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re: Psych-Out, or Riot On Sunset Strip
Posted on 3/2/13 at 10:08 pm to OldTigahFot
Posted on 3/2/13 at 10:08 pm to OldTigahFot
Posted on 3/2/13 at 10:54 pm to Kafka
Dallas represent:
The Noblemen - "Here's Where You Belong"
Pittsburgh:
Flavor - "Sally Had A Party"
Louisville:
Soul, Inc. - "I Belong To Nobody"
The Noblemen - "Here's Where You Belong"
Pittsburgh:
Flavor - "Sally Had A Party"
Louisville:
Soul, Inc. - "I Belong To Nobody"
Posted on 3/3/13 at 2:31 pm to tidalmouse
quote:
Psych-Outquote:The Amboy Dukes - "Journey to the Center of the Mind" I've got a friend that will argue til the cows come home that "Journey to the Center of the Mind" is the greatest album of all time.
A great album, and certainly merits attention as one of the best ever, so I will say your friend has good taste in music.
Posted on 3/22/13 at 3:00 pm to Kafka
40 years of Nuggets
>>>>> Playlist of the songs on the original Nuggets <<<<<
quote:
Before he would achieve recognition as the guitarist for Patti Smith, Lenny Kaye wrote reviews and articles for Rolling Stone in its early years and was hired as a freelance talent scout by Elektra Records in 1970. During that period, Elektra president Jac Holzman told Kaye about a record he wanted put out consisting of songs that were either hidden on records or minor hit singles. The result? Nuggets: Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era 1965-1968.
"In a way, it seemed to me that these songs were in a twilight zone," Kaye tells Spinner, "between what was then the AM format -- catchy three-minute singles with a good chorus and a hook -- and the more expansive album-oriented music that developed in the '60s when all these artistic parameters were kind of pushed aside, and a certain sense of possibility came into the music where you could think expansively and imaginatively beyond certain time lengths and song lengths and song constructs. Having lived through it as a teenager, I felt very much connected with it in terms of my own artistic growth and what I could see as the possibilities within music."
With songs selected by Kaye and released in 1972, Nuggets became a classic garage rock album featuring bands that never achieved long-lasting fame.
quote:
"Nuggets seems to have a life of its own," says Kaye, "because what it became is a symbol for a type of energy and musical reinvention that is always a part of our growth as musicians and as an audience -- the spirit within it, the sense of beginning anew that Nuggets represented I think is something that's a constant in music as music moves towards the future. I'm just so thrilled that Nuggets has had a chance to be the birthright of many a band and many a musical fan, and that its fountain of youth is continually returned to."
>>>>> Playlist of the songs on the original Nuggets <<<<<
Posted on 3/22/13 at 7:37 pm to Kafka
Today's selection has an international flavor:
From Minneapolis:
The Litter - "Action Woman"
Supposedly this track turns up in a Californication episode.
From Mexico:
Los Chijuas - "Changing The Colors of Life"
From London:
Caleb - "Baby Your Phrasing Is Bad"
This track was the undeniable career high point for the session musician playing piano on it, one Reggie Dwight.
From Minneapolis:
The Litter - "Action Woman"
Supposedly this track turns up in a Californication episode.
From Mexico:
Los Chijuas - "Changing The Colors of Life"
From London:
Caleb - "Baby Your Phrasing Is Bad"
This track was the undeniable career high point for the session musician playing piano on it, one Reggie Dwight.
Posted on 4/10/13 at 2:37 pm to Kafka
Mouse & The Traps
"A Public Execution"
"L-O-V-E Love"
And my personal fave:
"Sometimes You Just Can't Win"
quote:
This Tyler, TX, group from the mid-'60s is most known for their uncanny imitation of Highway 61-era Dylan, "A Public Execution." Featured on the Nuggets compilation, it is to Dylan what the Knickerbockers' "Lies" is to the Beatles: one of the few rip-offs so utterly accurate that it could easily fool listeners into mistaking it for the original article. Spearheaded by singer/songwriter Ronnie Weiss, the group actually recorded quite a few decent singles between 1965 and 1969 without approaching any sort of national recognition. "Mouse" never got as explicitly Dylanesque again, but there's no doubt that Weiss often recalled a non-atonal Dylan with his nasal delivery, and several of their singles were a much more melodic, pop-oriented extension of Dylan's mid-'60s sound. Recording almost exclusively original material, they were one of the better regional groups of the time, and also waxed some capable Texas punk-psychedelia and good-time pop/rockers. -- Allmusic.com
"A Public Execution"
"L-O-V-E Love"
And my personal fave:
"Sometimes You Just Can't Win"
Posted on 4/10/13 at 4:02 pm to Blue Velvet
Prefer this version of Psyche Out
MEAT BEAT MANIFESTO
what can I say? I spent the early 90s hanging out in Houston at POWER TOOLS, NUMBERS LIZARD LOUNGE, RED SQUARE and PROTEUS
MEAT BEAT MANIFESTO
what can I say? I spent the early 90s hanging out in Houston at POWER TOOLS, NUMBERS LIZARD LOUNGE, RED SQUARE and PROTEUS
This post was edited on 4/10/13 at 4:04 pm
Posted on 4/10/13 at 4:37 pm to CAD703X
This thread is devoted to a musical genre of the 1960s
Please delete your post
Thank you
Please delete your post
Thank you
Posted on 4/10/13 at 7:23 pm to Kafka
The Savage Resurrection (1967-1968)
one of the youngest psychedelic rock bands of the 60's
My buddies dad gave me this vinyl in middle school:
My favorite: The Savage Resurrection - Jammin'
The Savage Resurrection - Expectations
The Savage Resurrection - Thing In "E"
one of the youngest psychedelic rock bands of the 60's
My buddies dad gave me this vinyl in middle school:
My favorite: The Savage Resurrection - Jammin'
The Savage Resurrection - Expectations
The Savage Resurrection - Thing In "E"
This post was edited on 4/10/13 at 7:27 pm
Posted on 4/10/13 at 7:26 pm to Captain Fantasy
Greatest 1st post ever?
Certainly for the MB
Certainly for the MB
Posted on 4/10/13 at 7:57 pm to Kafka
From London: The Action (1963-1969) - Brain
From Boston: Ultimate Spinach (1968-1969) - Ballad of the Hip Dead Goddess
From Paris: Jacques Dutronc (1963-present) - Hippie Hippie Hourrah
This post was edited on 4/11/13 at 8:30 am
Posted on 4/12/13 at 8:14 pm to Captain Fantasy
Cheshunt, Hertfordshire:
The Creation -- "How Does it Feel"
Creation guitarist Eddie Phillips was reputedly the first guitarist to play an electric guitar with a violin bow, a technique Jimmy Page would later, er, copy.
Fremont, California:
The Harbinger Complex -- "I Think I'm Down"
Acton, Massachusetts:
The Mauve -- "You Got Me Cryin'"
The Creation -- "How Does it Feel"
Creation guitarist Eddie Phillips was reputedly the first guitarist to play an electric guitar with a violin bow, a technique Jimmy Page would later, er, copy.
Fremont, California:
The Harbinger Complex -- "I Think I'm Down"
Acton, Massachusetts:
The Mauve -- "You Got Me Cryin'"
Posted on 4/13/13 at 8:45 pm to Kafka
Tonight a little folk-rock:
The Byrds - "I'll Feel A Whole Lot Better" -- The late great Gene Clark on lead vocal
The Byrds, 1965: Chris Hillman, David Crosby, Michael Clarke, Roger McGuinn, Gene Clark
Dino Desi & Billy - "Not The Loving Kind"
It's a family affair -- or is it a class project? (L-R): Dino Martin (son of Dean), Desi Arnaz Jr (son of Lucille Ball), Billy Hinsche (future brother-in-law of Beach Boy Carl Wilson); sophomores at Beverly Hills Catholic High School, 1965.
The Beau Brummels - "Just A Little"
The Byrds - "I'll Feel A Whole Lot Better" -- The late great Gene Clark on lead vocal
The Byrds, 1965: Chris Hillman, David Crosby, Michael Clarke, Roger McGuinn, Gene Clark
Dino Desi & Billy - "Not The Loving Kind"
It's a family affair -- or is it a class project? (L-R): Dino Martin (son of Dean), Desi Arnaz Jr (son of Lucille Ball), Billy Hinsche (future brother-in-law of Beach Boy Carl Wilson); sophomores at Beverly Hills Catholic High School, 1965.
The Beau Brummels - "Just A Little"
Posted on 4/14/13 at 8:52 am to Kafka
Lots of good stuff in here.
Thread title is still anchor worthy.
Thread title is still anchor worthy.
Posted on 5/11/13 at 3:51 pm to Hugo Stiglitz
Just found this thread!
Here's a couple of Italian Riots on Via Veneto from I Kings:
I Kings "1,2,3"
I Kings "Trovane Un Altro"
I Kings "Trovane Un Altro" movie clip
Here's a couple of Italian Riots on Via Veneto from I Kings:
I Kings "1,2,3"
I Kings "Trovane Un Altro"
I Kings "Trovane Un Altro" movie clip
Posted on 5/20/13 at 9:18 pm to Kafka
Posted on 5/21/13 at 1:53 pm to Kafka
Posted on 5/21/13 at 1:53 pm to CAD703X
quote:
what can I say? I spent the early 90s hanging out in Houston at POWER TOOLS, NUMBERS LIZARD LOUNGE, RED SQUARE and PROTEUS
HAHA, me too.
Posted on 5/21/13 at 8:59 pm to CAD703X
quote:I don't care about your nostalgia
I spent the early 90s hanging out in Houston
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