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Interview With Mike Mastrangelo

June 13, 2014 by Tim Granda

Mastrangelo is a punk. A low down, dirty punk… and I mean that endearingly. His work is fast and loose, like a guitar riff hammered out by a beer soaked Steve Jones dodging bottles at the 100 Club. It’s real, and from the heart. Full of swagger and purpose. Mastrangelo is that tease that keeps you crawling back for more.

He has an uncanny knack for the “hook”, which I can best describe as the ability to produce an image that instantly becomes etched in your brain. Check out the Manson piece below that he drew for Heavy, and then honestly tell me it isn’t one of the most iconic images in the scene today. Read the fuck on, foolish mortals. This film is about to begin.

Mastrangelo’s work lives on the edge, and by that I don’t mean some bullshit marketing description to signify that something is outrageous. By “edge” I mean that line where if you fall off one side you achieve utter brilliance, but on the other it’s nothing but limb-strewn carnage and chaos. Think of it like this: you’re coming in hot on a turn, when suddenly you catch the rear in some loose gravel. You’re either going in the fucking ditch, or you’re straightening her out and leaving a hot testament of rubber snaking across that old country road. Fuck yea! Living through those moments are what life’s all about, and inevitably those moments become the stories that define us. The stories we pass on to those who matter.

That’s the “edge” where Mastrangelo lives. The place where time stands still. The place between the frames of a camera. That place on the country road where your headlight reveals past conquests laid out in rubber.

Grab hold, we are about to begin…

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Hey Mike! Can you tell our readers where you’re based?

I’m London based, and have been for all my 50 years on this planet.

Where about did you grow up?

I was raised in a little town just outside of main London Town… a very interesting place… a little place called Thornton Heath. It was the hangout in the ’70s for one of the first unofficial UK bike chapters: The Nightingales, who as a kid I used to walk past. Seeing these greasy bikers and their shinny machines had me jumping up and down! They looked dangerous. I ended up working with one of the members many years later and was told the odd story or two. Some of these guys were old English rockers from the ’60s.

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Who were some of the artists you were digging back then?

As a kid, I was heavily influenced by American comics: old Spider-Man, Fantastic Four, Hulk, you know, the old DC and Marvel stuff. BUT the stuff in those comics that I loved were the ads for life-size Frankenstein’s, Magic Horses, ha ha. I also loved Aurora model kits and one day can across some old Roth model kits in a newspaper store near my grand parents home. Now those kits blew my tiny mind! Rats driving drag machines, brother Rat Fink on a motorbike, Angel Fink etc.

Being close to London also meant I’d be able to get great comics and magazines. We had a second hand book store near me which I use to go to when I was 14, and it had great comics, old Easyriders, but the best bit was it had a section in the back of the shop which housed adult magazines! Playboy, Knave, which was a classic ’70s adult magazine that ran a feature on the Hells Angels. I had heard of the HA through papers, but never actually seen pictures of them, and as you can imagine SF California was another planet! I loved the imagery of the bikes; those choppers where like flying saucers from another world. Another place, far far away.

I was also influenced by early skateboarders from the ’70s. It was a big thing for a short time, but again I found myself looking at the likes of Tony Alva and the Dogtown crew as something I really loved. Many years later when I worked for the Gun Club, I got to meet Tony Alva as his band The Skoundrels supported the Gun Club at an L.A. show. Seeing Evel Knievel jump was another big inspiration. I saw him jump at Wembley Stadium in 1975 and crash. It was amazing!

But without a doubt, it was the Dave Mann’s work in Easyriders that I loved. Frank Frazetta was also a huge influence, and someone I wished I could be as good as. I loved all his great movie posters. All those great Clint Eastwood film posters. In fact, the first film I took my now wife to was Every Which Way But Loose, which of course has the legendary Black Widows in it. I wanted to be a Black Widow big-time! Still do, ha ha! Also various artists like Charles Burns, Gary Panter, Spain, Roth, Robert Williams, Joe Coleman, and one of my all time favourite artists is Edwin Pouncey (aka: Savage Pencil). I have been a friend of his for years, and have some of his original art, but for me helping him with one of his greatest pieces of work blew my mind. In the ’90s he put together a fantastic LP called Angel Dust Movie Music for Bikers, a selection of killer tracks from various ’60s and ’70s biker movies with a beautiful gate-fold sleeve and picture disc LP.

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Do you remember the moment where you realized art would become a lifelong pursuit?

Nope! Music has been one of my biggest loves. I actually came back to art about two years ago in a big way, but working in the music industry is the full time gig. I have to pay the bills and support the family!

As a very young kid I loved bands like KISS, Black Sabbath, Led Zep, Deep Purple, as well as old Rock ‘n’ Roll/Rockabilly. My parents loved music, and my father worked for an old ’60s record pressing plant so I was subjected to all kinds of great music. Beatles, Stones, reggae… loads of music! The art of LP covers always played a big part with regards to what records I purchased. Anything dangerous looking came home with me. I was lucky to live near the UK’s largest second-hand record store Beanos, and would take my pocket money and buy LPs by The New York Dolls, Stooges, Grateful Dead, and The Fugs, to name a few. I loved Glam Rock; that was the first thing that was mine. The Sweet, T Rex (Marc Bolan), Suzi Quatro, Slade, but PUNK really got me going!

I was 14 when punk rock broke, and I remember the first time I saw the Sex Pistols, along with The Damned, Ramones. It was dirty and dangerous. Music has been a big part of my life. In the early ’80s I got a gig running the fan club for one of my all time fave bands: The Gun Club from LA. I was also a huge Cramps fan, so I started doing fanzines, writing for music papers, and doing flyers for bands as well.

Over the last 25 years, I have worked in the music business. I managed a large second-hand record store, then went to work for Sanctuary Records by putting records out, and doing artwork for the likes of the Sex Pistols, The Fall, The Damned, Motorhead, and Black Sabbath (to name a few). In fact, I oversaw the transfer of music from original master tapes for the then recently discovered multi-track tapes for the first 3 Black Sabbath LPs when I worked for Sanctuary Records.

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Most people tuning in for this interview will recognize your art from Show Class Magazine. How did you hook up with those dudes?

A few years ago I hooked up with an old friend Dean, who does DiCE magazine. I had not seen him in years, and as it turned out I’d bought some issues of DiCE but never made a connection for some reason. I’d been painting old Rock ‘n’ Roll stars like Screamin’ Jay Hawkins and Johnny Kidd in my style for fun, and one night when Dean came over we had some beers and I showed him my stuff. He asked me to do something for a possible DiCE cover, but it was never used as they changed the format and style..

I had so much fun doing it but it was a bit too cartoonish, I fear. My bike builder Benny Thomas said I needed to make the biker art more realistic, and that was sound advise which I thank him for. But seeing Dean and seeing what he was doing in LA made me sit up and want to do what I’d dreamed of doing for years: get myself a bike! Fulfill a dream. Here in the UK, Harleys are not cheap. You pretty much have to double up on US prices! Plus the old school chopper scene is pretty small, BUT there are some great people in it

It’s not been easy, but I got me a chopper! Then I wanted to look cool as F**k on it, so… I contacted Billy at Hellmutt Liners. We chewed the fat and got on well. I got a killer helmet done and am so afraid to wear it – it’s a work of art in its own right. But I saw he was selling a magazine called Show Class, a term I was aware of due to having read Hunter S. Thompson’s HA book.

I bought all the issues Billy had and was sold as soon as I saw it. It’s different to DiCE. I love both magazines but Show Class is a bit more dangerous, if that makes any sense at all? Billy put me in touch with Tim from Show Class as he’d been doing some stuff with them. I said to Tim “You know what the magazine is missing? A cool Dave Mann style painting like Easyriders. It’s got everything else but that.” Tim said yeah, then why don’t you do some paintings then. The rest is history, as I’ve been knocking ’em out like little baby turds ever since. They seem to love them (Tim and Zak).

It’s now progressed to the odd t-shirt design, other ideas, and with Tim and Zak calling me the out-of-house artist, which I guess makes me a part of the SC team (which is something I’m proud of). I like what they do a lot. For me the shame is I’m some 4,000 miles away from all the great bikes featured in the magazine. I really hope the people who buy the magazine like the art too. One of my recent ideas for those guys was the 49% SHOW 51% CLASS idea which they beautifully turned into tees and caps. I’m currently working on an original piece of art which hopefully will be received well by the scene in America. Someone will end up the owner of an original piece, which hopefully will mean a lot to them.

I also want to spread the word to the UK and Europe too. The scene here in the UK is small for the real old school bikes from the ’60s and ’70s, but we have some amazing bike builders here too. People who I admire: Benny at Boneshaker Choppers does some amazing builds, as does Andy at Pacoma Cycles, and the mighty Toshi at Bell 45.

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That’s awesome, man! Will we be seeing a cover somewhere down the line?

Yeah, I done a nice front and back cover which I’m hoping will be used sometime soon, and I have ideas for an even better one, but my big problem is time. I hold down a regular job and do all my art in my spare time. I certainly keep busy, and just completed designs for Heavy, Sinner Supply, and am about to do a killer collaboration with Jesse from Rising Vision in L.A. More Reaper Madness…

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Heavy Clothing recently put out your epic Manson tee. What’s it like working with Zak on Heavy stuff? Does he give you any indication of what he’s looking for, or are you given free reign with the design?

Zak is nothing but trouble. I tell ya that guy is so dark he scares me – way too much darkness. He’s trouble with a capitol T. Ok I’m lying, he’s very much like Tim at Show Class: COOL AS FOOK. Very easy to work with, happy to be hit up with ideas, and happy to tell you what he does not does not like. Straight talking mofo. That’s the way I like it. I’m pretty happy with the Heavy Charlie design I did. Zak’s also the other part to Show Class. Apparently those guys are sending me a Panhead for Christmas! I cannot thank them enough for liking what I do.

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What are you riding these days? Are there any bikes over the years that you wish you never sold?

I ride Ding A Ding Dang My dang Along Ling Long. She’s my baby. A ’98 Evo Sportster chopper, shrouded shocks, ’70s Sportster front-end, 21″ front 18″ rear, which soon will have an original hamburger-style front brake and a vintage flamed Sportster tank (with great thanks from Dean at DiCE). She’s my first bike so I have never sold a bike. I’d love to have a Knucklehead hardtail, or Panhead, but for now that’s a pipe dream. I went for an Evo chopper as I wanted to have fun riding without too much hassle. I’m not gonna lie, I’m no hot shot in fixing these thing, but I’m learning a hell of a lot fast. I hope in a few years to go for a Knuck or a Panhead, but for now all I can say is that first ride when I got my bike home was worth all the pain in getting it!

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Are there any new artists out there that you’re really digging, or inspire you to work harder?

Show Class always features some great artists. I like Tallboys work a lot! Toby Tequila is another kat who does some amazing work on the back of cuts. I just traded up an original of mine for a cut of a Reaper he did for me. Donny Gillies work is great too. Jesse at Rising Vision does some monster posters too.

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What are you working on next? Got any new prints or projects we should have our eyes peeled for?

Show Class has a heap of art to roll with. There’s a great Heavy inspired poster. I’m working with Rising Vision in L.A. on a new t-shirt and poster design – a great collaboration with Jesse. Just finished two designs for prints and t-shirts for the mighty Angelo at Sinner Supply in Belgium. “Reaper Spelled Backwards is DEATH” t-shirt design he has total exclusivity on. That’s my baby and its a killer t-shirt. I’m also planning to do a few more affordable prints as well. I like to make my work top quality but also affordable to everyone, from the guy who has a very healthy bank balance, to the kid on the street who has to work his butt off for anything. I did 13 prints of “Reaper Madness”, signed and numbered, for a mere £35 each (about $45-$50 dollars). If you want an original, well that’s cheap too. People should hit me up.

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I ask this closing question to everybody, because you never know what you’re going to get, and the answer is often filled with insight: If you could travel through time, where would you go?

This one is going to have two answers ha ha. I’d go forward a week so I could find out the winning lottery numbers so I could win!! That way I pay my bills off and get the bikes of my dreams! Or… take me back to L.A 1991 to Long beach so I can buy the Robert Williams “Zombie Mystery” painting I passed up on for $1500!!! Flea from the Red Hot Chili Peppers now owns!

Thanks a ton, Mike, for this opportunity to interview you for Doom Cycle. It’s been a blast, and I’m always looking forward to seeing what you’re up to. Cheers!

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Filed Under: Featured Category, Features, Interviews, News Tagged With: 49% SHOW 51% CLASS, Angel Dust Movie Music for Bikers, Aurora, Bell 45, Black Sabbath, Black Widows, Boneshaker Choppers, Charles Burns, Charles Manson, Clint Eastwood, Deep Purple, DicE Magazine, Dogtown, Donny Gillies, Easyriders, Edwin Pouncey, Evel Knievel, Every Which Way But Loose, EVO, Frank Frazetta, Garage Co Customs, Gary Panter, Grateful Dead, Gun Club, Heavy Clothing, Hells Angels, Hunter S. Thompson, Ironhead, Joe Coleman, Johnny Kidd, KISS, Knave, Knucklehead, Larry Pierce, Led Zeppelin, Motorhead, Pacoma Cycles, Panhead, Playboy, Rat Fink, Reaper Madness, Reaper Spelled Backwards Is Death, Rising Vision, Robert Williams, Sanctuary Records, Savage Pencil, Screamin' Jay Hawkins, Sex Pistols, shovelhead, Show Class Magazine, Sinner Supply, Slade, Southern Gentleman, Sportster, Suzi Quatro, T Rex, Tallboy, The Beatles, The Cramps, The Damned, The Fall, The Fugs, The New York Dolls, The Ramones, The Rolling Stones, The Skoundrels, The Stooges, The Sweet, Toby Tequila

Mike Mastrangelo Interview – Video Tease!

June 9, 2014 by Tim Granda

DC-tiny-wedge Check out the new video tease for the interview with artist Mike Mastrangelo, which debuts this Friday! Mike’s work with Show Class Magazine and Heavy Clothing has been such a killer match-up so far (have you seen the epic Manson Heavy head? Fuck!), and it sounds like we’ll be seeing a lot more insane stuff in the future. His work kicks lots of ass, and it oozes gallons of soul. So turn up your speakers and prepare for a trip into the mind of a master: Mike Mastrangelo!

The track featured in the video is by the killer doom band Monolord, and it’s called “Empress Rising”. They appear courtesy of RidingEasy Records.

The version heard here was edited by me to fit the video (from 12 minutes down to about 50 seconds). You can grab the original on sweet vinyl from RidingEasy Records or get it digitally on iTunes.

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Filed Under: Featured Category, News Tagged With: Bell 45, biker art, Charles Manson, Choppers, David Allan Coe, DicE Magazine, Garage Co Customs, Heavy Clothing, Johnny Kidd, Larry Pierce, Mike Mastrangelo, Monolord, Show Class Magazine

The DC Links Page

January 19, 2014 by Tim Granda

DC-tiny-wedge The Links page on a web site goes back to the earliest days of the internet. Over the years it’s grown out of fashion, but I don’t give a fuck. I dig the Links page. You can discover all sorts of cool shit that you never knew existed. As of today, this picture represents all of the amazing artists and brands that are linked to here on Doom Cycle. This list continues to grow all the time, so make sure you check back every once in awhile to see what’s up.  If you haven’t checked out some of these sites before you’re in for a real treat. Prepare to have your head blown!

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Filed Under: Featured Category, News Tagged With: 99 Seconds, Adi Gilbert, Bad Weather, Benjamin Lande, Born Loser, Brett Stenson, Bubble Visor, Burney, Chop Cult, Corpses From Hell, Death Machine Corpse, Death Spray Customs, DicE Magazine, Dresden The Barbarian, Florian Bertmer, Gorgeous George, Greasy Dozen, Heavy Clothing, High On Haley, Honkey Kong, Ifern, Jack Gallowtree, Jason Cruz, JCRUZ, Josh McAlear, Love Ear Art, Low Side, Madman, Matt Kerley, Maxwell Paternoster, Mitch Cotie, Night Watch, Old Bike Barn, Pork Magazine, Richey Beckett, Robert Crumb, Ryan Quickfall, Shawn Dickinson, Swamp Wizards, Tony Mayoh

Interview with Maxwell Paternoster

December 16, 2013 by Tim Granda

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DC-tiny-wedge Maxwell Paternoster creates some of the most unique artwork you’ll find in the scene today. Each piece pulsates with a nervous raw energy that can leave you twitching and gasping for alcohol. His world is wrapped in a twisted landscape saturated with toxic waste; a place where shriveled mutants with mile-high pompadours run wild with gun barrel eyes.

The discarded parts that are piled up everywhere are scavenged over by these freaky inhabitants, who cobble together bits of this and that to build incredible machines (which appear to run on either steam or contaminated jet fuel). The skies here are scorched with fire, and the roads are littered with the oozing limbs left behind by psychotic biker gangs patched in Hell.

Paternoster’s world is seriously twisted. You’re just as likely to die from radiation as you are to be run over by a gene-fused man-fly riding one helluva sweet chopper. But as dangerous a place as it is, I’d love to wake up there! Who wouldn’t jump at the chance to shoot lightning bolts from their eyes?

So it’s with great pleasure that I introduce to you the man behind such deviously clever apocalyptic work, one of my favorite artists out there today… Maxwell Paternoster!

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Here in the USA, you’re probably best known for your work with Lowbrow Customs. How did that collaboration come about?

Oh yea, that came about thus: a few years back people were not all overFacebook and Instagram like they are now, and it seemed more about forums and blogs. I always used to try posting artwork onto the Jockey Journal forum, and also my buddy Richard Baybutt talked me into starting my blog Corpses From Hell. So from that I had my images seen by the guys at Lowbrow Customs. I can not remember the first image I did for them, but after that I have done loads of pictures for Lowbrow!

The Corpses From Hell site is always a blast to check out. What’s the story behind the inception of CFH?”

I started to draw pictures for some imaginary motorcycle gangs and stuff like that, then I thought Corpses From Hell sounded like a cool name. I initially used it just as the name for my website/blog, but it seemed to become very popular and everybody started to know me as the Corpses From Hell person. So it stuck.

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Where were you raised, and what were the factors that led you to become an artist?

I was raised in Rural Suffolk in England; in the countryside. So yea, surrounded by fields, trees, and nature – ha ha! I do not know what the factors were that led me to do art. I seem to remember thinking it would be really cool if I could draw an awesome tractor, and to draw the engine. I think I drew some stuff and liked doing it, then some adults probably said it was really good, so I got it into my mind that I could draw and that I should keep doing it. Now its too late to stop – ha ha ha!

Were there any artists that made an impression on you while you were growing up?

I didn’t have much access to many shops or money to buy comics and stuff as a youngster, but there was a pile of British comics I always looked at. They wereWizzer and Chips, Beano, Dandy, and one called Corr!!, or something like that. Also loads of animation stuff on telly, Tom and Jerry and all those mad cartoons. I also liked an artist called Steven Wiltshire, who was on TV, and he could draw everything from memory.

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You have one of the most recognizable styles in the motorcycle scene today. Were there any particular pieces along the way that proved to be significant in defining your style?

Ha ha! Not sure it’s the most recognizable!! Hah, maybe, I dunno. Until a few years back, I did not really do so much motorcycle related artwork. I had been focusing on developing my illustration style for many years in the world of art, comics, and illustration.

I was always a bike fan, and an artist, but did not mix the two things together because bikes were much less popular a few years ago. I drew bikes, but only for myself in my sketchbook. So I think my style was already sort of defined, but I just started to get a lot more motorcycle related jobs and projects.

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So when did your interest in motorcycles begin?

I think I must have just been born with that or something. I saw some on TV and stuff, or in comics, or something, and I always wanted one. I wanted a dirt bike. But yea, actually, as a kid I had a two-stroke Suzuki 70cc step-through – ha ha! Then an MZ TS125 two-stroke, which father painted Mad Max on the fuel tank – ha ha!

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Haha, too cool! Are there any artists out there today that you really dig?

Yea, loads – ha ha! Maybe too many to mention!! If you want to see something rad, look at Will Sweeney, for example. Also, look at the Koyama Press website; there’s a stack of rad artists on there!

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I see that you’re participating in the “Live for Myself, Answer to Nobody” Steve McQueen exhibit, which is happening right now in London. What were the circumstances that led you to become involved in the show?

Oh yea, the Steve McQueen show came about through being involved in the bike scene here in London. We have been asked to participate in a few things now that bikes are in vogue – ha ha ha! For example, they opened a Belstaff store in London, and they wanted a bunch of bikes to ride about in front of the shop on opening night – ha ha ha! It was hilarious for us. I have no clue how I was selected for that, but yea, the Steve McQueen one was through my buddy, the photographerSam Christmas, who was in the show and opened the door for me and some other art people.

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What are you working on next, Maxwell? Do you have anything in the pipeline that you’d like to share?

There is a bunch of stuff in the pipeline, a few tanks, and some preparation for a show in France (details TBC). Also t-shirts etc; a bunch of things. I want to do more CFH t-shirts and things too.

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Lastly, if you could travel through time, where would you go?

Cool! Depends on how many trips I’m allowed, ay? Maybe if it’s many goes I’d go back to check out some dinosaurs, then go into the future a bit at a time to make sure I didn’t land when the earth was destroyed. But if I only have one go I might just stay here, actually – ha ha!

Haha! Thanks a ton, Maxwell, for setting aside some time for this interview. It’s been a blast speaking with the dude behind so many iconic images, and I can’t wait to see what you come up with next!

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Filed Under: Featured Category, Interviews Tagged With: Australian Cafe Racers, Beano, Belstaff, Bonneville, Buzz or Howl, CFH, Corpses From Hell, Coste, Dandy Corr!!, Devil Inside Cycles, Devil Inside Speed Shop, Devil Power Cycles, DicE Magazine, El Solitario MC, ESMC, Jockey Journal, Koyama Press, Lazer Death, Live for Myself Answer to Nobody, Lowbrow Customs, Mad Max, Maxwell Paternoster, MZ TS125, Pau Speed Shop, Richard Baybutt, Sam Christmas, Steve McQueen, Tom and Jerry, Wizzer and Chips

Maxwell Paternoster Interview – Video Tease!

December 14, 2013 by Tim Granda

DC-tiny-wedge Teaser video for the  Maxwell Paternoster interview! Stop back on Monday to check it out!

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Filed Under: Featured Category, News Tagged With: Corpses From Hell, DicE Magazine, Lowbrow Customs, Maxwell Paternoster

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Doom Cycle is the place to keep up with all the rad artists in and around the chopper scene. It's run by this dude in MI named Tim Granda. [Read More...]

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