Mob boss a biography in blood
Mob boss a biography in blood and fire.
Mike Hudson was born in Cleveland, Ohio, on Feb. 2, 1956. At the age of 16, he dropped out of school, hitchhiking throughout the United States and Mexico before joining the United States Army.
Mob boss a biography in blood
By the time he was 21, he was an editor for Cleveland’s Sun Newspapers, and also released his first record with the Pagans, the seminal American punk rock group he co-founded with his brother, Brian. The band released a short stack of classic singles, including “Six and Change,” “What’s This Shit Called Love?” “Dead End America,” and “Not Now, No Way.”
Touring and recording steadily for the next two years, Hudson left the newspapering business and began publishing fiction in the fanzines of the nascent punk rock movement.
By 1980, the Pagans had broken up, and he founded Terminal Records, a label that released the work of more than 20 bands, many of which appeared on the groundbreaking “Cleveland Confidential” LPs. The Pagans reformed briefly in 1982-83, releasing the classic “Pink Album.”
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