Meet The Ramones | May 23
Ramones at 50: Celebrating the Band’s Debut Album
By Doug Breté
“Blitzkrieg Bop,” “Beat on the Brat,” “Judy Is a Punk,” and “Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue.”
These songs from The Ramones’ debut album are more valid than ever.
During the band's 1994 Acid Eaters tour, I found myself standing next to Joey Ramone at Nagoya's Diamond Hall. I was wary of the venue, avoiding it because of a technicality that marred an otherwise awesome Halloween party that THE ALIEN Magazine had held there recently. It involved an Aussie, a Japanese guy, his girlfriend, and a concrete block hurtling down a mirrored stairway. And the venue's sign proudly announced "D mond Hall."
The**"i"** was just another casualty of the chaos and the joy.
I was writing a gig interview for the magazine — which eventually, after a lot of detours, has morphed into Nagoya Buzz. I'd been sent to get a few words with the band, and because of the way these things worked back then, that meant standing around backstage until someone pointed you at the right person.
Someone pointed me at Joey.
He was impossible to miss. Six and a half feet of leather jacket and hair, folded slightly at the shoulders the way very tall people sometimes fold themselves in low-ceilinged rooms. The glasses. The long dark hair brushing against an angular nose. He looked exactly like you'd imagine from the album covers and then completely different from what you'd imagined, simultaneously.
What I hadn't expected was how quiet he was.
Not unfriendly. Extremely polite, actually — thoughtful in a way that took a moment to register. But quiet. Almost shy. Standing there in a venue that was going to be extremely loud in about sixty minutes, talking softly, choosing his words.
The incongruity of it started making sense almost immediately.
I say that because the Ramones were never really about aggression. That was a misread. The songs were fast, and the guitars were brutal, and the whole thing hit like a freight train — but underneath it, Joey wrote about anxiety, loneliness, boredom, obsessive love, the specific exhaustion of being alive and slightly at odds with everything around you. I Wanna Be Sedated is funny until you realise it's a panic attack with a pop chorus. The band's humor always had a nervous edge.
Joey wasn't performing music. He was reporting.
Declarative, not explanatory. Here is how it feels. Not here is why.
And standing there watching him talk quietly before a show, the leather jacket the only intimidating thing in the room, I understood something about why the band cut through where everyone else in the mid-seventies was building elaborate cathedrals of sound. While arena rock was constructing mythology, the Ramones were stating facts. Two minutes, three chords, count it off, go. No solos. No mystical seriousness. No wasted time.
Joey Ramone
Joey believed rock music had gotten bloated and self-important. His answer was to strip it back to what actually mattered: the hook, the feeling, the thing you needed to say, delivered at speed before anyone could overthink it.
Simple. But not dumb.
There's a difference.
By the time this Saturday rolls around it will have been 50 years since The Ramones released their debut album on April 23, 1976 — fourteen tracks in twenty-nine minutes, recorded in seven days for $6,400 in a studio inside Radio City Music Hall. Rolling Stone later called it the greatest punk album ever made. It sounded like nothing else that year but changed a lot of music that came after.
Celebrating 50 Years at Rock Bar UK
On Saturday May 23, four Japanese bands are gathering at Rock Bar UK in Hoshigaoka to mark the anniversary properly.
The night is called Meet The Ramones , and it's hosted by URAMONES — a Fukui-based tribute band formed in 2013 whose dedication to recreating a Ramones show has taken them to stages in Tokyo, Osaka, and Fukuoka, and earned them mentions in Ramones-related books and zines published in both the US and UK. Last December they played the official Ramones 50th anniversary event in Tokyo alongside performers who had shared stages with Marky, Richie, and CJ Ramone.
These are not casual fans.
The URAMONES performing Blitzkrieg Bop**__ from the band's debut album:"Ramones"**
The supporting lineup pulls from across the region. Imaike Ramones open the night — the name itself a flag planted in Nagoya's own live music geography, as Imaike is home to the city's densest concentration of live houses. Porkchop Monkey from Nagoya. The Re:mones make the trip from Hamamatsu.
Four bands, four thirty-minute sets, done by 20:45.
Very on-brand.
The Re:mones Performing Psycho Therapy
The venue is exactly right for it. Rock Bar UK sits above street level in Hoshigaoka — a neighborhood rock bar that feels found rather than built, the kind of place where Ramones songs belong. Not polished. Not large. The right amount of loud.
There's something worth thinking about why this specific kind of night survives in Japan when it has largely disappeared elsewhere. It's not nostalgia in the ironic sense — not a costume party, not a retro exercise.
This is genuine commitment to keeping a sound alive because the sound still means something. Walk into enough small live houses in Nagoya and you find ecosystems dedicated to specific bands and scenes with a seriousness that doesn't need explaining. People show up. The room gets loud. Someone yells hey ho, let's go before the first song starts.
Joey would have understood that completely.
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The Details
Meet The Ramones
Venue: Rock Bar UK
Date: Sat, May 23, 2026
Times: Open 17:30 Start 18:00
Price: ¥2,400 ¥600 drink charge
Lineup: 18:00–18:30 今池ラモーンズ Imaike Ramones
18:45–19:15 ポークチョップモンキー Porkchop Monkey
19:30–20:00 Re:mones
20:15–20:45 URAMONES
Address: Sunshine Nishiyamaguchi 2F 3-3 Meito-hondori Meito-ku, Nagoya
Website: http://rockbar-uk.com/
Access
By Subway / Train: Higashiyama Line Hoshigaoka Station (H17) Exit 4
Walk east along Meito-dori for about 7 minutes.
Rock Bar UK is on the 2nd floor of the Sunshine Nishiyamaguchi building.
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