Forums » Shakin' Street

List of newest posts

    • July 1, 2011 4:05 PM CDT
    • Jenni, I'd love to hear any sort of podcast that you'd like to do. Since you're not a current resident of the region, why not just start a more general podcast? If you can handle doing a new episode every two months or so (at least), then you can just do your own show and then have a special episode where you play all Aussie stuff. Or two episodes like that, or whatever. Let me know what you think.

      We do have someone else here who has stepped forward to do an Aussie/NZ show and it will be debuting soon, but it's not like there's room for only one, so Johnny, if you're still interested, too, let me know.

      Cheers.

    • July 1, 2011 3:05 PM CDT
    • Show #332: "Short Names, Part 1"

      Every 3 weeks I leave an open slot to do random themes and whatnot. This week's theme is "Short Names". I've compiled a 3 hour show of all bands and artists with the shortest names (2 and 3 letter words). I've eliminated all bands that start with "The" (so you won't hear The Who or The End), cut-out all bands that use abbreviations or initials (so no MC5 or Dr. Z) and I also excluded any solo artists that just use a given first name (but will include bands that use a given name). This will be a 2 part show, as I will do a show of bands and artists that are on the excluded list at another time. So...everything played tonight is by a band/artist (from the 60's or 70s) with just a 2 or 3 digit word for a name. Tune in tonight to hear: Can, Egg, Gun, Kak, Mu, Art, Eno, Man (US band), Zen, Het, Man (Welsh band), War, Elf, Lyd, Yes, If, Mij, Blo, Jet, Neu!, Up, and many many more!!!

      ***To stream The Metaphysical Circus live, listen to past shows, view playlists, etc…check out my website: http://eggmanrulez.com/ or wscafm.org Friday nights at 10pm EST on WSCA-LP 106.1 FM, Portsmouth Community Radio!

      Watch my playlist unravel before your eyes LIVE here: http://wscafm.radioactivity.fm/

      Egg

    • July 1, 2011 2:21 PM CDT
    • Great songs. I'm diggin' this group.

      Zorch Radio said:

      nice list!

      Mitchhz said:

      Hi, I'm a fan of wild rock'n'roll too. Here's my top ten of the wildest songs ever:

       

      10. Tony Conn - Like Wow

      Hard to choose really. There are myriads of wild rockabilly songs. This one has interesting orchestration, like Tyrone Schmidling.

      9. Jesse James - South's Gonna Rise Again

      Love the voice.

      8. Project Blue - The Banshees

      Timeless classic.

      7. The Ranger Sounds - Ricordami

      Incredible Italian band!

      6. The Pinetoppers - Shout Bamalama

      Otis Redding when he he tried to sound like Little Richard.

      5. The Valiants - Good Golly Miss Molly

      This one was released before Little Richard's and is much faster and wilder!

      4. Adrian Lloyd - Lorna

      Real punk gem.

      3. The Phantom - Love Me

      Opening scream is unbeatable.

      2. Bunker Hill - The Girl Can't Dance

      Link Wray played on that one.

      1. Ralph Nielsen & the Chancellors - Scream

      I don't know if this is surf, rockabilly or 60s punk but it is truly the wildest!

       

      Hope you like it.

    • July 1, 2011 12:58 PM CDT
    • WOOOOOOOW !!! GREAAAAAAT list ! This top list is pretty unbeatable !

      Right now, I'm also thinking of (in no particular order):

      "Alright" by the GROOP,

      "Psycho" by THE SWAMP RATS",

      "She said" by HASIL ADKINS,

      "You're gone I'm left" by TYRONE SCHMIDLING, 

      "Jailhouse Rock" by DEAN CARTER 

      and "Can't tame me" by THE BENDERS of course.


      Mitchhz said:

      Hi, I'm a fan of wild rock'n'roll too. Here's my top ten of the wildest songs ever:

       

      10. Tony Conn - Like Wow

      Hard to choose really. There are myriads of wild rockabilly songs. This one has interesting orchestration, like Tyrone Schmidling.

      9. Jesse James - South's Gonna Rise Again

      Love the voice.

      8. Project Blue - The Banshees

      Timeless classic.

      7. The Ranger Sounds - Ricordami

      Incredible Italian band!

      6. The Pinetoppers - Shout Bamalama

      Otis Redding when he he tried to sound like Little Richard.

      5. The Valiants - Good Golly Miss Molly

      This one was released before Little Richard's and is much faster and wilder!

      4. Adrian Lloyd - Lorna

      Real punk gem.

      3. The Phantom - Love Me

      Opening scream is unbeatable.

      2. Bunker Hill - The Girl Can't Dance

      Link Wray played on that one.

      1. Ralph Nielsen & the Chancellors - Scream

      I don't know if this is surf, rockabilly or 60s punk but it is truly the wildest!

       

      Hope you like it.

    • July 1, 2011 1:18 AM CDT
    • nice list!

      Mitchhz said:

      Hi, I'm a fan of wild rock'n'roll too. Here's my top ten of the wildest songs ever:

       

      10. Tony Conn - Like Wow

      Hard to choose really. There are myriads of wild rockabilly songs. This one has interesting orchestration, like Tyrone Schmidling.

      9. Jesse James - South's Gonna Rise Again

      Love the voice.

      8. Project Blue - The Banshees

      Timeless classic.

      7. The Ranger Sounds - Ricordami

      Incredible Italian band!

      6. The Pinetoppers - Shout Bamalama

      Otis Redding when he he tried to sound like Little Richard.

      5. The Valiants - Good Golly Miss Molly

      This one was released before Little Richard's and is much faster and wilder!

      4. Adrian Lloyd - Lorna

      Real punk gem.

      3. The Phantom - Love Me

      Opening scream is unbeatable.

      2. Bunker Hill - The Girl Can't Dance

      Link Wray played on that one.

      1. Ralph Nielsen & the Chancellors - Scream

      I don't know if this is surf, rockabilly or 60s punk but it is truly the wildest!

       

      Hope you like it.

    • July 1, 2011 12:36 PM CDT
    • Yes, that was KOGAR's band. 

      The CONNECTION said:

      A few years back there was a band from my town ( Portsmouth NH ) called THEE MONKEY BUTLERS. They played great garage RnR. The only link that I can find that still works is the myspace address. Check them out!! http://www.myspace.com/theemonkeybutlers

       

       

    • July 1, 2011 8:01 AM CDT
    • Los Tiki Phantoms.

    • June 30, 2011 7:50 PM CDT
    • the rip offs

    • June 30, 2011 5:16 PM CDT
    • YES


      Alex said:

      The Mummies.  End of discussion.

    • July 1, 2011 11:42 AM CDT
    • A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
      July 1, 2011



      BARRENCE WHITFIELD & THE SAVAGES
      Peter Greenberg with Barrence Whitfield in Santa Fe last year

      After a quarter decade, East Coast R & B and soul shouter Barrence Whitfield has reunited with the core of his original band, The Savages, and recorded a mighty new album. It’s called Savage Kings. It’s available in Europe and is scheduled for American release next week on Shake It Records, a Cincinnati label.
      Although Whitfield is from Boston and the record was recorded in Cincinnati, there’s a strong New Mexico connection here. Original Savages guitarist Peter Greenberg moved to Taos a couple of years ago.

      Greenberg, who once played with Boston garage warriors Lyres (and now plays with Taos band Manby’s Head), instigated the reunion with Whitfield and original bassist Phil Lenker. In fact, their first live gigs together in 25 years or so were last year in Taos, Santa Fe, and Albuquerque.

      This is the European cover of Savage Kings
      A history of the Savages, in a nutshell (as related to me in an interview with Whitfield last year): Whitfield was formerly a drummer in a funk band. While working in a record store and studying journalism at Boston University in the early ’80s, he hooked up with Greenberg, who was fresh out of Lyres and looking to start a more R & B oriented band. They recorded a couple of albums together before the original Savages, including Greenberg, began drifting away.

      Whitfield pressed on, forming another Savages band and making more albums, including a couple of country-flavored efforts with Tom Russell in the mid-’90s. A confessed vinyl addict, he still works in a record store.

      Savage Kings kicks off with “(Your Love Is Like a) Ramblin’ Rose.” No, it’s not the Nat King Cole song or the Grateful Dead’s “Ramble on Rose.” This is an MC5 classic. And Whitfield uses his best falsetto scream to deliver it. It’s followed by a punchy rocker called “Just Moved In” that features a honking sax solo by new Savage Tom Quartulli.

      One of the coolest songs here was written by Greenberg and fellow Manby’s Header Mike Mooney. It’s called “Willie Meehan,” and it’s about an old boxer in the early part of the 20th century who actually beat Jack Dempsey a couple of times. Battling Willie, according to the song: “Never did no training / He ate his way to heavyweight.” The opening riffs remind me of The Sonics’ “Strychnine,” which Whitfield also covered a few years ago. Like Meehan himself, this tune is a chunky slugger.

      “Shot Down” basically hits that murky borderline between R & B and ’60s garage music. Meanwhile, “Who’s Gonna Rock My Baby,” an obscure old rockabilly tune by Jerry Woodard, sounds as if it were written especially for Whitfield. “Well, I got my call from my draft board today,” the song begins. “Two years might not be that long, but I got to leave my baby at home.”

      Whitfield and the band mix things up a bit. The minor-key “You Told a Lie” is basically contemporary blues. You can almost imagine Albert Collins or Robert Cray or maybe even Buddy Guy doing this one. “Bad Girl” is a good old-fashioned riveting soul meltdown; it starts out with a spoken-word introduction and ends with falsetto pleas for mercy.

      Since I first listened to this album, my favorite song has been an old Lightnin’ Slim dirty blues classic called “It’s Mighty Crazy.” Captain Beefheart covered this also, at least in his live shows, although he called it “Keep on Rubbing.” (I’ve got it on a live bootleg Beefheart album called Crazy Little Things.) Whitfield’s version is closer to Lightnin’ Slim’s, except he’s got a sax instead of a harmonica.

      Whitfield and the boys are touring Europe this fall. I hope the tour is a big success and inspires the Savages to record more.

      Also recommended:
      * Barrence Whitfield & The Savages. In anticipation of Savage Kings, Whitfield re-released his self-titled long out-of-print first CD, from the early ’80s, complete with a bunch of bonus tracks — outtakes, live recordings, etc. — from that era.

      It starts out with “Bip Bop Bip,” a rocker written by soulman Don Covay. It’s got Whitfield’s original version of “Mama Get the Hammer” (the hammer is needed because there’s flies on the baby’s head.”). The song came from a ’50s R & B band, the Bobby Peterson Quintet. But it has become something of a signature tune for Whitfield.

      Other must-hears are “Georgia Slop,” a Big Al Dowling tune (written by Jimmy McCracklin), which was later covered by Los Lobos, and “Whistle Bait,” which is a Collins Kids song, originally sung by the pre-teen Larry Collins. Whitfield sings it like an adult — a lust-crazed adult. Greenberg’s big moment here is the breakneck romper “Whiskey Wagon,” a fiery rockabilly slammer.
      BARRENCE WHITFIELD & THE SAVAGES

      Among the bonus tracks is a nice slow soulful “Pain in My Heart,” a Naomi Neville tune that is best known for the version by Otis Redding. Whitfield fakes crying at the end of the song. Maybe some real tears were shed in that audience.

      This CD has only been released in Great Britain by Ace Records. The good news is you can pick it up for a reasonable price at Amazon and other outlets. It’s worth having the CD because of the fine booklet with extensive liner notes by John Swenson and photos. It’s a savage treat.

    • July 1, 2011 11:23 AM CDT
    • I'm glad I could fulfill your last dying wish!

    • July 1, 2011 11:12 AM CDT
    • Love that track. It was on Teenage Shutdown #10. I can't blame you for wanting to know so badly what it was.

    • July 1, 2011 8:08 AM CDT
    • Kevan... you have helped me solve a problem that has riddled me for years. I've talked to experts all over the world and no one has been able to tell me until now. Thanks so much. I can die in peace, now!

    • June 30, 2011 4:49 PM CDT
    • It's called "I Know" by Shepard's Heard

    • July 1, 2011 9:06 AM CDT
    • Thanks KK for the link. I will check it out.

       

      John, good to know I can ask when necessary. I already post now and then my questions on the AX84 forum. My new build is taken from that site, the simple pre-amp and the 50w pp from the 'Building Blocks' section. Most question I have so far are about the differences in the schematics/layout and what I read in books.  And I plan on doing some mods to the AX84 circuits so there will be questions about that, too.

    • July 1, 2011 8:49 AM CDT
    • Do you have any details  on this booklet? I would like to check it out.

      The Fnords said:

      There's a wee Mullard booklet which has valve amp circuits. I started one; haven't finished yet as it needs a chassis building and I haven't got round to that yet. I've done some modifying, but mostly to the boxes containing everything!

      D.

    • July 1, 2011 8:48 AM CDT
    • You've got a fellow amp builder here. Looks like there are others too.

       

      If/when you have questions, just ask. I've found that one of the best resources is the AX84 forum. There are some very experienced/knowledgeable folks there that are happy to help and share their knowledge. It's a very good group, everyone is welcome and treated with respect.

      If you check out my profile you can see some of my efforts.

       

      John

    • July 1, 2011 3:25 AM CDT
    • I LOVE twitter, made a lot of new "friends". it's all about sharing, the peeps I'm following provide me with a lot of interesting information; new releases, labels, concerts. I'm from Holland, so a part of my tweets is in Dutch, but when it's about music I tweet in English; http://twitter.com/robkooiman

    • June 30, 2011 10:26 PM CDT
    • Bad Seed is a great book although it does spend a very long time on the Birthday Party era. There is a lot of input from Mick Harvey and others. I enjoyed it and am not even a massive Nick Cave fan.

    • June 30, 2011 9:44 PM CDT
    • Thanks guys - surely square set on my to-read list. Much appreciated. Love Cope, informed and makes you want to be informed.

    • June 30, 2011 6:00 PM CDT
    • Bought my tickets last night - missed out on the 4 day passes... every single night features at least one of my all-time favorite bands/performers! insane. pysched.

    • June 30, 2011 4:32 PM CDT
    • the intelligence have alot of guitars done with 12 strings.

    • June 30, 2011 3:29 PM CDT
    • I had a go with the superglue on a larger crack (maybe 0.5mm across) and only just managed to get the drop to go in the crack on attempt no. 3. It clearly wasn't going to be worth trying to get it into the hairline lacquer cracks - as it was I got superglue over my hands and then managed to touch the inside of the guitar case, resulting in a very uncool hairy palm look.

       

      I've attached a pic that shows a couple of cracks typical of those on the guitar.

    • June 30, 2011 3:18 PM CDT
    • Yes... good eye!

      If anyone wants to watch the complete film you can find it here