I was always an adventurous kid. When I saw those
tags and shit on the phone booths, and on the train, I said to myself
“This is going to be a part of me, the Vincent now! I lived right
across from all the trains that I saw (at 205th Street) when I
had first gotten here. There were thousands of them, and Tracy
Towers wasn’t even built yet. A few blocks down was another yard…
the D, E, F, J, KK, Q, B, N, RR, train yard…aaaahh I was bugging.
I had to start politicking, cause we had no money, no father, no dog, and
my grandmother was too tight to give us money. So, I went over to
Marty’s doughnut shop, the most famous graffiti place. I told the
guy “Hey I’m broke, I got no paper ( money ) what can I do to get some
money?” He gave me a job and I started off counting pennies all day
from eight in the morning till eight at night. Later, I got promoted
to nickels, dimes and then quarters. When I brought brownies and doughnuts
home, my mom and grandmother questioned me. “Don’t
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worry about it, I’m taking care of you”, I remember
telling them. I knew it wasn’t the best career to have, so I told
the guy at Marty’s doughnut shop, “I can’t make the pizzas nor can I see
over the counter” and that I really appreciated his help, but it was time
for me to move on. That’s when I started riding the trains every day, for
30 days and went to Kingsbridge, Bedford Park, Fordham Road, 183rd
Street, Burnside, 170th Street, 176th Street, 149th
Street and 3rd Avenue to 149th and Grand Concourse.
Then I took the train back, climbing up the seat in the front of the train
and I was fascinated! I had the fever. Then… it just started!
As I rode the
train, I looked up and saw the names, like tags and shit like that and I
was like “Yo this shit is on the inside of the train and other shit is on
the outside of the train”. This is writing! It said
LIBRA ONE was here, MOE 146 was dead. I said
to myself, this is intriguing. I figured…these guys; they
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must get these names form somewhere. In my
little mind, I thought had to buy a name to write on the trains, like you
had to pay someone. Then I learned otherwise, and knew I had to make a
name for myself. I remember watching Popeye on television, that’s when
I started writing the name POPEYE. The next day, I went to a little
bookshop where all the graffiti writers under the sun went to buy their
markers. In the shop, they had buffalo markers, nigi’s, uni-wides,
pilots, mini-wides, and flow master ink. I went in there, bought a toy
little brown marker, and started writing my name POPEYE all over my block,
wherever I went. That’s when I ventured out going on adventures to
Bedford Park, where I climbed underneath the fence to go into the train
yard, where I saw scribbles on the trains. The guys that stuck out in
my head were guys like LEE 163, SUPER KOOL 223
(who I saw on the front of every car ), HULK 62, MAD HAT
1,
LIL CRUSHER 1 & 2,
TREE 127, SNAKE 131, KITU,
LIBRA 1, TRACY 168, RC 162, JIVE
3,
SHADE 1, PIPER 1, TM 550,
SAVAGE 1, KILLER 1 , there was another KILLER
1 ( who was a black dude who mainly hit the D - yard ) . They
were all small tags done with markers or spray paint. After seeing
that I thought POPEYE wasn’t such a great name after all, it was kind of
corny. All the names that I saw had a very strong sound to them, so I
changed my name to TOP; I added 170 to it because I stole markers from an
art supply store on 170th Street. TOP 170, I felt meant
something to me. Later, I started writing with different kinds of
markers to stand out and eventually came up with an idea to make my own
markers out of Band-Aid boxes. I put erasers in the boxes, poured ink
into it and used it to write my name extremely big. From that point, |
I started hitting all the mailboxes and train stations,
writing my names in the inside of the trains. For such a little kid,
at 8 years old, I was getting my name around. I developed a strategy
to get my name around by riding the D or 4 train to the very last stop
where I walked through all the cars and wrote in every single one (as I
walked through them). Over that year I did that consecutively, and
my mom thought I was going to school at P.S. 95.By
1972, graffiti writing became noticeable. You could go to different
places and see a big tag and see what it says. I saw all these names
like PHASE 2,
STAY HIGH 149 and CAT 87 and wondered…wow; they’re
drawing their names so elegantly. That’s when I thought to myself,
that my name TOP didn’t have a ring to it after all. But, it was my
name, so I stuck with it. Since I lived right across the street from
the 4-yard I was always scared my mom would see me. The D yard, on
the other hand, was like a ghost town, where
nobody was able to see what I was doing.
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Every
time I went there, more tags appeared on the trains, especially by the
entrance of the yard. Each time I went there, I would follow the
tags that lead into the yard, saying “Yo…. I’m almost here”! But, I
thought to myself I don’t want to be a god on the BMT’S and IND’s, I
wanted to see what was happening on the IRT’s. So, I started
investigating the writing scene there. I started walking around the
4 yard, checking it out for ways to get in there.
DeWitt Clinton High
School was
where all the famous IRT writers went; like STAYHIGH 149, PHASE 2, HONDO,
BONANZA (the guy who wrote the swastika next to his name). Even if a
writer didn’t attend the school, they went there to bomb the school walls.
I remember sitting across the street from the school wall, when I saw
about 30 black guys walk right by me. They looked at me wondering,
what the hell this little blonde headed boy was doing there. Even
though Mosholu Parkway was a white neighborhood, there weren’t any
white kids that went to
DeWitt Clinton
High School.
So, you had a thousand black guys going to
DeWitt Clinton High
and chilling in this neighborhood. As I was sitting there, I was
afraid, because they were giving me dirty looks. I remember
thinking, “Oh my God! These guys might fuckin kill me!” At
first, I thought
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they
were just regular guys, walking by, doing their thing. I didn’t know
what their goal was. All of the guys walked into the 4 yard, which had
plywood around the whole perimeter; there was a hole cut out that the boys
used to enter. I bugged out! I knew these guys were up to
something in there, but I was scared to go in there to see. After a
while, I grew more curious and had to go in there (I was like the character
from the children’s book “Curious George”). If anything happened in
the Bronx…boom…FUZZ ONE was there. Little did I know that was the day
I would get my wings in GRAFFITI. I went into the yard, spray cans
were flowing, dudes were smoking joints, some had trench coats on like the
character from the movie the MACK, some were wearing super fly hats, Lee
jeans, funky sneakers with Graffiti on it and dudes were just bombing the
trains. Some of the guys were Spanish dudes, regardless these were all
of the best writers in Graffiti; writers such as PJ 109, TURK 62, PRIEST
167, HULK 62, STICK 1, COOL KEVIN 1, DR SOUL, TON 5, T BONE, TOP CAT 126,
PHASE 2, AJ 161 aka ALL JIVE, LIL CRUSHER, and even STAFF 161 of the EBONY
DUKES was there. A lot of the dudes looked real mean and crazy.
I went up to the sharpest looking black guy; I had to be about 2 feet high,
and pulled on the leg of his pants. As he looked down |
at me, I said, “Hey mister, what are you doing?” STAFF 161, the
ultimate God of Graffiti said to me, “Who are you little white boy?
Go back home, you’re going to get killed on the third rail!” No, no,
you don’t understand mister; I want to do what you guys do. I’m
hereto write, I want to be a writer. So they all looked at me and
laughed, “Ha Ha little bastard, you can’t even reach the train”.
STAFF looked down at me and asked me for my name,
I told him it was Vincent, but I’ve been writing POPEYE. As he
chuckled, he said it sounded corny. Since I had this big, blonde,
push back, D.A. haircut, and looked like one of the actors from the 1960’s
beach movies, STAFF looked at me and said, “I think Fuzzy, would be a good
name for you”. I thought, and asked, “How about FUZZ?” He looked at
me and said “Hey that’s a good name! FUZZ”. That’s how I got my
name. So he said, you have to have a number at the end of your name.
I told him I want to be “The One”; I want to be FUZZ ONE! The
original ONE! “All right then!” he said. He pulled over a
garbage can; I jumped on top of it and caught my first tag. It was
this big uneven tag of letters, with a little one at the end of it.
From that point, I followed them all around carrying their paint.
“Wow I’m in with them. I have nothing to worry
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about,
they got my back”. Most of the guys liked me, but there were some
who didn’t. I don’t think it was because I was white, I just think
some just didn’t like me ‘cause the way I carried myself and my body
language. Most people either loved me or hated me! PHASE 2 was
one of the dudes who hated me. I don’t think it was because I was
white, I think it was because he thought I should’ve been in school and
was a pest.
The first time
I saw my name on a train... I was in a barbershop (with my mother) getting
my first D.A. haircut. I looked out the window and “BANG!”… I ran
outside with the Barber’s bib on, hair all wet, and said “FUZZONE, that’s
me! I’m FUZZ now!” Back then, there were so many names,
and the biggest graffiti artists were STAFF 161, PHASE 2, RIFF 170 and
STICK 1 (who only had 5 pieces running on the trains). Back in those
days, writers only did 7 to 8 pieces. If you ever heard otherwise,
it’s bullshit. Everybody in my
neighborhood was prejudice, so I knew being white I had to work extra hard
to prove myself.
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As
the days, and weeks went by I started bringing Hispanic and black dudes by
my house, and by Marty’s Pizza Shop. I was the only white writer at
that time, however TRACY 168 wrote Graffiti on the other side of the
Bronx. TRACY 168
wasn’t living in Kingsbridge in the early 1970’s; he was
living on 167th Street by Yankee Stadium (the other side of the
Bronx), and later moved to Kingsbridge. STAFF 161 was the president
of a gang, THE EBONY DUKES whose members were mainly outlawed black guys
from my area and Brooklyn. The gang had a clubhouse on Kingston
Avenue, in Brooklyn, which was the key spot for the EBONY DUKES where they
would fly their colors (wear their gang jackets that read EBONY DUKES on
the back). I was never into that gang life, I was a pretty mellow
tone kid who only wanted to write Graffiti and nothing else. STAFF
161 was like a father figure to me. I was never a big writer at that
time; basically I was like a butler to them who ran errands for them.
There were guys that called themselves Gods back then, because they lived
across from the yards and hung around with big writers. However,
what makes one a God in Graffiti, is the influence the writer has on
others, also one who bombs everywhere (the inside, outside, ceiling and
every single groove of the trains and walls ALL CITY). STAFF 161 is
a guy that got around the five boroughs to steal paint. He was like
a train map,
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all I had to do was cling on to his jean jacket and go along
for the ride. On
Intervale
Avenue, where STAFF lived, was a CORKY 161 piece on a rooftop, which was the
first ever to be done. Throughout the years, I have heard many guys
say they were the kings of the rooftops, but I’ve never seen any of their
shit. One day I took a trip to STAFF 161’s house, and that is where I
met the entire original group of the EBONY DUKES. As I came up the
stairs to his house, all they saw was this little blonde boy with two hot
chocolates and two honey dipped donuts (one for AJ 161, king of the buses
and the other for STAFF). In order to become a member of the EBONY
DUKES you had to pay twelve dollars to get in and five dollars for a
membership card. They were the first writing group to originate the
use of membership cards. When STAFF 161 introduced me to all the boys,
they all laughed at me because I was a little blonde white kid running for
doughnuts. STAFF 161 spoke up for me, and told them he was going to
make me a member by taking me under his wing. To get in the group an
initiation was required, in which the “new person” had to run through
the entire gang as they beat on you. I heard stories about some guys
that never, ever recovered from their
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initiation.
Some are still walking around in the subways in a daze from their trauma.
I knew I couldn’t do that shit, and somehow I got out of getting the
beating. STAFF 161 put me in the group just to run out and steal for
them. Eventually the EBONY DUKE relationship faded away as members
got locked up or hooked on drugs. As they faded out, I started
spending more time around
Meshula
Parkway, in the Bronx where I began breaking into hardware stores for
paint and markers. One day I went into a Chinese restaurant, where I
ran into a big black guy who had to be about ten feet tall.
He stopped me
and asked where I was going; he ( I later found out he was KINDO 1, ) was kind
of nice with a humorous grin. From STAFF 161’s mascot I turned into
KINDO’s new mascot; I supposed it was quite a promotion for me. KINDO 1
took me all over the city to steal in mostly white neighborhoods, which in his
theory, the other neighborhoods did not have anything to steal. KINDO 1
was sort of a crazy guy who fought with the bus drivers and owners of
stores (when he was caught stealing). He would put them in the
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famous
chokehold, which he called “KINDO YOKE”! KINDO was able to jump from
one platform to the other, due to his height and long legs. He
mostly hung out on the 6-line, with all his boys who were all black.
They were called, the 6-YARD BOYS. KINDO 1 was intrigued by
hanging-out with me, cause I was a little blond headed white kid.
There were many rumors about THE FANTASTIC PARTNERS (TFP). Rumor had
it that the original group was supposed to be a group of deejay’s from
Webster Avenue, which was bullshit. I remember the first time the
group was brought up. It was a day when KINDO 1 and I were stealing
Chinese food. He had decided a name should be made for Graffiti
writers who hung out with each other, unlike street gangs who just robbed
pocketbooks. KINDO 1 asked me what I thought about the name TFP,
which stood for THE FANTASTIC PARTNERS……… “Wow that’s great,
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that might
become something big”, I said. From that point, he started writing
KINDO 1-TFP and I started writing FUZZ ONE-TFP. I didn’t hang out
with KINDO everyday, cause I hung out on 183rd Street which had
a lot of famous writers, but none of them were kingpins that went out
there and did whole cars and top to bottoms. The most famous dude
that came form 183rd Street was SOLID ONE. The first time
I met SOLID ONE, was when he was flying pigeon's on 183rd
Street. He was a really nice
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black
guy who was intrigued by the stories I told him about KINDO 1, who liked
ordering food and running off without paying for it and the fights he
would get into. That was when SOLID ONE started hanging out with us.
We were just three guys writing our names, stealing paint, shoplifting and
all that kind of shit.
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