Showing posts with label flamin groovies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flamin groovies. Show all posts

2020-07-03

under my thumb: the flamin' groovies live at the roxy club in los angeles 1976


is it the 8th of december? or is it the 12th of august? no, it's 1976! and it's the flamin' groovies! live at the roxy club in los angeles! they are what's happening! hey hey hey! sheik some action!


unfourtunaughtlay i do not own this record myserif, but my bromther sent me a tape copy sum thyme wayback in the eerlie eighties and this what you want and this is what you get! the flamin' groovies live in 1976! 40 seamless minutes! no separation at all! (shake some action by the way is faded out for one reasong or annie other; i can't tell if it's just my copy or a wilful feature of the oreginald record; please furgive me)


here we go-go!

01 - she said yeah
02 - let the boy rock n roll
03 - house of blue light
04 - i'm a lover not a fighter
05 - please please me
06 - please please girl (listen directly)
07 - up and down
08 - shake some action
09 - i wanna be your man
10 - don't lie to me
11 - i can't hide (listen directly)
12 - miss amanda jones
13 - under my thumb
14 - hey hey hey

(mp3 / leftclick to listen / rightclick to download / don't forget to save the pictures!)


2020-06-26

i got bad taste: the weird and funny world of re-recorded hits featuring the liverbirds, the dovells, carl perkins, joey dee, the sweet, lou christie and many more


 
a very funny cd for a sunny afternoon, with or not without a lot of beer. a compilation of re-recordings of songs originally recorded in the fifties, sixties or seventies using as many members of the original groups as possible, featuring the rattles, the angels, the crickets, the comets and even the flamin' groovies and link wray.


most of these songs obviously were re-recorded at some time in the nineties or later, but most often there is appsoloudelay no evidence when, where or why they were recorded. burst never mymind, this coumpilation is just for the fun in and out of it.

 
some versions are rather close to the original version, some are much better than their predecessor, and some are completeredley over the top. there is no chance to get bored, so please don't. most of these records, by the way, i found in the cut-out-section of the dust bins of long forgotten record shops somewhere in germany, and nobody cared for them except me.


and contradictating the cover i did not include any recordings by bill haley and dion dimucci because their cheapotrashrecords are including their original stuff and so did not fit in the concept of this post.

so here we go-go:

01 - the comets - rock around the clock (live ca. 1993)
02 - the crystals - da doo ran ran (live ca. 1993)
03 - carl perkins - matchbox (???)
04 - johnny and the hurricanes - crossfire (???) (listen directly)
05 - the crickets - that'll be the day (live ca. 1993)
06 - roger mcguinn - turn turn turn (live ca. 1993)
07 - the angels - my boyfriend's back  (???) (listen directly)
08 - the sweet - alexander graham bell (1986)
09 - ? and the mysterians - "8"teen (live 1998)
10 - joey dee - shout (live ca. 1993)
11 - the rattles - meddley 1997
12 - the conturs - do you love me? (live ca. 1993) (listen directly)
13 - the tokens - tonight i fell in love (live ca. 1993)
14 - the dixie cups - iko iko (live ca. 1993)
15 - the original juniors - at the hop (live ca. 1993) (listen directly)
16 - carl perkins - rock medley (???)
17 - the dovells - you can't sit down (live ca. 1993) (listen directly)
18 - link wray - jack the ripper (live 1996)
19 - lou christie - the gipsy cried (live ca. 1993)
20 - ? and the mysterians - 96 tears (1997) (listen directly)
21 - the liverbirds - medley (live 1997)
22 - the dovells - bristol stomp (live ca. 1993)
23 - the flamin' groovies - let me rock (2017)
24 - the starclub ensemble - born to be wild (1997) (listen directly)
25 - little richard - keep a knockin' (???)

(mp3 / all scans included / direct download)


2018-01-19

white negroes in deutschland: kim fowley live in berlin in october 1992 featuring chris wilson from the flamin' groovies

one of the very few live recordings of kim fowley that have survived, and what a great show this was. the audience hated him from the very first moment his underrehearsed band tried to produce some interrelated music on stage, and he does not care at all. right in the middle of the performance the organiser asks the audience if they reall want to go on listening to this shit, and they all go NO! and BOO! and kim fowley goes on and on until they literally shove and club him off the stage, and still he is talking and talking and talking his mind and the audience is not able or allowed to understand or to see that this moment in rockandrollhistory is the one moment that keeps the whole universe all together.
the cd white negroes in germany was recorded on the 25th and 26th of october 1992 at the neue welt in berlin and featured chris wilson of the flamin' groovies on guitar, a drummer, some special guests and some naked girls. tracks one to nine are the only remaining fragments of the live concert on the 26th of october before kim fowley had to flee backstage and back to the hotel as fast as possible, the other tracks were recorded during the rehearsal on the 25th of october; tracks 15 and 16 can not be found on the vinyl version of this performance. 

so here we go:

live in berlin on the 26th of october 1992:
01 - berlin boogie
02 - moonlight in germany
03 - petra kelly's dead
04 - back in the ussr (listen directly in your browser)
05 - gloria
06 - peter r. defends kimania
07 - skin head boot boy mambo
08 - o.k. shithead (listen directly in your browser)
09 - third world girl (spanish fly) (listen directly in your browser)

live in rehearsal on the 25th of october 1992:
10 - heart of a dog
11 - e.e.c.c. blues
12 - soul of a madman (listen directly in your browser)
13 - world beat party
14 - night of pagan sex
15 - on the autobahn (listen directly in your browser)
16 - rockin' in the balkans 


later on that night kim fowley barricaded himself in room 719 of the berlin ibis hotel with some members of the stuttgart postpsaychoredelic band metabolismus who had helped him to escape. kim fowley did not stop to brabble and to blather and to spiel, and the metabolisten accompanied his uncontrollable brambardizing. a few weeks later a tape with some twenty minutes of this performance was released as sounds of an empty room on the metabolismus label and the 7-inch-vinyl stranded in stuttgart, produced by wenne voran and myself, followed soon after. 
you may find both releases in this=here blog following the links i provided above (with lots of additional information); but for your listening pleasure i added the tape sounds of an empty room just exactly right here.

17 - sounds of an empty room - kim fowley and metabolismus (listen directly in your browser)

(mp3 / all scans included / direct download)

2016-03-26

the flamin' groovies (featuring chris wilson) / a collection of rare demos and live recordings / released in 1993

and this is exactly what it says; a collection of rare demos and live recordings by one of the best - if not THE BEST - rock and roll bands in the world, the flamin' groovies; licenced from and fully approved and wisely annotated by chris wilson; eighteen tracks of pure and raw power, released in the usa in 1993 and raising a new mod riot right now. start!
this is what you want, and this what you get:

01 - house of blue light
02 - i'm a lover not a fighter
03 - please please girl (listen directly)
04 - i wanna be your man
05 - don't lie to me
(live in los angeles at the roxy, 1976)

06 - under my thumb
(live in london at the roundhouse, 1976)

07 - sweet little 16
(live in paris at the olympia, 1975)

08 - let me rock
09 - dog meat (dog meal on the cover)
10 - sweet little rock and roller
11 - jumpin' jack flash
12 - blues for phillys (listen directly)
(rehearsal room in san francisco, 1971)

13 - roll over beethoven
(french tv, 1972)

14 - between the lines
(live in san francisco, 1979)

15 - dizzy miss lizzy
16 - day tripper
17 - river deep mountain high
18 - from me to you
 (live at the berlin sportpalast, 1980)

so so so so so so great! the sharpenest heart reaping sound around, no noise attached, just rogue and rawk and reddy. be the in-crowd and listen to chris wilson (vocals and guitar on all trcks), cyril jordan (guitar and vocals on all tracks), dave 'george' alexander (bass and vocals on all tracks), david wright (drums on 1-7 and 13-18), danny mihm (drums on 8-12), tim lynch (guitar 8-12), mike wilhelm (guitar 14-18) and james ferrell (guitar 1-7 and 13); and yes, it's mike wilhelm, yes.

(mp3 / all scans included / direct download)

2014-07-18

the dream syndicate - it's too late to stop now (demos, radio broadcasts and live recordings 1984 - 1987)

this cd has become rather rare throughout the years, it is not even mentioned on their wikipedia-entry or on their new homepage, but every fan of john coltrane, free form rock and reflective dysfolk should have heard their music at least once in his/her life: the late dream syndicate with some demos, radio broadcasts and live recordings, starting in 1984 and terminating the mission with the last track of their last show in 1987.
in these years the dream syndicate were steve wynn (vocals, guitar), dennis duck (drums), mark walton (bass) and paul b. cutler (guitar); additional musicians on this album include karl precoda (guitar), dave provost (bass), robert lloyd (accordion, penny whistle, mandolin) and chris cavacas on keyboards.

(mp3 / 320 kbps / scans included / direct download)

2010-11-26

the flamin' groovies 1992 in agony. shot down in flames.

strange enough most people believe that the flamin' groovies sacked themselves after the australian adventure and the flop of "step up", a fine album though indeed, but - as all the other 12 or 33 albums before - the 99th commercial flop, a reliable fate, that became the trademark of the world's most underappreciated band since '69. Back in the states they fumbled around with bits and pieces and tried to re-invent the whole caboodle one more time and time again. still with Zahl and Johnson, they tried to get commercial for the 45th time and released "rock juice"in'92 (steiniger saftladen), an album with an ugly cover, lousy production and, let's face it, a couple of jordan-compositions that you'd rather not listen to. believe me. but hidden under all that third hand power pop for wimpies, there's "give it away", a song that shouldn't stay buried under all that tedious crap. (o.k., the more i listen to "rock juice", the more i still like it better than 99 percent of all what's called power pop today. but the groovies usually didn't try to set standards... they simply were the ultimate reference) - anyway. no way. anyhow. nowhere... never mind the annie, get your guns... here's the swansong of a teenage header: and we give it awayawayawayagain...

|>> the flamin' groovies - give it away

2010-06-18

tornado warning – doug sahm & the texas mavericks live in bremen 1987-04-13

in 1987 the lolly pope and me=myself saw doug sahm and the texas mavericks play live in tübingen, a very pleasing evening at the old amerika-haus close to the blaue brücke organised by one hans kesteloo. unfortunately no recordings of this event seem to have survived, but in the deep black holes of my collection i found a tape of their gig in bremen only four days earlier. this tape is what you are going to be listening to right now and the lolly pope has a lot to say. please enjoy:


"Those were the days when Rock n' Roll – though already smelling suspiciously funny – was still alive, and there were reasons to leave the house every once in a while. As a hardcore Sir Douglas-fan since the German release of "She's About A Mover" in '65, I had to see the MAN when a gig at Tuebingen was announced '87 during his European promo tour for the Texas Mavericks album on New Rose. When I asked fellow-warrior-against-the-jive van daale to come along, he was a bit undecided, but soon as he heard of chances (well, that turned out to be just rumours) for some cameo appearances by Roky Erickson, he was more than convinced, and we hit the road to our old Alma Mater on smoking wheels. It was a night of pure magic, and definitely the only useful purpose one of these Amerikahauses spread across Germany - and usually rather a place to protest and throw molotov cocktails - ever had. Doug seemed to be a bit embarressed with that Roky hype, which was a promo-trick invented by his management, promoter, record company or who ever, but he explained, that he and Roky were old friends and companions since the days of the Vulcano Gas Co., and that he had a couple of Erickson's songs in his repertoire for decades anyway. I can't tell you the complete line-up, but I remember that Doug's son Shawn was on lead guitar, and Speedy Sparks was as prominently featured on guitar and vocals in The Mavericks as Sir Doug himself. Augie Meyers was sadly missing, but they had a small keyboard on a table, where they shared fake-Vox organ duties when necessary. Trouble with this incarnation of the Sir Douglas Quintet is, that they all worked under aliases on this record (subtitled „Who Are These Masked Men“), and bass and drums are stated as Miller V. Washington and Frosty respectively there. But then again, who the care fucks anyway... The only regret we had, was that we forgot to bring along some bootleggers' equipment to document this memorable evening.


Some 23 years later a tape of a gig in Bremen, recorded 4 days earlier, showed up in stunning sound quality. It time-warped us back to the days when the defuncted Pinkees couldn't yet imagine to reincarnate as Sturclub. Reduced to the duo format we were sitting in limbo, but somehow the idea of the Club of the Stubborn was in the air right from the start, and after struggling through all the madness, and losing some members half our age to the „real world“, we're still angry old men getting younger than yesterday. (Look out, here comes tomorrow...)


Back to the drawing board: Speedy Sparks, in and out with the Sir Douglas Quintet since 1980, obviously is a die-hard Buddy Holly admirer (like Roky) and covers no less than 3 of his classics here („That'll Be The Day“, „Not Fade Away“ and „Rave On“) with bravour and grandezza. He also does a fine rendition of Van Morrison's „Brown Eyed Girl“, and that's a very good idea after 20000 versions of „Gloria „ worldwide. I could have thought of less over-played Chuck Berry-classics than „Johnny B. Goode“, but it's a crowd pleaser anyway, and his mediocre self-written „Redneck Rock“ is the only number I could have done without. Speedy makes up for this with a tremendous run through Erickson's „Don't Slander Me“. I had to listen to legions of lousy versions of that song before and after, but this one, well, don't know... It somehow sounds right. But Sir Doug of course is the man in charge here, and he blows away all wannabe Tex-Mexers this and the other side of the Rio Grande lefthanded with „Texas Tornado“, something like his theme song, and speeds up with a killer interpretation of Roy Head's „ One More Time“, a song that may sound familiar to formerly young punks in the version of Joe „King“ Carrasco & The Crowns (remember Stiff Records?) „She's About A Mover“ nails me to the cross like it did in '65, and I still can't grasp how Lenny Kaye could miss out on this one, when he compiled the original „Nuggets“. A personal heartbreaker, tearjerker, you name it, is the Gene Thomas Medley („Sometimes“/“Cryin' Inside“), which was one of ten highlights on Doug's '76 album „Texas Rock For Country Rollers“. A wonderful melange of Western Swing and New Orleans R&B, and I remember well the hard times I had back then, when I outed myself as a fan of both in the wake of da Punk. The following „Key To My Heart“ from the same LP is a very personal, possibly autobiogrphical song, that still seemed to haunt him 12 years later, and... , fuck me, I need a new handkerchief.

Strange enough... I've first heard „Starry Eyes“, one of two handfuls of 70's songs that'll survive this and the next century, on Doug Sahm's rare LP „Live Love“ (1977, Texas Re-Cord Co.), a year before I noticed that it was a Roky Erickson song. The greatest number Buddy Holly couldn't record, anymore, but a post-mortal tribute in both versions anyhow. And then „Mendocino“!!! The smash that catapulted Sir Douglas high in the charts worldwide. And left him stranded as some kind of one hit wonder, teenage novelty attraction from times not true anymore. Tortured and mutilated in „Original home language versions“ from Cambodia to Michael Holm. Nurse, my brain hurts!!! (Just listen to the words, teenyboppers! But then again: it's too late anyway.) Who'd have thought that Roky Erickson would survive Doug Sahm (or even the 80s)? But that's the way the cookie crumbles, and it's a pleasure to see Roky singing and walking with kindergarden kids instead of zombies these days. Doug's worst ever LP was „Border Wave“ (never trust any kind of wave) in '81. Recorded for Takoma, but released in Europe on the then still major label Chrysalis, it was aimed at a mass market, and sounded like Sir Douglas trying to out-teenybop Michael Holm at his own game, which was old hat and around the corner by that time for years anyway. (Though there's a hell of a version of The Kinks' „Who'll Be The Next In Line“ on it, to give truth some honour). And you'll find the most ridiculous execution of The Elevators' „You're Gonna Miss Me „ ever on this strange platter. BUT: here it is the way God, Roky and Doug planned it. A real revelation. And it's true: I'm missing Doug Sahm, the first and last real KrautROCKER (yep, his parents immigrated from Bavaria).

The band encores with Ritchie Valens' „La Bamba“, the first million seller in Chicano Rock. An old, worn-out warhorse, you might think, but a heartfelt tribute to a 17-year old Latino, who had 4 Top 20 hits in 8 months, before he fell from the sky with Buddy Holly and the Big Bopper. Not really the day the music died, but a bit like the beginning of the end...."

01: That'll Be The Day
02: Texas Tornado
03: One More Time
04: Not Fade Away
05: Brown Eyed Girl
06: She's About A Mover
07: Rave On
08: Gene Thomas Medley: Sometimes / Cryin' Inside
09: Give Back The Key To My Heart
10: Don't Slander Me
11: Starry Eyes
12: Redneck Rock
13: Mendocino
14: Johnny B. Goode
15: You're Gonna Miss Me
16: La Bamba

tornado warning – doug sahm & the texas mavericks live in bremen 1987-04-13
(mp3 / 320 kbps / 57 minutes / wrapped as one track / direct download)

(doug sahm / steven t. / question mark / kim fowley)

2010-05-19

the fondellas. roy loney in 1999. unreleased demo recordings.

though roy loney had left the flamin' groovies in 1971 the music he played throughout the following years of course was not only a footnoting appendix to the history of bright and clever power pop punk. and having been a subscriber to bomp magazine since the early seventies i always loved his kind of understated rock and was very glad that i had found the fondellas in 1999. so it is a shame he seems to be forgotten nowadays, even wikipedia and discogs seem to be comprehending only very few information about roy loney and literally nothing about the fondellas (the german ostrich fanzine though is recollecting some commemoration these days). so let's get back to 1999 and dance. the fondellas in 1999 were roy loney (lead vocals), james ferrall (guitar), danny mihm (drums), karl a. malinowski (guitar) and don bacardi (bass). they rehearsed sporadically, played a few gigs in san francisco, had a great time and then went off again. 
 
on their homepage "fondellas.com" they offered three demo tracks as free downloads in glorious 64 kbps; the page and the music though have vanished into digital nirvana (i.e. archive.org). fortunately i was one of probably some fifteen people who had downloaded and stored these tracks, and a few days ago i dug them out again, pimped and boosted them up a bit and here they are again in 320 kbps as direct downloads. 
 
please listen to: 
 
in a december 2000 interview with ken shimamoto of 1-94 bar roy loney mentioned his work with the fondellas in some short sentences that are quoted here as follows: 
 
K: Skipping forward in time a little bit, you had the Fondellas, which had Danny and James. Is that band still active? 
R: No, it isn't, unfortunately. We lost our bass player, who moved out of town, and our rhythm guitar player kind of faded away. It just became kind of hard to pull it together. I don't know if it's totally OVER, but it's definitely on hiatus at this point. We'll see if we get something together. It was a band that I sort of came into after the fact. It was already a band, but they couldn't hang onto a singer. They kept having singers either leave or get thrown out; they weren't good enough. So finally at one point, Danny just broke down and came to me and he just said, "Look, would you wanna be in our band for a while, just help us out? We need a singer, we don't have one." I said, "Sure. It'll be fun for me. I'll learn the songs, play some shows, get to rehearse, just have some fun." And it was good for me, but it was their act, pretty much. They ended up doing a few of my tunes, but for the most part with the Fondellas, I was just sort of a hired hand. 
 
K: Did you do any recording with them? 
R: No, we didn't, unfortunately. We did a little home stuff that's very, VERY funky sounding, very loose. And there's a couple of videos of us playing live where the soundtracks aren't too bad, for what they are. We were very hard rock. It was very...it was LOUD. We were really loud. It was"crunch factor," it was a crunchy sort of band. I kinda thought of it as "geezer rock;" these old guys up there crankin' it up, gettin' off on it. I think our attitude was really, "Fuck you if you don't get it." Really like that. So we played some gigs, got some people diggin' us, but it just sort of ended. I think it may come back together at some point in some form or other.
 

2007-10-10

the flamin groovies live in stuttgart 1987.

in 1984 cyril jordan (guitar/vocals) and george alexander (bass/vocals) were the surviving remains of the classic line-up(s) of the flamin groovies. the same year jack johnson (guitar/vocals) and paul zahl (drums) both left the yanks to join their heroes in what was to become one of the best, dense, intense and dynamic versions of the groovies ever. they recorded two albums for the australian label AIM ("one night stand" and "step up"), the third "live at the festival of the sun", recorded in barcelona on the 4th of october 1987, was released posthumous in 1994. in the autumn of 1987 they toured all over europe and visited stuttgart on the 12th of october for a memorable concert. you are about to witness a documentation of this event in glorious threedimensional mono: testify and shake!!

part 1: teenage head / call me lightning (who) / feel a whole lot better (byrds) / i can't hide / a million miles away (plimsouls) / step up (krrcqzz) / can't stay away from you / shakin' / intermezzo / milkcow blues (john estes rearranged by the kinks) / shake some action (faded out at the end of side one of a c-90 tape...)

part 2: slow death / in the usa / baby please don't go (big joe williams misunderstood by them) / jumpin' in the night / slow down / almost grown (chuck berry; only rarely played and almost unavailable) / bittersweet (hoodoo gurus)

for reason unknown information on the groovies is rather far-scattered on the web and one of the most comprehensive sources seems to have vanished into the nirvanas of the internet archive, though even the ruins are completely overwhelming. unfortunately i could not find any pictures of this line-up; maybe you can?


a slightly different german version of this text can be found at kraut mask replica, for some technical reasons split into part one and two. have fun. and stay tuned.