by Brian Childs
This article appeared today in Metro in a shorter form, but since the website hasn't been updated I thought I'd just place it up here for posterity.
CONEY ISLAND - On Friday night, Cha Cha’s was packed with 50 burlesque dancers dressed as Princess Leia, Marilyn Monroe and even sexy, creepy clowns. Saturday featured eight free hours of surf music and sideshow on the boardwalk and on Sunday- a roller derby. Countercultures collided this weekend at the Coney Island Rockabilly Festival, a four-day event by Cockabilly Records with over 80 acts.
“It’s a cool new subculture,” said the 56 Kid, a musician from Philadelphia who performed on Saturday, his birthday, without pay, “It’s the reclamation of the 1950’s culture, minus the racism.”
The 56 Kid is new to Rockabilly, having switched his style from Country three weeks ago after meeting a mysterious old man he believes to be Elvis.
“I was playing in this bar in Philly three weeks ago and I met this old man who changed my whole sound,” said the 56 Kid, “I had my suspicions, and on the third day I held up a photo and it was dead on. Elvis. I think he heard my sound and he honed in on that. It was a chance to get out some of his final stuff.”
Although Coney Island is New York’s home of sideshow and burlesque, most of the festival’s performers were from other cities, Boston, Philadelphia and even Austin, and were new to the Coney Island scene. The result was a fresh take on old acts, such as Philadelphia’s Baron Von Geiger, a Human Pin Cushion who swung a beer keg around with his earlobes and allowed people to staple money directly to his body and face.
The festival was conceived as a one-day show at Astroland by Cockabilly Records’ Ben Wilson, but turned into a four-day bonanza as more and more performers heard about the show through MySpace.
“This was grassroots, 100 percent MySpace,” said Nelson Lugo, a magician who performed Friday night at Cha Cha’s, “when Ben [Wilson] called me I thought I’d be performing to an empty room, but he did it. He pulled it off.”
Most of the fans heard about the festival from MySpace as well and weren’t Coney Island regulars.
“I wanted to come to Coney Island for the last summer and I love Rockabilly music so this was perfect for me,” said Jaime Gillette, who came from Connecticut for the Friday show, “I love burlesque too so this was literally the perfect weekend for me.”
As for Wilson, he already has his eyes on next year.
“We’re going to add a tattoo convention, a hot rod show, and a formal roller derby events, maybe at Keyspan Park…we’ll have a whole year to get sponsors!” said Wilson, “You look at Crimson Boudoir, who’s burlesque, and Betty Bruiser, who’s roller derby. Look at Jelly Bean the sideshow performer. It’s all on the same page, it’s a beautiful crossroads of cultures.”