Anyone planning on attending? Just bought a golden pass. They've announced a few bands, including......Alarm Clocks! Awesomeness.
Anyone planning on attending? Just bought a golden pass. They've announced a few bands, including......Alarm Clocks! Awesomeness.
I vote Rod Argent of The Zombies
His keyboards make The Zombies, both with his comping and his sick solos.
I like his playing because he's sophisticated and sloppy at the same time. He's got these great licks that you'd hear from jazz guys but he lays it over a real raw track and rushes just enough to give his solos this frantic feel.
I have yet to hear the combination of complexity and soul from another garage rock keyboardist but tell me what you think. I wanna hear about some more players I can check out.
Listen to his organ work on :
Just Out Of Reach (keyboard solo at 1:00)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E7aebYXnArg&feature=related
and then his electric piano work on
She's Not There (solo 1:37)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f5IRI4oHKNU&feature=related
I love me some goats head soup. Heartbreaker is a killer song.
Johnny Bean said:
As a total fanatic I would say everything between the first album and Goats Head Soup is classic. My real favourites though are the first 2 albums, plus early bootlegs like the Chess Sessions and Camden 1964. If you have those recording the first Ramones album, I`m Stranded, Louie Louie and the Best of Bo Diddley you have everything you need to know about rock n roll :)
I would say that this stuff you're calling "later" is actually early. Those guys have been making albums for a long time! OK, so I guess it's 'later early.' Maybe you could say those albums were the 'Golden Age.' Their last album, A Bigger Bang, is really good, much better that what they did since the good ol' days.
I had Keith's autobiography in my hands on Friday but bought a book on the making of Night of the Living Dead instead (which I love by the way). I do want to go back and pick up the autobio because I am sure if would spark a stones fest for me. I love Exile, and Tumbling Dice is probably my Stones anthem. And I still love Tatoo You. I would say I grew up with later Stones and maybe I burned myself out on it just a little bit. So if I catch a stones tune on the radio I am more apt to flip off newer stones but rarely leave older stones behind, except blues standards like Route 66 which bore me. Wow, MikeL, I realize you have my head spinning with indecision. Theres no doubt - its is all so frickin good.
i was very disappointed in "Exile" - maybe because by the time i finally got to hear it i had been bombarded with just what a masterpiece it was! it wasn't - at least not to me. much prefer sticky fingers... but hell i like the stones even in the 80s... that early 70s seems to resonate most with me but then again...
the early covers are the shit. but thats also in the context of what they would go on to do later. beggars banquet was the first album to hook me. let it bleed is the masterpiece.
In case anyone was wondering, I decided to pull the trigger on the Burns Double Six. I had to save a bit since they are "valuable" (things are "valuable" if they're worth the high ticket price and "expensive" if they aren't). Everything about it feels and sounds ... right. I considered the Rickie but just couldn't justify the ~ $2000 price.
Hollow body's are great with distortion, but you have to manage the feedback. the easiest way is to buy synthetic (no Moisture) foam squares from the make up aisle. It must be synthetic, cotton holds moisture and will mess with the guitar. Stuff the squares into the f-holes carefully till the guitar is half full, several bags. What this does is cut down on the sound waves bouncing around inside the guitar but still maintaining the killer vintage tone. We have an early 70's era Silvertone hollow body and this worked great. Some vintage guitars have microphonic pickups (they work like a mike) which cause feed back. A good guitar repair guy will know how to dip them in wax to stop this.
Follow me if you are interested in the latest Necro-Tone and Kaplan Records Gossip
and my hilarious dailly witticisms and affirmations as i stumble blindly through my black magic filled over sexed reverb drenched fuckfest I call a life and I'll talk about all my bands too like the Quasi-Men and the Crimson Ghosts
'Never Ever Land: 83 Texan Nuggets', ripping comp!
I just finally started listening to it but Songs the Hideout taught us is pretty awesome!! Kicks off with the legendary Cynics. One of my favorite garage singers Greg from The Fiends once tole me their "Blue Train Station" record was one the the ultimate garage records of all time.
almost all the good ones are already listed...
The Fort Worth Teen Scene(s)!
Garage Punk Unknowns
Northwest Battle Of The Bands!
...
Just been listening to Teenage Treats volume 4, comp of late 70's/early 80's rare punk singles, gonna look for the other volumes now.
Yeah, most "Northern Soul" is mediocre, IMHO.
Check out this snoozer:
Not sure if it's the same band you're talking about, though...
I contribute over at drumforum.org frequently. One of the guys on there posted this recently:
"Back in high school 1967 - 1968 I cut a record. Many teenage bands made records that go nowhere and they forgot about them. Just for the hell of it I looked up the record on Google: Hurry On Back To Me / Up On the Roof by the Casino Royales. I discovered it is being sold (and has been played in clubs) in the UK and Germany, for up to $175.00 US dollars for a mint copy. This is pretty cool but I guess there are no royalties after 40+ years. I think it's a mediocre record at best but maybe in Europe it's considered a classic of Northern Soul. Pretty funny for a group of teenage white guys. We never played the Apollo that's for sure."
Anyone ever heard of them?
Reverbnation has a digital media app, that sends the songs to I tunes, napster, amazon, last FM plus a bunch more. You have to sign up on an annual basis i thinks its about $150. But you get paid every time someone streams a song. for the price they have web hosting, electronic press kits, lots of widgets. Its worth giving it a look.
I'm the drummer for a 60's fuzz garage band called 45 Spider from Cleveland, OH. 2 girls (vox & me, on drums) and 2 guys (bass & guitar). Looking to possibly add organ as well! Recordings are rough basement versions......in final phases of our 1st album. Check us out http://www.myspace.com/45spider.
dead moon were a grunge band from portland. you can find their 7" in jukeboxes there.
Hi,
It comes down how was it recorded with the Beatles and or early Rolling Stones LP they were all record in mono so that the way I like listen and on vinyl but I hate the Beatles, but early Stones mono LP's kick ass.The mono recording that were change to stereo just don't sound right good mono recording sounded great!
The guitar & bass player in my band play Eastwood. Both of them have upgraded electronics,bridge etc......Overall I know they both love the versions they have. Guitar has the Map, & The the 59 custom 3P, Bass has The Airline.
I think ya outta try & find a new drummer. Us drummers are too imprtant to go without:)
I have heard many young people thnk the only danceable music is crappy "disco music" (crappy, esp the late 70s disco duck, YMCA-oriented wimpy stuff........as if dancing started oin the late 70s and early 80s, hahahahhahahahahhahahah...what creeps:):)!!!! What does the word "disco music" even mean??! Beats me :):)!!!! Young people have been dancing since the dawn of ages....."discos" or discoteques were created in the late 50s and the chix and teens really went wild unlike the plastic, sterile dancing to the Lady Gagas of today :):):)!!!
GOOO..GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO...GGGOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO GO GO CHIX ;););)