Sunday, March 25, 2018

Grateful Dead

You've been hearing American Beauty in the background for the past couple weeks. It's one of our favorite LPs at 168. (Did you know, if you really study the album cover, you'll see that besides saying "Beauty," the Kelley-Mouse design alternately spells out "Reality." Cool, right. (That's called an "ambigam," by the way.

Anyway, it was on in the shop and then we came across our copy of Anthem of the Sun and got hooked on a Dead standard.

"That's It For The Other One" was for many years a key part of The Grateful Dead experience (after 1971, only the jam/instrumental sections were performed with regularity and referred to instead as "The Other One"). Each new iteration of the song reflected stages in the band's musical development, a proving ground for the band's dynamic musical exploration and experimentation. By 1973, this role was shifting to other songs, most notably "Playin' in the Band," "Eyes of the World," and most notably in the impromptu "Drumz" and Space segments that centered dead shows from as early as 1967, but most notably from the late 70s. "The Other One" began to settle into a more predictable format, exhibiting an ebb and flow of intensity and concentration that more or less matched the creative and dynamic energies of the band. "That's it for the One" in all its formulations was the catalyst for a Dead spirit that lasted into the 90s. It was the song that made The Dead The Dead.



The original suite of tunes, "Cryptical Envelopment," "Quodlibet for Tenderfeet," "Cryptical Reprise") arrived on the scene in a standout performance at the Shrine Auditorium in L.A. on November 10, 1967, though abbreviated versions of the tune appeared even earlier. These early variants and the studio cut itself open with ambiguous, though heartfelt, storytelling; indeed a powerful intro to 1968's Anthem of the Sun:

The other day they waited
their breath was cold and bated
solemnly they stated
he had to die
he had to die...
And all the children learning
from books that they were burning
every leaf was turning
to watch him die
well, you know he had to die...
The summer sun looked down on him
his mother could but frown on him
and all the others sound on him
but it doesn't seem to matter...
And when the day had ended
the rainbow colors blended
his mind remained unbended
he had to die
well, you know he had to die

Then the band delved go into a brief version of "Quodlibet for Tender Feet," which in later versions is expanded into a movement of its own. It's pure psychedelic madness. In the midst of the "Quodlibet" jam, and on the LP all you want is more, comes a first-person account of a classically mind-unbending experience:

Spanish lady come to me
she lays on me this rose
it rainbow spirals round and round
trembles and explodes
left a smoking crater of my mind
I like to blown away
the heat came round
and busted me for smilin'
on a cloudy day."
"comin', comin', comin' around
comin' around...."
"Escaping through the lily fields
when I came across an empty space
it trembled and exploded
left a bus stop in its place
the bus came by and I got on
that's when it all began
Cowboy Neal at the wheel
of the bus to never ever land"
"comin', comin', comin' around, comin' around
comin' around, comin' around....

The storyteller seamlessly hems in the dramatic energy of this first person narrative account:

and when the day was ending
with rainbow colors bendin'
his mind remained unbending
he had to die, he had to die....

The first part, "Cryptical Environment," is an engaging Jerry Garcia piece where verses are sung over a background of Pigpen's mellow organ, Jerry's complimentary guitar and drum fills that frequently mirror the rhythm of the lyrics. The piece temporarily shifts to a heavily processed vocal passage with a pretty psychedelic pop melody that serves as a bridge before returning to a final verse. (Though The Dead were more or less a communal operation, this tiny passage makes it clear that their most promising path to broader recognition would be Garcia’s voice and guitar, a truth that would emerge later on American Beauty.) 


Quickly we move to a brief second passage, "Quadibet for Tenderfeet," an instrumental passage recorded at one of their live performances. The shift is timed to the descending notes of "Cryptical Environment," with the expected final note replaced by the first drum beat of "Quadibet." The timing of that beat is a just teensy bit rushed — much more noticeable than the barely indistinguishable cut that gave George Martin and crew grief on "Strawberry Fields Forever." The shift from one reality to another is surprising at first, as we move from the manufactured stillness of the studio to the acoustically-variable dynamics of a live performance and are vaulted from a gentle tempo into a rocking bash. 

Garcia, Circa 1957
"Quadibet" fades pretty quickly and "The Faster We Go, The Rounder We Get," comes barreling in. The syncopated rhythms and rhythmic shifts are particularly well-executed and the weaving of the vocals during the chorus is terribly exciting. "The Faster We Go" then fades somewhat awkwardly (it was 1968 after all, and this wasn't a Beatles' budget) into a live fragment from the "Cryptical Environment." 

The fourth part is only for true Dead Heads or LSD peakers, "We Leave the Castle," a concoction of beeps, bells, growls, squeaks, noises, creaks and chimes courtesy of Tom Constanten, a friend of Phil Lesh who joined the party to provide piano and this barrage of effects. Again, it's 1968, and all is forgiven. "That's It For The Other One" is one of those Dead songs with a little bit of everything, Cassady, jamming, Jerry's timid vocals, storytelling, musicianship and experimentation. Want more? Better find an acid test.



Wednesday, March 21, 2018

Custom Vans

Several of you have asked if we can customize your Vans with a one of a kind 168 graphic. One of the unique things about 168 is that a tattoo is yours and yours alone. Been in that kind of shop with all the generic tattoo designs? That's not us. At 168, the tattoo design you get is all about YOU, and only you.

Want your 168 Tattoo on a pair of Vans - you got it.


Want a custom design for your custom-made Vans - you got it.


Custom designs are $50, plus the cost of the Vans. 


And just like your tattoo, your Vans will last for-evah!


email us at rick168tattoo@gmail.com

Vans and 168

In 1966, brothers Paul and James Van Doren alongside Gordon Lee and Serge D’Elia opened the first Vans store in Anaheim, California under the name The Van Doren Rubber Company.

Initially, the brothers manufactured the shoes themselves, selling them directly to the public. On their first day in business, the company only had display models in stock, so when customers picked out their Vans, they were asked to come back that same afternoon to pick up their purchase.

Paul and Lee had to then head to the factory to fabricate the shoes, 12 pairs to be exact. The customers came back to the store later in the day to pick up their Vans, but the store didn’t have any change. The Vans team, who were in no position to turn down customers, gave out the shoes and asked the customers to return the following day with their payments – all twelve did so.

The three styles sold in '66 retailed for $2.49 and $4.99 at the time. Wow.

While Vans diversified over the years, was gobbled up by manufacturing giants and then spit back out, the company continues to have a growing share of the market, now manufacturing clothing as well and sponsoring events like the Warped Tour and extreme sporting events like the Vans Triple Crown.

Every old-school surfer dude, like this writer, rotates through his Chucks and his Vans, but now, thanks to 168 and tattoo artist Rick Fichter, there’s a new Van in town!

  

For a limited time only, you can get one of Rick Fichter’s tattoo graphics on a pair of specially designed Vans that pair the iconic flair of original Vans and the artistry of 168’s Rick Fichter.

If you are interested in ordering a pair, send an email to 168 at rick168tattoo@gmail.com and 168 will respond within 24 hours. The 168-styled vans as shown are $125.00. 

Tell Me Honestly That You Don't Need These!

Friday, March 16, 2018

Tattoo Tech

Rick Fichter: A tattoo machine consists of a handheld needle gun that penetrates the skin at a rate of 3000 cycles per minute, not unlike a sewing machine. The needles differ in size and shape and are bundled together on a needle bar in patterns depending on the requirements of the artwork. The unit is attached to a power supply that is activated by depressing a foot pedal on the floor beside the workstation. 

Before the tattoo machine was invented or even a thought, ancient cultures used tools like rose thorns, sharks teeth, and pelican bones to push pigments into the skin. Natural pigments like red ochre and soot were used to provide color. In a tattoo ritual, the Maori, in what is today New Zealand, used a chisel made of bone to cut lines and shapes in the skin. After the lines were cut, the Maori tapped the chisel, with the edge dipped in pigment, into the lines.

The first electric tattoo machine was invented, unknowingly, by Thomas Edison. In 1876 Edison received a patent for the electric pen. While carbon paper goes back to the early 19th century, it was impossible for an individual to make more than a few copies of a letter or document at a time. The electric pen used a small motor to drive a needle up and down the shaft of the pen. As the user wrote, the pen created a stencil that could be easily copied. In essence, like having a printer. Patents for tattoo machines were filed less than ten years later by different individuals, each adding their own improvements.

Samuel O’Reilly is credited with the “electric pen”, a device built from the Edison blueprints in 1891. The only thing O’Reilly changed from the Edison version was that he added an ink reservoir.  The machine we use today was first patented by Charlie Wagner, which was called a dual coil reciprocating engraver, especially made for tattooing. While Wagner's invention has stood the test of time, some 130 years, there's a new kid in town. 

With absolute control and accuracy in mind, Cheyenne has introduced the biggest innovation in the tattoo industry – the Cheyenne Hawk Pen. This rotary machine is specially designed to closely resemble an actual pen, which will facilitate even more precise tattoo procedures than before. 

Tech? I know right? Those of you who know me are wondering if it's another Invasion of the Body Snatchers; like the Pod People have taken control over Old School Rick. I mean, maybe... First, it was my iPad Pro, now a whole new inventory of high tech rotary tattoo engravers that are easy to sanitize and are less painful for the canvas.

Oh my God, what will happen in the next exciting chapter of The Further Adventures of Rick Fichter? An Apple Watch? A Prius? No... calm your heart. Just even better tattoos.

Wednesday, March 14, 2018

Calligraphy - Part 2


Calligraphy

As we get better and more consistent with our postings, 168 wants to remain entertaining and informative. Below you’ll find the first in a series of video posts on the Tattoo process. One of the first things a tattoo artist needs to master is lettering, essentially creating a style that’s all his own. My style has a west coast vibe to it, reminiscent of the Chicano still prevalent in L.A. The Sailor Jerry style is quite different (having a Polynesian flair with Navy traditional), and New York style has a harder edge to it. I’ll post Part 2 maƱana.  

Tuesday, March 13, 2018

More on the Tapers

Tapers are a different breed of music fan. They show up at concerts with a suitcase and claim their spot, usually FOH (Front of House). Up goes a microphone with a tiny umbrella. The Taper section looks like Area 51. Tapers are the first to arrive, and the last to leave and they're passionate about sound, particular about their recording equipment.  Today it's digital, but back in the day it was Maxell Vs. TDK. Cassettes vs. DAT. Taper philosophy and etiquette was never to charge for copies (covering postage is acceptable); profiting from the recordings was and is strictly taboo. The practice of allowing taping and utilizing the tapers as a promotional strategy is known in the business world as Inbound Marketing, with companies like Dell and Pepsi only now catching on.

And it all goes back to The Dead in 1967. So how did a group of musicians from San Francisco transform marketing and become social media pioneers? Essentially, The Dead made a series of important choices to separate themselves from everyone in their industry, making difficult and unpopular decisions along the way, such as allowing fans to tape concerts or creating special tickets and access for fans.  

The concept of the freemium model is to give away valuable information to attract a larger base of prospective customers with a percentage of them willing to pay for a premium product or service. This approach is at the core of inbound marketing and describes the evolving marketing funnel for many businesses today. It’s a bastardization of the Dead ideal, but remains a pretty sophisticated approach from a collection of misfits and miscreants.

The Dead, one of the most iconic and successful rock bands of its era, achieved elite success with only one top 10 song (which didn't come until we got our MTV). Instead they succeeded by building a word-of-mouth network of fans powered by free music. The Dead understood that it was about the experience that the music provided, which in itself served as a role model for living a creative life.  The Dead model was so successful, it’s taught in business schools and codified in books like Marketing Lessons from the Grateful Dead.

Those internal, seemingly instinctual tenets of business created a multi-million-dollar industry without industry in mind. According to the Dead Model: 1) The most important thing is playing and creating. Everything else is secondary. 2) Work is a family affair. It’s important to shelter, support and share with a larger community. 3) Money plays second fiddle to living the kind of life one wants to live. According to Jerry, “You can build your own economy.” 4) Accept the hazards and finger-pointing as a small hindrance of living differently. 5) Push the envelope whenever possible. 6) Build a scene. These beliefs added up to a worldview that aligned with the values of the hippies and flower children of the ‘60s who intended to reshape the country and the world in their image. Pretty powerful stuff. It certainly didn’t hurt that the world was ready to think differently the moment the Dead first administered the acid test.

The Grateful Dead pioneered community-building in a lot of ways but mostly by thinking of their fans as part of the band, not separate from it. The Dead’s fans wanted to record each show, so the band let them by creating special “taper’s sections” in the audience. They encouraged peer-to-peer tape exchange by their fans, which attracted an even larger base of paying attendees, essentially pioneering the “freemium” content model.


Everything the Dead did was to assure that the band lived the life they wanted to lead, making them beholden only to their creativity and fans — not a bad template for the rest of us.

Monday, March 12, 2018

A Day in a Life at 168

Tattoo 168 isn’t your typical tattoo shop.  The studio is chock full of trinkets and kitsch, from Mid-Century Modern wall clocks to chalk-ware saints. When a client enters the shop it’s like Alice’s looking glass into another dimension, a different world where enamel Firestone signs mesh with prints of big-eyed urchins. No doubt about it, Tattoo 168 has style.
 
It’s not unusual for a canvas to lug an eight-foot antique crucifix into the shop as trade for a “full sleeve.” And Rick is ready to barter: “I dunno, man; black and white half-sleeve and you got a deal.” Rick and his wife, Leah, know their stuff. Sure, a client bearing the weight of crucifix is surreal, but sometimes it’s an unopened box of New Kids on the Block trading cards that closes the deal.

Although a “traditional” tattoo parlor, it’s the personal touch that sets apart Tattoo 168.  Clients meet with Rick during the day and then schedule private one-on-one sessions for the actual tattooing.  It’s then that the shop comes alive with stories woven in and around the tattoo session, but it’s not so much about the sentimental, but the paths we all take to get where we are, what led to the tattoo, the process, the art, the permanence - the humanity that brings together artwork and skin.

And Rick’s a character, no doubt: artist, tattooist, bike fabricator, entrepreneur, marketing genius, former millionaire, baseball coach, father, husband and picker. 168 is a whirlwind of color and colorful people, rich storytelling, ink and antiques. “One man’s junk is another man’s treasure” just doesn’t say enough.

Saturday, March 10, 2018

The Tapers

Rick Fichter: So a canvas walks in and I ask him, what’s the story behind your idea?  He gets nervous and takes off.  I mean, I work one day, one tattoo, you don’t want to lose business, but a tattoos more than a splatter of ink on skin.  A great tattoo holds meaning, tells a story, has a voice. So I went pickin’.  Old junk holds meaning, tells a story, has a voice. 

I found a box of cassettes. The girl had spent a lot of time decorating the boxes. I'd say it was a girl, young in the 80s; just a guess. One was from a Taper, or maybe just a Deadhead with a recorder. I remember those days. It was Karma at a Dead Show, the interplay of intertwining fates, the spiritual law of cause and effect. I was a taper, this subculture of Deadheads who recorded shows and traded them. Story goes, Jerry was at Phil's and opened a big dictionary. He saw “Grateful Dead” in big, black letters staring up at him.  “That’s it,” he said.  The name is from a folktale about a wanderer who hears that a pauper died but can’t be buried till his debts are settled, so the traveler pays the debts and continues on his journey.  That night on the highway he’s threatened by thieves when out of nowhere a stranger appears to frighten them off.  It’s the pauper’s ghost, of course, the grateful dead. 

The stories make everything cool.

It’s that kind of spirit that kept us coming back, the tapers, the Church of Unlimited Devotion, spinning like Sufis to Gerry’s twangy guitar, the dragon chasers. I saw them at the Cow Palace and Winterland and JFK, anywhere, everywhere.  I haven’t been able to pin it down, 188 times, maybe. 

I met a guy.  His name was Bran. He heard one of my tapes and said, “That sounds like shit.” It didn’t, not to me. I was there, it takes me there, I can go back again when I want.

There are no bands like that anymore. Can’t break new ground when the grounds already broke.

Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Rick on Tech

Technology has finally taken me by storm. The old method was draw, draw, draw: overlays, tracing paper, colored pencils, markers, every gadget you could imagine to make a drawing come to life. Then to the airbrush station; then to the painting: watercolor, oils, acrylics. But with the addition to my arsenal of the new iPad Pro and the Mac 1 pencil this system, it's now a far simpler task. Getting used to everything is a little bit difficult, but all in all, it's incredible what can be done - the same art with just one tool. The graphic is my first "painting" on the iPad Pro. I can put it up for sale; I can post it to Facebook; I can send to Instagram. I can reproduce it on big canvas. it’s high resolution and I can alter it, pull out the color or create a tattoo stencil. It’s the most amazing product I’ve ever used.


From This                                   to                                                 This