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Our artist/critic and muscle car fanatic Lee Quinones weighs in on a new book Motion Tales of a Muscle Car Builder.

Simply said, Martyn L. Schorr’s fantastic new book Motion Tales of a Muscle Car Builder is a refreshing read and visual window into a unique New York entrepreneur’s story set in the turbulent late 1960’s and 1970’s.

For some who may come to read it, it may also relapse an envy for the central cogs of the story — those pesky, nasty Chevrolet’s that stole onto the streets and into the hearts of America and beyond.

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The black and white photo montage throughout the book lends a strong backbone to the many memoirs of Motion’s founder Joel Rosen and his partnership with Baldwin Chevrolet’s Ed Simonin. Both Rosen and Simonin created fast special order super cars that factories couldn’t legally deliver, they built a sense of camaraderie among two business heads flanked by a leap of faith and ballsy “in your face” tactics.

I especially was moved by the chapter of Charlie “Astoria Chass” Snyder. It managed to bring together the innocence, tragedy and lasting triumph of a young American and his iconic sidekick, a 1967 Motion prepped Corvette Stingray nicknamed Ko-Motion.

As a native New Yorker myself and a fanatic for details, I religiously studied the photos captured on Rte. 27 East in Baldwin where Motion’s creations were turned lose within the villages. I could see where the sun was setting in the sky, tattle telling what time of day Motion got it’s off-track test sessions going on Sunrise Highway. A sharper eye will catch the Stingray of Charlie Snyder taking off at the now defunct New York National Speedway, back when it boasted four side to side racing lanes.

All in all, a wild read with a nostalgic forward by Joe Oldham.

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Muscle(car) man and style critic Lee Quinones tested out the 2010 Chevy Camaro SS at the 10th Annual Toy Run for St. Mary’s Hospital for Children. Who says press cars aren’t used for noble purposes?

There is internal disagreement about the particulars of this vehicle in Gotryke garage. Some of us love the brawny shifter. We’ll Lee tell it his way. We heard the kids at St. Mary’s dug the red Camaro.

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What has not been debated about our beloved classic remade, the 2010 Chevrolet Camaro? What I can tell you is, that this new pup into the doggy dog world of steroid ego is one city slicker. The LS, SS, and RS models are hard to distinct from one another so here then lies a sleeper cell of cars.

Its 426 HP motor lets you feel a sense of what was and what is here now. It boogies. The shifter knob is beyond knob; it’s a ball, a basketball at that. Too big for my comfort to row gears in a hurry. The steering wheel is super fly with its cut edged face. It resembles the classic tuff wheels of the early seventies.

Though the roof lines are handsome, it is cut a little hair too much. It created a nerve wrapped driving experience, though someone should be on the red alert when driving this kind of animal. The cockpit is comfy and snug and the rear seat might has not be included in the package. Putting an infant car seat there is nothing short of G..dam it as I discovered!

The trunk lid could have used a little more trimming on its cut to maybe create an even bigger trunk space, but it passes. People were not really feeling the rear light panel. My two cents is that two discreet lights were better than four. Can’t wait to see, let alone drive an LS7 427 Factory race Camaro ala ZL1 pedigree.
Lee Quinones

More Camaro on Gotryke:
Camaro takes Manhattan

Chevy Camaro: Tales of Street Sensation

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It’s been over four years since we first interviewed Clifford Joseph Harris, jr  for DUB Magazine. Whirlwind success, a Grammy, cinematic success, three albums, a Chevy endorsement and ultimately, sad legal woes have followed Tip, who turns 29 this month. While he’s taking a moment away from the spotlight fullfilling his one-year prison sentence  for a weapons-related felony offense, we await his return and 2010 album, and look back at the history of an authentic star whose rhymes originate from a genuine place and real life experience.

By Tamara Warren

via: DUB Magazine, July 2005

T.I.

“Man, somebody gonna trip,” he said in a familiar, deep baritone drawl. His voice is almost surprising, coming from a man with a wiry frame, striking features and a square jaw, who at a quick glance appears young and spry. The authoritative voice and staunch gaze tell a different story of an old soul, wise beyond his 24 years. It is the voice of a man who has rolled around the block a few times—in his own words—a real OG.

T.I.’s booming cadence is easily identifiable to anyone who pays attention to Billboard playlists or to the sounds of the streets. His powerful delivery has solidified his firm hold on superstardom with tales from his third album, Urban Legend (Atlantic, 2004), bumping from car speakers across America.

Turning to look at the uneven steps on the bus, he watched as members of Pimp Squad Click (P$C) exited onto the midtown New York City sidewalk. Called Tip by his cohorts, T.I. watched in silence, seeming ready to step in if someone tumbled. T.I.’s Grand Hustle label artists landed the drop squarely, and, like a squadron, gathered to make their next move—studio bound.

T.I. pays attention to details—from the phrasing of questions about his native Atlanta to the specs on one of his Chevys. Make a wrong inference about one of his cars, and he is quick to correct. “I got a ’96 Impala. It’s got an LT1. They didn’t have that engine in the ’94 and ’95, but I got a ’96,” he explained. “The LT1 is a Corvette engine.”

Explaining his tastes, his lifestyle and his history is a part of every day life for T.I., who is currently on tour with Nelly and Fat Joe. He keeps busy with the normal flow of photo shoots with P$C, decisions to be made about matters like clothing logos, and a rigorous interview schedule. Despite the hectic pace, his actions are measured, calculated and meticulous—the kind of qualities characteristic of both a master craftsman and the kind of guy you might run into while perusing his next purchase at a car show.

For T.I., these passions are often one and the same. He does not mind talking about his cars—old and new, foreign and domestic, or posing with cars, whether they come from his modest fleet, from his Atlanta shop, or from one of his regular stops on a promo tour.

DUB caught up with him as he breezed through L.A.’s NEXT Motorsports to peep an exotic Ferrari 575 Maranello sparkling with HRE 840R rims wrapped in Pirelli tires and a BMW 745i decked out in a full AC Schnitzer body kit and NC Forged Xtreme 10 rims.

The car a man owns speaks for the man, and T.I. mixes and matches old, sturdy American classics with silky smooth innovations, resulting in a fleet that kicks a potent concoction.

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He uses his lyrical craft—as one of the most respected MCs in the new-school Southern game—to talk about what goes down in hood-bound cars, showing his talent for telling stories.

So if your rearview shaking and your seats vibrating /24 inch Daytons got the Chevrolet shaking. (24’s)

T.I. has come a long way. From the streets of Atlanta to assuming his title as rap royalty, he flips consonants and flows over lines that depict the raw lifestyle he experienced—making the wrong kind of record, stigmatized with the felon tag.

Nonetheless, his albums have always told tales about cars in the hood. On his first album, I’m Serious (Arista, 2001), he cut his first enthusiast track “Heavy Chevys.” Moreover, T.I.’s catalog contains enough Chevy references over the course of three albums to put a half-ass car club to shame. “Me and Trick did a song we never used about Chevy Impalas,” he said.

You gonna make me bring a Chevy to a real slow creep/My partner’s hangin’ out the window/Mouth fulla gold teeth. (U Don’t Know Me)

T.I.

T.I.’s floss is not for show. “That’s what we do in the South,” he said. Growing up around folks who loved cars, his uncles were into Chevys—the chariot of choice for the self-proclaimed King of the South—while his father was a Cadillac man.

“I’ve been riding in Cadillacs for a long time. The first time I was ever in one was my dad’s 1985 El Dorado Biarritz. He used to take me to Harlem—up to Harlem, yeah boy—to his candy store, to run numbers,” he recalled. “That’s the first Cadillac I rode in. I still have it.”

T.I. can sometimes be found parked, sitting in the gold car’s luxurious seats, stealing a quiet moment.

A precocious youth, T.I. taught himself to drive when he was about 11, taking his grandmother’s or mother’s cars. He finally got his own when he was about 14—a 1985 Cutlass Supreme. “I’d ride round the apartments,” he said. Mid-90s Hip-Hop weighed heavy on his playlist. “Back then it was Too Short’s Get in Where You Fit In, Snoop Dogg’s Doggy Style, Outkast’s ATLiens and Underground Kings (UGK). I had six-by-nines bangin’ those cuts,” he recalled.

However, T.I.’s teenage years were defined by trouble, as he fell deep into the street life around him. But, ultimately, the rap game proved more formidable than the dope game.

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By the turn of the millennium, he was touring, and a record deal with Arista gave him the means to shop for a fly new car. However, it was his second album, Trap Muzik (Atlantic, 2003) that opened up the playing field.

“When I had enough money to buy anything I wanted, I bought the 2001 Escalade EXT and then the CL,” he said.

These days, T.I. is a car connoisseur. His fast and furious favorite is the Mercedes-Benz SL 55, and on warm Atlanta days, the top is squarely dropped. However, on average, T.I. does not drive much. He has a driver for his new Rolls Royce Phantom and is contemplating adding a Maybach to the mix.

Still, he maintains a taste for Detroit muscle bound beasts. A 1970 Chevrolet Sport Chevelle, a 1972 Monte Carlo and a 1970 Chevelle Convertible find themselves in his fleet alongside a 2003 Hummer, a 2003 Yukon Denali, a 2004 Range Rover, a 1988 Monte Carlo, and the aforementioned ‘96 Impala.

“You get old cars from people’s yards when they don’t want them anymore,” he said. “Every now and then you catch a good deal.” But T.I. is selective when picking up an old car. “Make sure the frame ain’t bent, and that it has no rust,” he said. “Certain things, you just know, are very hard to find. I learned a lot from my uncles.”

While T.I. favors rims, counting GFGs as his favorite of the moment, his schedule does not allow for anything other than picking out his next ride or choice of wheel. But T.I.’s cars are in trusted hands. He is part owner of Atlanta Auto Concierge Elite, employing a half dozen people. “I bought my own shop,” he said. “We get ’em, sell ’em to you, fix ’em up for you; whatever you need.”

When it comes to car talk, T.I. likes to get technical about his. “The most efficient thing I’ve ever seen is probably the ’67 Corvette convertible. Puff got that. Me and him rode in that in Miami,” T.I. said, reminiscing, a slow easy coming over his face. “That’s what Elvis used to ride in.”

While anybody can appreciate a car of that caliber, T.I. recognizes the mystique that transcends the machine and has nothing but respect to a chariot truly fit for a king.

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Woo-ha! I picked up the 2010 Chevy Camaro Friday night from a Manhattan parking garage. Let the games begin. Here it is Mother’s Day and a car show later, I’m celebrating the motherload in all it’s glory. Usually, we at Gotryke like to digest our reviews before sending them your way, but we’re just too thrilled to be muscling our way through Brooklyn on this sunny day that we had to spout off with opinions. We’re reporting to you live from a Brooklyn cafe a s the blazing Camaro taking a siesta in the afternoon sun. More coverage, flicks & thrills after the jump.
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In case you thought Chevy was ignorant to the hybrid game, here are two shining examples that graced the Gotryke driveway — the 2009 Chevrolet Silverado and the 2009 Chevy Malibu Hybrid.

What these two Chevy’s share in common: they both debuted with rave reviews in their combustible engine format over the last two years. Yet, so much has changed in that time, Chevy was smart to sharpen it’s A game with attention getting hybrids.

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It’s worthy noting that the Malibu also boasts respectable fuel economy (22/30 mpg) in its standard 2.4 liter engine and bare bones package. ($21,605). (Hello people, hybrids aren’t the end all be all on fuel economy; see Gotryke Green 101.)
However, in hybrid form these numbers do improve (26/34 mpg). Of course, that added cost comes with a higher sticker price ($25,555). The Malibu goes toe to toe with its competitors in the mid-size sedan category and is a better value for quality materials and ride. Several owners have raved to us about their purchase choices since the Malibu hit the market. Of course we have affection for Malibu’s pedigree dating back to ‘64, and here we’re confident that GM did right by the latest generation.

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While big dogs like the Silverado have caught flack for being well — big — our construction workers, artists, and farmers still need those medium size trucks, and this one attacks the ground with vigor. The hybrid engine doesn’t affect smooth-as-silk handling on treacherous terrain. (Try offroading in the wilds of Michigan yonder, or gallavanting down Atlantic Ave in Brooklyn.) Here’s where fuel economy is apparent and probably a good look for the greener business community.

The Silverado ($38,205.00) relies on a power-laden 5.3L 315hp V8 and runs at a pace that won’t keep up with new fuel economy standards (14/20) — but is by far not at the lowest of the low. In hybrid skin these numbers hit higher across the board. (21/22 mpg). Trucks that hit 20 mpg are worth it.

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In case you haven’t frequented car blogs this week, the Chevy Camaro is making the scene. In a very low-key presentation, Gotryke spied the Camaro last night at Cooper Classics. The cocktail napkins had designer Sangyup Lee’s cool sketches. The Camaro was one of several unleashed in strategic Manhattan locales. We’ll get back to you with some wheel time reflection soon. [click to continue…]

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We’ve long been fascinated by car culture and the people who keep it interesting. Our favorite folks are those who collect the Detroit legends — an art form with sheet metal as the medium — and then flip it with their own sense of style. New York Giant Mike Jennings sent us this video last fall after telling us about his off-season passion — the old school car game. Here he shows off his pet project — Michael Strahan’s 1963 Lincoln Continental. [click to continue…]

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Lee Quinones rides the 2009 Chevy Traverse through the March snowstorm in New York City. Here are his findings —

The interior compartment of the 2009 Chevrolet Traverse is super comfy and keeps the outside world decibels at bay. All control knobs which is what I first look for to be at a moments glance away are placed nicely in veiw. The Bose system booms appropriately. [click to continue…]

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Detroit is down shifting. It was not long ago that the Big Three were best known for speed, horsepower and big hefty torque. So 2008. While the Camaro, Challenger and Mustang souped-up additions were on display, their presence was subdued in lieu of the electrified concept machines — making a slower go at fuel economy. The most surprising is the Lincoln C-Concept with a 4-cylinder EcoBoost. Yet, the word about town was how great Chrysler’s EVS are to drive, as one of my colleagues enthusiastically bragged. Personally, I think the Cadillac Converj is a sexy take on refined luxury for a brand that showed promise since it broke out of the shell a few concept cycles ago.
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