Sunday, June 28, 2009

"Sin Alley" 20 Hot 50's Rockabilly RnB Blasters Vol. 4 VA

"There’s a fine line between clever and stupid. Just WHERE this sits is on the LATTER"
"Filthy, sleazy 50s trash! 20 real gone rockabilly blasters about Sex, Frogs, Martian, Lust, Fighting & Sex..."
"These records are full of lunatics who had no sense of subtlety and taste. This stuff is so cool and ANTI everything that hippy "nostalgia" lovers want you to think about the fifties."traxfromwax:
a) SIDE DRUNK
1. Royal Jokers: You Tickle Me Baby 2. Jerry Harris: Swing Daddy Swing 3. Mckinley Mitchell: Rock Everybody Rock 4. Southlanders: The Wiggle 5. Barn 'n' Jess: Banjo Stomp 6. Bryan "legs" Walker: I Stubbed My Toe 7. Phil Campos: Street Fight 8. Tony Chick: A Car 9. Jay Blue: Get Of My Back 10. Joey Warren: Goatee
b) SIDE WEIRD
11. Scotty Stuart: Nightmare 12. Carlos Casal: Don't Meet Mr. Frankenstein 13. Jackie Morningstar: Rockin' In The Graveyard 14. Tarantula Ghoul & Her Gravediggers: Graveyard Rock 15. Gary Warren: Werewolf 16. Carl Bonafede: Werewolf 17. Poets: Dead 18. Mad Man Jones: Snake Charmer 19. Jay Blue: The Coolest 20 Don Cole: Lie Detector Machine
ripped from vinyl in glorious monoloudarama!

Saturday, June 27, 2009

"Sin Alley" 21 Hot 50's Rockabilly RnB Blasters Vol. 3 VA

"These records are full of lunatics who had no sense of subtlety and taste. This stuff is so cool and ANTI everything that hippy "nostalgia" lovers want you to think about the fifties."Sure, there's been about 600 volumes of 50s Rockabilly comps issued since 1975 but SIN ALLEY cuts loose WITHOUT the anal-retentive "collector mentality" syndrome, the cuts within ARE a blast for just about any thrillseeker hungry for a taste of greasy, grimey 50s poonk-rawk! This pressing comes with b/w covertraxfromwax:
1. Johnny O'Keefe: Shake Baby Shake 2. Elroy Peace & Bow Ribbon: Quick Like 3. Wailin' Bill Dell: You Gotta Be Loose 4. Mad Mike & The Maniacs: The Hunch 5. Wildtones: The Martian Band 6. Musical Linn Twins: Indian Rock 7. Del-Roys: Bermuda Shorts 8. Rose Marie McCoy: Dippin' In My Business 9. Johnny Knight: Snake Shake 10. Little Cameron: She's Leaving 11. Volcanos: Oh Oh Mojo 12. Portugese Joe: Teenage Riot 13. Pinetoppers: Shout Bamalama 14. Orbits: Knock Her Down 15. Galaxies: This Rock'n'Roll 16. Emanons: Emanons Rock 17. Bill Johnson: You Better Dig It 18. Billy Lamont: Hear Me Now 19. Bob Vidone: Untrue 20. Emmett Lord: Women 21. Katie Sweet: I Love To Rock
ripped from vinyl in glorious monoloudarama!

"Countdownunder - Party At Hanging Rock" 1986 - VA

"It took awhile as this volume comes from deep deep downunder - have fun." - guehartAn 80s mod classic ... Soon the label needed a follow-up so Piller was sent to Australia to check out the burgeoning mod scene there. As a guest of Shake and Shout fanzine, and living with major mod players Don and Gary Hosie, a compilation was crafted out of the vibrant antipodean underground scene. Heroes like the Saints and Stupidity were bolstered by the Mushroom Club, Reasons Why and a host of other up and coming bands. Called, rather unimaginatively, "Countdown Under...Party At Hanging Rock", the album was released in the summer to a warm response...

traxfromwax:
1. The Perfect Crime - Up And Downs 2. Gypsy Woman - The Saints 3. Try Not To Let It Show - Stupidity 4. Avalanche Of Love - The Grooveyard 5. The Rest Of My Life - The Mustard Club 6. You're An Angel - Happy Hate Me Nots 7. The Meaning Of Life - The Dynamic Hepnotics 8. Look At You - Upbeat 9. Basia - Painters And Dockers 10. Undecided - The Reasons Why 11. Happy Days - The Huxton Creepers 12. Wild Wild Girl - The Sons Of Guns
...served by guehart...

Friday, June 26, 2009

"Sin Alley" Red Hot Rockabilly 1955 - 1962 Vol. 2 VA

"These records are full of lunatics who had no sense of subtlety and taste. This stuff is so cool and ANTI everything that hippy "nostalgia" lovers want you to think about the fifties."When Elvis Presley introed his Sun take of "Milk Cow Blues", he uttered the classic line "Let's get real, real GONE for a change". Well, the SIN ALLEY is documentation of just how GONE things got; crazed collections of the most whacked-out, slobberingly drunk Rockabilly/Hillbilly / R&B hoot'n'howl obscurities from the years 1956-1961.traxfromwax:
1. Johnny Knight: Rock And Roll Guitar 2. Eddie Smalling's Rolling Aces: Jeanie 3. Jefferson County: City Billy 4. Corky Jones: Rhythm & Booze 5. Joe Hall & Corvettes: Bongo Beatin' Beatnik 6. Danny Wheeler: Teenie Weenie Man 7. Bennie Hess: Wild Hog Hop 8. Phil Gray: Pepper Hot Baby 9. Gradie O'neal: Baby Oh Baby 10. Billy Smith: Tell Me Baby 11. Chuck Henderson: Rock And Roll Baby 12. Three Aces & A Joker: Booze Party 13. Darryl Vincent: Wild Wild Party 14. Telli Mills: Ain't Going Home 15. Johnny Buckett: Let Me Play Wit 'yo' Poodle 16. Nona Rae: Real Kool Kitty 17. Freddie & Hitch Hickers: Sinners 18. Frantics Four: Down By The Old Mill Stream 19. Phil Gray: Bluest Boy In Town 20. Lou Millet: Slip, Slip, Slippin'in 21. Buddy Sharpe & The Shakers: Bald Headed Baby
ripped from vinyl in glorious monoloudarama!

The Milkshakes "20 Rock And Roll Hits Of the 50s & 60s" 1984

"Chatham's favourite sons thrash their way through 20 rock 'n' roll faves from their fathers past."The title kind of says it all on this CD-ification of The Milkshakes 1984 vinyl release. The sleeve note's claim that these recordings were made by The Milkshakes' fathers in the early 60s, before they all died in a plane crash in Rochester, may be treated with a certain scepticism but one listen and you could well believe it. Whichever band it was, it is pure unadorned rock & roll, not the kind of ponced up, long haired waIly variety that attempts to pass itself off as such, in endless mindless videos that the 'music industry' shoves at us daily. This is real rock & roll for real men and women - no sexism here - played with a bite that would put the fear of Elvis' sham-burgers into most of these jumped up up-starts. Grrrrrrrrrrrr! - from: http://www.acerecords.co.uk/content.php?page_id=59&release=1543

trax:
1. Hippy Hippy Shake 2. Rip It Up 3. I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Cry 4. Say Mama 5. Peggy Sue 6. Jaguar and Thunderbird 7. Comanche 8. I'm Talking About You 9. Sweet Little Sixteen 10. Money (Thats What I Want) 11. Carol 12. Boys 13. Something Else 14. Some Other Guy 15. Who Do You Love 16. Jezebel 17. Hidden Charms 18. Little Queenie 19. Ya Ya (Twist) 20. I Wanna Be Your Man

Thursday, June 25, 2009

"Sin Alley" Red Hot Rockabilly 1955 - 1962 Vol. 1 VA

Red Hot Southern Rockabilly 1955 - 1962"These records are full of lunatics who had no sense of subtlety and taste. This stuff is so cool and ANTI everything that hippy "nostalgia" lovers want you to think about the fifties."traxfromwax:
1. Bobby Roberts: Big Sandy 2. Myron Lee & The Caddies: Homicide 3. Terry Clement & The Tune Tones: She's My Baby Doll 4. Roy Gaines: Skippy Is A Sissy 5. Dave Travis & The Premiers: I Don't Like Him 6. Tony Casanova: Showdown 7. Rio Rockers: Mexicali Baby 8. Mel McGonnigle: Rattle Shakin' Mama 9. Gradie O'Neal: The Turkeyneck Stretch 10. Johnny Thompson: The 309 11. Danny Dell & The Trends: Froggy 12. Pico Pete: Chicken Little 13. Rudy Green: Juicy Fruit 14. Bob Vidone & The Rhythm Rockers: Going My Way 15. Rhythm Rockers: Madness 16. Frantics Four: T.V. Mama 17. Dave 'Diddle' Day: Blue Moon Baby 18. Crazy Teens: Crazy Date
ripped from vinyl in glorious monoloudarama!

Kim Fowley "Outlaw Superman" 1971/1999

Even if the name Kim Fowley doesn't immediately ring a bell, the average listener has probably heard his most popular early productions — "Alley Oop" by the Hollywood Argyles, and "Nut Rocker" by B. Bumble and the Stingers. Outlaw Superman is a sampling of some of the bizarre singles Fowley has released on small labels over the years. If the subtitle Pure Genius From Ultra-Rare Singles is an overstatement, Fowley does possess a good ear for songs and a knack for getting his ideas across in three minutes. An integral aspect of Kim Fowley's work is his larger-than-life reputation. None of the tracks here are as outrageous as "Young America Saturday Night" (available on the compilation Only In America), a request for teenage girls to send their picture to Kim in care of the record company.However, "Hound Dog Savage" and "Hollywood Nights" (under the alias Lance Romance) might qualify as autobiographical statements of purpose. Spanning from 1962 to 1977, Fowley's work anthologized here touches upon many of the important genres of pop music from that period. The two tracks by Johnny C. and the Blazes, the exotica-tinged "Inferno" and blues-riffin' "Ebony," are among the better surf music available. "John Works Hard" by the Laughing Wind is an exellent garage-rock tune, which proves that shamelessly Beatlesque music can still sound original. Kim Fowley was, if not exactly ahead of his time, somewhat visionary in terms of hit potential. For example, his 1972 single as Jimmy Jukebox foreshadowed Bowie-esque territory years before it became fashionable. Outlaw Superman also has its share of celebrity or eventual-celebrity cameo appearances. Among them are Leon Russell, Phil Spector's backing band the Wrecking Crew, members of the Wailers, and Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones on 1964's "Rise of the Brighton Surf," a "House of the Rising Sun" knockoff that is probably the first-ever mod record. Kim Fowley has been an invisible mover and shaker for several generations of pop music; Outlaw Superman stands on its own as a Fowley primer, or could serve as a completist volume of this legendary and prolific character. - AMG Review

trax:
1. Memories Of A High School Bride - The Players 2. The Rebel - The Players 3. Little Bitty Girl - The Memories 4. Bodacious - The U.S. Rockets 5. Inferno - Johnny C. & The Blazes 6. Ebony - Johnny C. & The Blazes 7. Big Fat Alaskan - Donnie & The Outcasts 8. Bounty Hunter - Donnie & The Outcasts 9. The Rise Of The Brighton Surf - Bo & Peep 10. Goin' Away Baby - Grains Of Sand 11. Golden Apples Of The Sun - Grains Of Sand 12. John Works Hard - The Laughing Wind 13. Secret Police - The Belfast Gypsies 14. I'll Do Better Next Time - Joey Covington 15. Silver Shadows - Evergreen Blueshoes 16. Man Without A Country - King Lizard 17. Hound Dog Savage - Kim Fowley 18. 25 Hours A Day - Jimmy Jukebox 19. Motor Boat - Jimmy Jukebox 20. Hollywood Nights - Lance Romance 21. (What) If Boys Got Pregnant - The Orchids 22. The Worst Record In The World - Aletha & The Memories
...originally served by Mak...

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

The Cavestompers! "The Cavestompers!" 2008

"good evening RYP! checkin' your blog regularly - lots of good stuff - thanx
want to introduce you russian garage sixties revival band the Cavestompers! (where i play rhytm-guitar)."
- ПещерныйThe Cavestompers! - a band from Moscow, Russia confessing savage garage-punk, from mid-sixties and primitive beat sound, filled with psychedelic guitar and organs passages. The whole idea behind The Cavestompers! was simply to play together some favorite songs from 1960s, have fun and if everything goes right walk further and create original material with authentic garage punk sound, feel, attitude and spirit. Formed in fall 2006 for the past two years the band played almost 50 gigs all around the country, released 3 demo-tapes (one of these mixed by E. Letov), plenty of bootlegs and finally made it to the studio, recording their debut LP "Introducing The Cavestompers!" The sound experiments of the band gradually led to birth of their own specific sound based on heavy usage of east-bloc and soviet equipment & instruments, which can be described as a slightly delayed answer to sixties garage music coming from an Iron Curtain. Original material now prevails in The Cavestompers! average concert set-list, but there is always space for some weird covers of lost garage, beat, soviet, punk treasures and finds.
It happened so that at the time The Cavestompers! started there was not much of a scene around and naturally the band went into developing and then supporting it. That included hosting "Garage Gathering" festival, "Proof Of Fuzz" parties, numerous allnighters and concerts which made it possible for like-minded freaks from all over Russia to express themselves in front of emerging audience. Now one can call The Cavestompers! not only a band but a rather big commune of enthusiasts (photographers, publicists, dj's, go-go dancers, artists, guys from psychedelic lightshow etc) all responsible for some sort of garage "boom" and breakage of ice here and there.
Meanwhile The Cavestompers! music was featured on some western radio-stations like "Whole Lotta Shakin" show, Luv Radio, Psy Velveeta in the States, Whatwave, Sugarbuzz magazine podcast in Canada, Stoned Circus Radio Show (France) and on Cavestomp! club's myspace profile as well as local radio. Good reviews on the material surprisingly came from founding fathers such as Electric Prunes and GONN! and their descendents The Cynics, The Thanes, Robert Gordon, legendary PUNK! magazine and a bunch of other outsiders from all over the world. Shindig mag (UK) wrote about the band and next issue of Misty Lane fanzine (Italy) will feature a big interview with The Cavestompers! plus a song on supplied CD. There were also some brief appearances on local music TV and press, but you can say that more interest is coming from the outside then from within.
In January 2009 the band's own label Plastic Cave Records(toghether with russian indie-label Noizer) pressed a CD-version of debut LP, originaly released by Groovie Records (Portugal) with different artwork and bonus tracks and made a 6 cities support tour (Volga Region, North-West, Ural) and is going in European tour (Netherlands, France, Germany) in summer 2009. - Пещерный
http://myspace.com/thecavestomperstracklist:
01 girl in black / 02 rock'n'roll / 03 был один парень / 04 amphetamine girl / 05 do you understand me / 06 run outside / 07 limousine / 08 go go go on / 09 you're my girl / 10 louie / 11 shabby clothes, shabby moods / 12 night and day / 13 promise me / 14 can't stop the stomp / 15 isolation

Kim Fowley "Bad News From The Underworld" 1985

One of the most colorful characters in the annals of rock and roll, Kim Fowley was, over the course of his decadeslong career, a true jackofalltrades; a singer, songwriter, producer and manager as well as a disc jockey and published poet he was the catalyst behind much of the music to emerge from the Los Angeles area during the 1960s and 1970s, guiding his associates and proteges to fame and fortune while remaining himself a shadowy cult figure well outside the margins of the mainstream.Allen Ginsberg (R.I.P.) produced by John Giorno. That's what this Fowley release often makes me think. It's mostly mutlitracked spoken word from Kim with minimal musical accompaniment. If I still did drugs, I think I'd like to take drugs to this album. It is full of humor and observations. Frank Zappa pointed out the "plastic people, " Fowley marks the "polaroid people." Four and a half postcards from the other side of the sun. ~ Thomas Schulte, All Music Guidemusicians:
Kim Fowley: Synthesizer, Voices, Producer, Vocals, Piano, Keyboards / Betty Gina Pocock: Tambourine / Ronnie Rocket: Guitar / Laurie Bell: Piano / Members of The Runaways: back up vocals

traxfromwax:
Alcoholic Side:
1. Face on the Factory Floor 2. Zero/Zero 3. Bad News from the Underworld 4. Devil Doll Serenade 5. Shades
Psychedelic Side:
6. Fred Loves Betty 7. Destination Judy 8. Other Side of the Sun 9. World '99 10. Invasion of the Polaroid People

MrBaliHai said... "I met Fowley backstage at the Whisky in '76 while singing for a band called Low Budget. Every other sentence out of his mouth was, "Hey, babe, what's your hustle?" He also tried to convince us to change our names to The Leather Bombers and play only Sex Pistol covers......Here's a photo I snapped backstage of Fowley and our bassist, X-8."

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Kim Fowley "Underground Animal" 61-69 - 1999

Kim Fowley: "I listen to all unknown, unloved, unnoticed, unappreciated and unsigned music performers..." - This is another heaping helping of Fowley-produced and/or performed rarities from the '50s to the '60s.As Kim Fowley has been involved behind the scenes in every rock & roll and pop music trend and non-trend since 1959, even a decade-spanning collection like this one encompasses a lot of different sounds, from doo wop, surf, R&B and garage, to wacky novelties. A cleaner version of "The Worst Record Ever Made" than the one on the Outlaw Superman compilation resurfaces here (and it is pretty bad). Other tracks are better testaments to Fowley's songwriting and producing abilities. The rocker, "Watch Your Step," by Larry Green & the Rhythmaires, the Texan surf instrumentals, "Fallout" and "Moon Beat," by Aston Martin & the Moon Discs, the sitar-driven stomper, "Beautiful," by Walter's Dream and the wild R&B novelty side, "The Yo Yo Song," by Mo & Jo, are standouts here. This is definitely one for collectors of '60s ephemera, or listeners who prefer the wilder side of rock n'roll. ~ Jim Powers, All Music Guide

trax:
1. Worst Record Ever Made - Althea & The Memories 2. Casual Look - Chris Darlin 3. Yo, Yo Song - Mo and Jo 4. Need Your Love - Doug & Freddy with the Panics Band 5. Watch Your Step - Larry Green and the Rhythmaires 6. Vaquero Beat - Vaqueros 7. Astrology - Kim Fowley 8. Geronimo - The Renegades 9. Charge - The Renegades 10. Teen Machine - The Gamblers 11. Fallout - Aston Martin and the Moon Discs 12. Moon Beat - Aston Martin and the Moon Discs 13. Hello Mr. Sun - Boystown 14.The Office Girl - The Hounds 15. Mr. Responsibility - Kim Fowley 16. Wanted Dead or Alive - The Rogues 17. To Die Alone - The Bush 18. Heavy Love - The Doll House 19. Vito and the Hands - Vito and the Hands 20. Beautiful - Walters' Dream 21. Story of Susie - Bill Woods

Wanda Jackson "Queen of Rockabilly" 2000

"I don't know so many women playin' rockabilly, but she IS fantastic." - skampusAce Records' Queen of Rockabilly is such a good idea for a Wanda Jackson collection that it's astonishing that it didn't get put together and released until 2000 -- or that Bear Family Records, which is no slouch when it comes to distilling down certain aspects and angles of American country and rock & roll stars, didn't do it first. It should have been out a lot earlier, in the 1970s -- that would have saved hundreds of listeners (maybe thousands, around the world) having to buy, borrow, or steal her old LPs and singles, so we could isolate and distill down her rockabilly and rock & roll tracks onto open-reel tape or audio cassette. Compiler/annotator Rob Finnis allows the songs to jump across seven years, back and forth, pulling together the strands and threads of this side of Jackson's work into a killer collection of 30 songs, clocking in at less than 70 minutes. And running through the rough and raucous rock & roll sounds is the enigma of Wanda Jackson herself -- this CD touches more musical and cultural buttons than even the man who put it together seems aware of, or than Jackson herself will ever admit to. She has said that she was never as consciously committed to rockabilly or rock & roll as her career direction would seem to indicate; she spent years walking a tightrope between traditional country and rock & roll, just trying to carve out a niche for herself and earn a living, and rock & roll was as new to her as it was to most country music fans in 1954-1955. In keeping with the sensibilities of the era, as the daughter of white working-class Texas-born transplants to Oklahoma (and then to California -- around Bakersfield, natch -- and back to Oklahoma), blues and R&B, as something that she would do herself or allow herself to be influenced by, were mostly alien to her when she began exploring the music (with help and encouragement from Elvis Presley) in 1955.
Luckily, the King of Rock & Roll was correct in his assessment of Jackson as a natural, and she became the Queen of Rockabilly at a time when Janis Martin was "the Female Elvis" and Brenda Lee was some child mutant doing rock & roll with some success. Jackson even recorded with a mixed-race band, the Poe Cats (including Big Al Downing), beginning in early 1958, and the records were amazing, although they didn't start selling seriously until 1960, when a DJ started playing "Let's Have a Party," a three-year-old track off of her 1957 debut LP, and Capitol got it out as a single. She was suddenly on the pop charts, as a unique voice and personality by then, and her career, which had started to coast, was suddenly thrown into high gear. It's all here, the astonishingly raucous and even raunchy early singles like "Hot Dog! That Made Him Mad" and "Fujiyama Mama" (the latter a huge hit in Japan, amazingly enough), the LP renditions of "Long Tall Sally" and "Rock Your Baby," and the raw, throat-ripping performances of "Rip It Up," from as late as 1963. There are some especially amazing moments amid the rip-roaring rock & roll that even Finnis misses, such as Jackson's rendition of Chuck Berry's "Brown Eyed Handsome Man." The song itself was Berry's commentary on the plight of the black man in white society, but for a white Southern woman rocker to sing it in 1961, even on an LP, while Berry was in the middle of his first-round trials for alleged illicit activities with an underage girl, was an amazingly challenging and provocative act -- Finnis extends the effect by following it with the later LP track "You Don't Know Baby," a slow, smoldering blues that Jackson makes work as a woman's song. She's equally bold and convincing on Little Richard's "Slippin' and Slidin'" from the same session as the Berry song; of course, in 1958 Jackson was also singing "Rock Your Baby," with its demand "Rock your baby all night long, and don't be slow" -- a song she wrote herself, no less. By the time it's over, this CD will make one wonder if Jackson -- her denials and professed innocence notwithstanding -- was the most sexually and musically subversive white woman ever to step in front of a microphone. The sound is great too, up to Ace's usual high standard and then some. - Bruce Eder/All Music Guide

trax:
01 Baby Loves Him 02 Mean Mean Man 03 Fujiyama Mama 04 Cool Love 05 Honey Bop 06 I Gotta Know 07 Let`s Have A Party 08 Money Honey 09 Long Tall Sally 10 Hot Dog ! That Made Him Mad 11 Searchin` 12 Savin` My Love 13 Kansas City 14 Hard Headed Woman 15 Funnel Of Love 16 My Baby Left Me 17 Sticks And Stones 18 Who Shot Sam_ 19 There`s A Party Goin` On 20 Brown Eyed Handsome Man 21 You Don`t Know Baby 22 Tongue Tied 23 Riot In Cell Block #9 24 Slippin` And Slidin` 25 Fallin` 26 Rip It Up 27 Rock Your Baby 28 Whole Lotta Shakin` Goin` On 29 Honey Don`t 30 Man, We Had A Party
...served by skampus...

Monday, June 22, 2009

Kim Fowley "Impossible But True: The Kim Fowley Story" 2003

King Of The Psychedelic Freakout!The Kim Fowley story is one of the most interesting in rock, and the exhaustive liner notes to Impossible but True do a fine job of telling it. Producer, songwriter, manager, promoter, scenester, performer — Fowley was omnipresent on the wild and seedy fringes of rock & roll in L.A. and London in the '60s and '70s. The 32 tracks that make up the musical portion of the package are comprised of tracks Fowley released in the '60s under his own name, songs he wrote or co-wrote, and songs he produced or at least had a hand in. Impossible but True: The Kim Fowley Story is a trip through an alternate history of rock in the '60s. Fowley had an ear for a great song and a weird streak a mile wide that kept things very interesting at all times. The disc kicks off with two Fowley performances from 1968: the beastly and rude hard rock of "Animal Man" and the hard rock, acid bubblegum of "Bubblegum." His unique vocal technique is best taken in small doses, and these (along with "The Trip," his hilarious psychedelic parody that is also included) are his best and best-known tracks. The rest of the disc bounces from style to style and from year to year. While most of the tracks Fowley did were pretty obscure, he did have a hand in some actual hits: he played on 1960's "Alley-Oop" by the Hollywood Argyles, discovered the Rivingtons (their "Papa-Oom-Mow-Mow" from 1962 is an R&B classic), released the classic instrumental "Nut Rocker" by B. Bumble & the Stingers on his Del Rio label in 1962, and he produced the girl group classic "Popsicles & Icicles" by the Murmaids from 1963. He also wrote a songs for Cat Stevens ("Portobello Road"), Paul Revere & the Raiders ("Like Long Hair"), and the Seeds (the wild "Fallin' off the Edge of My Mind") and produced Gene Vincent (1968's "Rainbow at Midnight") and the Soft Machine ("Feelin' Reelin' Squeelin'"). The rest of the disc is made up of the aforementioned obscure but excellent tracks like the hard-rocking garage track "Gloria's Dream" by the Belfast Gypsies (basically a Van Morrison-less Them), the British R&B of the 'N Betweens' (who later became Slade) cover of "Security," the snotty, spacy, and hilarious version of "Wild Thing" by Cathy Rich, and the folk-rock sweetness of "Daydreaming of You" by the Hellions. Fowley was always looking to wedge his way into every trend that came along, so there are stops made at folk-rock (the sweet "Daydreaming of You" by the Hellions), instrumental rock ("Charge!" by the Renegades), doo wop ("No More" by Little Victor & the Vistas), vocal pop ("Honest I Do" by the Innocents), cornball easy listening (his own wildly amusing "Space Odyssey" from 1968), and blues rock ("Louisiana Teardrops" by Elfstone). He also seemed to have invented at least one very specialized genre, ski rock. The songs by the Alpines ("Shush-Boomer") and the Snowmen ("Ski Storm, Pt. 1") are basically surf tunes with lyrics about skiing. Impossible but True is a fascinating historical document and a blast to listen to from beginning to end. Ace did a damn fine job putting it all together; it is a picture-perfect example of everything a good collection should be. Highly recommended. - AMG-Review

trax:
1. Animal Man - Kim Fowley 2. Bubblegum - Kim Fowley 3. Justine - Rangers 4. To Die Alone - The Bush 5. Alley-Oop - The Hollywood Argyles 6. Reputation - The Rangers 7. Nut Rocker [From Nutcracker] - B. Bumble & the Stingers 8. Popsicles & Icicles - The Murmaids 9. Shush-Boomer - The Alpines 10. The Trip - Kim Fowley 11. Comedown Song - Spider 12. Security - The 'N Betweens 13. Daydreaming of You - Hellions 14. Portobello Road - Cat Stevens 15. Satan's Holiday - The Lancasters 16. Charge! - The Renegades 17. You Been Torturing Me - Gary "Alley-Oop" Paxton & The Hollywood Argyles 18. Like Long Hair - Paul Revere & the Raiders 19. Heads Up, High Hopes Over You - The Pharaohs 20. Gloria's Dream - The Belfast Gypsies 21. Ski Storm, Pt. 1 - Snowmen 22. No More - Little Victor & The Vistas 23. Louisiana Teardrops - Elfstone 24. Wild Thing - Cathy Rich 25. Space Odyssey - Kim Fowley 26. Fallin' off the Edge (Of My Mind) - The Seeds 27. Rainbow at Midnight - Gene Vincent 28. Feelin' Reelin' Squeelin' - Soft Machine 29. People, Let's Freak Out - Freaks of Nature 30. Pink Dominos - The Crescents 31. Honest I Do - The Innocents 32. Papa-Oom-Mow-Mow - The Rivingtons
...originally served by -Mak...

X "Beyond & Back" 1997

"Everything published by X is a must." - skampusThis two-disc retrospective serves better as a wild gift to fanatical Xtremests rather than as a serviceable overview for the casual fan who never had much time for the band in the first place. Only 11 of the collection's 45 tracks were culled from the nine official albums released over a decade and a half span. Unlike a standard best-of, Beyond and Back is heavily weighted with demos, outtakes, rare singles, and live recordings. Some will no doubt bemoan the supplanting of studio recordings of high-tension band standards such as "The World's a Mess; It's in My Kiss," "The Once Over Twice," and "Johny Hit and Run Paulene" with raw, lo-fi alternates. Still, the candid approach certainly suits the band's original aesthetic, and there are a surplus of enticing rarities to be found that even dabblers will enjoy. - Steven Stoldertrax disc 1:
01 Los Angeles (Los Angeles) 02 The World's A Mess; It's In My Kiss (From The Film The Unheard Music)) 03 Yr Ignition (Rehearsal 1978) 04 Year One (Record Plant Demo 1979) 05 Hungry Wolf (Under The Big Black Sun) 06 We're Desperate (Dangerhouse Single, June 1978) 07 Beyond & Back (Live At The Country Club 1982) 08 Back 2 The Base (Live At The Country Club 1982) 09 Blue Spark (Remixed Outtake) 10 Some Other Time (Unreleased From The Film The Unheard Music) 11 Sex And Dying In High Society (Record Plant Demo 1979) 12 Motel Room In My Bed (Under The Big Black Sun) 13 Heater (Rehearsal 1978) 14 The Once Over Twice (Live San Diego 1982) 15 Because I Do (Under The Big Black Sun) 16 In This House That I Call Home (Wild Gift) 17 Soul Kitchen (Record Plant Demo 1979) 18 Universal Corner (Live At The Country Club 1982) 19 Delta 88 (Demo 1978) 20 Real Child Of Hell (Remixed Outtake) 21 I'm Coming Over (Live At The Masque, Vol.2) 22 White Girl (Single Mix, Slash Records) 23 Nausea (Live San Diego 1982) 24 Johny Hit And Run Paulene (Record Plant Demo 1979) 25 Your Phone's Off The Hook, But You're Not (Los Angeles) 26 Riding With Mary (Single Mix) 27 Nausea Spoken Word (End Of Show Recording)
trax disc 2:
01 The New World (Dreamship Demo) 02 Breathless (Single) 03 Poor Girl (More Fun In The New World) 04 What's Wrong With Me (Rough Mix) 05 How I (Learned My Lesson) (Live At The Country Club 1982) 06 The Have Nots (Under The Big Black Sun) 07 Someone Like You (Knitters Demo) 08 The Stage (Demo) 09 See How We Are (Demo) 10 Surprise Surprise (See How We Are) 11 4Th Of July (John Doe Produced Demo) 12 Arms For Hostages_Country At War (Demo Fragments) 13 Wild Thing (Single Edit) 14 Burning House Of Love (Unclogged) 15 Devil Doll (Dreamship Demo) 16 True Love (More Fun In The New World) 17 Call Of The Wreckin' Ball (Knitters - Poor Little Critter On The Road) 18 In The Time It Takes (Demo) 19 I Must Not Think Bad Thoughts (1997 Mix) 20 Hungry Wolf (Instrumental)
...served by skampus...

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Kim Fowley "Hotel Insomnia" 1994

Schlocky record producer and (self-)promoter. He was involved in "Alley Oop" by the Hollywood Argyles, the Runaways, and god knows who and what else. He can be seen with Rodney Bingenheimer in The Mayor Of The Sunset Strip. (Kim is as tall as Rodney is short.)Mr. Fowley has been active as a songwriter, producer, artist, actor, composer, dealmaker, film scorer, disc jockey, poet and showbiz manager. He has participated in some capacity in the making of no less than 43 gold and platinum records in his half century as a performer and showbiz "mover'n'shaker." He will without a doubt be best remembered as the man who discovered, packaged and perfected a group of rocking females (Joan Jett, Lita Ford and Cherie Currie) into 70's legend and punk rock predescessors The Runaways. Other acts of the 70s he either wrote songs for, managed, discovered or produced include Cat Stevens, Helen Reddy, Warren Zevon, Them, Soft Machine, Blue Oyster Cult, The Orchids and Kiss. In fact, thinking of that silly Kevin Bacon game, one could very well play "Six Degrees of Kim Fowley" and connect virtually everyone in the music business to Mr. Fowley with no more than six degrees of separtion. Try it! Throughout it all he still continues to produce his own recordings (including a kickass 1995 collaboration with L.A. folk-rocker Ben Vaughn) as well and has a knack for being able to write a song on the spot about any topic in any style. Sadly, none of his own recordings have garnered the success he has brought to many of his cohorts and discoveries. Despite his shadowy persona he has grown to be a music business cult figure of legendary proportions with a small but dedicated fan following. And that's the story so far...

trax:
1. Failure Rock 2. 1983: Year Of The Bleeding Trees 3. Back On The Road To Nowhere 4. Citizen Kane 5. Precious Kate 6. Share The Night 7. My Foolish Heart 8. Angry Young Man 9. Where The Cactus Grows 10. Let's Rock 'N' Roll Tonight 11. Teenage President Talking Blues 12. Angel Of Fire 13. I'm Crazy 14. He Is Very Pretty 15. Gonna See My Name In Lights 16. Terry Seven Rejected Me On Her Birthday 17. Break Our Chains 18. Germs 19. One Woman Man 20. Rock 'N' Roll Wedding

"Teenage Shutdown: Jump, Jive and Harmonize" 1995 - VA

"Garage punk at its best!" - skampusThis is one of the COOLEST darn records y'all are gonna hear! This comp. features some of the best dance-oriented garage pounders ever put on wax! Things kick off in high gear with the mighty Midnighters " Jump,Jive and Harmonize " and just gets better and better. One of the outstanding tracks is the fast-paced monster " Busybody " that was covered by the Lyres in the late seventies and early eighties. The great thing about this record is that it explores some of the more soulful sounds produced by "garage" bands in the 60's. The SOUL is what sets this collection apart from the often lame "garage" collections that have plagued music fans since the 80's. Moden "garage" wanna-be hipsters could improve themselves by absorbing some of the soul on this stellar disk! - By jason gilmour (Toronto, Ontario)trax:
1. Jump, Jive and Harmonize - THEE MIDNITERS 2. Busy Body - JOLLY GREEN GIANTS 3. Slippin' and Slidin' - FIVE AMERICANS 4. The Alligator - THE US FOUR 5. Set Me Free - THE INCROWD 6. I Wanna Be Your Love - COBRAS 7. Can't You See - COUNT AND THE COLONY 8. Move it on Over - DEL SHANNON 9. Get Your Baby - MARK & THE ESCORTS 10. It's Alligator Time - JIMMY STOKELY & THE EXILES 11. El Monstruo - LOS SHAINS 12. Monkey Man - BABY HUEY & THE BABY SITTERS 13. Gorilla - THE SHANDELLS 14. 83 - CENTURYS 15. Rollerland - THE TWILITERS 16. Come on Come on - THE ESQUIRES 17. Who Do You Love - THE PREACHERS 18. Take a Look at Me - MR. LUCKY AND THE GAMBLERS 19. Hog - THE GROUPIES 20. Ain't that Lovin' You Baby - THE HUMAN BEINGS
...served by skampus...

Tonio K. "Notes From The Lost Civilization" 1988

"I borrowed these two Tonio K. records from my friend to add to my Tonio K. collection. I was only familiar with one or two songs from these albums prior to ripping them. Tonio's style is different than his earlier work, but engaging none the less. Some of the music on "Romeo Unchained" sounds dated, but "Notes From The Lost Civilization" does not suffer from 1980's production sound, like the former. I think anyone who has spent some time with his earlier albums will find much to appreciate here. Tonio K. has a few other recordings after this. Anybody got 'em?" - Don K.It's a shame that Tonio K. was never recognised for this songwriting skills until he gave up recording. He produced several smart, snappy songs that all died lonely deaths in the back bins. He once said that he made more cash off that Grammy-winning song for Vanessa Williams (in the early 1990s) than he did off his entire recording career. Sonically interesting (but you can hear T-Bone Burnett all over the place, even when he isn't there) but it's the lyrics that work best. It's dated now, but definitely still worth the money. - By eforrest (Chicagoland, USA)

traxfromwax:
01 Without Love 02 Children's Crusade 03 Stay 04 City Life 05 You Were There 06 The Executioner's Song 07 I Can't Stand It 08 What Women Want 09 I Can't Stop 10 Where Is That Place?
...served by Don K...

Saturday, June 20, 2009

The Milkshakes "107 Tapes" 1986

The posthumous 107 Tapes contains one LP of blisteringly ragged, painfully overdriven '81 demos with the Prisoners' bassist on loan and a disc of '83 live-in-Germany drunken mayhem. If not quite the Milkshakes' recorded apex, this package may nonetheless be the band's most representative document. - [Art Black] from trouserpressThe early 1960s saw rock n' roll-obsessed British teenagers picking up cheap electric guitars and cranking out a hyperactive, rough-and-ready form of American R&B that was informed more by raw enthusiasm than instrumental polish. The Beatles and the Searchers are two acts that rose to international prominence from this "beat boom"; other contemporaries, such as the Big Three, languished in obscurity, revered by the Merseyside audiences who could remember and the odd collector. Fast forward to the late seventies, as a group of teens already bored by the inchoate rage of punk rock delve back a few years to create something "new". These Chatham boys are led at the frontlines by The (or, later, Thee) Milkshakes, who, armed with an onslaught of independently pressed and released LPs, forge the "Medway" sound (after the mighty river that runs through Chatham town). If you've read this far already, you're probably chomping at the bit for a taste of these masters of Medwaybeat, and the listener unfamiliar with The Milkshakes (or any of singer-guitarist Billy Childish's numerous recorded efforts) could do worse than "The 107 Tapes", a collection of originals ("Pretty Baby", "Mumble the Peg" )and beat standards ("Soldiers of Love", "Boys"). Overall a riotous assembly of old-school rock n' roll, dolled up with a bit of post-punk panache, "The 107 Tapes" is Beatle boots without that silly Prince Valiant cut, and the British Invasion minus the poncey pop overtones. Highly recommended. - By "rosyrings" (Denver, CO United States)

The Milkshakes:
Mickey Hampshire - guitar / Billy Childish - guitar / Bruce Brand - drums / Russ Wilkins bass guitar

traxfromwax:
1. Pretty Baby 2. Ruhrge Beat 3. Well Well 4. I Want You 5. Flat Foot 6. I Say You Lie 7. Shed Country '81 8. Don't Love Another 9. Mumble The Peg 10. You Did Her Wrong 11. The Red Monkey 12. Let's Stomp 13. Eaten More Honey 14. Tell Me Where's That Girl 15. A Girl Called Mine 16. Little Queenie 17.. Jaguar 18. Black Sails (In The Moonlight) 19. Sit Right Down And Cry 20. She Tells Me She Loves Me 21. Soldiers Of Love 22. Monkey Business 23. Let Me Love You 24. El Salvador 25. Boys

Kim Fowley "Snake Document Masquerade" 1979

Kim Fowley is less important for what he's done than what he gets away with once described as "the king of rock'n'roll pimps," Fowley is a master manipulator of artists and creator — as writer / producer / entrepreneur — of hit records that are both crassly commercial and smugly subversive.Snake Document Masquerade (does that sound like a Captain Beefheart title or what?) is his twisted idea of a new wave concept album, a vision of '80s pop apocalypse that gets by on sheer audacity. Musically, it's a limp mélange of disco, reggae, punk-funk and electronic meditations distinguished by the spacey rap "1985: Physical Lies" (modeled on his own 1966 acid-rap hit, "The Trip") and robot sex fantasy "1988: Searchin' for a Human in Tight Blue Jeans." from trouser press by David Fricketraxfromwax:
1. 1980: Run for Your Life 2. 1981: Black Christmas 3. 1982: Stranded in the Future 4. 1983: Don't Feed the Animals 5. 1984: the Saga of Hugo X 6. 1985: Physical Lies 7. 1986: Snake Document Masquerade 8. 1987: Lost Like a Lizard in the Snow 9. 1988: Searching for a Human in Tight Blue Jeans 10. 1989: Waiting Around for the Next Ten Years

Tonio K. "Romeo Unchained" 1986

Tonio K. was definitely something different. Here was an artist who had A great music sound, had lyrics with Substance and convictions, but at the same time (unlike most CCM rock Musicians) wasn't excessively preachy. The album's themes are basically about Love, Heartache, Discontent, and Hope. There are many great New Wave / Pop Rock songs including "Impressed", "Romeo Loves Jane", "You Belong With Me", "Living Doll", and the infamous "I Handle Snakes". Tonio is A very good guitarist and vocalist, and his lyrics really speak to your heart. I highly recommend this album for anyone who likes good classic rock, with A message of Love. - By Silky Greensleeves (Northeast,Ohio USA)

trax:
01 True Confessions 02 Perfect World 03 Romeo And Jane 04 You Belong With Me 05 Impressed 06 I Handle Snakes 07 Emotional War Games 08 Living Doll 09 You Don't Belong Here 10 You Will Go Free
...served by Don K...

Friday, June 19, 2009

Kim Fowley "I'm Bad" 1972

"Don't care what you wear - It's what you are - Makes you a star" - Kim Fowley"... I've been trying to get Capitol to reissue this and/or I'm Bad (which was never put but in Britain) or a compilation, or even an E.P. So far they've been pretty wary. Maybe if you all realise the error of your ways and bombard Capitol with letters/'phone calls/telegrams they might change their minds. You'd be doing yourself a favour. Meanwhile buy the Helen Reddy album, and Kim's Jimmy Jukebox single on Sonet too. That should keep you in ecstasy till this hits you. Listen, I don't even care if Kim's claims to being Howard Hughes' son are true, or if he IS the owner of real estate like he says. As he sings on 'World Wide Love', "It's not the limousine, It's how you drive it". How true. Kim Fowley is God. You could be too." - © Sandy Robertson, 1977trax:
01 Queen Of Stars 02 Forbidden Love 03 Man Of God 04 Human Being Blues 05 I'm Bad 06 California Gypsy Man 07 It's Great To Be Alive 08 Red China 09 Gotta Get Close To You 10 Let It Loose

If you like to have Kim Fowley's "Animal God Of The Streets" from 1975, go to Digital Meltdown

Los Nitros "The Fuel Injected Sound Of Los Nitros" 1998

This is a nice package. The Nitros' sound is pretty crispy, the balance between lead and rhythm is really nice, and while this contains mostly covers, for the most part, they are generally overlooked tracks, so the "just another cover" argument doesn't apply, and because their sound is not quite trad, but somewhere between the Ventures, the Overtones, and trad surf, the songs take on new life. The Nitros are from Spain, which has been mostly devoid of surf instro bands up to now (with the exception of the Pacifics and Da Surf Ones).The trio is:
Carlos del Amo - guitars, Ramon Trabas - bass, Oscar Cabada - drums, with additional guest appearances from Mike Sobieski - guitar, and Jose "Taco" - Vox Continental.

trax:
01 Bird Walk 02 Happy Geetars 03 Clemencia 04 Street Or Strip 05 Hurricane 06 Roller Derby 07 Nitrogeno 08 Bay Of Pigs 09 Ski Storm 10 Baker' Dozen 11 El Ringo 12 Hotdoggin' 13 4 Pistas
...originally served by Eek! The Cat...

"This Is Mod: More Rarities 1979 - 1981" Vol. 2 VA 1996

"You can call it "power pop" or "mod sound". "Rock 'n' Roll" can be right!" - skampus22 ultra-rare tracks released on singles by bands like Purple Hearts, The V.I.P.'s & The Crooks during the Mod revival of the late '70s/ early '80s. 1996 release.trax:
1. Twisted Wheel - The Killermeters 2. SX 225 - The Killermeters 3. Plane Crash - The Purple Hearts 4. Scooby Doo - The Purple Hearts 5. Gun Of Life - The Purple Hearts 6. The Fashion Plague - The Exits 7. Cheam - The Exits 8. Need Somebody To Love - The VIP's 9. One More Chance - The VIP's 10. Stuttgart Special - The VIP's 11. Who Knows - The VIP's 12. Janine - The VIP's 13. Modern Boys - The Crooks 14. The Beat Goes On - The Crooks 15. Wild About You - The Same 16. Movements - The Same 17. All The Time In The World - The Crooks 18. Banging My Head - The Crooks 19. The Odd Man Out - The Teenage Filmstars 20. I Apologise - The Teenage Filmstars 21. Just A Little Mod - Terry Tonik 22. Smashed And Blocked - Terry Tonik
...served by skampus...

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Kim Fowley "Outrageous" 1968

"Let’s Go Out of our Minds to get back in!"The shaman has always been the doorway between worlds. The shaman acts as some bizarre bozo-interface mixing the serious and the ridiculous, the sacred and the profane, the super dangerous and the embarrassingly twee. Which is where Kim Fowley comes in. Or, more specifically, where OUTRAGEOUS comes in. Because, on OUTRAGEOUS, Fowley became the ultimate example of that bozo-interface. And, like a petrified rubber figure of Bart Simpson excavated from under one of Stonehenge’s trilithons, OUTRAGEOUS is probably the most unprovenanced piece in the whole history of rock’n’roll.
It sounds like nothing else.
It came out of nowhere.
There wasn’t even an attempt at a follow-up.
Fowley just did it, then walked away.
OUTRAGEOUS has song after song and great ones at that. But, far more than all of this, it was a shamanic rock’n’roll album made by the ultimate chancer / huckster / gleeman. And its lack of commercial success in no way undermines its genius as an album of transformation. Indeed, this album could probably be used as a blueprint for those seeking to create a Pied Piper effect on our contemporary teenage wasteland.
But how could this be? When I make the claim for OUTRAGEOUS lacking provenance, I’m talking about this urine-stained street hustler Fowley guy who, back in 1966, was having hits as Napoleon 14th with “They’re Coming to take me Away” after failing one year before with his bandwagonning 45 “The Trip”. Four long years before that, he’d been the doo-wop producer of naff Leiber & Stoller re-writes such as the Hollywood Argyles’ number one “Alley Oop”. Hell, back in 1960 this guy was writer, producer and performer of that hoary 45 “Nutrocker” – yup, this man was B. Bumble AND the Stingers!
I guess the greed of late ‘60s expectations must have taken over. An opportunist schmoozer-loser such as Fowley must have known he had to act quickly as soon as he clocked other contemporaries from the early ‘60s transforming themselves AND being taken seriously, as did his mate Little Ritchie Marsh, who had become the proto-Flower Child Sky Saxon. - by Julian Cope

traxfromwax:
1 Animal Man 2 Wildfire 3 Hide & Seek 4 Chinese Water Torture 5 Nightrider 6 Bubble Gum 7 Inner Space Discovery 8 Barefoot Country Boy 9a) Up b) Caught in the Middle c) Down 10 California Hayride

"Mods MayDay '99" 1999 - VA

"Some months ago, I have proposed you the Mods MayDay 1979 (link is still alive!). To celebrate the 20th Anniversary of the original Mods Mayday these 7 bands got together for a day of pure ‘79 revival fun." - skampusSunday 2nd May 1999 - The Forum - London. To celebrate the 20th Anniversary of the original Mods Mayday these 7 bands got together for a day of pure ‘79 Revival fun. It was an emotional day for all involved, and luckily we were there to record it! What you get here is a Double LP and Double CD that features the highlights of each of the bands’ sets. With packaging that features tonnes of photos from the day and great liner notes from Paul Robinson (co-organiser of the event). Features brand new tracks by The Circles and The Killermeters alongside great live versions of all your ‘79 favourites. This is the biggest thing ever to happen at Detour - so be a part of it! Just look at that front cover - this release is ULTRA MOD from start to finish - from bands that are proud of it for people that are proud of it!trax disc 1:
1. Intro 2. Rsvp - Rosko 3. My Generation - Rosko 4. Summer Nights - The Circles 5. Circles - The Circles 6. Dignity And Pride - The Circles 7. Billy - The Circles 8. I Can't Help It - The Killermeters 9. Rhona - The Killermeters 10. Which Way Kids - The Killermeters 11. Metric Nose - The Killermeters 12. Today - Small World 13. For You - Small World 14. Purple - Small World 15. Staring At The Rude Boys - Small World
trax disc 2:
1. Intro 2. So Far Away - The Chords 3. Now It's Gone - The Chords 4. I Can't Stay Here - The Purple Hearts 5. Hazy Darkness - The Purple Hearts 6. Gun Of Life - The Purple Hearts 7. Everybody Needs Somebody - The Purple Hearts 8. The Face Of Youth Today - Squire 9. Get Smart - Squire 10. I Don't Get Satisfaction - Squire 11. B-A-B-Y- Baby Love - Squire
...served by skampus...

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

"Get a Board!" 1993 - VA

Bitchin, narly and totally BOSS, man! I was really surprised to find my band's very first single included in this compilation of surf pre-classics (Side-Swiped by the Torquetts). I'm proud to be included in this totally bitchin set of raw early surf music. This is a must for collectors of hard to find surf and hot-rod jams. - By GreyWolfe "The King of El Paso" (Livermore, CA United States)The lo-fi standard of rock 'n' roll in the '50s and most of the '60s allowed anybody with a combo and garage to make music; the plethora of rockabilly, early punk, and exotica compilations to come out in the last decade attests to the rampant music making going on at the time. The world of surf music was no different, as bands inspired by Dick Dale and the Beach Boys flourished in the early '60s. The Satan label's Get A Board spotlights the obscure side of the genre and includes both instrumentals and vocal numbers. Highlights include straight-ahead surf tunes like the Toads' "Morpheus," Arlen Sanders'car manual narrative "Hopped Up Mustang" (replete with drag race samples), and girl-group entries by the Surf Bunnies and Susan Lynne. Proto-punk intensity is supplied by Bob Moore and The Temps on their distortion-riddled basher "Trophy Run," while the Pygmies contribute a bit of Las Vegas-grind camp on their "Don't Monkey With Tarzan."This is an excellent and generous collection (29 tracks); one best suited for those who don't mind a rough production aesthetic, and who are interested in exploring the wealth of obscure surf music out there. ~ Stephen Cook, All Music Guidetrax:
1. Baggies - The Belairs 2. Get a Board - Val Rays 3. Swingin' Hangout - The Mark Four 4. One Mo' Gin - The STING RAYS 5. Morpheous - The TOADS 6. Varoom - The Warner Brothers 7. Misirlou - The Roemans 8. Hopped up Mustang - Arlen Sanders 9. Slippery When Wet - The Diminshuns 10. Side-Swiped - The Torquettes 11. Go Go Yamaha - The Spats 12. Shut 'Em Down in London Town - The Majority 13. Swamp Surfer - The Irridescents 14. Surf Bunny Beach - The Surf Bunnies 15. Time Bomb - The Avengers VI 16. Kick Out - The Safaris 17. The Chopper - The Crestones 18. Full Blown Caddy - The Emerald City Bandits 19. Surf Bunny - Gene Cray And The Stringerays 20. Don't Monkey With Tarzan - The Pygmies 21. Go Mustang - The Triptides 22. Baha-Ree-Ra (Pt. 1) - The Trademarks 23. Reveille Rock - The Titans 24. Basic Surf - Leon Smith 25. Be Billy - Pat And The Californians 26. Garbage City - The STREET CLEANERS 27. Don't Drag No More - Susan Lynne 28. Trophy Run - Bob Moore & the Temps 29. Leavin' Surf City - Dave And The Saints
...served by skampus...

Kim Fowley "The Day the Earth Stood Still" 1970

A very rare and deleted LP from Psych-Rock wizard Kim Fowley. Recommended if you like Syd Barret, Destroy All Monsters, Iggy Pop, Julian Cope, Electric Prunes, Joe Meek, Screaming Lord Sutch, Lee Hazelwood etc...In the mid-1960s, Fowley became immersed in the Los Angeles counter-culture, befriending Frank Zappa and his band the Mothers of Invention and later appearing on their Freak Out!
A prolific songwriter, he also composed material for the Byrds, the Beach Boys, Soft Machine, Cat Stevens and Them, and produced the likes of Gene Vincent, Warren Zevon and Helen Reddy. Finally, in 1967 Fowley issued his own solo debut, Love Is Alive and Well, a record which found him closely aligned with the flower-power movement. A series of solo records followed, including 1968's Born to Be Wild, 1970's The Day the Earth Stood Still and 1973's International Heroes, but none garnered the commercial success of so many of his other projects.

traxfromwax:
1. Cadillac 2. Pray for Rain 3. Night of the Hunter 4. Frail Ocean 5. Visions of Motorcycles 6. Man Without a Country 7. Prisoner of War 8. I Was a Communist for the FBI 9. Birth of a Nation 10. Long Live Rock'n Roll 11. Day the Earth Stood Still 12. Is America Dead?
Recorded in Sweden, in 1970

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Kim Fowley "Love Is Alive And Well" - Sounds & Scenes Of The Flower-Love-Generation 1967

“I’ll be back As a brown paper sack, A wretched guitar Or a Chinese car...” (excerpt from "Reincarnation")...Why this never appeared on a garage punk compilation is puzzling: it’s snot-snot-snotty, barely coherent and has that kinetic teenage Vox-Continental a-go-go rhythm that many tried for and only glimpsed for a moment. As for Fowley, he caught it barehanded and wrestled it to the studio floor in one take. “Reincarnation” is well worth the price of admission, and has recently surfaced on Rev-Ola’s “Mondo Hollywood: Kim Fowley’s Jukebox” compilation.
I’m sure “Love Is Alive And Well” was cut within a week’s time as Fowley was known for his economy in the studio -- contrasted by the self-penned liner notes that take up a good portion of the back sleeve:
”Love is alive an’ well. Our return to the innocence of childhood is the only flash of beauty and light upon the cropless field of life on which many of us may live.”
You see what I mean with that earlier ‘sincerity’ thing? It’s impossible to sum up Kim Fowley. But I’ll try: he’s a rock’n’roll enig-maniac like Iggy Pop meets Guy Stevens on the corner of Z-Man Barzell and Phil Spector who worked with The Soft Machine and appeared onstage at the Roundhouse in 1972 during a Deviants reunion gig singing “Pappa Ooo Mow Mow.” - Reviewed by The Seth Mantraxfromwax:
1. Love Is Alive And Well 2. Flower City 3. Flower Drum Drum 4. This Planet Love 5. War Game 6. Reincarnation 7. See How The Other Half Love 8. Flowers 9. Super Flower 10. Me
Features The West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band and was co-produced by Michael Lloyd (engineer). Kim Fowley is credited for vocals, keyboards and production.

"History Of British Blues" - Vol. 2 VA

"Since Vol 1 is 3 decades old and most of these tunes have been comped since then, I'd thought I'd try and make a Vol 2 with lesser known tracks by these artists and some other bands with keeping the theme of Mike Vernon in mind." - philotrax;
1) Little Boy Blue & The Blue Boys (Pre Rolling Stones) – I Ain’t Got You 2) Alexis Korner Blues Inc - Rain is Such a Lonesome Sound 3) The Yardbirds – Let It Rock 4) John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers - Crawling Up A Hill 5) Graham Bond Organization – Harmonica 6) The Artwoods - Big City 7) Downliners Sect – Bloodhound 8) Duster Bennett - Worried Mind 9) Spencer Davis Group - Stevie's Blues 10) Jack Bruce - Rootin' Tootin' 11) John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers – Greeny 12) Chicken Shack - Hey Baby 13) Aynsley Dunbar Retaliation - Warning 14) Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac - Fleetwood Mac 15) Savoy Brown Blues Band - It's All My Fault 16) Brunning Sunflower Blues Band - Ride With Your Daddy Tonight (Peter Green vocals) 17) Duster Bennett - Jumping at Shadows 18) Gordon Smith - Diving Duck Blues 19) Climax Blues Band - Alright Blue 20) Ten Years After - Hear Me Calling 21) Dharma Blues Band- I Thought I Heard That Train Whistle Blow 22) Jellybread - Driving Wheel 23) Groundhogs – Groundhog 24) Chicken Shack - Mean Old World 25) Key Largo - Wrapped Up In Love Again 26) Bacon Fat - Boom Boom (Out Goes The Lights) 27) Mike Vernon - Let's Try It Again - More complete tracklist in rar file
...served by philo...

Monday, June 15, 2009

"54321 GO" - The Countdown Compilation 1985 VA

One of the finest compilations of the whole Mod revival period, ''5 4 3 2 1 Go'' was originally issued on Eddie 'Acid Jazz' Piller`s Countdown label."Ich habe noch die andere Countdown Compilation aufgenommen (heute regnet es und ich habe etwas Zeit). Ist zwar nichts von den Prisoners oder Daggermen drauf, aber die passt zum anderen Sampler." - gueharttraxfromwax:
1. Only Time Will Tell - Makin' Time 2. Dreams Come True - The Combine 3. Guilty - The Alljacks 4. Not Ready For Love - The Co-Stars 5. Stuck On The Edge Of A Blade - The Kick 6. Bend Don't Break - Stupidity 7. Whatever Happened To Thames Beat - The Times 8. The Faker - The Gents 9. Sticks And Stones - The Moment 10. Inside Out (For Your Love) - The Scene 11. I Don't Need No Doctor - Fast Eddie 12. Wednesday Girl - The Jetset
...served by guehart...