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    • February 9, 2010 11:32 AM CST
    • I'm looking for the real lyrics to the Unrelated Segments' "Where You Gonna Go."

      I sang some gobbledegook on the Malarians' 1986 recording of the song, and want to get 'em right on the reunion tour.

    • February 9, 2010 9:28 AM CST

    • Can somebody knows where i can find those lyrics :

      Friday Night Dance Party - Link Wray
      Booze Party - Three Aces & A Joker

      Haven't got the time" by The Pagans .

      thanks very much !

      Pat

    • February 9, 2010 8:20 AM CST
    • Hi there folks

      I'm Suzanne aka Sleazy Suzy aka Bom Bom Lulu.
      Maybe you already know my podcast, i'm doing it for ages now. But finally I'm proud to say... I'm in!!! Kopper asked me serveral times to do the show in Englisch and the only anwser I had was. NO way man. The show is already creap in dutch, so please don't make me do it in Englisch... I'll loose al my fans!! So the language was the reason I coulden't get in. And then a couple of weeks ago I get a message ....'Your in, your show will be posted on GaragePunk.com' So what the .... i'm here now, and here to stay Haha.

      Oke cut this crappy shit!! About the show, the music I play. Thats the only important thing.
      My show is a big mix. The only thing you have to remember is this!!

      It's a dutch radioshow that stands for a great sound of sleazy trashy Rock & Roll / Garage/ Punkrock/ 60's beat/ Ye Ye beat/ 60's Girl Garage/ Raw Rhythm & Blues/ Bubblegum punk/ Pre wars/ Nasty rockabilly/ Trashy Country and many many more...for all ye sinners and sufferers...

      Hope you all will enjoy it like i do every time!

      Nice to be part of this!!

      Thank you
      Trash it

      Suzanne




      You can  SUBSCRIBE yourself at http://feeds.feedburner.com/RocknRollRampage

      LISTEN on the websites
      http://rocknrollrampage.blogspot.com/
      http://www.myspace.com/rocknrollrampage

      become a facebook fan at http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Rock-Roll-Rampage-Radio-Show/114354414920?v=wall&ref=mf



    • February 8, 2010 7:47 PM CST
    • I'm getting some King Khan tracks, and after that some Don Byas and Kenny Clarke tracks. Right now I'm listening to a lot of Chronological Classics jazz records. I recommend the Illinois Jacquet set if you like wild R&B sax honking from the Fifties. He's just as great as Big Jay McNeely. Don't forget the big Valentine's Day special with free tracks if you log in after the 14th. swt said:

      Thanks Andy. What have you picked up at eMusic lately?

      Andy Seven said:
      Some great choices, as usual.
      My monthly sub recharges tomorrow, yes!

    • February 8, 2010 10:54 AM CST
    • Thanks Andy. What have you picked up at eMusic lately? Andy Seven said:

      Some great choices, as usual.
      My monthly sub recharges tomorrow, yes!

    • February 6, 2010 12:59 PM CST
    • Some great choices, as usual.
      My monthly sub recharges tomorrow, yes!

    • February 6, 2010 12:48 PM CST
    • My eMusic downloads the past month ..

      * Slipping And Sliding by Big Al Downing. He was an Okie kid who idolized Fats Domino, a country boy who loved rock 'n' roll. He won a talent contest on Coffeyville. Kansas radio station singing "Blueberry Hill." One of the listeners was a white singer named Bobby Poe who hired Downing, still a teenager, to play piano and sing in his band The Poe Cats. The Poe Cats were hired as the backup band for a young rockabilly gal from Oklahoma, Wanda Jackson and in 1957 backed her on her biggest song "Let's Have a Party."

      It was one of the first integrated rock 'n' roll bands and it wasn't easy on Downing. In 2003, he told No Depression, “I remember once when we were in Butte, Montana ... There were no blacks anywhere in the town. They put a blanket over my head and we went into the hotel. Once we got to the show, people were hurling food and other things at me on the stage and we had to go back to the dressing room.”

      But besides his work with Jackson, Downing, with the Poe Cats cut lots of tunes on their own and that's what's on this collection. Domino's influence is apparent on several of the tracks, as is Little Richard's. Los Lobos fans will recognize "Georgia Slop." Basically this album is full of every I love about early rock 'n' roll. Big Al is one of the great under-recognized heroes of the era.


      Hill Country Revue: Live at Bonnaroo by North Mississippi Allstars. This live set from the 2004 festival in Tennessee is a gathering of the Dickinson (Luther, Cody and daddy Jim) and the Burnside (R.L., his sons Garry and Duwayne, and his grandson Cody) families plus some friends like Othar Turner's Rising Star Fife & Drum Band (featuring the grandchildren of the late fife master), Chris Robinson of the Black Crowes and others.

      What they produced was a magic mix of blues, Southern rock and some Dixie-fried psychedelia. "Psychedelic Sex Machine" is just loads of fun. But Jim Dickinson's version of "Down in Mississippi" (written by J.B. Lenoir, but a signature song of the elder Dickinson) might be the mightiest version he ever did.

      The Essential Carl Smith 1950-1956This honky tonk giant toured with Hank Williams, who got him his first appearance on the Grand Old Opry in 1950. He married June Carter before Johnny Cash did (Carlene Carter is his daughter). And when he died last month, The Nashville Tennessean in his obit used an old quote from Waylon Jennings: "From the minute he came out, I wanted to look like him, tried to comb my hair like him and learned every song he ever recorded."

      This collection of 20 songs from 1950 to 1956 makes you realize what Waylon was talking about. You can hear Hank's influence in songs like "Trademark" (which was co-written by Porter Wagoner) and "Are You Teasing Me" (a Louvin Brothers song). Meanwhile songs like "Go Boy Go" and "Back Up Buddy" ("back up, buddy, don't you come any closer/I know you want her, but the answer is `No, sir' ...") sound as if they were recorded right on the border of honky tonk and rockabilly.
      Plus:


      Most of The Sheik Said Shake by Hipbone Slim & The Knee-Tremblers. Allright! Voodoo Rhythm last month quietly added a bunch of albums to eMusic including some relatively new ones (The Pussywarmers, The Movie Star Junkies and the latest from King Automatic and The Guilty Hearts).

      This is Hipbone Slim's third Voodoo Rhythm album, released a couple of years ago. Like his previous albums is dangerous sounding British psychobilly.

      So far I don't hear anything quite as snarling as the title song ofSnake Pit or as catchy as "What Do You Look Like," Sir Bald Diddley's duet with Holly Golightly on Have Knees, Will Tremble

      Still, it's irresistible. I'll definitely pick up the rest of this album when my account refreshes next week.

      And (speaking of the rest of an album) ...

      * The remaining four tracks from tracks from No Requests Tonight by The Devil Dogs, which I didn't get last month. It's good and rocking, though my favorite track on the album still is the cover of Sonny Bono's "Laugh at Me."

    • February 8, 2010 3:38 PM CST
    • Check the compilations of 'Girls in the Garage' The next albums are great to - Boy Trouble - garpax girls - Girls With Guitars (Ace) - Back to the girl zone - rare upbeat girl group tracks! - Good Girls Gone Bad (Ace) - The Girl Group Sound - All The Ettes You Can Handle - From The kitchen to the garage (dutch sounds) - A Million Dollars Worth Of Girl Groups - One Kiss Can Lead to Another: Girl Group Sounds, Lost and Found - Ultra chicks Enjoy!!! Check my postcast I play a lot of girlsound!!! http://rocknrollrampage.blogspot.com/ http://garagepunk.ning.com/profile/rocknrollrampage http://myspace.com/rocknrollrampage Cheers Suzy

    • February 7, 2010 9:10 PM CST
    • FREDDI said:

      I think they began as a punk band and became a good rock band,maybe their
      political lyrics give them that rebel-with-a-cause attitude,
      but overall they were a great rock band (Joe Strummer was a great Creedence C.R. fan,so he said)
      able in mixing various styles of music as might have been the WHO,ROLLING STONES in past years,
      or TALKING HEADS in another country (and some calls them punk too).
      And as many great rock band they end in the crap..
      And then,what means punk? It's a much larger use term,a word like rock,pop..
      Is the one who read it that gives its intent. Not most of us..
      Well, almost everybody who graced the stage of CBGB's between 1974 and 1980 was considered a punk band, but most of the bands never sounded alike. Television, Talking Heads, Blondie, Ramones, and Suicide really have nothing n common except being in the same scene at the same time.

    • February 7, 2010 9:06 PM CST
    • Would anyone recommend searching for recordings by the 101ers, Joe Strummer's band before the Clash? I think most of them are live but they've been brought to my attention a few times.

    • February 7, 2010 12:24 PM CST
    • Rockin Rod Strychnine said: Billy Childish also did a cover of "1977" with Thee Mighty Caesars that appeared on one of those DOPE GUNS AND FUCKING IN THE STREETS compilations on Amphetimine Reptile. Probably not a record label you'd enjoy but there was some decent stuff on the comp that they appeard on.
      <. That is a great recording. I don't dig the Clash version so much but the childish version would obviously not exist without it. Best song on the whole DGaFitS album I think.

    • February 7, 2010 1:52 AM CST
    • I think they began as a punk band and became a good rock band,maybe their
      political lyrics give them that rebel-with-a-cause attitude,
      but overall they were a great rock band (Joe Strummer was a great Creedence C.R. fan,so he said)
      able in mixing various styles of music as might have been the WHO,ROLLING STONES in past years,
      or TALKING HEADS in another country (and some calls them punk too).
      And as many great rock band they end in the crap..
      And then,what means punk? It's a much larger use term,a word like rock,pop..
      Is the one who read it that gives its intent. Not most of us..

    • February 7, 2010 1:36 AM CST
    • Hey, thanks Rod! Turns out I know at least a half dozen or more Clash songs without even realizing - or remembering it. I just performed my 1st ever internet (or otherwise) search on the Clash. I think I'll seek out those early recordings. I'm expanding my horizons! Rockin Rod Strychnine said: Billy Childish also did a cover of "1977" with Thee Mighty Caesars that appeared on one of those DOPE GUNS AND FUCKING IN THE STREETS compilations on Amphetimine Reptile. Probably not a record label you'd enjoy but there was some decent stuff on the comp that they appeard on. Maybe but maybe not, you'd probably like their first album whether the UK or US versions. The Clash do a decent version of Vince Taylor's "Brand New Cadillac" but it's stuck on the LONDON CALLING album,which I feel is kind of overrated.

    • February 6, 2010 10:51 PM CST
    • Michael Kaiser said:

      Now that you mention it, I recall Billy Childish referencing that song in an interview, so I guess I've heard of it by proxy. I also remembered that I have those Thee Stash recordings. So there's 4 more, I suppose.

      One can gather what an impression the Clash has made on me. I think it must be due to despising that "Rock The Casbah" song so much in my youth that I figured it wasn't worth pursuing the band much further. Heck! for all I know they may be the greatest thing since Emmett Lord!

      Strike my testimony from the record.

      YOU GOT GOOD TASTE said:
      What about ''I'm so bored of the USA' ?
      Michael Kaiser said:
      Besides "Rock The Casbah" and "Should I Stay..." I can't name one Clash song.
      Billy Childish also did a cover of "1977" with Thee Mighty Caesars that appeared on one of those DOPE GUNS AND FUCKING IN THE STREETS compilations on Amphetimine Reptile. Probably not a record label you'd enjoy but there was some decent stuff on the comp that they appeard on. Maybe but maybe not, you'd probably like their first album whether the UK or US versions. The Clash do a decent version of Vince Taylor's "Brand New Cadillac" but it's stuck on the LONDON CALLING album,which I feel is kind of overrated.

    • February 6, 2010 8:17 PM CST
    • Now that you mention it, I recall Billy Childish referencing that song in an interview, so I guess I've heard of it by proxy. I also remembered that I have those Thee Stash recordings. So there's 4 more, I suppose. One can gather what an impression the Clash has made on me. I think it must be due to despising that "Rock The Casbah" song so much in my youth that I figured it wasn't worth pursuing the band much further. Heck! for all I know they may be the greatest thing since Emmett Lord! Strike my testimony from the record. YOU GOT GOOD TASTE said:

      What about ''I'm so bored of the USA' ?
      Michael Kaiser said:
      Besides "Rock The Casbah" and "Should I Stay..." I can't name one Clash song.

    • February 6, 2010 8:05 PM CST
    • What about ''I'm so bored of the USA' ? Michael Kaiser said:

      Besides "Rock The Casbah" and "Should I Stay..." I can't name one Clash song.

    • February 6, 2010 7:52 PM CST
    • Besides "Rock The Casbah" and "Should I Stay..." I can't name one Clash song.

    • February 6, 2010 5:20 PM CST
    • fast eddie said:

      I have to agree with lord muck, they were most definitely punk. Punk at the time was more about the social revolution not just music. The press added the label not the artists. I'd rather listen to white riot than any pistols track, live it was an inspiration. If you can't call the clash punk you'd better rule out the ramones (who really wanted to be a surf band , just didn't have the chops to play it at the time), plus as Lord muck said they were great live
      I have friends who's band in 76/77 hated the punk label and called themselves hoodlum rock, but they were probably the best of the Toronto punk bands (the ugly - good luck finding their stuff) If you look back now most of the stuff seems pretty tame in comparison, but if you were there it changed music and art for the better (not to mention the fact that a lot of what we listen to now would likely never have come about without the first wave kicking down the walls of mediocrity that had developed in the music scene)
      Hoodlum rock:That's a great term. I mean think of it. That's what a lot of these sixties bands look like and bands like the Ramones and Dead Boys sound like...a bunch of hoods.

    • February 5, 2010 11:52 AM CST
    • Not punk.

      Not even a good band. Ugh.
      I'll let white riot and 1977 off but that's about it.

    • February 6, 2010 5:09 PM CST
    • Not that I'm condoning any of this, but isn't it something he normally could have handled if he hadn't had the flu at this time...of course, falling asleep with that much junk in your system isn't good either...better to let it wear off before crashing. Better not to do any junk in the first place.

    • February 6, 2010 12:52 PM CST
    • Jay Reatard Blows It-- that about sums this up.. Stupid

    • February 5, 2010 1:45 AM CST
    • wow!thanks, will give it a listen and include a track or rwo in my next podcast

    • February 4, 2010 5:57 PM CST
    • Phantom surfers,Slacktone (once i saw them in Genova IT,but I was late,just in time for the last song!!).
      And I like The Vulcanos but I don't know if it's a new or old band.Impala and Untamed Youth are not bad.

    • February 4, 2010 5:47 PM CST
    • Hmmm....I've been searching through these forums for the pic I asked about and still can't find it....could have sworn I saw it in the discussion "What's spinnin' on your turntable" or something like that" but I noticed that two pictures are gone... one entry has a "deleted by photobucket" in lew of a picture....and another entry has a box with a red x instead of a picture.... anyway....to give a hint of what I'm looking for....imagine this Mad Monster Party if it looked more like this the living dead Pictures, Images and Photos anybody NOT know what i'm talking about?