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Tag Archives: Cheepskates

Multicoloured Shades

Most widely known for the 1987 solitary “Teenager Sex Transfusion,” Multicoloured Tones spent the mid- to past due ’80s purveying organ-heavy psychedelic rock and roll. Created in Marl, Germany in 1984, the music group originally presented vocalist Pete Barany, guitarist Eddie Wagner, bassist Michael Doering, keyboardist Detlev “Det Bizarre” Bizer, …

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The Loved Ones

Of all Australian rock sets of the ’60s, there’s non-e that lives on as brightly in the remembrances of these who found them or heard them as the FAMILY MEMBERS. That they had “it,” that unquantifiable quality that transcends the styles of your day, that “something” that’s greater than a …

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The Daybreakers

A garage rock and roll combo from Muscatine, IA, who trim only one one, “Psychedelic Siren” (1967), that was rediscovered by enthusiasts upon its inclusion in the Psychedelic Unknowns anthology in the first ’80s. These were a far more or much less average garage music group of that time period, …

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The Count Bishops

Although amounting to bit more when compared to a footnote in the first days of British punk rock, the Count number Bishops were an excellent, lively, R&B-based band with the capacity of kicking away a brutal racket of noise that sounded such as a grimier version of seminal United kingdom …

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Zakary Thaks

One of the better garage bands from the ’60s, and something of the greatest teenage rock sets of all period, Zakary Thaks released a half-dozen regionally distributed singles in 1966 and 1967; some had been hits within their hometown of Corpus Christi, TX, but non-e were heard somewhere else until …

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Things to Come

Emerging from your glut of Southern Californian rock and roll groups within the mid-’60s, What to Arrive created in 1966. Their initial lineup included business lead vocalist Steve Runolfsson, drummer Russ Kunkel (who carry on to become best sessionman), and bassist Bryan Garofalo (also another sessionman and an associate of …

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The Gonn

Like many garage bands from the ’60s, the Gonn achieved (slight) international fame beyond anything they attained within their lifetime when their single “Blackout of Gretely” was rediscovered by collectors and reissued within the ’80s. From Keokuk, IA, the Gonn released a couple singles on tiny regional brands in 1966 …

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The Vipers

The Vipers were an obscure ’80s music group which was transfixed with ’60s garage area/proto-punk, often pulling comparisons to such similarly styled outfits because the Chesterfield Kings, the Cynics, as well as the Lyres. Even though music group received some advantageous press and testimonials throughout their tenure jointly, the Vipers …

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Chesterfield Kings

Upstate New York’s Chesterfield Kings landed upon the developing punk/new wave picture in the past due ’70s with an unbelievably organic ’60s tempo & blues audio that borrowed heavily from pre-1966 Rolling Rocks. The group, therefore unlike every other underground feelings of the time, arguably kickstarted the complete ’80s garage …

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New Colony Six

Chicago’s New Colony 6 originally surfaced as a hardcore, British Invasion-styled clothing prominently featuring Farfisa body organ and a book (at that time) Leslie electric guitar. Scoring an enormous local strike with “I Confess,” their early recordings — exemplified by their 1966 debut record, Breakthrough — highlighted first-class original materials …

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