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    • May 16, 2011 4:36 PM CDT
    • Ah yes, we were proud to be on Get Hip for our 2nd 45 and 2nd & 3rd album "back in the day."


      A great label still, but with all the work needed for the Cynics, it can be difficult to get something going with them...but a great suggestion. Thanks!

    • May 16, 2011 4:28 PM CDT
    • I guess it depends on the sound, more than anything. There are lots of great labels out there still putting out vinyl (In The Red, HoZac, Goner, SS, Birdman, Trouble in Mind, etc.). Most of them are very small but have good distro and some even have pages here on the Hideout. The key is finding one that will like what you do and want to release your record and be able to get it in the most stores.

    • May 16, 2011 2:31 PM CDT
    • What about Get Hip?

    • May 16, 2011 10:36 AM CDT
    • Sounds like a good idea to have both, I wish you the best of luck with that! :)

    • May 16, 2011 9:01 AM CDT
    • Yes, I think you summed it up:  this kind of limited release is for the hardcore collector enthusiasts -- those of us who really love this kind of music, and for people like us the combination of a digital/CD release with some vinyl makes it more special.

       

      Of course the fact that garage "fans" themselves are making it so difficult for indie bands (by sharing/downloading so much gdigital stuff for free) is another story!

       

      But I am determined to have a vinyl 45 made, one way or another, to go with our CD box set! :)

    • May 16, 2011 5:40 AM CDT
    • Yes I can understand that it is far more difficult and we don't want to miss out on great music which is mainly an underground scene. I think perhaps joining a label is a good idea but you can get shafted, (remember The Prisoners with stiff),you don't want to lose your independence. Nice to go with a label like Dirty Water, dead By Mono or damaged Goods and release both CD and a limited vinyl pressing for the die hard vinyl enthusiasts such as you and I.

    • May 15, 2011 10:57 AM CDT
    • I agree that vinyl is the best way to go to have a release that is truly special -- but should a band now go-it-alone to press their own stuff or still partner with a label? I never considered that when we were releasing records regularly in the 1980s and 1990s, but as was said above, it's now a lot more difficult...

       

      Thee Retroman said:

      I think vinyl is the only way to truly enjoy garage music!

    • May 15, 2011 10:47 AM CDT
    • I think vinyl is the only way to truly enjoy garage music!

    • May 15, 2011 4:08 AM CDT
    • I still remember in my early teens flickin' through the 60's section in my local record store,with shakey hand's in anticipation of comin' across a Kinks or Pretty Things pic sleeve.

      I felt the same way when i held our first singles.

      "CD's?" Nah,not for me i'll stick with the vinyl......or so i thought back then.

      These days i'm not so sure of how much publicity comes from a release.Alot of the record companies we used in the 90's hit hard times and no longer exist (or now put out very limited runs of their releases)

      It pains me to admit it but digial is prob. the way forward though my love of vinyl will never fade.("aaaahhhhhh")

    • May 14, 2011 11:01 AM CDT
    • I asked this in one of the record company groups here, but I'd like to hear what other bands and garage fans think, too:
      If you could approach one current indie label about releasing a new garage-psych vinyl 45, which label would that be? Or does the idea of being associated with "a label" even matter today?  

      We've been fortunate enough to be associated with some of the coolest labels over our decades of releasing records, but we might consider going digital-only for our upcoming 25-year retrospective releases -- and for the first time avoid traditional distribution and vinyl altogether if we must.
      Please share your thoughts, fuzz friends!  
      --Timothy Gassen
      Marshmallow Overcoat
      "celebrating 25 years of Fuzz in 2011"

    • May 16, 2011 3:23 PM CDT
    • Do the POP!

    • May 16, 2011 3:22 PM CDT
    • They through most Wasps onto a 12"LP now called thiswaspunk

    • May 16, 2011 3:04 PM CDT
    • Thanks!
      Doing a few shows in Toronto right now, and we have some wild guerilla shows coming up here in the next week.

      St. John's!!!!!! Been really hyped on going there. This summer most likely.

      Mopey Mumble-Mouse said:

      i cannot tell you how many kinds of happy this makes me.

       

      here in st. john's NL there have been a couple guerrila shows in Bannerman Park. they run an extension cord out to this little gazebo. (i actually missed these shows unfortunately.)

       

      oh, and a blue dano 56, fuck yeah. mopey play a redburst 63, a white 56 pro, and i myself have a tangerine dano pro tuned to D standard.

    • May 16, 2011 3:02 PM CDT
    • For the whole security thing, my state of mind is always to act like you own the place and people don't give you trouble, especially when you tell them that higher management set the gig up. The guerilla show thing is so new (no one else has the balls to do it) that I have yet to encounter ANYONE that has a clue what we're doing.


      duke cottonhead said:

      how did you get your amp past security? if i tried that, they'd take me for a terrorist. you naughty boys!

    • May 16, 2011 2:20 PM CDT
    • i cannot tell you how many kinds of happy this makes me.

       

      here in st. john's NL there have been a couple guerrila shows in Bannerman Park. they run an extension cord out to this little gazebo. (i actually missed these shows unfortunately.)

       

      oh, and a blue dano 56, fuck yeah. mopey play a redburst 63, a white 56 pro, and i myself have a tangerine dano pro tuned to D standard.

    • May 16, 2011 12:07 PM CDT
    • how did you get your amp past security? if i tried that, they'd take me for a terrorist. you naughty boys!

    • May 16, 2011 2:37 PM CDT
    • Beyond the Calico Wall and 30 Seconds Before the Calico Wall are great Erik Lingren comps

    • May 16, 2011 1:49 PM CDT
    • Closing this discussion to try and steer more of you towards the discussions for each separate volume happening over in the GRGPNK Records group. Go there!

    • May 16, 2011 12:55 PM CDT
    • I like this one with the German band The Magnificent Brotherhood

    • May 16, 2011 11:00 AM CDT
    • Anybody seen any recently-produced music videos that knocked their socks off?  PRODUCED as in, with some production value, style, story, what-have-you, not just a live clip.  I wanna see!

       

      Thanks-

      J

    • May 16, 2011 10:47 AM CDT
    • I cannot speak for Eastwood's Hi-Flyer in particular. However, I have been playing an Eastwood Sidejack for over a year now and I can not speak highly enough for it. Rag on China and Korea all you want but their current production methods meet or exceed the standard here in the US and the Eastwood guitars show it.

    • May 16, 2011 12:24 AM CDT
    • There's 15 of them.  The serial number on the spine points out which volume it is i.e. TS-01 or TS-15.

      Duke Of Earl said:

      So, how many Teenage Shutdown volumes are there, they dont even have #s. Anybody got a list?

    • May 15, 2011 6:36 AM CDT
    • So, how many Teenage Shutdown volumes are there, they dont even have #s. Anybody got a list?

    • May 14, 2011 12:24 PM CDT
    • Johnny Thunders & Wayne Kramer do "Like a Rolling Stone" on their Gang Warfare album.

      It's not technically "garage" but Mike Ness of Social Distortion does a cool cowpunky version of "Don't Think Twice" on his Cheating at Solitaire solo album.