The early 80s were a slog for Ramones. The New York City quartet were highly respected as a trailblazing punk act, but the commercial breakthrough that their late-70s albums Rocket To Russia and Road To Ruin had promised hadn’t materialised. 1980’s Phil Spector-produced End Of The Century cracked the US Top 50, but subsequent releases Pleasant Dreams and Subterranean Jungle failed to make significant headway. Splitting up, however, was never an option – and that defiance was reflected in the title of the band’s next album, October 1984’s Too Tough To Die.
Listen to ‘Too Tough To Die’ here.
The backstory: “We weren’t going to surrender”
“I have that tattooed on me, you know, those words ‘Too Tough To Die’,” bassist Dee Dee Ramone revealed in the sleevenotes for Rhino’s 2002 reissue of the album. “Those words, along with a devil with a pitchfork because that’s how I have always felt about us. We always felt we were fighting for what we believed in, and our way of fighting was not to give up. Especially during that period in the early 80s. We were having a rough time but we were not going to surrender.”
However, while Ramones’ self-belief counted in their favour, they needed to overcome numerous obstacles while making Too Tough To Die. Most pressingly, with Marky Ramone having departed during the making of Subterranean Jungle, the group needed a permanent drummer pronto. Eventually, they recruited Richie Ramone (real name Richie Beau), formerly of NYC rockers The Velveteens, who soon admitted that fitting in with his new bandmates proved to be something of a challenge.
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“I’ve always drummed in their style,” the musician said in a 1985 Sounds interview. “Steady and hard-hitting. But it was difficult working myself up to that speed. There are three speeds in the Ramones – fast, pretty fast and very fast!”
The recording: “They wanted to go back to the basic, classic Ramones sound”
Nonetheless, Richie quickly adapted to his new job, and he went on to prove himself an able replacement for Marky on Too Tough To Die. With that problem solved, Ramones also had to push back on Sire Records’ insistence in pairing them with name producers. Instead, they chose to reinstate Tommy Ramone (billed as T Erdelyi) and Ed Stasium: the duo who did such an excellent job helming 1978’s Road To Ruin. As Ramones’ original drummer (he left following the release of Rocket To Russia), Tommy was happy to reconnect with his former bandmates, but he was disappointed by the state of inter-band relations.