his wide listening audience and played “Hillside Strangler.” The song promptly charted in Record World’s New Wave Hit Parade.
In 1995, Bingenheimer introduced a segment to his show entitled “American in London,” co-hosted by Liza Kumjian-Smith, focusing on news and releases from upcoming British bands, which brought Brit Pop to the US and broke many UK bands such as Coldplay, Doves, Muse, Pulp, and more recently the Arctic Monkeys, among others.
His show has in more recent years been relegated to a midnight to 3:00 a.m. slot on Monday mornings. In 1998, he interviewed the Toronto band Chicklet when they dropped by the station while on tour. This was his first live air interview in years as Bad Religion was said to be his last prior to this occasion.
Bingenheimer was also responsible for three Rodney on the ROQ compilation albums on Posh Boy Records.
Hoskyns, Barney
Waiting for the Sun: Strange Days, Weird Scenes and the Sound
of Los Angeles
(Bloomsbury Books, 2003)
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