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    • July 23, 2012 8:35 PM CDT
    • Not sure if this has been posted yet, 

      Metallica "Welcome home Sanitarium"  In high school I would sing,

      San Antonio, leave me be

      San Antonio, just leave me alone..........

    • July 23, 2012 6:57 PM CDT
    • "Hot and Nasty" , Black Oak Arkansas - "They call me hot and nasty , they call me Mr. Pansy.".       Actual lyric - "They call me Mr. Fancy".

      Johnny Thunders (And Walter Lure's Heroes) "Too Much Junkie Business"

      "Your the coolest thing in town , with your face flat on the ground. Friends went through your pockets as the coffee went down...."

      "...AS THE COFFIN WENT DOWN".

      ( I thought they were saying "Coffee" in reference the suposedly surefire way to revive an OD victim by pouring hot coffee down their throat , which , reportedly , is how original Dolls Drummer, Billy Murcia , died. ).

       

      "Honky Tonk Women" , YOU KNOW WHO. "I laid a Divorcee in New York City..."

                                       "I LATER DID THE SAME IN NEW YORK CITY....". 

       

      "Whiskey In The Jar" (Trad.) - Dubliners , Thin Lizzy.

      " I first produced me pistol , and then produced my rapier." 

      "And then produced my razor.''.

       

      David Bowie - "Hang on To Yourself" -     "And we move around like tigers on vaseline"

                      "If you like f*gg*ts and vaseline".  I'm sorry , that IS what it sounded like until I saw the actual lyrics.

       

      "All The Madmen "- "My libido split on me , give me some good old lobotomy."

                                 "And The Beatles split on me...." (Very topical for 1971.)

      "Ziggy Stardust" - "He could lick 'em by smiling....." . Do I have to say it?

                                 "The kids were just crass"     "The kids were just crap.".

       

      "Suffragette City"  "AW , DOOGIE , DON'T CRASH HERE"  

                                 "There's usually dope 'round here....".

       "Width of a Circle"    'To which he laughed insane "Kahlil Gibran".

                                 "To which he laughed and said "God's will , children."

       

      Romeo Void (I forget the song.)    "Get THAT JERK OFF YOUR MIND" (Do I have to say it?).

       

    • July 23, 2012 8:24 PM CDT
    • The Hideouts(Va)Hoodsnake(Nc),the Aqualads,Biggy Stardust,Hellacopters,Black Lips....just off the top of my head

    • July 23, 2012 2:45 PM CDT
    • bass drum of death is awesome stuff. but I dont get this Get Bent. Sounds like Offspring or something...

    • July 23, 2012 2:03 PM CDT
    • I used to write for get bent but they fired me :( I saw Bass Drum not long ago they are gonna be huge someday, some seriously hard rocking shit.

      Cath said:

      Great thread! I've been listening to "GB City" by Bass Drum of Death a lot lately. And I agree with Alison, Get Bent is awesome, you definitely have to check it out.

    • July 23, 2012 6:03 AM CDT
    • Hi Tim,

      I'm seeing Ty Segall in Tufnell Park next Thursday, is that where you are going? 

      Cheers, Coop


      Tim said:

      Came across a band called Boneyards recently who are from Brighton, England, and they sound REALLY good. I think they sound sort of garagey punk, trashy, lofish with a pleasant hint of surf.

      Check them out!

      http://boneyaards.tumblr.com/

      I'd be interested to hear what people think.

      Think they are pretty new and I only came across them because they are listed as support for Ty Segal who i'm seeing next week.

      By the way this is exactly the sort of thread that I love this site for. Mmmmmm new bands!

      Although some peoples definition of new is a bit.... well.... old... but I'll stop myself there so I don't become a meany.

    • July 23, 2012 5:57 AM CDT
    • Came across a band called Boneyards recently who are from Brighton, England, and they sound REALLY good. I think they sound sort of garagey punk, trashy, lofish with a pleasant hint of surf.

      Check them out!

      http://boneyaards.tumblr.com/

      I'd be interested to hear what people think.

      Think they are pretty new and I only came across them because they are listed as support for Ty Segal who i'm seeing next week.

      By the way this is exactly the sort of thread that I love this site for. Mmmmmm new bands!

      Although some peoples definition of new is a bit.... well.... old... but I'll stop myself there so I don't become a meany.

    • July 23, 2012 7:06 PM CDT
    •  GETTIN' THEIR WEDDING TACKLE OUT  , huh? It's more than most bands will do. A friend of mine , who'll remain nameless , we'll call him "Bill" . He used to go see them and said he came home , once , covered in flour and other crap like whipped cream that was being projected from the floor and the stage, he said it basically turned to glue , and He had to sneak back in the house without Mum and Da seeing the state of his clothes.
       
      melissa scott said:

      *larf* Yeah, as long as you didn't mind sometimes gettin' covered in flour when you got too close to the stage. They were loud! And known to get their kit off. Not that I complained...



      John Battles said:

      Yes , it was around that time , I was beginning to wish I lived in England , so I could see my countrymen , The Cramps.   By the time I COULD see them , I'd been a fan for almost 10 years.   IT SEEMED LIKE THERE WAS THIS WHOLE NEW SCENE GOING ON , BUT , I KNEW THAT , BY THE TIME I'D FOUND OUT ABOUT IT , IT WAS COMING TO AN END......

      I did'nt hear The Cramps' influence in the Psychobilly bands , which is fine , I just kept reading and hearing about "Cramps copyists" . I think The Cramps' frequent sojourns to Blighty motivated some of the changes taking place in The UK music scene , even if  Paul Fenech and others still deny it..      BUT ,  WHAT ABOUT KING KURT?  I HEARD THEY WERE HILARIOUS , LIVE.
       
      Johnny Bean said:

      I was around the London scene at that time, Hoodoo Gurus were the kings for me !!! Always loved the Cramps, Stems and The Prisoners, Long Ryders also played some great shows in that period. Always felt Milkshakes, Cannibals, Turkey Bones, Guana Batz et al were not very good, no memorable songs but the gigs were always a drunken laugh :)

    • July 23, 2012 6:27 PM CDT
    • *larf* Yeah, as long as you didn't mind sometimes gettin' covered in flour when you got too close to the stage. They were loud! And known to get their kit off. Not that I complained...



      John Battles said:

      Yes , it was around that time , I was beginning to wish I lived in England , so I could see my countrymen , The Cramps.   By the time I COULD see them , I'd been a fan for almost 10 years.   IT SEEMED LIKE THERE WAS THIS WHOLE NEW SCENE GOING ON , BUT , I KNEW THAT , BY THE TIME I'D FOUND OUT ABOUT IT , IT WAS COMING TO AN END......

      I did'nt hear The Cramps' influence in the Psychobilly bands , which is fine , I just kept reading and hearing about "Cramps copyists" . I think The Cramps' frequent sojourns to Blighty motivated some of the changes taking place in The UK music scene , even if  Paul Fenech and others still deny it..      BUT ,  WHAT ABOUT KING KURT?  I HEARD THEY WERE HILARIOUS , LIVE.
       
      Johnny Bean said:

      I was around the London scene at that time, Hoodoo Gurus were the kings for me !!! Always loved the Cramps, Stems and The Prisoners, Long Ryders also played some great shows in that period. Always felt Milkshakes, Cannibals, Turkey Bones, Guana Batz et al were not very good, no memorable songs but the gigs were always a drunken laugh :)

    • July 23, 2012 6:19 PM CDT
    • Yes , it was around that time , I was beginning to wish I lived in England , so I could see my countrymen , The Cramps.   By the time I COULD see them , I'd been a fan for almost 10 years.   IT SEEMED LIKE THERE WAS THIS WHOLE NEW SCENE GOING ON , BUT , I KNEW THAT , BY THE TIME I'D FOUND OUT ABOUT IT , IT WAS COMING TO AN END......

      I did'nt hear The Cramps' influence in the Psychobilly bands , which is fine , I just kept reading and hearing about "Cramps copyists" . I think The Cramps' frequent sojourns to Blighty motivated some of the changes taking place in The UK music scene , even if  Paul Fenech and others still deny it..      BUT ,  WHAT ABOUT KING KURT?  I HEARD THEY WERE HILARIOUS , LIVE.
       
      Johnny Bean said:

      I was around the London scene at that time, Hoodoo Gurus were the kings for me !!! Always loved the Cramps, Stems and The Prisoners, Long Ryders also played some great shows in that period. Always felt Milkshakes, Cannibals, Turkey Bones, Guana Batz et al were not very good, no memorable songs but the gigs were always a drunken laugh :)

    • July 23, 2012 6:09 PM CDT
    • I think it just depends....Most domestic LPs are still about 8 to 11 dollars , which , of course , is NOTHING in English Pounds. 45s CAN RUN YOU ANYWHERE FROM 4 TO 8 dollars , which is LESS than nothing in English Pounds.  A lot of independent labels and stores did try hard to keep the prices down , but , now , it's a crapshoot.  Also , regionally , a lot of new releases may be more expensive , still.

      Yeah , I also have the original Blood on The Cats comp - Everything from Screaming Lord Sutch to America's own Shockabilly (Who had no discernible Rockabilly influence , but , then again , neither does most latter - day "Psychobilly" .). I have The Wigs EP , too. I knew it existed , because it was listed in a Media Burn (?) ad , and I'm a Yank , fer chrissake.
       
      Mark George Harrison said:


      Forgot the Escalators JB, another Meteors offshoot although I remember reading that Nigel Lewis was on a lot of high dosage meds for a back complaint and when he was more compus mentus disowned their entire output!

      The blood on the cats, all four of them, were a weird combination of rockabilly, psychobilly, garage and goth! With a bit of punk on there for good measure with the Belfasts finest the Outcasts wrongly credited as the Outcats! Worth buying for the Wigs 'thirteen lines' took me until about ten years ago to find a copy of the Wigs ep, was told it didnt exist by a respected collector!

      Albums today are probably cheaper than they were then, its singles that are bloody dear! is that the case in the States? An average 45 here is about £4.50 but an album is usually between £10 and £13.50 or there abouts. sorry to get off track but as an 'old timer' its my perogative!;)
      John Battles said:

       Mark George ,        Well , The British stuff did'nt come cheap , here , either. There was this whole new "Scene" that did'nt get much coverage in the states. I did play a lot of it on my old radio show in Dallas in '86. I may have been one of the first DJs to play that stuff in The U.S.

      I played The Meteors , Guana Batz , etc. , too , alonside The Stingrays, who were mistaken for a Psychobilly band , because of the quiffs and  the standup bass. Bal said "Garage , Trash , Psychobilly , it's all the same thing. It's American music , and Americans don't understand it".   I COULD'NT find a lot of that stuff , yet , I loved the "Rockabilly Psychosis and The Garage Disease" and "Revenge of The Killer Pussies " albums . The Psychobilly thing seemed fresh at the time. I found The Washington Dead Cats' EARLY CASSETTE . They're still going , still terribly silly. But , this tape combined Psychedelia , Psychobilly , and a bit of Pere Ubu ,and , it worked .I still like it , and still have the psychedelic pattern shirt it came with !     Some of those other  bands , Prisoners, Vibes , Escalators , X-Men....Took a few years to find them , but , their records were much cheaper , by then.
       
      Mark George Harrison said:

      As a 16 year old rockabilly/psychobilly in 1980 on £28 a week after giving my mum £10 a week board, there wasn't much money left for records, especially as beer was 50p a pint! I wasn't aware of a garage revival as such until much later, bands like the Stingrays and the X-men all had quiffs and crossed in to the rocking scene without ever using the 'g' word. The Vibes, later the Purple Things, also were be-quiffed! Im not sure when garage came to be used to differentiate between the scenes, it's a question Ive had with several people of similar ages who were there as well.  

      You young whippersnappers don't know how lucky you are with the internet, everything now is accesible. Press coverage was sparse to say the least and apart from a few 'bigger' bands American garage was pretty hard to get hold of and bloody expensive if you could find it, a collecion took years to build up and not a couple of hours downloading from the web.

      Anyway, for me, the best garage bands available to me at the time were the Vibes/Purple things, Stingrays, Tall Boys, Prisoners, Turkey Bones and the wild dogs(check out goldfish and helicopter man). Always found the Milkshakes a bit too 'beat' for me but like later Childish bands. The garage goodies vol 1 album was probably the best British comp at the time as well. Hope this answers the question?

    • July 23, 2012 2:55 PM CDT
    • haha fuck. im diggin the AXE guitar of hell!!!!!

      Damn those metalheads they have no taste..

    • July 23, 2012 1:45 PM CDT
    • Wow so many cool ways to end a song.

      We always loved the shimmering fade-to-reverb ending of The Monkees' "Pleasant Valley Sunday" -- so much so, that we used it on our version of "See My Friends", an extended psychedelic workout of the Kinks classic with which THEE DIRTYBEATS traditionally closes its sets. 

      This track eventually became the hidden bonus track of THEE DIRTYBEATS' debut ep.

      THEE DIRTYBEATS 100% pure maximum garage
      FREE EP DOWNLOAD http://theedirtybeats.bandcamp.com

    • July 23, 2012 1:38 PM CDT
    • Los Straightjackets

    • July 23, 2012 1:22 PM CDT
    • Hey all, I am excited to join this lovely community. I'm Kirby and I am here on behalf of The Whistle Tips. We are a Surf Punk band hailing from Brooklyn, NY with a strong emphasis on 60s garage sound. We are a relatively new band but have been hitting the Brooklyn circuit hard as of late.


      Something we've noticed in the recent months is a strong grunge revival in NYC, and no offense to any grunge bands or lovers but we want to bring back the dirty garage shows that were so common the last few years. Maybe its because the novelty of budget rock wore off and all the cool kids want to revisit 90s nihilism, but we wanna rocknroll!

      Our big aim is to connect with as many locals and touring bands in the states as possible and flood the scene with unforgiving fuzz and I figured this was a perfect place to connect and keep things moving.

      Our big influences range from Man or Astro-Man to The Reatards, not necessary to list all of em but we live it fast, dirty, and surfy. Don't be shy, reach out to us! We are constantly booking shows and looking for acts to headline or open, we also want to keep house shows alive so I am hoping that anyone interested with join us in our conquest of Brooklyn and NYC.

      So much talent on here and I can't wait to dig deeper.

      All our love,

      The Whistle Tips

      thewhistletips.bandcamp.com

    • July 23, 2012 12:16 PM CDT
    • Not all flower punk, but all worth checking out: Bare Wires, Mikal Cronin, Jack of Heart and Regal (from France), Dead Ghosts, Harlem, Indian Wars, Sic Alps, Fresh and Onlys, The Hussy, White Fence, The UV Race (from Australia, Wobbly Lamps, Wounded Lion, Submarine Races, Eddy Current Suppression Ring (from Australia), Tyvek, Nobunny, Hunx and his Punx, Shannon and the Clams, Unnatural Helpers, Useless Eaters, King Lollipop, The Pharmacy, The Mantles, The Beets, OBN IIIs......

    • July 23, 2012 12:05 PM CDT
    • Jacuzzi Boys, Thee Oh Sees, Davila 666...

    • July 23, 2012 11:36 AM CDT
    • The Trip! July 22nd Show!

      Hey kids, give this week's show a listen! http://cjamlog1.cjam.ca/mp3dirnew/381-The_Trip-20120722-0030-t1342913400.mp3

      The setlist:

      THE GO-NUTS  LET'S BRING CHEESE TO CHINA 
       
      THE CLIFF DWELLERS  HO HO LAUGHING MONSTER 
      BOB BUNNY  THE JOKER
      ERNIE CHAFFIN  LAUGHIN' AND JOKING 
      CRESCENDOS  HAWK WALK 
      JAN DAVIS  WATUSI ZOMBIE 
      GANIM'S ASIA MINORS  DADDY LOLO 
       
      DEEP PURPLE  LAZY 
      DEEP PURPLE  SPEED KING 
      DEEP PURPLE  BURN 
      JUNIOR WELLS  LITTLE BY LITTLE 
      R.L. BURNSIDE  HIGHWAY  7 
      KENNY BROWN  COCAINE BILL 
      JOHN MAYALL & BLUESBKERS  THE DEATH OF J.B. LENOIR
      THE FABS  DINAH WANTS RELIGION 
      LAVERN BAKER  VOODOO VOODOO 
      THE MARKS  HIGH HEEL SNEAKERS 
      MAD DADDYS  SO MACHO 
      THE SPARKLES  OH GIRLS, GIRLS 
      NICK CURRAN & THE LOWLIFES  DR. VELVET 
      MONTY PYTHON  EVERY SPERM IS SACRED 

    • July 23, 2012 8:04 AM CDT
    • Gorilla is one of the worst, and they are RELENTLESS!They organize events here at least 2 times a year and still manage to fill their roster with bands. I am especially disappointed in the clubs that support these scams, just to make their own buck. They are what's wrong with our local music scene.

    • July 23, 2012 4:12 AM CDT
    • Thank you sir, you're too kind! Can't wait to rock all over Hinckley again soon!!!x

      Trash Freak said:

      THE MOBBS! http://garagepunk.ning.com/profile/TheMobbs

      Fellow East-Midlanders (England), raucous, retro, rocketfuelled Britishness, like the Kinks on Crack! Great live.