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Rebel Rebel

In John Varvatos’s world, music and fashion combine to create a lifestyle brand for those about to rock.

by Deborah L. Martin photography by Andrew Matusik

 

JOHN VARVATOS IS A ROCK AND ROLL guy, and he arrives at his Bowery flagship store
for our 8 am call time looking the part: skinny jeans, leather jacket, stone-cold stare. It’s clear that he hasn’t been in the store in a while and he busies himself with his team, doing some merchandising. “I don’t want these shirts like this. People don’t shop this way.” He’s walking around the store doing something that people who know retail understand. He is shaking things up. When we sit down to talk, I nd that this is a phrase he uses often, and it’s something he is proud of. “In my company, we hire a lot of young people, in the design studio, in sales, in the stores. It’s inspiring to be around. I’m someone who loves change and I’m so in there with them. I just want to shake shit up. I say it all the time, it’s in my DNA.”

 

Rebel Rebel
John Varvatos by Andrew Matusik

 

As it turns out, the stone-cold stare is the public face, and behind that is a warm, funny guy who is a bit verklempt, and grateful, for the way his life has turned out.

John Varvatos the brand, and John Varvatos the man are both known for their rock and roll edge—from the musicians who have appeared in his ad campaigns to the New York flagship location in the former home of CBGBs, Varvatos has managed to weave his passions together in a way that eschews the normal ebb and ow of “fashion.” He says, “Music was my energy force as a young kid growing up in Detroit, in a 900-square-foot home with seven people. My escape was to put my headphones on—it transported me someplace else.” That love of music is the baseline for everything he does.

“I don’t really use the word fashion,” he says. “I talk about style. Our designs are inspired by my sense of rebelliousness and toughness, which is what rock and roll stands for.” He knows his customer. “Our guys range from Wall Street and business people to music artists, but they all have that creative bone.” He continues, “We don’t think about fashion of the moment. For me, style is more timeless. Our customer doesn’t need something obvious. They are the anti-obvious.”

And what about those musicians?

“They are probably the smallest part of our business, but thank goodness we have them, because they add a cool vibe.” Varvatos has called on some of those rockers to star in his ad campaigns. “All those people have become friends. They do it because they want to be associated with the brand. There’s no real money of any consequence attached to it, but they like the association, they like me, and we have a relationship. Like anything else, it has to be good for everyone. and it is good for them, as well.”

 

Rebel Rebel
John Varvatos by Andrew Matusik

 

The list of names who have appeared reads like a list of inductees at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Ziggy Marley, Ringo Starr, Kiss, Iggy Pop, Chris Cornell, Alice Cooper, Dave Matthews, Questlove, ZZ Top, Jimmy Page—the star-studded roster goes on and on. Varvatos says, “The guys from Kiss invited me to their farewell tour, and it’s the friendship that’s important. The thing I’m proudest and most humble about is that they consider me one of their own, and not just some fashion guy that’s trying to get rock stars to be in his ads.”Varvatos isn’t just “some fashion guy.” He started in Midwest sales for Ralph Lauren in 1983, and moved his way up the ladder, eventually taking a design post in New York. In 1990, he joined Calvin Klein, where he launched the menswear collection, the cK brand, and the hugely successful underwear line, in the process gifting the world with Mark Wahlberg in boxer briefs (which he invented by cutting the legs o long johns). After a short stint at London Fog, he rejoined Ralph Lauren as vice president in charge of men’s design for all Polo Ralph Lauren brands. In 1998 he joined Nautica Enterprises, who agreed to back his own brand, which launched in 1999

“These were great learning places for me.

I’m still close with Ralph and Calvin, and they respect what I do. When your mentors give you cred, it’s a humbling thing.” He chokes up a little when he says, “My wife ran into Ralph in the park and he told her, ‘I’m so proud of John, he really did what he said he was going to do.’”

He views the brand as a culture, and the Bowery store—once the site of one of the most infamous clubs in music history, CBGB & OMFUG—is a big part of that culture. “We are really thrilled with the people who come to visit the store because of its history. They want to come in and hang out and it’s all about the culture. That’s why we do concerts in the space. We clear out all of the clothes and turn it into a club again.”

 

Rebel Rebel
John Varvatos by Andrew Matusik location WTC 3

 

In addition to the clothing, there is also the punk documentary produced with Iggy Pop, a music label, the annual Love Rocks concert for Gods Love We Deliver, relationships with AMFAR and Stuart House in LA, and a brand new tequila launch with friend, Nick Jonas. “I started the music label about four years ago, with Universal and Republic records. We signed the Zac Brown Band, and we had a multi-platinum album right out of the gate.” After leaving Universal, Varvatos teamed up with Scott Borchetta and created Big Machine John Varvatos Records. The label’s first band is a young group called Bad ower. Varvatos says, “They are one of the most incredible bands I’ve heard over the last 10 years. I was in LA in the spring and the kids were lining up for four hours before the show because they wanted to get the best place in the theater. When I saw that I had goosebumps. For me, it’s about helping young artists and their voice.” The label has just added another band out of Wales called Pretty vicious.

Varvatos friendship with Nick Jonas goes back to a dinner party where they were seated together.

“We realized we had a lot in common, including a love of tequila. The next day he called me and said ‘I’m in the recording studio and I’d like to play you some of the new music.’ When I got to the studio, there was a bottle of tequila sitting on the soundboard. For the next few hours, we drank tequila and talked about life.” The friendship developed into a fashion and fragrance collaboration and just this summer, villa One tequila was born. Varvatos says, “I’m proud of it, and of my friendship with Nick. He’s half my age but he has the heart and soul of someone who is much older.”

 

Rebel Rebel
John Varvatos

 

The success of the brand, and his passion for music have taken him on a wild ride. “To quote the Grateful Dead, it’s been a long strange trip. It was never a plan.
I wanted to be a musician but I wasn’t a good musician, I didn’t have a great voice. But I lived through the music and organically this happened.” He continues, “We didn’t even talk about rock and roll when we started the brand. And then suddenly Jimmy Page is calling and telling me he’s coming to New York and says he loves my stuff and wants to meet up. These people become friends because we have a similar core ethos.”

Varvatos is at the top of his game, enjoying the adventure, challenging himself and his brand. “Success isn’t just about the product. It’s about what you do that’s different from the rest. If you don’t do something different, there’s no reason for being. I am so blessed. I get to do all of these cool things that I never could have dreamed of as a kid. I’m so blessed.”

 

 

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Culture Entertainment Music

Guitar hero Steve Stevens on his Dec. gigs with Kings Of Chaos, New York City, Billy Idol & more

Steve Stevens / Photo: Charles Jischke
Steve Stevens / Photo: Charles Jischke

As a successful musician for decades, Steve Stevens has a lot of claims to fame. As Billy Idol’s long-time guitarist, he co-wrote most of the Idol anthems still regularly heard around the world. He won a Grammy for his work on the “Top Gun Anthem” from the hit Tom Cruise movie. He has played on recordings by Michael Jackson, P!nk, Diana Ross, Joni Mitchell and Robert Palmer, to name a few key artists. Steve was also featured on the E! reality show Married To Rock as his wife Josie was one of its stars. In turn, it is not surprising that Steve has his own signature guitar via Knaggs Guitars, a signature amplifier via Friedman Amps, and signature guitar pickups via Bare Knuckles.

In 2016, Steve is still at it with Billy Idol; a new album, Kings & Queens On The Underground was released in October 2014. Notably, Steve also hits the road often as a guitarist in Kings Of Chaos. An all-star band featuring members of Guns N’ Roses, ZZ Top, Linkin Park, Slipknot and Stone Temple Pilots, Kings Of Chaos has gigs in the area this month. KOC can be seen at Montclair’s Wellmont Theater on Dec. 17, the following night at Long Island’s The Paramount, and a few days later at Irving Plaza on Dec. 21. In addition, Steve has a new solo album in the works.

Downtown caught up with Steve — a native New Yorker who lived downtown for years — for an interview via phone. More info on Steve and his upcoming shows with Kings Of Chaos can be found at www.kingsofchaosband.com.

I know that you were born in Brooklyn. Where in Brooklyn did you grow up?

Steve Stevens: I was born in Brooklyn, but my parents moved just to Far Rockaway by the time I was one and a half, two, so I grew up in Rockaway.

And you lived there until you moved to Manhattan?

SS: Yeah, pretty much so. By the time I was 16…I was in a cover band so I kind of moved out…The band was based in Ozone Park, Queens, so I’ve kind of lived in every borough of New York.

You and Billy first met in Manhattan?

SS: The band I was in before Billy Idol was managed by Bill Aucoin, who was the manager of KISS. And he had just brought Billy over from London. So I was still living actually, by then I was living in Kew Gardens, where my parents had moved to, so when I met Billy I was living there.

And where in Manhattan did you live over the years?

SS: My first place was on Jane Street over between West and Washington, so I was like right in the middle of Greenwich Village. And then I moved to Bleecker and Broadway, and I lived there until I moved to Los Angeles.

And when was it in your career that you moved to Los Angeles?

SS: I came out to do reunite with Billy, he had moved to L.A. And this is 1992, I believe…Different plan, let’s get together and do a record and I came out. Originally I was in a hotel, and I went into a residential hotel and got my first apartment, but I decided to live in L.A. officially like 20 years ago.

What was it that made you move out there? Was it just work or had you gotten tired of the weather here?

SS: Weather was never a factor, but a lot of musicians had moved out to L.A. and had started to…People would call to work with them, let’s say like Duff McKagan or someone, and everyone had a home studio and I thought, “Well that’s really cool, I want an environment at home that I could work in.” It seemed like a really hard thing to do in Manhattan, you always had to put money in the pockets of somebody else who had a recording studio, and I thought, “Well, I’d rather invest in it myself.”

And the environment, there just seemed to be a lot of musicians that I knew from New York that moved out here by then. New York is such a night city and stuff, and I’d made the decision to get sober as well, and I thought, “Well this is probably going to be so much easier, I can get In too much trouble in New York.” (laughs)

Sure. Do you remember the first venue that you ever played in Manhattan.

SS: Here in Manhattan we played Great Gildersleeve, which was the club right down the street from CBGB.

And then what was the first New York venue that you played with Billy?

SS: Max’s Kansas City. We played unannounced. We had found out it was closing and Billy had some friends who were [playing]…and we arranged to play unannounced. Because it was really important to us to play Max’s before it closed, so that was the very first Billy Idol gig.

So you have these East Coast dates with Kings Of Chaos. I understand that Billy Idol and you have some dates coming up in Vegas. What’s the next like six to twelve months looking like for you?

SS: Idol and I, we did our Vegas residency this year at the House Of Blues, which was just fantastic…We pulled out a lot of more obscure tunes off our records and when you’re in one venue for that long, you really gets to hone your show down. You get your lights exactly the way you want them. So we return to Vegas in March next year and I’m going to start recording another solo record…That kind of got put on the backburner for 2016, so that’s one of my priorities and I’m planning on doing a solo tour in Europe in April, and we’re just getting the dates together for that.

Do you have any hobbies when you’re not doing music?

SS: Hobbies…I don’t know, I do all the kind of same things that people like to do, I love films and all that kind of stuff, and my wife and I are a year overdue on a vacation, so we’re just now trying to find out where we’re going to go on vacation and kind of recharge our batteries.

Well, thinking about that for a second. You know a lot of people would go to Vegas for a vacation but that’s more of a working city for you and then you’re from New York and you live in Los Angeles. So you’re the kinds of people that would look to go somewhere remote?

SS: Yeah, absolutely. We try to get off the grid as much as possible.

Is there anything that you miss about New York and not having lived there for 20-something years?

SS: Yeah, I mean, the energy of the city is amazing and when I go to New York now I do all the things I used to make fun of tourists for doing, like going to Broadway plays. I guess growing up in New York, I went to High School Of The Performing Arts in Manhattan. So I kind of overlooked a lot of the things that Manhattan has to offer. So now when I go back, I make it a point to like hit up new restaurants and catch plays and things like that.

I think what I miss most is New Yorkers’ personalities because people will tell you exactly how they feel, and there’s not as much backstabbing. If somebody is pissed off at you, they’re going to tell you and you’ll either work it out or part ways or whatever. But I like the directness of New Yorkers…There’s an energy about New York that nowhere else has.

So finally, Steve, any last words for the kids?

SS: For the kids, yeah. People, come out and see Kings Of Chaos…Primarily we do it for the fun and just the catalog is just incredible and some of the players. And come on, just seeing Billy Gibbons and myself onstage, trading off solos and stuff. It’s a once-in-a lifetime experience.

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Culture Music

Lynyrd Skynyrd’s Gary Rossington talks new album “Take It On Faith,” New York, Skynyrd, Cameron Crowe & more

Gary Rossington / Photo: Travis Shinn
Gary Rossington / Photo: Travis Shinn

As a founding guitarist of Lynyrd Skynyrd — a Jacksonville, Florida band formed in the 1960s — Gary Rossington had sold many millions of albums. Songs co-written by Gary (e.g. “Sweet Home Alabama,” “Don’t Ask Me No Questions,” “What’s Your Name?”) are still played on countless radio stations, while Skynyrd continues to tour the world. Simply put, Lynyrd Skynyrd is in rare company, not only as into the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame, but based on how many key artists have covered the group’s music; Metallica, Alabama, Kid Rock, Garth Brooks and The Drive-By Truckers are just a few of those influenced artists.

Gary Rossington has stayed musically-active beyond his Skynyrd responsibilities, not only guesting on other artists’ recordings, but also as part of Rossington with wife Dale. Dale first collaborated with Gary in 1977 when opening for Skynyrd as part of 38 Special. Their collaborating continued in the 1980s while Gary was part of the Rossington Collins Band; Dale would go on to earn the moniker of “First Lady Of Southern Rock.” 10 years in the making, and just released last week, Take It On Faith is the new album for Gary and Dale. Beyond the aforementioned Rossingtons, Faith features cameos from ZZ Top’s Billy Gibbons, Little Feat’s Richie Hayward, and Delbert McClinton.

Downtown had the privilege of conducting with Gary on the eve of the release of Take It On Faith. More on Gary and Dale Rossington and their new album can be found on the website of the Loud & Proud record label.

Where was the first gig you ever played in New York? What do you remember about it?

Gary Rossington: It was just so long ago I’m trying to remember…I think we actually opened for Al Kooper’s blues project, I guess it was Capitol Theatre.

Any plans to tour in support of your solo album?

GR: Not as of now, but if we get a lot of offers or something comes along that is worthwhile, we will!

When you wrote Take It On Faith, did you know that it was going to be the name of your album? Or at least the focal point of the album?

GR: No, we actually thought one of the harder rock or blues songs would be it, but our record company picked this one because It fit in with our beliefs and everything that was going on at the time.

Do you have a favorite song on the new album?

GR: “Dance While You’re Cookin’” because that’s a real fun one.

Gary & Dale Rossington, 1982 - Photo: Mary Rossington
Gary & Dale Rossington, 1982 – Photo: Mary Rossington

Did you know all along that you were going to have so many guests on Take It On Faith, or did that happen organically?

GR: Yeah, just happened by coincidence, but also by getting people as they were in and out of the studio where we recorded.

Lynyrd Skynyrd was a big part of the storyline of the TV show Roadies. Was that something you were at all involved with?

GR: No, but I was asked by Cameron Crowe to put music to it. There was one episode about us but I was having health problems at the time and couldn’t make it. It was kind of weird to see when you’re in a band, it wasn’t quite like that. It wasn’t real to me.

Did you find that there was a renewed interest in Skynyrd after Roadies told the band’s story?

GR: No, I did not notice, that but I was touring really hard and not really catching up with that. I love Crowe, no disrespect for him.

Is there anything that you think people often get wrong about Lynyrd Skynyrd and its history?

GR: Not that I can think of right off, because there are so many different versions out there, and things people say throughout.

Gary & Dale Rossington / Photo: Travis Shinn
Gary & Dale Rossington / Photo: Travis Shinn

Is there something that you are still aiming to accomplish as a musician?

GR: Just to get better, play better, write better songs — that’s my goal.

Do you have a favorite cover version of one of your songs? Personally, I can’t get enough of Metallica’s version of “Tuesday’s Gone,” which I believe you played on.

GR: Yeah I love that one, let’s pick that one. Also, Shinedown did a great cover of “Simple Man.”

When not busy with music, how do you like to spend your free time?

GR: I like to fish and I have two grandkids who are half-grown, almost in their teens, so I like to go and watch them play sports.

Do you have a favorite restaurant or destination in New York?

GR: Jackson Hole — we have a place in Jackson Hole, Wyoming also, so we like to stop there in New York City.

Finally, Gary, any last words for the kids?

GR: Work hard and know your own business.

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Culture Events Music

Wall Street Rocks Is Back!

wall-street-rocks-resize

Wall Street Rocks is back and this year, it’s going to be bigger and better than ever! On Monday November 10th, the concert event will take over the Highline Ballroom in Lower Manhattan for a night of music, festivities and fundraising.

Wall Street Rocks is a non-profit organization dedicated to capturing the power of music to raise money for America’s heroes. This November’s benefit show will feature Warren Haynes of the Allman Brothers, John Popper of Blues Traveler, Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top, Will Lee and Anton Fig from the Late Show with David Letterman and many more all-star musicians.

The Wall Street Rocks collaboration is made up of employees in the financial, technology and entertainment industries who are passionate about supporting heroic Americans who serve our nation, including military veterans and first responders.

Over the past four years, Wall Street Rocks has raised more than $350,000. For more information about the event or to purchase your tickets for November 10th, check out their website. See you there!

-Lauren Price