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    • July 17, 2012 10:20 AM CDT
    • Thanks John! I thought I made that Screamin' Lord Such cassette for Shari! But I do remember that story and I still have that very record to this day.

      Records were incredibly hard to find in those days! Especially old ones. Reissues were just starting but they were mostly European so it was hard to find in California. I remember how legendary 'Easter Everywhere' was back then. There were sightings from time to time. I remember that there was a record shop in Orange County in 1983 that had a copy of 'Easter Everywhere' behind the cash register on display with a price tag proudly of 100 dollars. Now, that was a fortune for a record back then! Today I can probably go down to the local shitty record store (CD store??!!) in the train station in my town and find a CD copy for ten bucks!!

      John Carlucci said:

      I Love that photo! lol!!! BTW, I dig the Jackets lp. Hope to see you play one of these days!

      Oh... and speaking of the old days... let's not forget how hard it was to find some of

      the records that are now readily available on CD or the internet these days. I recall hanging out with you & you gave me a cassette of some Screaming Lord Sutch material I had been looking for for ages. I brought down the cassette to Fuzztones rehearsal and suggested we cover Jack The Ripper & All Black & Hairy,

       and we did & they became some of my favorite covers we did with the band. both eventually making it on to record. I have since found a vinyl copy of that Lord Sutch record. 
       
      Gringo Starr said:

      Just gonna chime in quick here. I grew up in Greg Shaw's 'Cavern Club' in L.A. in the '80s. I saw all the bands playing in those days like the Unclaimed, Pandoras (Paula taught me how to drive!), Gravedigger V, Untold Fables, Thee Fourgiven, The Miracle Workers (who I lived with), Primates, Tell Tale Hearts, etc. Here's a pic of John Carlucci and I (plus some others) at the Cavern in 1986:

    • July 17, 2012 9:45 AM CDT
    • I Love that photo! lol!!! BTW, I dig the Jackets lp. Hope to see you play one of these days!

      Oh... and speaking of the old days... let's not forget how hard it was to find some of

      the records that are now readily available on CD or the internet these days. I recall hanging out with you & you gave me a cassette of some Screaming Lord Sutch material I had been looking for for ages. I brought down the cassette to Fuzztones rehearsal and suggested we cover Jack The Ripper & All Black & Hairy,

       and we did & they became some of my favorite covers we did with the band. both eventually making it on to record. I have since found a vinyl copy of that Lord Sutch record. 
       
      Gringo Starr said:

      Just gonna chime in quick here. I grew up in Greg Shaw's 'Cavern Club' in L.A. in the '80s. I saw all the bands playing in those days like the Unclaimed, Pandoras (Paula taught me how to drive!), Gravedigger V, Untold Fables, Thee Fourgiven, The Miracle Workers (who I lived with), Primates, Tell Tale Hearts, etc. Here's a pic of John Carlucci and I (plus some others) at the Cavern in 1986:

    • July 17, 2012 7:54 AM CDT
    • Just gonna chime in quick here. I grew up in Greg Shaw's 'Cavern Club' in L.A. in the '80s. I saw all the bands playing in those days like the Unclaimed, Pandoras (Paula taught me how to drive!), Gravedigger V, Untold Fables, Thee Fourgiven, The Miracle Workers (who I lived with), Primates, Tell Tale Hearts, etc. Here's a pic of John Carlucci and I (plus some others) at the Cavern in 1986:

    • July 17, 2012 3:31 AM CDT
    • Agree wholeheartedly with John C. bout The Miracle Workers and The Pandoras.They were my faves too.

      One question that always came up in our little clique was "The Chesterfield Kings or The Tell Tale Hearts?"

    • July 17, 2012 12:07 AM CDT
    • Yup. I was around then. Played bass in The Fuzztones from 86-90. Did gigs with a lot of the bands that were mentioned above. My faves from back then? Miracle Workers & Pandoras

    • July 17, 2012 10:16 AM CDT
    • I had one embarrassing experience with Wikipedia in my other life as a political reporter. 

      Back in 2008, I had an interview with then U.S. Rep. Rahm Emanuel, who was doing a fund-raiser for a local Congressman. (This of course was before he was Obama's chief of staff or mayor of Chicago.

      Before the interview, I read Emanuel's Wikipedia entry just to get some basic facts. Here's one of those "facts":

      "He was in a one-man Klezmer band called Rahmbunctious Eman."

      How could I not ask him about that? It had a linked footnote and everything.

      So I asked. And he looked at me like I was crazy.

      "No," he said.

      According to the footnote in Wikipedia, the klezmer claim supposedly was in a 2005 Rolling Stone profile. However, looking over the article afterwards, there's nothing about Rahmbunctious Eman or Rahm Emanuel in that article.

      The line in Wikipedia had disappeared by the next day.

      G. Wood said:

      Yeah, anybody can, but they have hordes of no-no volunteers whose hobby is finding articles to recommend for deletion.

      James Porter said:

      Hell, I didn't even know it took much to get on Wikipedia in the first place. Can't anybody just write anything? Most Wiki articles I see have some outlandishly wrong factoid in the first place!

    • July 17, 2012 9:47 AM CDT
    • We should name this thread, "No one cares about Wikipedia" lol!

    • July 17, 2012 10:05 AM CDT
    • i own a Joyo Tremolo pedal.

      i was lured by the cheap price - turns out to be a mighty expensive paper weight.

      it kind of does what it's supposed to but overall sounds like crap, hard to dial in.

      i heard Joyo clones pedals by famous makers, i don't know what this is a clone of but it's not good.

      my suggestion: if you want cheap imported pedals buy used Boss products.

       

       

    • July 17, 2012 9:42 AM CDT
    • i have bought and sold enough fuzz pedals over the years to rival the entire effect pedal inventory of any Guitar Center store (not really bragging, just sort of a fuzz enthusiast).

      one pedal i came across that will give you a very convincing 60's sound is a Catalinbread Merkin Fuzz, here's a youtube clip that's pretty impressive - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eMe2Sfe8c9A

      i currently own one and it is raw and raspy as all hell (i.e. no smooth fuzz) and has a lot of adjustablilty. they can be found well under $125 used which ain't bad for a very reliable 'boo-teek' pedal.

       

    • July 16, 2012 11:50 PM CDT
    • I just received my North Effects Rite pedal today.  Man, I got to thank you waveclipper for hipping me to this great pedal.  Yeah, this is the fuzz sound I was looking for.  I've been terrorizing the family with this pedal.  To cite my 10 year old daughter, "It sounds too ugly to listen to."  Gotta love it.

    • July 17, 2012 9:01 AM CDT
    • Great comments! I would add that there is much debate regarding how "hot" one's mastered tracks should be relative to other people's music, vs preserving the dynamic range of one's own music (i.e. the "loudness war").   There is definitely a tradeoff, and you'll want to hear the difference.   Luckily, most mastering engineers will for the same price give you a set of hot masters for the web / broadcast / iTunes (where dynamic range is less important than impact), and another full-range set for mastering to CD or vinyl. 

      IMHO, mastering is most useful in making tracks hang together as a collection.  So, if your tracks a) all come from the same recording/mixing session, or b) aren't destined to be released as a CD or LP, one could argue that mastering just offers a final opportunity to tweak the eq, compression and loudness of your tracks.  If that is indeed the case, and the untweaked versions sound just fine to you, heck, save your money.

      In the end you have to trust your ears.  When THEE DIRTYBEATS mastered its debut, we went with light compression (ie broader dynamic range) mastering for everything.  That just seemed to sound more like the vintage garage rock records we loved. 

      THEE DIRTYBEATS - maximum vintage garage
      Free download at http://theedirtybeats.bandcamp.com

    • July 17, 2012 6:05 AM CDT
    • I generally agree with G. Wood's comments.  Mastering does affect the overall volume level but it also can shape the sound of each track.  Shmo, I can't tell from your post whether you attended the mastering session, or whether you sent the tracks to someone to master and they sent them back to you.   I recommend that if you get the opportunity to attend a mastering session, that you do it.  And while you are there, ask all of the questions you have about the mastering process.  I also recommend that you have the tracks mastered by someone other than the person who mixed (and/or recorded) the tracks.

    • July 17, 2012 5:44 AM CDT
    • Yeah, good question. Mastering consists mainly of setting EQ, and making it consistent throughout the album, applying compression, and setting master volume. At 58, my ears are pretty much unreliable. What sounds good to me is a lot of highs, but this sounds too brash to most people with better hearing. Compression is a tricky thing, the right amount sort of glues everything together, too much makes everything sound kind of muffled. 

      Garage fans like a rawer sound than regular humans, so we're sort of disabled in that way. In the end, I'd say, Mastering: Yes. Then there's the little issue of finding someone who knows what they're doing. Different people will produce a different sound. Your mileage may vary!

    • July 16, 2012 11:11 PM CDT
    • anybody out there that leans towards not mastering your recordings despite any downsides like radio stations won't take it, and what ever else. I'll be the first to admit that i don't fully understand mastering, and that i'm paranoid that it is just an up-sell. ( it's the underbody protection of the music industry). but we just got our album back from mastering, and besides it playing louder i didn't really notice much difference. if i can tell a difference i think i like the raw better. OR is that because i've been listening to the raw for 2 weeks and now the mastered is here, and it is not what i'm used to?

    • July 17, 2012 8:38 AM CDT
    • I've recently come across an ace band from Valencia by the name of La Moto De Fernan by way of this, perhaps one of the best videos I've seen in a long while. Takes me back to the days of Ren & Stimpy!

      There's a band coming out of Salford, England right now as well called The Calimocho Club. They're playing stipped back blues like early Black Keys, but before that they Were The Black Knights. Glorious trash blues...and not a bass note in sight.

    • July 17, 2012 3:56 AM CDT
    • One of my bands, Tombstone Hearts, has no bass player; my other band, Nero Burns, does - the best of both worlds! It's apples and oranges, really. Gotta admit, I love the sound of early Cramps, but when they added the bass....it just wasn't the same. But then again, where would the Ramones have been without Dee Dee? It's apples and oranges, really.

    • July 17, 2012 12:02 AM CDT
    • Glen Matlock was/is a good bassist. Now Sid on the other hand...

       

    • July 16, 2012 10:52 PM CDT
    • don't forget the sex pistols.... haha.

    • July 17, 2012 8:16 AM CDT
    • Good call on Atomic Suplex! We played with them earlier in the year and they damn near brought the pub crumbing to it's foundations. Amazing band.

      Gotta love Clinic as well, especially the first few records. They've gone a wee bit softer in their old age, but are still an amazing band.

    • July 17, 2012 7:53 AM CDT
    • This is a really cool sound. Just listened to the 2nd song -- She Wants Me Dead -- thanks for posting to the cloud for all to hear and appreciate. And incidentally, two and a half minutes might just be the perfect song length. Don't get me wrong, I appreciate all kinds of music, and dig on opus-like songs from Pink Floyd, Mars Volta, Sleep, Grails.... but sometimes bands just need to get to the point and kick out the jams.

      Polyvinyl Craftsmen said:

      Wobbly Lamps from the UK. Check their new single here

    • July 17, 2012 7:43 AM CDT
    • Good recommendations all around. Now I've got plenty of new stuff to listen to throughout the summer.

    • July 17, 2012 3:08 AM CDT
    • Err... yeah...

    • July 16, 2012 11:59 PM CDT
    • Yes, KKBB has a CD out called "Kaboom" it's on Itunes.  BTW, I have the ORIGINAL Quick lp on vinyl.

    • July 16, 2012 11:35 PM CDT
    • Wow cool, do you guys have anything recorded? Any releases out? I loved that Speedies lp! So good!

      John Carlucci said:

      I still have the Speedies release for sale on Itunes& Amazon. It's also on spotify. A friend of mine found the vinyl copy of the Radio Heartbeat lp at Amoeba in LA. Otherwise Ebay is your best bet.

      For any Speedies fans out there living in the NYC area, my new band Kiss Kiss Bang Bang is playing at Cavestomp on July 28th, and we will have a special guest (Eric Hoffert, my former Speedies bandmate) will join us on guitar for one song.


       
      Duke Of Earl said:

      Where can you buy the crushed butler and speedies records?

    • July 16, 2012 11:34 PM CDT
    • Yeah, there was a couple years there where Radio Heartbeat stuff was all over and I picked up most of them, trying to find the Quick lp though. The Crushed Butler LP is awesome if you can find one.