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Tag Archives: 1960s

Ray McFall

Ray McFall owned and operated Liverpool’s renowned Cavern Golf club, the location that launched the profession from the Beatles and served while the nexus of rock and roll & roll through the nascent weeks of the Uk Invasion. McFall didn’t discovered the Cavern Golf club, nevertheless. That honor belongs to …

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The Navarros

The Navarros were a quintet from Ashland, OR, close to Medford, that evolved into Neighbr’hhood Childr’n, however, not before abandoning a set of charming folk-rock demos. The group, led by tempo guitarist/vocalist (and songwriter) Rick Bolz, presented Gary Campbell on lead acoustic guitar, Dianne Hoffman (occasionally spelled “Dyan”) within the …

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The Persianettes

Three different labeling released the Persianettes’, “It Happens EACH DAY” b/w “ASK Me” – Strata (5/1965), Open up (1966), and OR Documents (1969). Leon Huff and Cindy Scott, nee Sundray Tucker, obtain composer credits, Huff later on partnered with Kenny Gamble for any Hall-of-Fame profession. The Persianettes created in Camden, …

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The Baroque Monthly

The Baroque Regular monthly were a renamed version from the Columbus, Ohio quintet originally called The Jaguars. A garage area band of amazing skill and dexterity, they integrated noises that recalled probably the most advanced components of the Beau Brummels’ as well as the Zombies’ music. The brand new group …

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The Bunch of Fives

The Couple of Fives were notable limited to featuring drummer and famous wildman Viv Prince soon after he had remaining his position in the Pretty Things. The group documented a unitary for Parlophone, “GO BACK HOME Baby”/”On the Place,” in August 1966. We were holding passable, but common, mod rock …

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The Intertains

Many thought the Intertains were a Philadelphia group because they documented in Philly’s Uptown Information in the middle-’60s. Actually, these were from Cleveland, led by Larry Hancock, a cousin from the O’Jays’ Eddie LeVert. Their initial release “Gotta Discover Myself a woman,” highlighted Hancock’s young, radiant falsetto on the melodic …

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The Citations

England’s Citations were a short-lived music group that primarily specialized in instrumentals, having a audio similar compared to that from the Tornados. Their only solitary, for EMI’s Columbia label, presented a “Telstar”-like A-side known as “Moon Competition,” supported by a more interesting and encouraging monitor, a rip-roaring cover of Small …

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Trenchmen

Garage area combo the Trenchmen formed in Minot, ND, in 1965, originally comprising vocalist/bassist Jim Mackey, guitarist Greg Jordahl, organist Alan Mattson, and drummer Ken Light. Forming on the zenith of Beatlemania, the group also copped a solid sonic influence through the Projects, honing their audio at region proms and …

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The Brothers

The Brothers were an obscure project of Warren Zevon during his early career, releasing a unitary in 1967 on Light Whale, following the three singles he previously completed as half from the male-female duo Lyme & Cybelle. The one was unremarkable good-time pop/rock and roll, although there are traces of …

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Elli

Although he only issued a unitary (“Hardly ever Mind”/”I’M GOING TO BE Shopping for You” [EMI, 1967]), which sold badly because of “Cent Lane”/”Strawberry Fields Forever” released on a single day, Elli continued to record demos through the entire remaining ’60s. His plaintive, somewhat accented tone of voice and gentle …

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