Case file Nº 018 1974–1996

Ramones

The Ramones present this archive's purest specimen of the silent feud. After Johnny Ramone began a relationship with — and later married — Joey Ramone's girlfriend Linda around 1980, singer and guitarist effectively stopped speaking, communicating through intermediaries and setlists for the rest of the band's existence: roughly sixteen years and well over a thousand shows of professional cohabitation in a van, in matching leather jackets, under a shared fake surname. Joey's response, 'The KKK Took My Baby Away,' went on the next album; Johnny played on it.

Formed
1974
Origin
Queens, New York, USA
Genre
Punk rock
Status
Disbanded 1996; all four founders deceased
Documented lineup changes
Fake brotherhood, real estrangement
The file

Formed in Forest Hills, Queens in 1974, the Ramones — Joey, Johnny, Dee Dee and Tommy, four unrelated men who adopted a shared surname and uniform — invented punk rock in two-minute increments and toured it relentlessly: 2,263 shows over 22 years, a work rate maintained by a band whose two central figures were not on speaking terms for most of them.

The rupture was personal and permanent: around 1980, guitarist Johnny began a relationship with Linda Danielle, then Joey's girlfriend; they eventually married. Joey — whose OCD, health struggles and romanticism made the wound bottomless — wrote 'The KKK Took My Baby Away' about it (widely so interpreted, including within the band), and Johnny, a self-described military-minded conservative running the band as a business, recorded his part and kept the tour booked. From then on the two communicated principally through drummer-managers and tour managers. The band's internal politics — Johnny hard-right, Joey liberal — supplied a second front; Johnny's induction-speech salute to the sitting president at the Rock Hall in 2002, with the band's history in the room, was in character to the end.

Around the frozen core, Dee Dee supplied heat: the band's chief songwriter and least stable element, he quit in 1989 to pursue a rap career as Dee Dee King (an album its own author later reviewed harshly), kept writing songs for the band he'd left, and struggled with addiction until his death in 2002. Producer Phil Spector's 1979 End of the Century sessions added the file's most retold episode: the band held over hours of takes by an armed and obsessive producer — accounts of exactly how the firearm featured vary by memoir, but every Ramone present described the experience as captivity with strings.

The thread

Timeline of unravelling

1974

Four fake brothers

Jeffrey Hyman, John Cummings, Douglas Colvin and Tamás Erdélyi become Joey, Johnny, Dee Dee and Tommy Ramone — the surname borrowed from Paul McCartney's old hotel alias. First gig at CBGB; songs average two minutes; the entire aesthetic of punk arrives assembled.

1976–77

The debut conquers England, not the charts

Ramones (recorded for about $6,400) sells modestly but detonates London — members of the future Clash and Sex Pistols attend the 1976 Roundhouse shows and take notes. The band begins its lifelong pattern: revered everywhere, platinum nowhere.

1978

Tommy escapes the van

Founding drummer and in-house producer Tommy quits touring, worn down by the road and the personalities — remaining as producer while Marky Ramone takes the stool. He later described the band's interior as considerably less fun than the songs.

1979

Phil Spector and the sessions with a sidearm

Seeking the hit that eluded them, the band records End of the Century with Phil Spector, whose methods include dozens-of-hours sessions, obsessive single-chord repetition, and — per multiple Ramones' accounts, with varying detail — a visible firearm deployed to keep the band present. The album becomes their highest-charting; nobody calls it worth it.

c. 1980–81

Linda: the feud begins

Johnny takes up with Joey's girlfriend Linda; the relationship becomes a marriage and the band becomes a cold war. Joey answers with 'The KKK Took My Baby Away' on Pleasant Dreams (1981); Johnny plays it live for fifteen years. The two speak, thereafter, essentially never — business is conducted via intermediaries within a shared van.

1983

Marky out (round one)

Marky Ramone is fired over his drinking; Richie Ramone serves through 1987, quitting over a merchandising-money dispute — the band's only feud conducted at normal volume — before Marky returns sober.

1989

Dee Dee becomes Dee Dee King

The band's essential songwriter quits to pursue hip-hop as Dee Dee King; the resulting album, Standing in the Spotlight, is received by critics and its own creator as a cautionary artifact. Crucially, he keeps writing for the Ramones — supplying songs to the band he couldn't stand being in, an arrangement everyone found more workable than membership.

1996

The end, still not speaking

After Adios Amigos and a farewell run ending at the Palace in Hollywood (August 6, 1996 — show No. 2,263), the band retires. Joey and Johnny's final conversation totals, by most accounts, roughly nothing; the two never reconcile.

2001–02

Joey and Dee Dee die within fourteen months

Joey dies of lymphoma in April 2001, aged 49 — Johnny, in a decision he defended flatly, does not call or attend. At the band's Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction in March 2002, the surviving members accept separately; Johnny's speech salutes the president. Dee Dee dies of an overdose that June.

2004

Johnny dies; the brand outlives them all

Johnny dies of prostate cancer in September 2004, days after a tribute concert. Within a decade, all four founders are gone (Tommy dies in 2014) — while the eagle-crest T-shirt becomes one of the best-selling garments in rock, worn by millions who could not name a single member the shirt commemorates.

Personnel ledger

Who held the thread

Joey RamoneVocals · 1974–96Punk's unlikeliest and most beloved frontman; carried the Linda wound and the band's melodic heart for sixteen silent years. Died 2001.
Johnny RamoneGuitar, commander · 1974–96Ran the band like a firm, married Joey's ex, and never apologized for either. Kept the machine profitable and the silence total. Died 2004.
Dee Dee RamoneBass, chief songwriter · 1974–89Wrote the songs, counted off the songs, left for rap, kept writing the songs. The band's chaos engine and truest poet. Died 2002.
Tommy RamoneDrums, producer, concept · 1974–78Co-invented the aesthetic, then chose survival over touring. The last founder standing until 2014.
Marky RamoneDrums · 1978–83, 1987–96Fired drunk, rehired sober; now punk's most durable custodian-witness, touring the songbook and the stories.
C.J. RamoneBass · 1989–96The late-era enlistee who gave the final years their energy — and observed the Joey–Johnny silence from the best seat in the van.
Where the thread lies now

No reunion was ever possible: the feud outlived both principals, with Johnny confirming in his posthumous memoir that he saw no reason to have made peace. The estates, in the great Ramones tradition, litigated intermittently (management disputes, documentary rights, merchandising) while the band's commercial footprint grew beyond anything the living lineup achieved — the logo shirt alone constituting a posthumous platinum career.

The file's lesson is severe and clean, like the songs: a band does not require friendship, or even conversation — only a shared uniform, a shared surname, a booked calendar, and two people willing to stand five feet apart for sixteen years rather than concede. It is the archive's most impressive feat of endurance and its saddest, in identical measure.

Exhibits

Further reading & official links

External links are provided for reference. The Threads is not affiliated with any linked site, artist, or organization, and does not control external content. Facts above are drawn from widely published reporting, interviews, court records, and band autobiographies; see our legal notice for our corrections policy.