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Tag Archives: ? & the Mysterians

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 Chocolate Watchband

Back the mid-’80s, the Delicious chocolate Watchband were trapped within an odd paradox (that actually wasn’t that awful a place to become for a music group that didn’t exist any more). They hadn’t performed a note jointly in nearly 15 years, but their first albums had been changing hands for …

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The Fuzztones

This NY City-based psychedelic/garage rock combo played a big role in the mostly underground ’60s revival through the 1980s. Led from the enigmatic Rudi Protrudi, the Fuzztones had been among the main “successes” (especially in European countries) from the revival that flourished in 1984 which also boasted the Chesterfield Kings, …

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The Syndicate of Sound

Produced in San Jose, CA, in 1964, the Syndicate of Audio had been among the top garage rings and forerunners of psychedelic rock and roll, building a national pursuing predicated on one massive 1966 strike, “LITTTLE LADY.” Made up of vocalist/guitarist Don Baskin, guitarist/keyboardist John Sharkey, lead guitarist Jim Sawyers, …

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? & the Mysterians

It just took one tune, the organ-driven number 1 smash “96 Tears,” to create ? & the Mysterians into garage area rock and roll legends. Eccentric frontman Issue Mark (in fact spelled “the Mysterians’ audio helped lay out an important area of the garage area rock blueprint, specifically the low-budget …

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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 13th Floor Elevators

The 13th Floor Elevators were among the pioneering bands of psychedelic music; many possess cited them because the first accurate psychedelic rock-band, and when they weren’t, they certainly predated a lot of the San Francisco rings that offered the sound a worldwide target audience. The Elevators performed a bracing fusion …

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The Seeds

Best known because of their rock & move standard “Pushin’ TOO MUCH,” the Seed products combined the organic, Stonesy selling point of garage area rock using a fondness for ragged, trashy psychedelia. And even though they hardly ever quite matched up the industrial peak of the initial two singles, “Pushin’ …

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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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Los Cheyenes

Spain, unlike various other countries in continental European countries, had not been a hotbed of garage area rock within the ’60s, but there have been several Spanish rings. From recorded proof, the best of the had been Los Cheyenes, a Barcelona group who wrote the majority of their riff-heavy materials. …

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