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    • February 7, 2014 4:39 AM CST
    • https://soundcloud.com/straight-to-archive/the-free-fire-dept-sugar-on-a

      Enjoying this very much

    • February 7, 2014 1:40 AM CST
    • YEAH , BOY. AS MUCH AS WE'VE TALKED ABOUT THE RAMONES , WE'VE SCARCELY TOUCHED ON THEIR SPORADIC POLITICAL INCORRECTNESS....At least , until "too tough to die" , when Johnny seemed to be losing the battle......

      I was once told "Suzi is a Headbanger " was un - pc because a "Headbanger" is upposed to mean someone who gives great head   I neve r heard the term used that way , before or since.

      "Glad to see you Go "was aimed at Dee Dee's ex GF , CONNIE , WHO SLASHED HIS ASS WITH A BROKEN BEER BOTTLE ,  and had almost taken Arthur Kane's thumb off wheN she dated him.      "GET ThE GLORY , LIKe cHARLES MANSON". It was a fantasy , seemingly shared by the whole band , of putting her out. She did it to herself , with drugs.    There's so many others......

       

       

    • February 6, 2014 10:56 PM CST
    • Fun topic! Here's some I thought of:

      Ramones - Loudmouth, 53rd & 3rd or Today your Love, Tomorrow the World.

      Oingo Boingo - Little Girls

      Fats Domino - Just Like a Woman

    • February 6, 2014 2:17 PM CST
    • Thank you. It's been going on for years.

      Some of my contributions were not directly credited to me (They were edited , with new content added , usually.) .But there are some new ones under my name.

      When the page began , most people , myself included  , only knew Death for "Keep on Knockin"" if even that.

      When Death first played Chicago , I was going to go , but , did'nt. I did'nt feel like being on public trans longer than at the actual show , that night. I heard they only did some of the songs on that first 12" , and padded the set out with Reggae songs from their other  band.  I WOULD NOT HAVE BEEN A HAPPY CAMPER TO FIND THAT OUT , IN PERSON. SORRY........But , they obviously have it together , now .

      I missed them again on NYE , because Roky Erickson was also playing , I might add , in a less batshit crazy part of town .......

    • February 5, 2014 8:26 PM CST
    • That link is killer! I'll read more of it tomorrow. Thanks for that. 

    • February 5, 2014 4:14 PM CST
    • Good point , I forgot they were still finding their way in '73. Just as people don't want to recall The Bad Brains were formed from the ashes of a Jazz Fusion group , til they later came under the spell of Reggae and Punk. It just did'nt make good copy "Before The Ramones"......THERE'S STILL SOME TIGHT GROOVES THAT GO BACK TO RAW FUNK IN SOME OF DEATH'S RECORDINGS. That's not a bad thing. i'd say they were Punk , or Proto Punk , but not in a Ramones /Heartbreakers /Dead Boys kinda sense. Most people that had'nt dared venture into The Bowery at the time  would'nt have known anout the embryonic NYC PUNK SCENE.

      What Death were into was VERY different from the Black music scene in Detroit , obviously , but , even if they knew teh right people , it might've taken them at least a couple of years to infiltrate the post Stooges/MC5 club scene , which did go one to include people like Hiawatha Bailey (Cult Heroes) and The (Detroit) N****ERS , who , reportedly , were assembled by a White Svengali    www.roctober.com

      click on Black Punk. Lively up your damn self. : ) John.

    • February 5, 2014 9:25 AM CST
    • Dammit! It quoted your whole thing and i can't edit it. I'll try again:

       

      John: " THE RAMONES BEGAN , IN EARNEST , IN 1974. DEATH STARTED OUT , WHEN , IN '73 ? ."

       

      You're spot on with everything in that post. But to further your point, i quoted this to point out that Death actually didn't start until Spring of '74 (the Ramones formed in Jan '74), they didn't write "for the whole world to see" until Oct '74 (and of course, the Ramones were playing CBGB's by August...with March being their first show), and "for the whole world to see" was recorded on Feb 18th, 1975 (the ramones recorded their first 15 song session on Feb 2nd, 1975).

      I love Death and think they were well before their time...but yeah, the whole "Before the Ramones" thing is not only pointless to point out (for the exact reasons you mentioned), but it's not even true, period. I think what confuses people is the fact the Hackney brothers were a funk group called Rock Fire Funk Express in 1973. You can hear their song "people save the world" on youtube, recorded in Sept '73. It's not even close to what they did in Death.

       

    • February 5, 2014 9:23 AM CST
    • John Battles said:

      THE RAMONES BEGAN , IN EARNEST , IN 1974. DEATH STARTED OUT , WHEN , IN '73 ? .

      You're spot on with everything in that post. But to further your point, i quoted this to point out that Death actually didn't start until Spring of '74 (the Ramones formed in Jan '74), they didn't write "for the whole world to see" until Oct '74 (and of course, the Ramones were playing CBGB's by August...with March being their first show), and "for the whole world to see" was recorded on Feb 18th, 1975 (the ramones recorded their first 15 song session on Feb 2nd, 1975).

      I love Death and think they were well before their time...but yeah, the whole "Before the Ramones" thing is not only pointless to point out (for the exact reasons you mentioned), but it's not even true, period. I think what confuses people is the fact the Hackney brothers were a funk group called Rock Fire Funk Express in 1973. You can hear their song "people save the world" on youtube, recorded in Sept '73. It's not even close to what they did in Death.

       

    • February 6, 2014 12:57 PM CST
    • Bloobrothers by The Dictators. Pure rock 'n roll.

    • February 3, 2014 12:14 PM CST
    • the first Damned.1976 !

    • February 5, 2014 11:27 PM CST
    • No one's mentioned 1 2 5 by The Haunted?

      A buddy of mine had a band which was pretty directly inspired by that song. Take a listen to them here http://calpeckandthetramps.bandcamp.com/

      Good luck with the harmonica, I've tried and given up so many times.

    • February 5, 2014 4:03 PM CST
    • No problem, thanks for helping out with setting up that interview. 

    • February 5, 2014 7:57 AM CST
    • Thanx for keeping the OG Legacy alive Dave!!!!

    • February 4, 2014 5:38 PM CST
    • This week's program was on the Canadian label Og Records that ran from 1983 to 1990.  I played lots of obscure Canadian garage and out of print music from Og.  I also Interviewed Gerard from Deja Voodoo/Og Records. 

      Og Play List:

      1. Deja Voodoo – Boppin’ 88 (Gumbo 1983 – OG 1)
      2. Terminal Sunglasses – Terminal Theme (Wraparound Cool 1985 – OG 6)
      3. Drums Along The Gardiner – Vagabonds (Mr. Garager’s Neighbourhood 1989 – OG 21)
      4. Desmonds – Bureaucrat From Hell (It Came From Canada Volume 5 1988 – OG 25)
      5. Ripcordz – Long Dark Train (It Came From Canada Volume 5 1988 – OG 25)
      6. Captain Crunch and Let’s Do Lunch – Goes Without Saying (More Baroque-Post Industrial Hillbilly Launch Music 1989 – OG 23)
      7. Ray Condo & His Hard Rock Goners – High Voltage (It Came From Canada Volume 2 1986 – OG 9)
      8. Dusty Chaps – Yukon Buddy (It Came From Canada Volume 1 1985 – OG 8)
      9. Chris Houston – Surfin’ On Heroin (It Came From Canada Volume 1 1985 – OG 8)
      10. Cowboy Junkies – Blue Moon Revisited (It Came From Canada Volume 4 1988 – OG 17)
      11. Deja Voodoo – Too Cool To Live, Too Smart To Die (Too Smart To Live, Too Smart To Die 1988 – OG 12)

      GERARD VAN HERK INTERVIEW (DEJA VOODOO/OG RECORDS)

      12. Deja Voodoo – 48 Bucks (Big Pile Of Mud 1988 – OG 18)
      13. The Mongols – Sleepwalk (It Came From Canada Volume 3 1987 – OG 13)
      14. Dik Van Dykes – Curling (Nobody Likes The Dik Van Dykes 1987 - OG 16)
      15. Condition – Too Hot To (From Montreal 1983 – OG 3)
      16. Shadowy Men On A Shadowy Planet – Good Cop Bad Cop Voltage (It Came From Canada Volume 2 1986 – OG 9)
      17. Jerry Jerry & The Sons Of Rhythm Orchestra – Bad Idea (Road Gore: The Band Who Drank Too Much1985 – OG 7)
      18. Vindicators – If I Were You (Vindicators 1989 – OG 29)
      19. The Gruesomes – For All I Care (Tyrants Of Teen Trash 1986 – OG 10)
      20. The Gruesomes - Hey! (Hey! 1988 - OG 20)
      21. Deja Voodoo – Coelacanth (Swamp Of Love 1986 – OG 11)

      Download/listen to the podcast:  http://cjamlog1.cjam.ca/mp3dirnew/36-Revolution_Rock-20140204-1030-t1391509800.mp3

      Blog post on Og Records here:  http://revrock.blogspot.ca/2014/02/it-came-from-canada-og-records-show-494.html

    • February 5, 2014 11:25 AM CST
    • Thank You.

      I found an old show archived somewhere on the 'net, and now I've found the source.

      Excellent.

       

    • February 4, 2014 9:06 AM CST
    • THE TRIP! GARY GRIMSHAW TRIBUTE SHOW!

      This week on The Trip! Greg pays a musical homage to the recently passed master of psychedelic art Gary Grimshaw.  

      Listen here:  http://cjamlog1.cjam.ca/mp3dirnew/381-The_Trip-20140202-0030-t1391301000.mp3

      The Setlist: 

      eric burdon and the animals- hey gyp
      neighbours- no car
      jimi hendrix- crosstown traffic 
      jazz rockers- smog
      amen corner- expressway to your heart
      cream- deserted cities of the heart 
      new york dolls- subway train
      james cotton- mystery train
      shuffle demons- spadina bus
      the beach boys- bicycle rider theme
      detroit cobras- nothing but a heartache
      the dirtbombs- hey cookie!
      MC5- back in the u.s.a.
      the frost- jenny lee
      the yardbirds- i ain't got you
      johnny bassett & the blues insurgents- party my blues away
      the who- armenia city in the sky / heinz baked beans
      the electric prunes- get me to the world on time
      the raveonettes- breaking into cars
      iggy pop- new values
      roky erickson and the aliens- cold night for alligators

    • February 5, 2014 10:25 AM CST
    • Here is a pretty decent and fairly recent interview with Richard Meltzer I just stumbled upon. 

      http://unionpole.com/assets/otp.pdf

      Meltzer is pure genius in my opinion. From Vom and Blue Oyster Cult to the Ascetics of Rock and Gulcher, his work always fascinates me. If you have favourite interviews, writings, articles, stories concerning Meltzer—link'em up!

       

       

       

    • February 5, 2014 8:22 AM CST
    • Gonerfest and Austin Psych Fest are two biggies.

    • February 4, 2014 10:45 PM CST
    • Thank you , Space Case......Phillips and Sun Records was like the NASA of Rock'n'Roll. With a set up that would register below quaint by today's depressing standards , Sam Phillips took it into unknown dimensions. If he heard something in his head, that he could get out of a recording artist , he'd strike while the iron was HOT (Famously telling Gene Simmons "Wrap that fiddle around a goddamn tree , and come back with a hot guitar , boy !". Simmons , incidentally ,once told me he was later edited from some background scenes in an Elvis movie "Because I was so damn  UGLEEHHH!! By the way, I don't mean the OTHER Gene Simmons who's SOOOOOOOO GAAAAAHHHHHHH -  DAMN UUUUUUUHHHH - GLEEEHHHHH!!!!!!).....

      BUT , WHEN SAM MOVED HIS OPERATIONS TO SAM PHILLIPS STUDIOS , He had it all decorated in a White Trash Vision of a Sci - Fi future, realized. i have'nt been able to go there , when I've been to Memphis , but , I hear some of the original fixtures are still  there !

    • February 4, 2014 3:25 PM CST
    • John Battles said:

      Carl Perkins' sphere of influence is immeasurable , that is true . I'd say he and Elvis hit on virtually the same thing within a very short time of each other. Elvis got signed to Sun , first , and Carl was quickly informed that "There's a kid on the radio that sounds like y'all !". He knew he was destined to work for Sam Phillips , but , Phillips took his sweet time promoting Perkins , even bringing him to play studio Guitar on an abortive Presley session (Which , thankfully , survived.). Elvis spoke very highly of Gene Vincent , and , of course , Perkins , whom he was friendly with. Likewise , Vincent said "Elvis has been one of the greatest people I've known since I've been in the business. He helped me a lot when I was getting started.".He praised Perkins , as any sensible performer would do. It seems there was a lot more cameraderie in those days. 

      Perkins famously said , "Elvis' look really helped the rest of us . Here he was , all pretty ,  and here we were , lookin' like MR. ED !!!".      Of course , most people would'nt say that of Billy Lee Riley , Johnny Cash or even  Jerry Lee Lewis , but there were some BOILERS on that label. Seen any pictures of Ray Harris?

      No , looks were'nt as important in those days , but Elvis did , as Perkins maintained , provide an acceptable face for the new emerging sounds at Sun Records.

       

      hahahaha you speak the truth, JB. Elvis was no doubt "THE FACE" as much as he was "THE PELVIS." And no matter who anyone thinks is "The King," Sam Phillips was the man with the plan makin' all sorts of Machiavellian magic happen behind the scenes.

       

    • February 3, 2014 8:44 PM CST
    • It is a very good piece. That's about all I remember about that movie , was Hoffman's outstanding performance as Lester Bangs. Both were tragic losses.  HEROIN HATES YOU. HATES ME , TOO. Too many great talents , ruined on Heroin and other bullshit drugs.

    • February 3, 2014 7:22 AM CST
    • Great article about Philip Seymour Hoffman's portrayal of Lester Bangs in Almost Famous...

      http://news.radio.com/2014/02/02/philip-seymour-hoffmans-immortalization-of-lester-bangs/

      Such a tragic loss. #fuckheroin

    • February 3, 2014 8:28 PM CST
    • What he said. It's too easy to find out about the original stuff , today. We had crappy books , shit liner notes (EVA records , anyone?) , and GOOD zines that were very difficult to find .....Reissues are generally much bette r, too , so , I hope the younger fans will stay with it . In 30 YEARS' TIME , THEY'LL each KNOW ENOUGH TO WRITE A BOOK....OR SEVERAL.

      btw , DID'NT MEAN TO MAKE MY LAST COMMENT on "The Adventures of ME" SO LONG. iT WAS LATE. I will say , when I moved to Chicago , i quickly learned that there was a happening Garage scene (There were about FIVE of us !).... The Cynics , ChesterfiELD kINGS (wHO WERE GETTING AWAY FROM THAT SOUND BY THEN , but had a good balance of 60's and 70's Punk , first time I saw them.), Lyres  - Sorry. Pretty unexciting . I know there are more Supercentaurians (People who've lived to be 110 AND OVER.) THAN PEOPLE WHO AGREE....Royal Nonesuch , From St. Louis , all these bands played out quite a bit. We had one Garage band in the late 80's , Fang Beach. Virtually all (Obvious) covers , with a sorta Pop approach. They meant well. There've been MAYBE 10 or 12 local bands I'd call "Garage" since.

       

       

       

       

    • February 3, 2014 7:29 PM CST
    • Neo-garage "old timers"? I'll get out my walker and declare, "YES! I was there and I still am."  ;)  

      I'm proud to have remained in the garage underground since the early 1980s(!?!), in garage bands, making lots of records, touring the globe, doing radio shows, writing books about it, shooting videos and releasing DVDs, etc.

      I surely hope some of the newcomers to garage will still be carrying the paisley flag 30 years from now so they can be called, with pride, an "old-timer"! :)

      And my KNIGHTS OF FUZZ book -- which details the garage-psych rebirth @1980-now -- is being updated and will be avbailable Spring 2014. The original has long been OOP.

      So bands & labels: get in your info updates and new sounds to me ASAP!
      http://www.purple-cactus.tv/garage-nation/knightsoffuzz.html

      Thanks and keep bringing the FUZZ! :)