The online archives of Thom King's Take One magazine, Nashville's original alternative publication!
Thursday, September 19, 2024
The True Story of Take One Magazine (November 1979)
Thom W. King, Editor-In-Chief
John M. King, Senior Editor
Contributors: Daryl Sanders, Gary Kanter, Larry Glick, Alis Petit, Scott Perry, Lanny Glick, Rex DeYonker, Nicole Chappin, Bette Blackman, Hunter Harvey
Articles
Nashville’s Take One: The True Story (Thom King)
Summertime Blues (Richard Harbert)
A Letter From The Publisher (Richard Harbert)
Personal Comments From the Staff (Thom King & Richard Harbert)
The Alternative According To Sanders (Daryl Sanders)
Comments From The Staff (Hunter Harvey, John King, Charlie Johnson, Scott Perry, Sharon Bell, Louie Rosenberg
Comments: The out-of-town investor who Thom sold a controlling interest in the magazine to bankrupted Take One by going weekly without an accompanying growth in advertising income to offset the cost of publishing four issues a month instead of one. Thom and Take One editor Richard Harbert published this one-shot, “The True Story of Take One Magazine,” providing transparency to the demise of Nashville’s first alternative publication. King and Harbert would subsequently launch The Nashville Gazette with publisher John Lomax III (see below).
PDF download of this issue [BIG!! 77mb - Right click and ‘save as’ to download]
The Nashville Gazette: April 1980 (First Issue!)
“On The Home Front” (Thom King)
Real World News
“Street Talk”
The Rock Lawyer’s Corner (Edd Gross)
Hot Picks (Lisa Richards)
The Month Ahead (calendar)
“Star Notes” (Carolyn Dodson)
The Trivia Contest (Thom King & Margaret Cash)
Books: “Living Proof” (Robert K. Oermann), “Pickers & Poets” (Curtis McGuirt), “Willie’s Time” (Gary Kanter), “Stand By Your Man” (Mary Bufwack), “Happy Trails” (Douglas B. Green), “Jimmie Rodgers” (Douglas B. Green), “Lost Highway” (Douglas B. Green), “Waylon & Willie” (Douglas B. Green)
Movies: Coal Miner’s Daughter (John Pugh)
“Flickering Images: TV’s Second Season” (Gary Kanter)
Mind Over Platter (Lynne Mitchell)
Restaurants: The Old Spaghetti Factory (J. Valerie Nasatir)
Sports: The Soundettes Strut Their Stuff (Sam Hunnicutt)
Vinyl Views: Kenny Rogers (John Lomax III), Linda Ronstadt (Bette Blackman), Marianne Faithful (Tom Russell), Bob Seger (Sam Borgerson), Richard Dobson (Jim Rooney), Cloverbottom (Thom King)
Articles
On The Campaign Trail: Learning How Democracy Works (Tom T. Hall)
Many Night’s Stands (Karen Gray)
The Joys of Inflation (Don Cusic)
Never Say Die! (Jan Simmons)
The South: Political Battleground In 1980 (Michael R. Harbert)
Dog Scratch Fever (Marjorie Reeves)
More Problems For Sequoyah (John S. Hepler)
An Open Letter To TVA Nuclear Workers (Jeannine Honicker)
Coal Miners’ Daughters (Mary Etta Cook)
Gram Parsons: The Outcast Southerner (Sid Griffin)
Nightmoney Pays Off (Rick Hull)
Roger Cook and Nashville’s Pop Factory (Al Cunniff)
Song City Serenades (John Lomax III)
“Hossman” Allen: Back On WLAC (Harvey McGee)
The Shake-Up At The Radio Station (Scott Perry)
Riders In The Sky: Nashville’s Home Grown (Robert K. Oermann)
Stars of the 80’s: Four Acts To Watch (John Lomax III & Stacy Harris)
More Than Meets The Eye: There Is A New Wave In Nashville (Rick Champion)
Hot Wax: A Close Look At The Bootleg Racket (Keith A. Gordon)
Tonto Remembered (Gary Kanter)
Revival/Survival, Oldham-style (Kurt Benz)
Antiques & Auctions (Cindy Kent)
Comments: From the ashes of Take One came The Nashville Gazette, which published roughly six issues if I remember correctly. They went BIG right out of the gate with an impressive 40pp debut issue in April 1980 with a four-color cover photo of country music legend Tom T. Hall, who also wrote the issue’s cover story.
PDF download of this issue [BIG!! 177mb - Right click and ‘save as’ to download]
Take One: March 1979
“176 2nd” (Thom King)
Quickies
Leisure (Bob Millard)
Gut Reaction (Kurt Benz)
Top Of The Rock (Scott Perry)
“Offbeat Cartoons” (John Heine)
Performance: Hoyt Axton (Ellen Caldwell)
On Record: The Blues Brothers (Brad Smythe), Larry Jon Wilson (Jan Simmons), Don Bowman (Sharon Bell), Elvis Costello (Brad Smythe), Rod Steward (Bette Blackman), Hall & Oates (Brad Smythe)
Placeboes: Kayak, Eddie Money, Todd Rundgren, Pipedream, Nicolette Larson (Keith A. Gordon)
Articles
Death Row Volunteer, Part Two (Keith A. Gordon)
Mensa: Is Yours Big Enough? (Thom King)
Volunteer Jam V photos (Thom King, John King, Keith A. Gordon)
The Farmer’s Plight (Craig T. Canan)
Music City Song Festival (Sharon Bell)
Pinheads Invade! (Rick Hull)
Earwitness: Nashville Wax For Your Ears (Alan Bernstein)
Going Mobile With Fanta (Sam Borgerson)
Adult Art? Erotica Appears On Second Ave. (Judy Isenhour)
Bar Hopping In Music City (Bette Blackman)
PDF download of this issue [BIG!! mb - Right click and ‘save as’ to download]
Take One: November 1978
Columns
“176 2nd” (Thom King)
Quickies
Calendar
Trivia
Culture: Fredrick’s of Hickory Hollow (Judy Isenhour)
Leisure (Bob Millard)
Gut Reaction (Kurt Benz)
Top Of The Rock (Scott Perry)
Rumblings On The Row (Phyllis Martin & Sharon Bell)
Performance: Papa John (Alan Bernstein), John Prine (Sharon Bell), Sammy Hagar & Boston (Keith A. Gordon), Kaz-Fuller & Little Feat (Keith A. Gordon)
Nashville Profile: Colleen Peterson (Sharon Bell)
On Record: Van Morrison (Keith A. Gordon), Eric Carmen (Bette Blackman), “The Muppets Show 2” (Better Blackman), Steve Martin (Brad Smythe)
Placeboes: Moses Jones (Keith A. Gordon), Brian Ferry (Brad Smythe), Neil Young (Sam Borgerson), Johnny “Guitar” Watson (Joe Gramelspacher), City Boy (Keith A. Gordon), Tasty Licks (Keith A. Gordon), Synergy (Keith A. Gordon), Frank Zappa (Keith A. Gordon), Golden Earring (Keith A. Gordon), Devo (Keith A. Gordon),
Articles
A Presidential Visit (Thom King)
Cheap Thrills: Higher Than A Kite (Steve Womack)
$350 Dream Car, Part Two (Thom King)
Seger Live! (Will King)
The Poisoning of America, Part Two (Jerry Shields)
Huell Howser: King of the Jungle (Thom King)
Notes From Huell (Huell Howser)
A New Much Ado (Judy Isenhour)
Winchester Wonder (Judy Isenhour)
On the Air: Sylvia (Bette Blackman)
Byrd Burton: Ace On The Loose (Sam Borgerson)
Cosmic Triggers? (Curtis McGuirt)
PDF download of this issue [BIG!! 124mb - Right click and ‘save as’ to download]
Take One: October 1978
Columns
“176 2nd” (Thom King)
Quickies
Calendar
Trivia
Politics: Catfish Alliance (Alis Pettit)
“Mug Shots” (Take One staff)
The Arts: Musical St. Fair (Judy Isenhour), Alternate Roots (Judy Isenhour), Center Floor (Sam Hughes)
Nashville Profile: Rafe Van Hoy (Sharon Bell), The North Star Band (Sharon Bell)
Top of the Rock (Scott Perry)
Concert Reviews: Yes (Bette Blackman), Dixie Dregs (Keith A. Gordon)
Records: The Who (Sam Borgerson), Sonny Throckmorton (uncredited), Boston (Keith A. Gordon)
Placeboes: Lynyrd Skynyrd (Will King), Gary Toms & Empire (Joe Gramelspacher), Heart (Bette Blackman), Wendy Waldeman (Keith A. Gordon), Rodney Crowell (Keith A. Gordon), Dan Fogelberg & Tim Weisberg (Keith A. Gordon), Talking Heads (Brad Smythe), Faith Band (Brad Smythe), Steve Gibbons Band (Brad Smythe), Moody Blues (Keith A. Gordon), Thin Lizzy (Keith A. Gordon), Crack the Sky (Keith A. Gordon), Lisa Burns (Keith A. Gordon)
Articles
The Poisoning of America (Jerry Shields)
Consumers’ Guide to Health Food Stores (Nicolle Chappin)
The Continuing Saga of My $350 Dream Car (Thom King)
A Nashvillian’s View of Tourist Traps (Doc Crouch & Henriette Rousseau)
In Search of Naz-Dar (Curtis McGuirt)
Keith Moon (Sam Borgerson)
Gene Cotton Update (Sharon Bell)
Jesse Winchester (Sam Borgerson)
PDF download of this issue [BIG!! 98mb - Right click and ‘save as’ to download]
Take One: August 1977 (First Issue)
Columns
Give & Take (Letters To The Editor)
Trivia (Scott Lee, Tom Heath, Robert Corlew, Thom King)
Calendar
Books: In The Mirro District (Scott Newton), Crowned Heads (Sharon Bell)
Records: Neil Young (Derek Fielding), Crosby Stills & Nash (Wil Joyner), Jessi Colter (Daryl Sanders), James Taylor (Karl Frisch)
Recommended: Dixie Dregs, Gregg Allman, The Beatles, The Meters (uncredited)
Articles
A Seedy Store (Cathey Arlt)
Nashville’s Foor Fairs (Greg Gardner)
The Tennessee Constitutional Convention (Chrisopher Edwards)
Spare-A-Dime: Death of A Gentleman (Thom King)
Pathways For Peddlers (Greg Gardner)
Gene Cotton: L.A. or Bust! (Daryl Sanders)
Tulsa On My Mind (Thom King)
The Big Bucks of Rock Concerts (Greg Gardner)
Ted Nugent (Gail Thomas)
What Next? Platinum Gospel! (Daryl Sanders)
Comments: The very first issue of Take One, published in August 1977 and featuring Thom King’s engaging cover story about street person ‘Spare-A-Dime’ as well as articles on singer/songwriter Gene Cotton and the sort of arts and music coverage that the magazine would later become known for throughout its existence.
PDF download of this issue [BIG!! 70mb - Right click and ‘save as’ to download]
Sunday, October 15, 2023
Your Nashville Zines Wanted!
This Take One archival site currently has only 15 of the 28 issues of the magazine that were published between 1977 and 1979. If you have copies of the publication that aren't currently featured on the site, I'd be glad to take them off your hands! If you want to donate the zines, I'd be glad to reimburse you for the shipping costs. Ditto if you just want to lend them to us to scan for the site. I'd also be willing to negotiate a price if you'd rather sell your copies (note that we're on a tight budget).
Along with vintage copies of Take One magazine, I'm also interested in getting copies of The Metropolitan Reader and The Nashville Gazette to scan and archive here. We'll also take old copies of Hank magazine to archive on our Anarchy In The Music City! website. Any donated zines will be donated to an archive after scanning, as they'd be better at preserving the decades-old newsprint.
Contact the Reverend with the form above and I'll get back in touch as soon as possible. Thanx!
Take One: September 21st, 1979
Short Takes
Speak Out!
“Star Moods” (Ken Ray)
Calendar
Classifieds
“129 2nd” (Thom King)
Movement (uncredited)
Rumblin’s On the Row (Valerie Ridenour)
Book Review: The Great Shark Hunt (Allen Steele, Jr.)
Album Reviews: Bob Dylan (David Lindsey), Tammy Wynette (Kelly Delaney), Rickie Lee Jones (Phyllis Martin), Roseanne Cash (Ken Ray), REO Speedwagon (Neal Hampton)
Articles
Cockfighting: A Walk On the Illegal Side of A Southern Tradition (Steve Salonsky)
No Juice For the Chair (Carleen Turelli)
The Hots: Can’t You Get It? (Thom King)
Nashville’s Original Alternative Dee Jay (Charles Biderman)
Profile: Michael Smotherman (Sharon Bell)
What ‘Get The Knack’ Means, and Why (John Lomax III)
Nashville Symphony Orchestra: A Concert-Goer’s Delight (Tom Nichol)
Born Again Runners (Judy Isenhour)
Overdoing It (Judy Isenhour)
Excess Edibles Get Canned (Laurie Heise)
Farm Report (Matthew McClure)
Hickory Hollow Hosts Energy Expo (Naomi & Jeffrey Allen)
$5,000 Per Second (Carleen Turelli)
Sliding Into Afternoon Wasteland (Gary Kanter)
Reggie Churchwell: Local Mogul Goes For Boob Tube Mega-Bucks (Valerie Ridenour)
PDF download of this issue [BIG!! 138mb - Right click and 'save as' to download]
Take One: July 30th, 1979
Short Takes
Speak Out!
“Star Moods”
Calendar
Classifieds
“Razz” (Heine)
Movement (Phyllis Martin)
Top Of The Rock (Scott Perry)
Rumblin’ On The Row (Phyliss Martin)
Performance Review: The Kinks (Sam Borgerson)
Book Review: The White Album (Pat Nunally)
Album Reviews: Neil Young, Elton John (Brad Smythe); Queen (Randy Ford)
Articles
No Alternatives In Mayor’s Race (uncredited)
Mayor’s Race Limps Into Home Stretch (Daryl Sanders)
All This For Only A Million Bucks… (John Lomax III)
One Last Shot At The Fast Dance Soiree (Kelly Delaney)
The Return of the Earth Mother (Judy Isenhour)
The Oriental Square, Ah So! (Sarah T. O’Toole & Turrell Twist)
Breaking Away (Scot Haller)
Finally, A Really Good Movie (Scot Haller)
These Are Important Issues (Gary Kanter)
PDF download of this issue [BIG!! 100mb - Right click and 'save as' to download]
Take One: July 23rd, 1979
Short Takes
Speak Out!
“Star Moods”
Calendar
Classifieds
“176 2nd” (Thom King)
“Razz” (Heine)
Movement (Alis Pettit)
Rumblin’ On The Row (Phyliss Martin)
Performance Review: Billy Joe Shaver (Kelly Delaney)
Film Review: Dracula (Talmadge Sherron)
Book Review: Anyone’s Daughter (Talmadge Sherron)
Album Reviews: Devo, Graham Parker (Keith A. Gordon); Joni Mitchell (Bette Blackman & Neal Hampton)
Articles
Mansion Was No Jewel (Derek Fielding)
High Drama From The Oval Office (Daryl Sanders)
LeRoux: White Boys Singing Pretty Vocals (Elizabeth Thiels)
Wet Willie Here For R&R (Scott Perry)
Willie’s Picnic: An American Tradition (Huell Howser)
Doc Cuts Smoking LP (Judy Isenhour)
Couple Exhibit Paintings, Sculpture (Ellen Caldwell)
PDF download of this issue [BIG!! 112mb - Right click and 'save as' to download]
More Take One Advertisers
More invaluable Take One magazine advertisers! The Villager, a bar in Hillsboro Village, was a favorite hangout of mine during my senior year of high school and afterwards. WKDF-FM was an early supporter of the zine, and this is their ad for the 1979 "One For The Sun" concert they co-promoted. Finally, The Great Escape, which came on board as an advertiser early, after they'd moved from a small house on Division to the much-larger location on Broadway that they subsequently spent decades in. I met Gary Walker, The Great Escape owner, when he was selling comics at the flea market every month at the Fairgrounds. I was an early customer at their Division store, and even worked for the company as a computer consultant, installing their first computer system and training staff members in its usage. Gary's son Greg became a good friend, and he contributed to my The Other Side of Nashville book. Thanx to all these folks for their support!
Take One: July 4th, 1979
Short Takes
Speak Out!
Star Moods
The Calendar
Classifieds
“Beowulf’s Journal”
Thumbnails (short film reviews)
Rumblin’s On The Row (Phyllis Martin)
LP Shortshots: The Knack, Thin Lizzy, Blue Oyster Cult, Mick Taylor (uncredited)
Articles
Sad Times For Happy Huell (Thom King)
Hartsville/Hiroshima Protest (Craig T. Canan)
Galbreath Proposes Preservation Bill (Daryl Sanders)
The Rolling Wonder Revue (Jan Simmons)
Video Disc: Laser Madness In Atlanta
Carp Cause Paper Bag Shortage (Phyllis Martin)
The Super Pickers: From Studio To Center Stage (Sharon Bell)
Reed Waxes Hot & Live At Exit/In (Kelly Delaney)
Natural Nashville: Food Fair Phenomena (Laurie Heise)
Having Fun In Gasless Nashville (Phyllis Martin, photos by John King)
Charles Trois’ Subconscious Exposed (Ellen Caldwell)
Flap-Flop: Nightwing (Talmadge Sherron)
Sunset Unveiled (Anne Ashcraft)
Cilla’s Art (Ellen Caldwell)
Architectural Antiques: Recycling Old Treasures (Katherine Alexander)
Dissenter’s Castle (Patricia Lipman)
PDF download of this issue [BIG!! 155mb - Right click and 'save as' to download]
Take One: June 14th-21st, 1979
Columns
Short Takes
Speak Out!
“Star Moods”
Classifieds
“176 2nd” (Thom King)
Movement (Craig T. Canan)
Film Reviews: The In-Laws (Scott Haller), Wanda Nevada (Daryl Sanders), The Drunkard (Tom Patrick)
Thumbnails (short film reviews)
Album Reviews: Kansas, Lou Reed (Brad Smythe); Emmylou Harris (Sam Borgerson)
Articles
Do We Need Hartsville (Craig T. Canan)
Important Questions For Important People: Jimmy Carter, Lamar Alexander, Howard Baker, James Sasser, Bill Boner
Henry Paul: Outlaw On His Own (Scott Perry)
Fan Fair ’79 Wrap-Up (Sharon Bell)
Joe Sun: Old Flames Start A Blaze (Sharon Bell)
“I Got ‘It’ With ISA” (Jan Simmons)
Sinking Creek: Films With Feeling (Daryl Sanders & Talmadge Sherron)
PDF download of this issue [BIG!! 111mb - Right click and 'save as' to download]
Take One: June 4th-11th, 1979
Short Takes
“Star Charts”
Offbeat
Classifieds
“176 2nd” (Thom King)
Movement (Craig T. Canan)
Top of the Rock (Scott Perry)
Film Reviews: The Innocents (Tom Patrick), Beyond The Poseidon Adventure (Talmadge Sherron), Manhattan & Prisoner of Zelda (Daryl Sanders)
Thumbnails (short film reviews)
Book Review: Nathan Pritikin (Charles Biderman)
Performance Reviews: Jerry Lee Lewis (uncredited), Steve Young (Sam Borgerson)
Records: Lee Clayton (Sharon Bell), Oak Ridge Boys (Kelly Delaney)
Articles
Caution: Condos Ahead (Kay Mahan & Pat Nunally)
Poco Last Thursday (Scott Perry)
Dave Perkins Talks (Scott Perry)
Fan Fair ’79 Swarms (Sharon Bell)
Getting “It” With ISA (Jan Simmons)
Making Bread Easy (Charles Biderman)
Peddler Generation (Gary Kanter)
Ten Years After & Black Oak (Thom King)
Alvin Lee: An Interview (Thom King)
All This For Only $175… (Thom King with photos by John King)
PDF download of this issue [BIG!! 133mb - Right click and 'save as' to download]
Saturday, September 30, 2023
Take One Advertisers
We didn't have a heck of a lot of advertisers back in the Take One days, but a handful of companies were faithful from the first day, running regular ads and paying on time (important for a struggling publication!). Nashville attorney Bart Durham was one such advertiser, who came on board with the third or fourth issue...I remember ol' Bart cruising up to our Second Avenue office in his convertible sports car with payment for his ads. As regular as clockwork, he was...local printer Copies Unlimited was another regular advertiser; I worked there for about three days sometime in the 1980s. For my money, though, our two longest-running and most avid supporters were Mary Jane's on Elliston Place, and New Life Record shop on Charlotte in West Nashville. New Life's Lee Lane even contributed cartoons to the publication in later days. Thanx to both for their invaluable support!
Take One: December 1978
Columns
Give & Take (Letters To The Editor)
Calendar
Classifieds
Quickies
“176 Second” (Thom King)
Gut Reaction (Kurt Benz)
Leisure (Bob Millard)
Top of the Rock (Scott Perry)
Offbeat (Heine)
Performance: George Benson (Joe Gramelspacher)
On Record: Arlyn Gale, Baby Grand & Tanya Tucker (Brad Smythe); Bill Anderson (Sam Borgerson); Peter Tosh (Joe Gramelspacher); 10cc, George Thorogood & the Destroyers (Keith A. Gordon
Articles
Dungeons & Dragons (Curtis McGuirt)
$350 Dream Car, Part Three (Thom King)
A Nashvillian’s Encounter With the People’s Temple (Sam Borgerson)
Al Jarreau Interview (Alan Bernstein)
Our smallest issue ever, only 12 pages of top quality material. What can I say...money was tight!
PDF download of this issue [BIGGISH! 79mb - Right click and 'save as' to download]
Take One: July 1978
Columns
Give & Take (Letters To The Editor)
Calendar
Classifieds
Quickies
Trivia
“176 Second” (Thom King)
Reelings: ‘Horror Show’ (Laurie Schultz)
On Stage: Miracles of Modern Times (Judy Isenhour)
Nashville/Profiles: Mac McAnally (Sharon Bell), Jack Clement (Phyllis Martin)
Rumblings On the Row (Phyllis Martin)
Sound Sense (Steve Merit)
Leisure (Bob Millard)
Placeboes (Album Reviews): The Rolling Stones, Foreigner, Nantucket, Bob Dylan, Alan Parsons Project, Graham Parker, Michael Stanley Band (Keith ‘Starlight’ Gordon)
Placeboes: Steve Young, Bonnie Tyler, Ronnie Milsap, Janie Fricke, The Oak Ridge Boys, Jerry Jeff Walker (Sharon Bell)
Articles
Just Another Pretty Face (Greg Gardner)
Hey Four Eyes…A Consumer’s Guide To Optics (Thom King)
Doctor, there’s a gomer in the pit (Barbara Pinson)
Direct To Disk (George Juodenas)
Reunion: The Class of ’67 Has No Class (Victoria Webb)
Animals and Art (Ellen Caldwell)
Parthenon: New Sights In An Old Setting (Ellen Caldwell)
Center Floor (Sam Hughes)
Balls, Butterflys and Batons (Karen Zimmerman)
Recording Session Showdown: Nashville versus L.A. (Sam Borgerson)
Jazz (Alan Bernstein)
Perceptive Palate (Edna DeKabe)
PDF copy of this issue [BIG! 95mb - Right click and 'save as' to download]
Take One: December 1977
Columns
Give & Take (Letters To The Editor)
Calendar
Classifieds
Places: A Woman’s Place To Come To (Victoria Webb)
Books: ‘Kinflicks’ (Mary Etta Cook)
Reelings: ‘First Love’ (Dave Badger), ‘Harvey’ (Harold Parker)
Nashville Profile: Don Schlitz (Sharon Bell), Geof Morgan (Sharon Bell), Karla Bonoff (Greg Gardner)
Articles
From Rocky Top To the Big Apple (Bob Millard)
The Coke Hustlers (Thom King)
Channel 4 News: It’s Not That Lonely At the Top (Bob Wyatt & Greg Gardner)
Gurgling Gourmet (Diane Bartley)
What I Don’t Want For Christmas (Victoria Webb)
Miles and Miles of Heart (Tom Miller)
Louisville Run (Jim Webb)
The Nashville Gospel Show! (Tim O’Connell)
A Family Tree (Will Joyner)
PDF copy of this issue [BIG! 114mb - Right click and 'save as' to download]
Thursday, September 21, 2023
PUBLISHING BOOT CAMP ON SECOND AVENUE
Learning to publish a magazine on the fly with no budget and minimal staff…
During the summer of 1977, I was working construction in the Nashville area and hating it when I ran into my high school compadre Thom King one afternoon at Shakey’s Pizza in Green Hills. Thom had just launched Take One magazine, Nashville’s first true alternative publication, and I wanted in on the fun. Over a pitcher of beer, I convinced him to bring me on as a music critic, something I had a few years of experience with, previously writing for the local music rag Hank as well as the Illinois-based publication Sunrise while we were in school together.
Little did I know, at the time, what I was getting myself into…somewhere around the magazine’s second year, the already-miniscule staff attempted an editorial coup and ended up leaving en masse, with only myself, Thom and his brother John, and a couple other writers (Scott Perry and Sam Borgerson) remaining. From the original office space on the third floor in the Goodie’s warehouse, we moved down the street a block to a pre-Civil War warehouse at 176 Second Ave North with lots of space, no heat or air conditioning, more than a few mice, and a flock of pigeons living on the top floor. Stairs between floors were non-existent, and the freight elevator broke down frequently, but the rent was cheap as hell, a necessity for a publication with a shoestring budget.
I even got involved in advertising – not from a sales perspective (which was handled largely by Thom and, later, Bob Millard and others) – but in collections. It was amazing how many local businesses were willing to stiff a small, struggling publication, and Thom would send me out in full biker regalia to collect what was owed. Since a percentage of these collections were all the money I made from the magazine, I encouraged, coaxed, and chastised accounts into paying. A local hairdresser, who always paid on time, came up with a scheme where he’d slip me an extra $50 to come stomping into his salon and threaten him in front of his assembled friends and customers, so that he could tell me that he’d pay when he was damn well ready.
He came off as a tough guy (he wasn’t) but I went along with his charade ‘cause I was basically living at the magazine office for much of 1978 and making $40 a week…just enough for gas for my ’73 Satellite Sebring and beer and pizza on Friday nights. Thom’s parents made sure that we had enough food to eat during the week (although to this day I can’t stand pimento cheese on white bread) and Sunday dinners at their house was a treat (Mr. and Mrs. King were genuinely nice people who treated me like a third son). Thom wasn’t getting rich off of Take One, either, and even when he temporarily sold a controlling interest in the magazine he used the cash to pay off the bills we’d already racked up publishing Take One.
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Take One's makeshift office cubicles |
For a few months, Take One relocated from Second Avenue to an office above the concession stand at Fair Park on Nolensville Road when the scion of a wealthy Nashville family invested in the magazine. The naïve young man was in love with one of our lovely young female photographers and, after a lengthy courtship (Thom milked him for every free dinner and handball game he could), a corporation was formed, money was spent, and we had to move the monster typesetter to the second-floor office at Fair Park. Thom’s new partner invited me to his Belle Meade mansion (with a Ferrari in the garage) for dinner to offer an insulting $50 a week to keep doing the job that I was essentially doing for free. He ended up writing me a check for $300 to leave without harming him (something I really had no thoughts of doing) which I subsequently used to pay off my tab at Shakey’s Pizza.
If the rich kid ever saw the hundreds of dollars of handball equipment that I bought on his credit card during one of his numerous games with Thom (and later sold out of the back of my car at the club), he never mentioned it (he gave me the card to drink at the club bar while he and Thom were “talking” bizniz). Still, his investment allowed us to feature color covers and interior photos, pump up the page count, and publish a fairly impressive-looking zine. Sadly, his ardor cooled a bit after a few months, after he’d married the photographer he lusted after, and he sold the magazine back to Thom for a pittance. We dragged the 600-pound typesetter down the stairs and back to Second Avenue where, since there was still money left in the corporate account, we published a couple more issues before looking for another investor.
After an educational year living in abject poverty in a too-hot or too-cold warehouse with a century of dirt and dust floating around, I moved from Nashville to Detroit to start writing the second chapter of adulthood. I continued writing for Take One and, when a negligent investor basically bankrupted the magazine, I wrote for its successor, The Nashville Gazette, even covering the 1980 Republican Convention in Detroit where Ronnie Raygun was coronated and the conservative era of American politics was born. I consider my time with Take One as well-spent, a crash course in publishing that no school could offer, and I’ve carried those lessons forward as I attempt to establish my own book publishing company.
I’m not sure how we did it, but Take One magazine published 28 issues over roughly 2½ years, on a more or less monthly basis (as Thom always said, “some months are longer than others”) with little or no budget but lots of passion and enthusiasm. I remained friends with Thom until his premature death in 2020 and subsequently worked with him at both his plastics company (Kingpins) and on various book publishing project. This archival site has been created to honor Thom’s memory and that of his first great idea, Take One magazine!
Thanx and a tip o’ the hat to former Take One staffer Larry Glick, who donated a bundle of the magazines and thus inspired this project…
Sunday, September 10, 2023
HOW I SPENT OVER $100,000 TO GET SOME FREE RECORDS
A Partial History of Nashville’s Take One Magazine
By Thom W. King
From August 1977 to September 1979, I published a magazine called Take One here in Nashville. What started as a 12-page black and white monthly tabloid with a circulation of 5,000 copies grew (partially with the help of a New York investor who later went bankrupt and took my magazine with him) into a weekly, colorful magazine with a circulation of 50,000 copies per issue.
During that time, we published over a million copies of what we feel was a lively, entertaining magazine devoted to music, art, politics, food, and lifestyles, plus whatever else we could cram in before deadline. Over 400 writers, artists, photographers, poets and other romantic souls contributed to the creation, nurturing, and survival of the publication during its brief life.
We did features and inside stories on such “related” subjects as cockfighting, the KKK, nuclear power, tourist traps, local TV news, dream cars, health food hazards, toxic waste, Tennessee cowboys, Mensa, passenger trains, jogging, holiday greed, Jimmy Carter, Nashville’s future, present, and past, neighborhood preservation, playgrounds in jeopardy, male prostitutes, gay rights in pre-AIDS America, Death Row…oh yeah, and we also interviewed rock stars, featured outrageous cartoons, got sued by large corporations we reported on (and thankfully we never lost a case, regardless of how big the boys we pissed off were). And we had huge quantities of fun and heartbreak. At the same time.
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Take One publisher Thom King on Second Avenue North, 1978 |
Tell us some stories, Old Man! Okee-dokey, little ones. Hang on! We lost female reporters to rock stars, including one who went out to Elliston Place for a concert review and called in two weeks later from Detroit, still high, in lust, and, unfortunately, without any money to get home. Her blonde hair and 18 (maybe) year old body had lost its appeal mid-tour of a major British legend.
We had a dead body show up on the back door of our five-story Second Avenue warehouse (30,000 square feet of space we baby-sat for $125 a month while the developer was putting his renovation together). We saw a dozen police cars roar up in the night, take the body away, and then never saw anything about it in the daily papers…something about stealing a mail truck?
We went to record label parties ‘en mass’ and drank everything behind the bar (first to come, last to leave, got no money but boy can we write…what a motto for a magazine staff). We were a blitz of hungry, thirsty wolves and we would attack without thought. Woe be the unsuspecting Music Row public relations beginner who innocently sent a little invitation to our offices only to see ‘The Sucking Heard of Zombie Journalists’ wipe out their entire party.
We had fights with the public, with ourselves, sometimes with total strangers. We worked with geniuses and total idiots, and I’m still not sure which column was which. We earned about ten cents per hour, and religiously fought for the right to keep on working. We sold our blood and plasma to keep things going. We unknowingly bought a typesetter that turned out to be hot (what are the odds of that?). We saw new artists become superstars, we saw writers become millionaires (Yo, Don Schlitz, My Man!), we saw former staff members become published national writers (Yo, Bobby Millard, My Man!), we saw skinny, unknown struggling country singers running naked around the hot tub and now we see them rich and fat on The Today Show (Yo, well, never mind…too many people might recognize your cute little butt and be shocked with the national image you now present to millions).
Talent was literally in every nook and cranny. Even our typesetter for a few weeks was one Kathy Mattea, who is now hooter than the majority of Nashville legends. I was in awe of her talent even then, but the fact that she could and would typeset for minimum wage or so was even more awesome. Hey, life was passionate. Every time an issue finally came rolling off those assorted presses, it was a religious experience. We changed printers every time they increased their prices…so, we were schlepping this magazine all over Kentucky, Tennessee, and Alabama for any place with a half-million-dollar printing press, of which there were a surprising bunch, even in places like Ardmore AL, Bowling Green KY, and Franklin TN.
It was like giving birth to the biggest, meanest, stubbornest, and often ugliest monster in creation. And we did it 28 times. And every time was harder than the time before. And we bled like hell. Got drunk. Got laid. Got sick. Got up. And then we started all over again. Great life! Over the two years, I spent all my money, all my friends’ money, all my family’s money, in fact well over $100,000. And all I was really trying to do was get into a few concerts for free and pick up some promo records. Was it worth it? Does a spinal tap hurt?
I became an inventor, and presently own a plastics manufacturing company. My products are used internationally and even locally, by banks, hospitals, restaurants, even such recording artists as Randy Travis, Gary Morris, Sawyer Brown, and, yes, Kathy Mattea, thought she probably doesn’t know her former friend makes them for her. I’ve developed a summer fad for students worldwide, a line of fashion earrings for co-eds, and other assorted goodies to make money. And last week, after six months of complete and total agony from literally crippling back pain, I had surgery for a ruptured disc that was paralyzing me.
And you know what? While I was in the hospital bed, actually not knowing whether I would ever walk again, the things I thought about the most were putting out a stupid magazine. I’m serious. Those were the days! Best to all the folks at The Metro. Long May You Reign!
Written for the fifth anniversary of The Metro magazine, August 1990