I guessed Teisco on the guitar and with the help of google I found out it's a Teisco EP-7. I'm not sure about any of their other gear. From google image search I saw a Supro amp on one of their album covers.
I guessed Teisco on the guitar and with the help of google I found out it's a Teisco EP-7. I'm not sure about any of their other gear. From google image search I saw a Supro amp on one of their album covers.
Anybody know what guitar and fuzz Ronnie from the 5.6.7.8's uses? I saw them in Memphis last weekend and thought it was a really cool combo.
Should be really interesting! Hope it's not 100 pages written in a big font! I want quality AND quantity!
Keith is also going to be interviewed by Little Steven next week on the Underground Garage's Sirius/XM channel. The total interview will be six hours long, and it will be broadcast Monday through Friday at 7 p.m. in hour long segments each night. The Friday night interview will be two hours long. Should be interesting to hear him talk for so long.
I think it will be great. I hear he talks about Mick's tiny penis hahaha.
Keith was paid $7.3 million in advance for his story, I hope it's good. He will also be on CBS Sunday Morning this week.
I personally like documentaries better than docu-dramas about bands I like. If they serialized their stories on HBO or something, that'd be something. But to put someone's career in a two hour bubble never seems to work. I love the exposure that the Runaways got but I had a tough time with the movie.
But if they were going to make a picture of a sixties band, The Misunderstood would work (thanks to the band and Ugly Things) as would the Thirteenth Floor Elevators. And so would the Monks. Not so much the Sonics. They really don't have a story.
One thing I can say about Steven's picture is I don't think it will be cruddy as Eddie and the Cruisers. The music might sound slick but I'm sure it'll be closer to That Thing You Do rather than Darkness on the Edge of Town or the River.
There's a couple doc's. on him.
The Roky Erickson documentary, You're Gonna Miss Me, focused a lot on his early days with the Elevators. Great doco, too. I was lucky enough to see it in a theater when it came out.
SarahJayne said:
They should just make it about the 13th Floor Elevators instead. Drugs, drugs, drugs, cops, rock & roll, Janis Joplin, drugs, crazy people, the Austin psych scene, drugs, cave dwelling, drugs, and drugs. All the bases covered right there.
Sounds cool to me:) I've heard Roky Erickson is quite a character.
SarahJayne said:
They should just make it about the 13th Floor Elevators instead. Drugs, drugs, drugs, cops, rock & roll, Janis Joplin, drugs, crazy people, the Austin psych scene, drugs, cave dwelling, drugs, and drugs. All the bases covered right there.
They should just make it about the 13th Floor Elevators instead. Drugs, drugs, drugs, cops, rock & roll, Janis Joplin, drugs, crazy people, the Austin psych scene, drugs, cave dwelling, drugs, and drugs. All the bases covered right there.
I saw it and it rules! Lotsa kickass footage of the 5 at their peak and some sad shit when they were circling the drain.
Gunther Toody said:
MC5: A TRUE TESTIMONIAL is one of the best, if not THE BEST, rock and roll documentaries ever made. It is out there, available, if you look....(HINT: bit torrent).
TeenFink said:Speaking of rock-and-roll movies, will we ever get to see MC5 * A True Testimonial?
MC5: A TRUE TESTIMONIAL is one of the best, if not THE BEST, rock and roll documentaries ever made. It is out there, available, if you look....(HINT: bit torrent).
Speaking of rock-and-roll movies, will we ever get to see MC5 * A True Testimonial?
I never said that "Velvet Goldmine" was historically accurate. I knew watching it the first time that it was a highly fictionalized version of the relationship between Bowie and Iggy. However, I still enjoyed it mainly because it was so visually stunning, which is very fitting for a movie about glam. I loved the soundtrack as well, including the songs that were meant to sound like Bowie songs from that era. On a side note, Barney Hoskyns did hint in his book, "Glam: Bowie, Bolan, and the Glitter Rock Revolution," that Bowie may have had a fling with Marc Bolan, so maybe Todd Haynes took that idea and turned it into a gay romance between Kurt Wild and Brian Slade.
Here how "Velvet Goldmine" got me into garage rock...A few months after the movie played here in Pittsburgh, a local music writer named Ed Masley wrote an article about glam rock, and he mentioned an upcoming glam rock tribute show that would be held at the Decade. I went to the show, which consisted of a house band named Spaceball Ricochet and a series of local performers singing their favorite glam songs. Michael Kastelic of the Cynics was one of those performers, and he sang "Search and Destroy," "Ziggy Stardust," and "Rock'n'Roll Suicide." At that time, the Cynics were on hiatus, and Michael was singing in a band called HoneyBurst. I saw HoneyBurst later on, and I liked them, and I also saw Michael perform at a second glam show, along with a David Bowie tribute show in which he sang the entire "Ziggy Stardust" album. I became friends with him during this time, and I saw him perform with the Cynics for the first time in June 2000, which was my first exposure to garage rock.
BTW, when I first listened to the Underground Garage, Little Steven played "Lookin' for a Kiss" by the New York Dolls, which delighted me, and more recently he got me into Prima Donna, a very cool glam revival band. That is why I like the UG, because they play old stuff that I like (The Dolls are my favorite glam band), along with turning me on to new stuff. Since I was fairly new to garage rock at the time, I really didn't have any preconceived notions of what he should or shouldn't play. That is why I view these things differently than you.
Dana V. Hatch said:
MikeL said:BTW, I like all of these suggestions for making movies about real bands, but then you run into the problem of people being such sticklers for accuracy, along with how the story itself is told, i.e. it was too sugar coated, too dramatized, to hokey, too grim, too much emphasis on one thing or another, too little emphasis on one thing or another, etc. Maybe this is the reason why producers and directors prefer to make movies about fictional bands.
BTW, did anyone here ever see "Velvet Goldmine"? If so, tell me what you thought of it. That movie led to my discovery of garage rock, and I'll tell you that story if you're interested (Hey, stop snoring back there! This is my life I'm talking about).
Yeah, I saw that lie of a movie. Todd Haynes changed the names of Bowie and Iggy so he could film his fantasy of their relationship but all concerned say Bowie and Iggy were friends not lovers (Angie B. says "my question would be, who'd be the bottom?"). Not only that but the Iggy character's lines don't sound like anything the Ig would ever say. The character is much more similar to Kurt Cobain or some emo pussy. Still, hearing "Needle Through a Camel's Eye" blasting in Sensurround was great and if the movie led you to dig garage rock, that's awesome.
MikeL said:
BTW, I like all of these suggestions for making movies about real bands, but then you run into the problem of people being such sticklers for accuracy, along with how the story itself is told, i.e. it was too sugar coated, too dramatized, to hokey, too grim, too much emphasis on one thing or another, too little emphasis on one thing or another, etc. Maybe this is the reason why producers and directors prefer to make movies about fictional bands.
BTW, did anyone here ever see "Velvet Goldmine"? If so, tell me what you thought of it. That movie led to my discovery of garage rock, and I'll tell you that story if you're interested (Hey, stop snoring back there! This is my life I'm talking about).
BTW, I like all of these suggestions for making movies about real bands, but then you run into the problem of people being such sticklers for accuracy, along with how the story itself is told, i.e. it was too sugar coated, too dramatized, to hokey, too grim, too much emphasis on one thing or another, too little emphasis on one thing or another, etc. Maybe this is the reason why producers and directors prefer to make movies about fictional bands.
BTW, did anyone here ever see "Velvet Goldmine"? If so, tell me what you thought of it. That movie led to my discovery of garage rock, and I'll tell you that story if you're interested (Hey, stop snoring back there! This is my life I'm talking about).
Um, yeah, I know. Hence the purpose of this post. Did you even read it?
Rinjo Njori said:
This is now free for download on the SCION site.
http://www.scionav.com/music/scionavgarage/index.html#general6,1908...
This is now free for download on the SCION site. http://www.scionav.com/music/scionavgarage/index.html#general6,19080323
CLICK HERE to download the Spits' "Haunted Fang Castle" EP.
I got this one on CD at the Scion Garage Fest and only listened to it once. It's probably my least favorite of their records. But hey, it's FREE.
It's an interesting read:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/musicblog/2010/oct/20/dirtbombs-detroit
I saw them two weekends back in a small seafront venue in Southend, Essex, UK and they tore the place up. Top volume but not so much that it hid the tunes. If you haven't seen them already catch them at the first chance you get. Both LPs are on constant rotation too. Great to see a band building support through word of mouth and performance not hype.
I'm a fan for sure. There take on Little Richard's Hey, Hey, Hey, Hey really get's me going.
Sunny Afternoon, I'm Not Like Everybody Else, I Need You, ect. All fucking KILLER. This right here is absolutely beautiful to me: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vsrqfvwO_xE
Great review. Thanks for writing!