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    • January 9, 2011 10:11 AM CST


    • TeenFink said:

      the FIRST punk era was from '65-'67, not '76-'80. 65-67  was the begining of psychedelic!!!......Duh!!!!

    • January 9, 2011 10:08 AM CST
    • well.Black sabath, alicce cooper,misfits, and half of the other bands you Listed are not pUnK
      bowie,...glitter! not a bad collection of music ...but most r not pUnk!!!!!!
      Rami LTX said:

      to make it more logical to find out reasons why punk, and how this form eventually defines then ...etc arent dominates rock genres, for myself i need to draw spesific timeline. Starting from age 14 to now: elvis presley - chuck berry - black sabbath - dr.feelgood - hurriganes - david bowie - ELO - alice cooper - uriah heep - new york dolls - sex pistols - ramones - tenpole tudor - crazy cavan & the rhythm rockers - polecats - stray cats - dead kennedys - cramps - meteors - stingrays - screaming lord sutch - pirates - terveet kädet - fall - go go's - blondie - gun club - heartbreakers - corpse grinders - misfits - plasmatics - ac dc - poison idea - husker du - butthole surfers - eugene chadbourne & shockabilly - marine girls - violent femmes - beat happening, and so on - the beat goes on.

    • January 9, 2011 8:26 AM CST
    • to make it more logical to find out reasons why punk, and how this form eventually defines then dominates rock genres, for myself i need to draw spesific timeline. Starting from age 14 to now: elvis presley - chuck berry - black sabbath - dr.feelgood - hurriganes - david bowie - ELO - alice cooper - uriah heep - new york dolls - sex pistols - ramones - tenpole tudor - crazy cavan & the rhythm rockers - polecats - stray cats - dead kennedys - cramps - meteors - stingrays - screaming lord sutch - pirates - terveet kädet - fall - go go's - blondie - gun club - heartbreakers - corpse grinders - misfits - plasmatics - ac dc - poison idea - husker du - butthole surfers - eugene chadbourne & shockabilly - marine girls - violent femmes - beat happening, and so on - the beat goes on.

    • January 8, 2011 10:10 AM CST

    • It's amazing what the Cramps brought us, ya know?  Link Wray, Hasil Adkins, a lot of necessities in real music to say the least!
      Wayne Talbott said:

      yeah makes total sense.Looking at it now, without link wray,I wounder what The Cramps would have sounded like?
      It wasn't until I picked up a album by wray that I relised poison ivy's stlye of playing comes from the man himself and she used it wisely I must say.


      joey fuckup said:
      I know what you're saying Wayne, just like you can't really classify the Animals as "garage"...To most music historians, garage started with surf music and Link Wray, then when the British Invasion hit, you had all these bands trying to emulate these groups, yet (to me anyway), sounding not as good, but better because it was so "punk" (hope that makes sense)...1966 is "Ground Zero" for what we know as the beginning of "garage rock", but if you go back and listen to Link Wray, you wonder, it's like it was garage before it was garage, like garage was punk before there was punk...I hope I'm makin' sense...And still to this day, I'll take '60's Stones over any decade they have been in existence...

      Wayne Talbott said:

      For me It was hearing louie louie by the kingsmen when I first watched quadrophenia when I was 15, but it took a good five years to get realise that the records that were popping up was this creature called garage,but where does garage start?

      Some say ? and the Mysterians, but could you call the kinks, the Who the Rolling Stones garage, they got classed as mod I know but they influenced a lot of garage bands, infact every garage band 

    • January 8, 2011 10:08 AM CST

    • That Bay City Rollers tune is a good one, my favorite by them is "Yesterday's Hero"!  And once it gets in my head, I can't get it out!  Like now... :)
      Johnny Bean said:

      Blitzkreig Bop without a doubt. I bought it in 1976, I think the single I bought before that was Rock N Roll Love Letter by the Bay City Rollers so maybe that was the one :)

    • January 8, 2011 9:57 AM CST
    • yeah makes total sense.Looking at it now, without link wray,I wounder what The Cramps would have sounded like? It wasn't until I picked up a album by wray that I relised poison ivy's stlye of playing comes from the man himself and she used it wisely I must say.

      joey fuckup said:

      I know what you're saying Wayne, just like you can't really classify the Animals as "garage"...To most music historians, garage started with surf music and Link Wray, then when the British Invasion hit, you had all these bands trying to emulate these groups, yet (to me anyway), sounding not as good, but better because it was so "punk" (hope that makes sense)...1966 is "Ground Zero" for what we know as the beginning of "garage rock", but if you go back and listen to Link Wray, you wonder, it's like it was garage before it was garage, like garage was punk before there was punk...I hope I'm makin' sense...And still to this day, I'll take '60's Stones over any decade they have been in existence...

      Wayne Talbott said:

      For me It was hearing louie louie by the kingsmen when I first watched quadrophenia when I was 15, but it took a good five years to get realise that the records that were popping up was this creature called garage,but where does garage start?

      Some say ? and the Mysterians, but could you call the kinks, the Who the Rolling Stones garage, they got classed as mod I know but they influenced a lot of garage bands, infact every garage band 

    • January 8, 2011 8:52 AM CST
    • Blitzkreig Bop without a doubt. I bought it in 1976, I think the single I bought before that was Rock N Roll Love Letter by the Bay City Rollers so maybe that was the one :)

    • January 7, 2011 7:46 PM CST
    • That's one hell of a playlist!

      NoHitWonder said:

      well, here we go...

      THE DEVIL DOGS - Big Beef Bonanza

      THE CRAMPS - Smell Of Female

      THE STOOGES - I'm Sick Of You

      RAMONES...needless to say

    • January 7, 2011 7:42 PM CST
    • well, here we go...

      THE DEVIL DOGS - Big Beef Bonanza

      THE CRAMPS - Smell Of Female

      THE STOOGES - I'm Sick Of You

      RAMONES...needless to say

    • January 7, 2011 6:52 PM CST

    • My garage must be a bigger garage cause there's a ton of British Invasion groups in it.  Even some are a bit poppy like the Hollies up to like 1967.  Early Animals for sure.  There is a ton of early Kinks that fits the bill for me as well.
      Wayne Talbott said:

      For me It was hearing louie louie by the kingsmen when I first watched quadrophenia when I was 15, but it took a good five years to get realise that the records that were popping up was this creature called garage,but where does garage start?

      Some say ? and the Mysterians, but could you call the kinks, the Who the Rolling Stones garage, they got classed as mod I know but they influenced a lot of garage bands, infact every garage band 

    • January 7, 2011 6:33 PM CST
    • Psycho - The Sonics
      My friends and I were fresh outta High School way into cars by the mid 90's but, we were just discovering music other than the "oldies" our parents showed us. Local record stores were the big chain type with no category for what we wanted so, we would look for any album cover that said or looked like anything Rockabilly or Surf. One of the guys got into buying music on E-vil-Bay and we would trade music with each other. He bought a Record called "Psychobilly sickness" or something like that. anyways long story short he hated it I loved it, Especially Psycho which of course wasn't Psychobilly so, I just had to find out what this music was and were I could find more of this amazing raucous Shit.

    • January 7, 2011 5:42 PM CST
    • I know what you're saying Wayne, just like you can't really classify the Animals as "garage"...To most music historians, garage started with surf music and Link Wray, then when the British Invasion hit, you had all these bands trying to emulate these groups, yet (to me anyway), sounding not as good, but better because it was so "punk" (hope that makes sense)...1966 is "Ground Zero" for what we know as the beginning of "garage rock", but if you go back and listen to Link Wray, you wonder, it's like it was garage before it was garage, like garage was punk before there was punk...I hope I'm makin' sense...And still to this day, I'll take '60's Stones over any decade they have been in existence...

      Wayne Talbott said:

      For me It was hearing louie louie by the kingsmen when I first watched quadrophenia when I was 15, but it took a good five years to get realise that the records that were popping up was this creature called garage,but where does garage start?

      Some say ? and the Mysterians, but could you call the kinks, the Who the Rolling Stones garage, they got classed as mod I know but they influenced a lot of garage bands, infact every garage band 

    • January 7, 2011 5:01 PM CST
    • For me It was hearing louie louie by the kingsmen when I first watched quadrophenia when I was 15, but it took a good five years to get realise that the records that were popping up was this creature called garage,but where does garage start?

      Some say ? and the Mysterians, but could you call the kinks, the Who the Rolling Stones garage, they got classed as mod I know but they influenced a lot of garage bands, infact every garage band 

    • January 7, 2011 7:51 AM CST
    • Search & Destoy - as thrashed out by The Dictators - 12 inch single from 77? Then I realised it was a cover! It was all down hill from then!! Now the Dictators LP's on vinyl are woth getting the old turntable wired up for!

       

      J=N=O

      Friends of the Light Machine

    • January 7, 2011 6:58 AM CST
    • Love's "Forever Changes" ... I was floored.

    • January 8, 2011 9:31 AM CST
    • joe let me know if you sell that Silvertone!

      joe said:

      i'd like to get a fury fireball guitar, also a johnson celestion or monarch amp

      also a honeytone pyschedelic machine

      have a duo sonic, its ok. have a farfisa compact , its crap a yamaha yc-20 0r 30 is more reliable. have a silvertone twin twelve which i might sell at some point. an old 50's standell amp would be cool too

    • January 8, 2011 12:50 AM CST
    • i'd like to get a fury fireball guitar, also a johnson celestion or monarch amp

      also a honeytone pyschedelic machine

      have a duo sonic, its ok. have a farfisa compact , its crap a yamaha yc-20 0r 30 is more reliable. have a silvertone twin twelve which i might sell at some point. an old 50's standell amp would be cool too

    • January 8, 2011 9:29 AM CST
    • gories...

      atomic 7-

      the young cools-

      slacktone

      ravi shankar

    • January 8, 2011 8:58 AM CST
    • The Batusis

      Hanoi Rocks - missed them a couple of times in the old days

      Sonics - missed them a couple of months back hope it was not the last chance :(

    • January 7, 2011 2:26 PM CST
    • I just replied to "what are the three favorite shows you've seen" but who is still on your "to see" list that you haven't seen and you'd like to catch before they break up and die?   No resurection from the dead or time travel, please.

    • January 7, 2011 10:27 AM CST
    • That's blows my fucking mind!

       

      On The Flip-Side said:

      If you follow Whatwave Dave's link you'll get to my site, On The Flip-Side. It has some of the lyrics but not all. Obviously it has a link to the whole song. Let me know if you need help decoding others. Also, read the comment section below the article and you'll see that the lyricist for the song weighs in with some revelations about how the song came to be.

    • January 7, 2011 10:11 AM CST
    • Sir Dom -

       

      If you follow Whatwave Dave's link you'll get to my site, On The Flip-Side. It has some of the lyrics but not all. Obviously it has a link to the whole song. Let me know if you need help decoding others. Also, read the comment section below the article and you'll see that the lyricist for the song weighs in with some revelations about how the song came to be.

       

      Cheers

       

      On The Flip-Side

    • January 7, 2011 8:20 AM CST
    • Wow!!!!!!! what a super cool post!!!!!