Don't know about the podcast you're talkin' about, but I know that's the title of the new album of DM BOB & The DEFICITS
Don't know about the podcast you're talkin' about, but I know that's the title of the new album of DM BOB & The DEFICITS
Heard song called They Call Me Country on a podcast. Does anybody know if it was from Garage Punk? Came at end of show. Looking for who the band was. Thanks.
There's also this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fivHgX9XImg&feature=youtu.be
The new Korg SV-1, it's marketed as an Electric piano, however it has a really great vox sound, which you can see in the middle of this you tube demo.(around 2:39) However, it's freaking expensive. (2K). Maybe, just maybe they'd put out a cheaper, stripped down version without all the bells & whistles?? Korg, are you listening??
Pick up "Children of Nuggets" on Rhino. That will be a good introduction.
And there was a whole pile of Canadian bands from that era as well;
The Gruesomes, 10 Commandments, The Worst, Dundrells, Deja Voodoo, Frankenstein 5, Smugglers, Vindicators,The Fiends, Cryptics, UIC and lots more that i can't think of at the moment...
Club Dog and Alice in Wonderland (run by the Dr) were also good clubs, but generaly had more psych bands than garage (Magic Mushroom Band, Treatment, Ozric Tentacles, etc)
Rip off Records!! Look em up and their catalog is a good reference. Also the drags were pretty great.
Whatever happened to the Playn Jane.
One of the greatest Psych bands of the 80s never cracked it on vinyl but some of the greatest gigs at the Marquee in my memory.
One classic friday night with the Prisoners at the Clarendon in Hammersmith Twas the mutts nuts !!!!!!
I played in The Surfadelics in the mid-80s in London (not to be confused with the later, Italian band!) There was a big garage scene at the time, centered around the Clarendon at Hammersmith. I remember The Milkshakes, The Cannibals, Treatment (psychedelic)
Plan 9, Plasticland, Dream Syndicate, The Last, Vietnam Veterans, Lyres, Midnight Records, Rain Parade, The Morlocks, The Nomads, The Steppes. Just to name a few!!!
Oh yeah, man, oh yeah. It's amazing to see how many great bands put out records then.
Glad to see the Humpers in there among those other legends. That is a lively scene those guys came from. If I'm not wrong Red Aunts come from that corner too. And you know who that is folks right? Hint: TWO TEARS.
kopper said:
Let's not forget the Drags, the Cynics, the Devil Dogs, the Revelators, the 5.6.7.8's, Bantam Rooster, Cheater Slicks, Lord High Fixers, Jack o' Fire, '68 Comeback, the A-Bones, the Dirtbombs, the Stomachmouths, the Satelliters, the Raunch Hands, Honeymoon Killers, Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, the Chrome Cranks, the Fall-Outs, the Subsonics, Sons of Hercules, the Barracudas, the Stems, the Real Kids, Lyres, DMZ, the Mono Men, Lightning Beat-Man's stuff (solo as well as w/ the Monsters), the Joneses, Dirtys, the Swingin’ Neckbreakers, the Humpers, the Spaceshits, the Royal Pendletons, the Reatards, Country Teasers, the Screws, Bassholes, the Insomniacs, the Kaisers, the Fleshtones, the Untamed Youth, the Von Zippers, the Woggles, the Fells, the Mullens, the Hentchmen, the Boss Martians, Sugar Shack, the Dukes of Hamburg, the Mortals, the Nomads, (early) Dwarves, the Compulsive Gamblers... and the OBLIVIANS!!
Also, it should go without saying that we're also including the Cramps on this list.
I always liked me some Mudhoney.
KK Dirty Money said:
This is great! Good subject, good question, good responses. Thanks!
I guess I'll chime in as the "grunge guy""...
I always thought Mudhoney was a pretty cool band from the latter part of that era, along with some of the other Sub Pop bands from back then.
Look into the Sub Pop label for that Seattle slice of this pie.
Let's not forget the Drags, the Cynics, the Devil Dogs, the Revelators, the 5.6.7.8's, Bantam Rooster, Cheater Slicks, Lord High Fixers, Jack o' Fire, '68 Comeback, the A-Bones, the Dirtbombs, the Stomachmouths, the Satelliters, the Raunch Hands, Honeymoon Killers, Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, the Chrome Cranks, the Fall-Outs, the Subsonics, Sons of Hercules, the Barracudas, the Stems, the Real Kids, Lyres, DMZ, the Mono Men, Lightning Beat-Man's stuff (solo as well as w/ the Monsters), the Joneses, Dirtys, the Swingin’ Neckbreakers, the Humpers, the Spaceshits, the Royal Pendletons, the Reatards, Country Teasers, the Screws, Bassholes, the Insomniacs, the Kaisers, the Fleshtones, the Untamed Youth, the Von Zippers, the Woggles, the Fells, the Mullens, the Hentchmen, the Boss Martians, Sugar Shack, the Dukes of Hamburg, the Mortals, the Nomads, (early) Dwarves, the Compulsive Gamblers... and the OBLIVIANS!!
Also, it should go without saying that we're also including the Cramps on this list.
Rikki is playing with The Mission Creeps from AZ. We started Kiss Kiss Bang Bang with her, but she lives too far from us, (we're in LA & she's down in Riverside). We are a new band & needed a lot of rehearsal to develop songs. The Mission Creeps are already established, so it was easier for her to jump right in with them. We did do one gig with Rikki, and are still friends. In fact we will be playing together (Mission Creeps & Kiss Kiss Bang Bang) @ Spike's in Rosemead CA in July. We now have Tony DeHerrera from The Vaquetones on drums. I'm not sure what the other Bandits are doing. We did a gig with the new lineup recently. I guess they broke up for personal reasons.
Rikki Styxx is married to drummer Dusty Watson (ex-Lita Ford, Kind Diamond, Agent Orange, Dick Dale, etc.). He's a friend of mine on Facebook. He posted something about Rikki being in another band semi-recently.
I'd really like to know. The Woolly Bandits looked and sounded like the greatest rock band ever. Then they went on tour in Europe. Now the band has a completely different sound and lineup, instead of the coolest rock band ever, they look like Christa and her four middle aged guy friends. Anybody have any info? Anybody know what Johnny Keys, Rikki Styxx, and Tracy Lee Skull are up to?
Murder City Nights #6 is available now! Balls-out, in-your-face garage, punk and trashy rock 'n roll from Los Angeles. SET LIST: Beef Boloney - Fear Love You More Dead - Joykiller Never Quite My Enemy - Fitz of Depression Creole Baby - The Hitchhikers Piece Of Ass - Nashville Pussy Shockwaves - Zeke Robber of Life - Backyard Babies Roky - Sonny Vincent & His Rat Race Choir Chinese Rock - The Ramones Mindless few - Chron Gen Pirate Love - Johnny Thunders & The Heartbreakers Street Where Nobody Lives - Pagans What's My Name - The Clash The Chesterfield Kings - Are You Gonna Be There ? Not a Goddamn Thing - Lazy Cowgirls Mean Evil Child - Raunch Hands I Can't Stop Thinking About It - The Dirtbombs Ne'er do well - Lords Of Altamont Crazy Girl - Black Lips Let Yourself Go - Reigning Sound Rocker - Nick Curran and the Lowlifes R & R Nurse - The Von Bondies
Mellow Yellow - Donovan (?)
Cocomo - Beach Boys
Cumbersome - 7 Mary Three
Eyes without Face - Billy Idol
Karma Chamelion - Culture Club
Everybody Dance Now - C & C Music Factory
Love in an Elevator - Aerosmith
Summer of 69 - Bryan Adamss
Horse with no name - America
Sledgehammer - Peter Gabriel
In the Air Tonight - Phil Collins
ha ha ha ha ha ha
Ms Springolator said:
I've Never Been to Me - Charlene. Personally I really wish she'd never been to a recording studio.
American Pie - Don McLean. If all was right with the world, he would have drove his Chevy to the levy, accelerated off the edge and then sunk to the bottom of some fathomless depth of water, where neither he nor his horrendous song would be heard again.
Where Do You Go to My Lovely - Peter Sarstedt. The song makes me vomit, and that's comment enough.
They've got a cool sound. Your description was very accurate. Thanks for the heads up...
Billy Idol has a son named Willem, who has a band called FIM (???). Anyway, aside from the goofy name, after listening to several of their songs I have to admit that I like these guys quite a lot. They remind me of early '80s Talking Heads meets Violent Femmes. Not particularly garagey, but easily as good as most of the stuff you'll hear coming out on Vice Records these days. Check 'em out: http://fimmanifesto.com
I like to play the Black Flag version with the Richard Berry's. Simultaneously.
But my vote goes for The Sonics. It feels more like an homage to the Wailers' version, than The Kingsmen's. I like that.
Hiya, I like this (but then again, I'm a bit biased...)
D.