Lee Ralph was pissed off. Thousands of kilometres from home, the 17-year-old Māori boy from Wellington via West Auckland was sitting in a carpark waiting for skateboarding legend Mark Gonzales to stop hanging out with Prince.“I’d been there about two weeks and he’s like, ‘I’m going to meet Prince’. And I was like ‘So what?’” says Ralph. “’That’s got nothing to do with skateboarding, bro.’ I couldn’t give a fuck. I go, ‘I don’t care. Whatever, I don’t care. Take me to the ramp.’”The year was 1987. A decade after the longhaired, surf-crazy Dogtown Z-Boys brought skateboarding back into the mainstream, the sport had matured into a worldwide phenomenon – with the fame and cash prizes that came with it. Ralph, who only a few years earlier had been given his first skateboard from a cousin returning from Australia, knew it could all be his.“I knew I was good. Some of my bros could take me on the field, could hit sixes and shit, but they couldn’t skateboard – and I could. I was like, ‘I’m only a few years away from being the best.’”After moving with his mum to Lower Hutt, Ralph had fallen in with the Westie crew in Newlands, led by Gregor Rankine – an underground legend who was one of few locals to keep skating when the sport fell out of favour in the late 60s. It was an inconvenient place to learn the ropes. Constant rain and wind meant wet ramps and dangerous airs. Ralph was on the verge of giving up, had it not been for Rankine.“Gregor, my mentor, was the hardest-core skateboarder on earth. And the best. He just totally ruled. I didn’t know how much until he went to America, kicked everyone’s asses over there, then came home and told me that he kicked everyone’s asses over there. And he said, ‘You’re going to as well, you’re on the right track.’ And I was like, ‘Far out. Cool.’”With the sport still in its infancy – particularly on the steep vert ramps that figures like Tony Hawk and the X Games would go on to popularise – style was every bit as important as substance. Under Rankine’s guidance, Ralph developed a powerful style, alongside his own, almost contradictory, straight-edge aesthetic, totally forgoing the drugs and alcohol rife in the scene. “I only think about playing guitar, and skateboarding,” he once told a TV reporter. By 1983, when Ralph was 14, he was ready for America.“Imagine a 14-year-old kid goes and plays the All Blacks,” Ralph says. “He’s going to be killed in the first scrum, but in skateboarding he wins. He beats all the adults. If his dad enters the comp, he beats him too. It’s just insane.”But Ralph’s parents were unwilling to send their son so far abroad. Instead, in 1986, Ralph went to Australia, continuing his training with Rankine and, in his words, “slaying everybody to absolute death”.One day, after sleeping out a rainstorm sheltered inside a car the pair had broken into, Rankine and Ralph entered a local competition. They agreed to split the prize money, regardless of who won, and figured they had a pretty good shot at taking it out.“[The Australians] were inbreds back then. Total inbreds, so redneck you wouldn’t even believe it. The tricks they thought were cool were so stupid. That’s why they weren’t getting any better – their whole attitude towards skating was wrong.”Ralph won the competition, and by ‘87 he had made the journey to the United States. After only a few competitions he signed a deal with skate brand Vision, producing his own board, and was a regular fixture in all the skate magazines. Tony Hawk, who would go on to make millions in clothing deals, skateboard sales and his own video games, rubbed shoulders frequently with Ralph, and would later describe him as “a barefoot caveman”.It seemed to everyone paying attention that Ralph simply couldn’t lose. In the US especially, Ralph’s wild red beard and aggressive, powerful skating set him apart – and made him a legend overnight.“Everything was so good. My whole life had been aiming at this moment, and it was on. Nothing could stop it, failing an injury, but I don’t get injured so that wasn’t going to happen either.”And then he went to France. At the time, skateboarding was strictly an amateur sport. Professionals needed green cards, and Ralph didn’t have one. After returning from a photoshoot in Paris, Ralph was stopped at the airport, seized by the United States government and put on a plane. He went to Germany and wouldn’t return to the US for a full decade. Disillusioned, Ralph picked up the paintbrush – and the bottle.“That’s all you can do. Deny the depression. You don’t have any other… I didn’t think I had other options. I was too stupid.”In the words of skateboard distributor Radar, Ralph took to partying “like a bull to red”. Having reached the pinnacle of the sport only to have it all taken away inside of two years by a bureaucratic technicality, Ralph was drowning his sorrows. He returned to his whānau in New Zealand, and began a gradual drift away from the sport and out of the spotlight, remembered only by the hardcores as one of skateboarding’s great what-if stories.But his love for boardriding endured, and, as street skating began to overtake vert skating in mainstream popularity, Ralph moved on to surfing. Unlike skating, he says, surfing has more of a spiritual component, and soon he had added carving to his repertoire of obsessions. That move, says Ralph, saved his life.Now in his 50s, Ralph lives on a farm in Taranaki. When he’s not surfing or carving, he’s feeding calves, riding quad bikes and accidentally electrocuting himself on the property’s fences. He’s not a rich man, but in hardcore skateboarding circles, everyone knows the name Lee Ralph. And three decades later, that’s enough.
Lee Ralph // PPS "9.25 Lee Ralph Classic Pro Model" - 2022!
Jay Smith // PPS "10.5 Jay Smith OG" - 2022!
"Special tribute to the legendary Rubberman Jay Smith. As the story goes the original release of this board was printed on leftover Hobie blanks that the company picked up on the cheap. This is Jay's original shape that came out later after the Hobie's were sold out. Classic color ways in both yellow and black stains for your shredding pleasure."
Mehr über Jay Smith (Bones Brigade)? OK! Der Typ ist speziell und der Hammer!
Shogo Kubo // Dogtown "Shogo Kubo Tribute Deck Classic" - 2022!
Jeff Grosso // Antihero "Dagwood Roastbeef" - 2022!
Da war ich mal wieder "in the mood"!
Interessantes Deck...echt lang!
Jeff Grosso // Antihero "Dagwood Roastbeef"
Hot Stuff // In progress - "Sauce - Rub - Chutney" Display - Comming up soon!
Jesse Martinez // Dogtown "Guadalupe" - accomplished by sifi893 and me (I just framed!)!
Jesse Martinez // Dogtown "Handshake 1987 Reissue Deck" - accomplished by sifi893 and me (I just framed!)!
Kris Markovich // Cliche 101 / "Metallica Skull" - 8.5" x 31.8" - including Print by Sean Cliver - limited #39/60!
Gestern hab ich dann endlich noch das Deck "geshadowboxed"!
Kris Markovich // Cliche 101 / "Metallica Skull" - 8.5" x 31.8"
Der Print war schon länger gerahmt! Geile Kombi! Happy to have it!
Im Hintergrund des Fotos übrigens "Donald "Pavel" Campbell!
Running out of walls // Solution - "Stand up displays" - should be Vol. 2, 3 or more!
Helge Tscharn // Skateboard - Photography
Bernd Böcker & Guests // Video Interview - "past perfect - past - presence" - Part #3/3!
So...DONE!
War mir persönlich eine Freude und Spaß hatten wir, glaube ich, alle!?
Wie immer im Leben kann man es natürlich nie jedem recht machen, ich hab auch Lehrgeld (im wahrsten Sinne des Wortes) bezahlt!
Meine Heiserkeit in Verbindung mit dem ein oder anderen Tonproblem...Shit happens!
Ist für mich nur Grund und Anlass genug, es beim nächsten Mal noch besser zu machen! Und seid sicher...da kommt wieder was!
Hab schon Pläne!
Ich bedanke mich nochmals ausdrücklich bei den Protagonisten,
Bernd Böcker
Donald "Pavel" Campbell
Martin Broich
Martin Wagner & Tochter
der Crew,
Ben Ott
Anna "annagphotography" Gala
Johannes "Kleinbildner" Boventer
den Fans vor Ort,
Team Rudi "Rare Guitars" & Jack
Martin "der Pole" Mazurek & Ronja "outer.the.box" missbuse
dem Catering,
der Metzgerei meines Vertrauens "Eberl"
Tegernseer Hell
Mir und last, but not least,
Meiner Frau, die unglaublich viel Geduld mit mir hatte!!!
LUV YOU!
Und jetzt noch das Schlusswort welches Bernd Böcker gewählt hatte:
"Frontsidegrind anytime anywhere"
Manuel Fuentes // "92 - skateboarding catalog"- 2022!
Jeff Grosso // Antihero / "The End Game" & "Crucified" - 2017
Bernd Böcker & Guests // Video Interview - "past perfect - past - presence" - Part #2/3!
Bernd Böcker & Guests // Video Interview - "past perfect - past - presence" - Part 2
So...Teil 2 ist nun auch raus und online!
Ein Kommentar: "Etwas langatmig und leider war der Ton etwas schlecht" 😉!
Wäre es weniger langatmig gewesen wenn der Ton besser gewesen wäre?
Hab ja im Text zu dem Video auf meinem Youtube-Kanal bereits darauf hingewiesen, daß "Team Jack @Rare Guitar "...nicht Rudi, sondern Jack, scheinbar das "Allgemein-Mikro" geshreddet hat, ein Kabel rausgezogen hat, oder, oder, oder!? Kein Thema, nix passiert...einfach lauter machen!
Kritik ist aber auch wieder Antrieb für mich es beim nächsten Mal noch besser zu machen!
Aber wir, ich, hatten sowieso nie den Anspruch den "Golden Globe" zu gewinnen!
Selbst für nen "Bambi" würde es nicht reichen!
Spaß ist Alles...und den haben wir, glaube ich, alle gehabt!
Doug "Pineapple" Saladino // G&S / Doug “Pineapple” Saladino - “Then” - Reissue Skateboard - III" - 2022 - signed by Doug!
Doug “Pineapple” Saladino “Then” Reissue Skateboard is his 3rd PineDesign Model.
2020/2021 Skateboarding Hall of Fame’s…Doug “Pineapple” Saladino is celebrating 46 years on the G&S team and still skating strong.
This Reissue is of Doug's third Model from 1981 with G&S.We are celebrating Doug’s journey with us by releasing this “Then & Now” set. You can get both!"
Bernd Böcker & Guests // Video Interview - "past perfect - past - presence" - Part #1/3 or 4!
Bernd Böcker & Guests // Video Interview - "past perfect - past - presence", Part 1
So, eigentlich wollte ich ja nur einen "Post" über Bernd Böcker machen! Angefragt, abgeblitzt mit der Aussage "wenn dann richtig"!
Steilvorlage für mein Ego, konnte nicht anders! Aufgeben...keine Option für mich!
Also...überlegt, recherchiert, nachgefragt, Filmer gesucht, Termin ausgemacht, Flug und Hotel gebucht und irgendwie alles unter "Dach und Fach" gebracht!
Bernd war skeptisch, ich irgendwie auch!
Hab mir tatsächlich ein "Skript" gemacht...war mir aber eigentlich vorab klar, dass ich das vergessen kann wenn es anders kommt...und es kam anders! Musste improvisieren...merkt man mir am Anfang auch extrem an!
War halt grösser als Bernd und ich gedacht haben...meine Schuld!
Nichts desto Trotz...war sehr geil und irgendwie wie ein Familientreffen! Und ich kann keinem das Wasser reichen was das Skaten angeht, aber über das Interview freue ich mich jeden Tag auf´s Neue!
Der Ordnung halber:
Bernd Böcker "Red Baron Speed Bearings"
Martin Wagner...leider nix auf "social Media"