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Tag Archives: Garage Rock

The Trolls

Impossibly rare — depriving listeners of the underground classic — may be the Trolls’ pairing of “Walkin’ Shoes” b/w “HOW WILL YOU Expect Me to Trust You?” (Peatlore 23267, 1966). “Sneakers,” a harmonica-laced shuffle, includes a hypnotic defeat and convincing vocal (half sneer, half world-weary sigh), while “Trust” wraps that …

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The Palace Guard

The Palace Safeguard didn’t make a lot of a splash anywhere but Southern California. The music group didn’t graph nationally, but among its tunes, the folk-rock “Falling Sugars,” was well-received regionally. The group debuted on Orange Empire Information, a Los Angeles-based label, using the solitary “FOREVER Long.” Later on, Verve …

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The Mourning Reign

Produced in San Jose, California, USA, the Mourning Reign had been garage strap peers from the Chocolates Watchband as well as the Harbinger Complex. Primarily referred to as the British, they comprised Frank Beau Maggi (vocals), Johnnie Bell (business lead acoustic guitar), Steve Canali (tempo acoustic guitar), Charlie Backyard (bass) …

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The Motions

A fairly typical Dutch “defeat” band of the 1960s, the Movements were quite popular within their local property, releasing seven albums and over 27 singles within their eight-year profession. Far from the very best Dutch group, and definately not the worst, the majority of their strikes were fairly normal fare, …

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The Misunderstood

Of the a large number of U.S. garage area bands who battled within the ’60s without attaining international achievement, the Misunderstood weren’t only among the most effective, but among the few to advance beyond basic garage area noises to music that is (belatedly) named nearly as completed and innovative as …

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The Mystic Tide

Of the numerous garage bands who released unrecognized and obscure singles within the mid-’60s, the Mystic Tide were among the absolute best. The Long Isle group released four singles independently brands in 1966 and 1967, mainly for distribution at their very own gigs (and evidently they didn’t sell as well …

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The Music Machine

Most well-known for “Talk Talk,” a high 20 single from 1966 which was perhaps one of the most manic ’60s garage-punk hits, the Music Machine had a lot more depth and songwriting skill compared to the typical one-hit miracles of your day. Lead vocalist and songwriter Sean Bonniwell’s strangled lyrics …

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Music Explosion

One-hit-wonder Ohio garage area music group that reached number 2 in 1967 with “TINY BIT O’Soul,” an excellent gutsy pop/rock and roll number having a vintage bass-organ riff. Whatever character they may experienced was coated within the studio room by manufacturers Jeffrey Katz and Jerry Kasenetz, who shortly help create …

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The Sonics

Of all garage area rings that produced a glorious racquet in the 1960s, couple of if any were louder, wilder, or even more raw compared to the Sonics, a Tacoma, Washington quintet whose outrageous style, filled with roaring guitars, pounding drums, as well as the fevered howls of business lead …

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The Scotsmen

From Minnesota, the Scotsmen produced one obscure novelty single, “Beer Bust Blues,” in 1965. An average frat rock agreement supported a gravelly-voiced, certainly wrestler-voiced vocalist with sound files of a beverage can being opened up and poured. The flipside was an instrumental offering body organ and what sounded like artificially …

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