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Tag Archives: The Standells

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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Mouse & the Traps

This Tyler, TX, group from your mid-’60s is most known because of their uncanny imitation of Highway 61-era Dylan, “A Public Execution.” Included in the Nuggets compilation, it really is to Dylan the actual Knickerbockers’ “Lays” is towards the Beatles: mostly of the rip-offs so absolutely accurate that it might …

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The Standells

The Standells made number 11 in 1966 with “Dirty Drinking water,” an archetypal garage area rock hit using its Stones-ish riff, lecherous vocal, and mix of raunchy guitar and organ. While they under no circumstances again reached the very best 40, they lower several strong, similar music in the 1966-1967 …

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Lowell George

ONLY A SMALL AMOUNT Feat was disbanding in later 1978, their business lead guitarist/songwriter Lowell George recorded a single album, Thanks I’ll Eat It Right here, that sounded as loose and funky as the music group within their prime. Following its release the next year, he lay out on tour …

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Lyres

Few rings in Boston rock & move background have lasted for as long, and produced as much great music, as Lyres. Led by garage area rock and roll obsessive, record collector, Farfisa body organ ruler, and world-class megalomaniac Jeff “Monoman” Conolly, Lyres increased in the ashes of Conolly’s initial band, …

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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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Blues Magoos

A Bronx-based quintet, the Blues Magoos were formed in 1964 and were originally referred to as the Trenchcoats before changing their name towards the Bloos Magoos and subsequently adopting the greater conventional spelling because they became accessories in the Greenwich Community club picture. The music group released singles for the …

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Sky Saxon

Following the breakup from the seminal psychedelic garage punk band the Seeds in 1969, frontman Sky Saxon (delivered Richard Marsh) embarked on an erratic solo career among stints being a mystical guru in Hawaii. A lot of his post-Seeds function fit the mildew of the inquisitive 1960s relic, a hippie …

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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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Adam Marsland

We were young in California, Adam Marsland distributed studio space with three other musicians in the first ’90s. In Feb 1994, after several bands split up or had been unsuccessful, the music artists at the studio room decided to get together. The effect was Cockeyed Ghost, a pop/rock and roll …

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