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Showing posts with label Garage Rock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Garage Rock. Show all posts

Tuesday, 19 March 2019

Peralta - Spain's Best Kept Secret - Live in Gijon, Spain 15/03/2019



A number of really good rock bands have come out of Spain over the years. One thinks of Los Brincos, of course, and Manta Ray, and also contemporary band Hinds.

Peralta rank along any of the above named. They are Spain's best kept secret. A throuroughly superb rock band. And I'm not the only one to think so. Sid Griffin, of the Long Ryders and the Coal Porters, says they his favourite band. And he should know. They've played together.

They are gigging once more around Spain and if you get the chance go and see them live, they really are an excellent good old fashioned hard rockin' live band. They really deserve to be better known.

Marcos Montoto is an outstanding guitarist, probably one of the best in Spain. He knows his Clarence White and has a knack of compact, melodic and slightly off the wall solos that really pack a punch. Pablo Gonzalez is a superb drummer, one of the best around. He has an innate drive and powerful funkiness that really push the band forward. He can also do Keith Moon style fills and come right back in on the beat. Angel Kaplan (rhythm guitar) and Juancho Lopez (bass) are a formidable rhythm section that anchor the fireworks and keep the band on track. They all write their own songs and do vocals and harmonies but most of the lead singing is handled more than competently (in English) by Pablo.

The band's self composed songs are tuneful and reminiscent of late period Byrds, Flying Burrito Brothers, CSN and classic mid 60s Garage Rock. They do a fantastic cover of the Gram Parson's Older Guys which rocks harder than the original (see clip below).

Their CD "Time Purpose and Gold"  is a favourite of mine and ranks alongside Beechwood Sparks or the Woods as a 21st century psych amerikana rock classic. It is is available for buying or free streaming on bandcamp here https://folcrecords.bandcamp.com/album/folc030-peralta-time-purpose-gold-lp

Do yourself a favour and check it out.

All in all, a live band that delivers great songs, has a fantastic rhythm section, does nifty off the wall guitar solos, play 12 string guitars, do harmonies, and even throw in some Who style feedback.

They tick all the boxes and just get better and better.

Why the hell aren't they better known?

Check out some of last Friday's gig in their hometwon of Gijon, Spain here.




and at their most who-like





Read more here http://strangerthanknown.blogspot.com/2014/12/peralta-time-purpose-gold-spanish-bands.html

Saturday, 16 April 2016

The Flamin' Groovies at the Gijon Sound Festival 15/4/2016




I have always had a soft spot for the Flamin' Groovies.

I bought their classic Shake Some Action as soon as it came out in the spring / early summer of 1976 on the strength of the review in the NME. That album, along with the first Ramones (which I bought exactly one week later - also on the recommendation of the NME) seemed to be the fast forward button into punkish things to come.

By 1976 there was change in the air. Punk was about to happen and the Groovies album, along with the similarly retro first two Dr Feelgood albums, appeared to point to the way forward, away from all the excess of early 70s glam and prog rock and back into a new refreshingly stripped down, black and white world of skinny ties, drainpipe trousers and the three chord trick.

In fact it's arguable that the Groovies were the first band to see 60s retro as a way forward - in the USA anyway. .At the time its resolute re-affirmation of the values of 1965 - three minute songs with catchy hooks and jangly guitars - can be seen as both a forerunner of, as well as an influence on, the likes of late 70s Mod revivalists The Jam, and also the later psychedelic Cosmic Amerikana bands of the early 80s - The Rain Parade, The Long Ryders et al.

Shake Some Action is a classic album brimful of some seriously catchy self penned songs (and a few covers) that still sounds fresh some 40 years later.

But it wasn't just that it had some great songs on it - I Can't Hide, You Tore Me Down, I Saw Her, Teenage Confidential are all classics - but it  also appealed to my own teenage 60s mod nostalgia obsession and I spent the latter months of 76 I trying to track down their previous albums Teenage Head and Flamingo - not easy in those days, as neither album had sold especially well and they were, by that time, long deleted.

However, due probably to the hype around the burgeoning UK punk scene and the Groovies evident influence on it along with other similar purveyors of high energy rock like the New York Dolls, Stooges and MC5 - whose albums I was also eagerly trying to track down at the time - both Teenage Head (1971) and Flamingo (1970) did get a surprise reissue as a double album package on the UK Kama Sutra label in late 1976.  

And when eventually I found it - in, of all places, Boots the chemist who, in those days, sold vinyl albums as well as cosmetics and aspirins - and took it home, I was staggered to hear a completely different band (Cyril Jordan and bassist George Alexander being  the only two musicians Teenage Head and Shake Some Action had in common) and musical approach; one that owed far more to the raunchy R'n'B of the Stones, and even 50s Rock and Roll, than to the jangling mid 60s poppery of the Beatles and Byrds. 

Teenage Head is in fact a classic hard rock album - comparable to the Rolling Stones' Sticky Fingers. Flamingo is no slouch eitherOn both albums singer Roy Loney swaggers and leers in best Jagger mode and guitarist Cyril Jordan also proves a dab hand at coming up with memorable chunky block chord riffs à la Keith Richards.  Lead track Teenage Head being a prime example.

As a guitarist Cyril should not be underestimated. Groovies albums are packed with some killer riffs - Slow Death, Heading For The Texas Border, High Flyin' Baby all come to mind and Shake Some Action (co-written by him and Loney's replacement, Chris Wilson) is a glorious pop song that really should have been a massive hit.





Strange to say though that despite being one of my favourite bands of 76 I never got to see them live.

So when I heard the reformed band - Roy Loney, Chris Wilson, Cyril Jordan, original founding member and bass player George Alexander, plus drummer Victor Penalosa - were coming to the Gijon Sound Festival on their 50th Anniversary tour, I was seriously looking forward to seeing them.

They did not disappoint. It was a blasting white hot set chock that drew on "hits" from both the early Roy Loney era and the later Chris Wilson band.

Cyril is still a very tasty picker and the years have given Loney's voice a power and confidence which I think he lacked as a younger singer.

Check these clips from Youtube for proof.

So, 50 years on from when they formed and 40 years on from when I bought Shake Some Action, this is how good they were...

Better than ever?

Shake Some Action!












More from the show here


More stranger than known

The Rolling Stones' finest hour - "Get Yer Leeds Lungs Out"...

Friday, 9 October 2015

The Sonics at Sala Albéniz, Gijon, Spain 8th October 2015


It was packed full. Overfull probably.
And it was hot. And it was fast. And it was loud.
It was everything a good old-fashioned rock'n'roll gig should be.

The Sonics really delivered at the Sala Albéniz in in Gijon on Thursday night. For a band whose members have already entered their seventies it was actually pretty shocking a times to witness the sheer raw power that these veterans of the 60s garage scene could summon up. The relentless pace and energy of the 75 minute set was of an intensity that would make bands half their age envious.

I must also confess to being a little surprised at how varied the audience was. The band certainly have a following in Gijon. Of that there is no doubt. The theatre was absolutely packed the to walls. And not with the old timers either but with a pretty varied range of ages. A lot of the younger people in the audience must have been at least a third the band's age.

The Sonics are tight and solid but for me the star of the show was drummer Dusty Watson (The Supersuckers, The Queers and even Dick Dale). He really drove the band forward. A band is only as good as its drummer they say. Well, the Sonics are a fantastic rock'n'roll band to see live and one of the reasons for that is most definitely Dusty Watson. The man is a drumming super machine.


Here they are playing the hits.

Jerry Roslie (keys/vox); Larry Parypa (guitar/vox); Rob Lind (sax/harp/vox); Dusty Watson (drums/vox); Freddie Dennis (bass/vox)

Sala Albéniz, Gijon, Spain 8th October 2015.
















More stranger than known








Monday, 10 August 2015

"Entre Girasoles" - Cooper Live At The Botanical Gardens, Gijon, Spain, 9/8/2015

Cooper


Cooper is a four piece Spanish rock band led by Álex Díez Garín, (vocals, guitar, composer, and ex-leader of another band of Spanish 80s mod revivalists, Los Flechazos). 

They’ve been going since the early 2000s and have four albums behind them - all of which contain their own superlative take on the kind of late 60s jangly guitar driven mod pop forged by the likes of The Move, The Who, The Creation and in Spain, Los Brincos, back in the days when superpop was king.

And Alex really does have a knack for writing well crafted and seriously catchy tunes. Once heard, they will stay firmly rooted in your inner musical mental soundtrack for the rest of the day. Check out Entre Girasoles (Among The Sunflowers), Ola de Calor (Heatwave) or Cierra Los Ojos (Close Your Eyes) below for the proof.

An early evening set (7.30 pm) at the Botanical Gardens in front of a generally family oriented audience may seem like an odd gig for a rock group but the band’s energetic punchy set went over extremely well. Their brand of uplifting cheery sunshine pop works especially well in the context of all the pastoral greenery and trippy flower power of a botanical garden on a warm and gloriously sunny summer evening.

Alex Cooper


Alex also comes over a very decent guy. There is touch of the Paul Weller about him, visually if not vocally, and his message - if there is one - comes over as optimistic and positive. This is a man who, like John Sebastian of the Lovin’ Spoonful, understands the magic in the music – especially the magic in the music of the summer - and tries to summon it up for us all to share.

He succeeded. This was the perfect soundtrack for a glorious summer evening.


Check out some clips from the gig below and also their albums if you can find them.

http://elefant.com/grupos/cooper

https://www.facebook.com/cooper.mi.universo




Cierra Los Ojos




Ola De Calor




Entre Girasoles







Bonus track in English
New Life







The Botanical Garden in Gijon, Spain

More stranger than known

Hinds - Wonderful Garage Psych Trippy Gum

Horizonte Eléctrico - 10 Great contemporary Spanish bands... 

Los Brincos - Glorious 60s Garage Beat Psych Pop...

Ten 21st Century Summer Psychedelic Nuggets 

Yé-yé! Spanish Nuggets - Ten 1960s Garage, Beat and Psych classics from Spain.  











Saturday, 13 December 2014

The Ugly Beats and Peralta live in Gijon 11/12/2014 - Sublime Nineteen-Sixty-Sixicity



Anyone who has taken even a slight shufti at this blog will have garnered (correctly) the impression that I hold the year 1966 AD in quite some high regard.

For me, it was the musical peak year of the 60s - the year with all the potential and none of the hang-ups. It was the year with all the promise, the energy and the momentum but with none of the excess that was to bedevil the end of the decade and the most of the 70s. 1966 is the year when, as Hunter Thompson wrote in Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas,You can almost see the high-water mark—that place where the wave finally broke and rolled back.”

And what a musical high water mark it was. The Beatles made Revolver, The Byrds put out Eight Miles High, Dylan released Blonde on Blonde and in San Francisco bands like the Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane and Big brother were coalescing into the next new wave. 1966 felt like the year when it was all about to happen.

If you could return in time you’d set the clock for the spring of 66 wouldn’t you?

I would anyway. Summer in Swinging London, to see England win the World Cup, and then off to spend the rest of the year on Haight Street SF and seeing everyone at the Fillmore and Avalon ballrooms.

Time travel is, for the moment anyway, impossible – or at least difficult to arrange -  but we do have some splendid bands to recreate some of the ambiance of that golden iridescent year – one of whom are the Ugly Beats from Austin, Texas.

The Ugly Beats at Sala Acapulco, Gijon.

Their new album “Brand New Day” is a sublime mix of 1966 inspired Garage Rock and Pop – their best yet actually – and judging by the gig I saw at the casino in Gijon on Thursday night, they are a live band to be reckoned with.

They played a varied mix of excellent original material from all of their four albums along with some superb covers. Their version of The Rascals' Find Somebody is way better than the original and the two tracks from the Ramones first album - Cretin Hop and Today Your Love - went down a storm and fitted in perfectly with the band’s hi-energy garage punk ramalama ethos. They even did a spectacular cover of obscure Spanish band Los Nivrams' Sombras.

If there was a negative, it might be that there was a little too much chat from the stage at times. It slowed the pace and deadened audience enthusiasm - it might be an idea for some visiting US and UK  bands to remember that, in places like Gijon, not everyone understands English perfectly and some comments from the stage sailed wonderfully over the audience’s head to fall, inevitably, quite flat.

Support band Peralta (a kind of Gijon super group made up of some ex components of well known local bands like Dr Explosion and The Cynics) also put in an impressive set and are definitely a band to keep an eye on. The two bands teamed up for a couple of numbers and Peralta’s set encore of the Flamin Groovies I Can't Hide (with Ugly Beats Joe Emery and Jeanine Attaway joining them on stage) was one of the night’s highlights.

An excellent night. What a pity so few turned up to see them. But then if local promoters don’t advertise how is anyone going to know? Time and time again I have seen poorly attended gigs in Gijon with no promotion or advertising. There wasn’t even a poster of the show outside the main door of the venue fer Chrisake...

Anyway, the Ugly Beats. Sublime shimmering Nineteen-Sixty-Sixicity. 
It’s A Brand New Day. 
It is.
Go see ‘em and buy the album.



Here's a video selection of the night's highlights from Youtube.
Ugly Beats Joe Emery and Jeanine Attaway joined support band Peralta for their encore. A stunning cover of the Flamin Groovies I Can't Hide.



The Band's own Up On The Sun and Brand New Day.



A cover of the Rascals Find somebody.



A cover of Sombras by Spanish band Los Nivram (whose name is a tribute to the Shadows Hank Marvin - Nivram is Marvin backwards).




More stranger than known

Ten 21st Century Summer Psychedelic Nuggets

20 years of the Xixon Sound

Los Brincos - Glorious 60s Garage Beat Psych Pop...

New Year's Eve 1968 "Surprise Partie" with The Who, Small Faces, Booker T, Pink Floyd, Joe Cocker, Fleetwood Mac... Dawn of the Rock Revolution 

Yé-yé! Spanish Nuggets - Ten 1960s Grarage, Beat and Psych classics from Spain.  

Friday, 1 August 2014

Brenda Holloway / The Night Beats at the Euroyeye Festival, Gijon, Spain 31/7/2014



The 20th Euro Ye-yé festival is taking place in the city of Gijon in the north of Spain this weekend. It's a 4 day festival of 1960s style and music - especially all things Mod, Beat, Garage, Psych and Soul. There are bands, films, all-nighters and even a march of the mods scooter parade through town. It's a week-end long celebration 60s cool.





60s Motown star and Northern Soul favourite Brenda Holloway kicked things off last night with a free concert in the Town Hall Square in the center of Gijon. It was a very short (35 minutes) set that included her old hits "Every Little Bit Hurts", "When I'm Gone", and "You've Made Me So Very Happy". To be honest, the Town Hall Square is not the best place to see any band as the sound is truly awful. The square is surrounded by buildings of concrete and brick on all four sides and the sound just bounces around all over the place and is invariably echoey, shrill and distorted. And every year the local council puts gigs on there. Work that one out. Anyway, despite all that she managed to put in a surprisingly energetic and enthusiastic performance with a local pick-up band as support and her voice, even at the age of 68, is still in fine form with a more overtly gospel influence in evidence nowadays.

A short set but one that left everyone wanting more.





The Night Beats are a Seattle psych garage rock band with two albums already under their belts. Playing at the Sala Acapulco venue - a nice smallish sized gig with usually pretty good sound - the band tore through a powerful 60 minute set that finished around 2 in the morning. Primitive, raunchy and shambolic (in a good way). I thoroughly enjoyed them.










more stranger than known

Horizonte Eléctrico - 10 Great contemporary Spanish bands...

Hugh Hefner's "Playboy After Dark"   

Los Brincos - Glorious 60s Garage Beat Psych Pop...

New Year's Eve 1968 "Surprise Partie" with The Who, Small Faces, Booker T, Pink Floyd, Joe Cocker, Fleetwood Mac... Dawn of the Rock Revolution

Yé-yé! Spanish Nuggets - Ten 1960s Grarage, Beat and Psych classics from Spain. 




Saturday, 12 July 2014

Ye-yé! Spanish Nuggets - Ten 1960s Garage, Beat and Psych classics from Spain.


At the end of July the 20th Euro Ye-yé festival takes place in Gijon in the North of Spain. It's a 3 day festival of 1960s style and music - especially all things Mod, Beat, Garage, Psych and Soul. There are bands (old and new - this year veteran soul singer Brenda Hollaway and new psych garage rockers the Night Beats headline), films, all-nighters and even a march of the mods scooter parade through town. It's a week-end long celebration 60s cool - especially the mod style that has been around for 50 years now and which still shows no sign of loosening its nostalgic grip on pop consciousness.

Ye-yé is actually a French term to describe the French singers and bands influenced by the Beatles in the mid 60s but there was also an awful lot of Ye-yé going on in Spain and the Spanish were actually pretty good at it - which is surprising when you remember that in the 1960s the country had a fascist government with an unfriendly attitude to anything new, young or liberal.

Spain was, as I said in a previous post on one the best Spanish bands of the era, Los Brincos, "a corrupt fascist dictatorship morally propped up by a Catholic church with an obvious antipathy towards the new "liberal" rock / pop culture emerging from the US and the UK. Spain was cut off and the climate was conservative and claustrophobic. Many Spaniards emigrated for reasons that were not just economic (anyone who has seen Spanish director Antonio Mercero's short metaphorical horror film "La Cabina" (The Telephone Box) will have an idea of what the atmosphere in Spain must have been like at the time). Such was this moral rigidity that even the Beatles were not warmly welcomed by the Spanish authorities when they played Madrid in the summer of 1965. Ringo Starr's abiding memory of playing in Spain (in the Beatles Anthology documentary) was of policemen beating up their young fans. However, despite all this, and rather amazingly, Spain actually had a thriving beat group scene in the 60s".

So, bearing in mind that these bands were all working, as John Lennon said, "against overwhelming oddities", let's have a look at ten of the finest examples of that thriving Spanish beat group scene. The bands they called Ye-yé because they sounded like the Beatles singing "Yeah Yeah Yeah". A scene that quietly subverted the conservative claustrophobia of their era and perhaps even offered a glimpse of a brighter future.  
Ye-yé!



Micky Y Los Tonys  - El problema de mis pelos ( = My hair problem) 1966
Micky (Miguel Ángel Carreño), and the Tonys  - Tony de Corral (guitar), Fernando Argenta (guitar), Juan Fuster (bass) and Enrique Moddell (drums) - were a very successful band in Spain in the 60s and even made a couple of films. Like most Spanish beat groups of the era they made a career out of covering UK / US hits translated into Spanish however they soon started writing their own tongue in cheek and wryly ironic material - 'No comprendemos por qué no somos millonarios' (We can't understand why we're not millionaires), 'No sé nadar' (I Can't Swim), 'Cuarto intento de éxito (Fourth Attempt at Success) and this one - 'El problema de mis pelos' (My hair problem).


After nearly a decade of hits the Tonys split in 1970 and Micky went on to have a big MOR solo hit in Spain with 'El chico de la armónica' produced by Fernando Arbex of Los Brincos. After an unsuccessful Eurovision entry in 1977 Micky's career started to decline and by the 1980s he was lost to the Spanish 60s revival circuit. However Micky is still around and in 2010 recorded an album with Jorge Explosión of Spain's best punk garage revival band Doctor Explosión.

Micky Y Los Tonys - Ya No Estas ( = You're not there). From the film "Megatón Ye Yé" (1965)






Los Zooms
A four piece Spanish Dutch collaboration. Otto van der Pol (vocals) and Eric de Leeuwe (drums) teamed up with Alex Sánchez (guitar) and Eduardo Amorós (bass) to record two of the best Spanish garage / psych singles of the era. A promising band that unfortunately met with no commercial success. They split up after only a few months together leaving behind these two classic singles.

Los Zooms - Algo Mas ( = Something more) 1968.



Los Zooms - Alguien Los Ha De Escucuchar ( = Someone must hear them) 1967





 
Los Archiduques - "Lamento de Gaitas" (= Bagpipe Lament / I love how you love me) 1967
Cover versions were standard practice at this time in Spanish rock. However this one is more original than most. A version of the Paul and Barry Ryan song by an Asturian band complete with Asturian bagpipes. The words were also rewritten and the song was changed to a lament for a dead girlfriend which I'm not sure really goes with the happy smiley tune but anyway...

Los Archiduques - Tino Casal (vocals),  Armando Pelayo (organ), Pedro Bastarrica (drums), Tony and Claudio (guitars) and Tito (bass) were all actually from Asturias in the north of Spain and, although this was not a hit, it may be the first time that bagpipes were used in a rock song. The shimmering fuzz tone guitar solo also adds to the rather tasty psychedelic stew the band manage to cook up. Psychedelic "fabada" anyone?

After the band split in 1971 lead singer Tino Casal emigrated to London and later reinvented himself, David Bowie style, as a kind of Spanish glam rock / new romantic icon for the 80s. He became part of the 80s Madrid "movida" scene, which also included film director Pedro Almodovar, and became one of the most successful Spanish solo artists of the 80s. Another Barry Ryan song, Eloise, gave him a national number one in 1988. He died in a car accident in 1991.






Los Brincos - Nadie Te Quiere Ya ( = Nobody wants you now) 1968
I've written more fully about Los Brincos here. They were the best and the most successful of the bands to come out of Spain at this time and were even known as the Spanish "Beatles". They maintained a consistent run of high quality hits throughout their six years together.  Nadie Te Quiere Ya is a psych classic taken from the 1968 album Contrabando recorded in London at Abbey Road in 1968 with Troggs' producer Larry Page at the controls.






Los Salvajes - Es La Edad ( = It's the age or It's an age thing) 1966
From Barcelona Los Salvajes (The Savages) were Gaby Alegret (vocals), Andy González (guitar), Julián Moreno (guitar), Sebastián Sospedra (bass) and Delfín Fernández (drums). If Los Brincos were the Spanish "Beatles" then los Salvajes were the Spanish "Rolling Stones" and had a much tougher sound. Es La Edad is a generational long hair anthem - its sentiments echoing the Who's My Generation.







Los Ángeles - Momentos 1969
Los Momentos - Poncho González (vocals, drums), Carlos Alvárez (guitar, vocals), Agustín Rodríguez (guitar, vocals) y Paco Quero (bass) - were one of the most successful bands in Spain in the late 60s. Momentos was a top ten hit in 1969 and shows a distinct mid 60s Beatles influence.







Los Íberos - Fantastic Girl 1970
Los Íberos - Enrique Lozano (Vocals), Adolfo Rodríguez (guitar), Diego Cascado (drums) and Cristóbal de Haro (bass) - were the first Spanish band to record an entire album in London. They were extremely popular in Spain and starred in a couple of films. The clip below is taken from "Topical Spanish" (1970), directed by Ramon Masats, and seems to bear a strong "Help" influence.







Los Bravos - Black is Black 1966
The one that made it. Black is Black was an enormous international success in 1966 reaching number 2 in the UK charts and number 4 in the US. It was actually the result of a certain amount of international co-operation as the song was written by three Brits (Tony Hayes, Michelle Grainger, and Steve Wadey), the band's manager, Alain Milhaud,  was French, the lead singer, Mike Kennedy, was from Germany and only the band - Antonio Martinez (guitar), Manuel Fernández (organ), Miguel Vicens Danus (bass) and Pablo Gomez (drums) were actually Spanish.

Quite a bit of the credit for Black is Black should go to manager Alain Milhaud who, after the band had already achieved success in Spain, aspired to even greater things in Europe and the US. The band's Spanish label Columbia were unconvinced but he struck a deal with UK Decca to record some sessions in London with a view to a possible UK release. Black is Black was chosen by arranger Ivor Raymonde and at first the band were underwhelmed by the song. Its hit potential was obvious though - the arrangement, especially the bass line, is very Motown inspired and Kennedy's vocals bear more than a passing resemblance to Gene Pitney. The band however did not play on the recording and what you actually hear are some of London's finest session musicians. The song was released in the UK on Decca in the summer of 1966 and picked up by Pirate station Radio Caroline who turned it into a hit. Unfortunately the band couldn't follow it up and, although they continued to have massive success in Spain, to the rest of the world Los Bravos remain one-hit-wonders.

Semi-interesting footnote: In 1970, after Mike Kennedy left the group, the band recruited a British singer, Andy Anderson, and recorded a single Individuality. Andy was the brother of Jon Anderson who was about to achieve mega-success with prog-rockers Yes.




Note; I've attempted to be accurate with the band line-ups but one of the many problems Spanish bands had at this time was the call-up. Military service was compulsory in Spain right up to the 80s and quite a few of these bands had members temporarily sacrificed to what in Spain was known as "La Mili"

Most of the band information here was sourced from the excellent Spanish online rock encyclopedia la fonoteca http://lafonoteca.net/ (in Spanish)

There seem to be very few decently written histories of this period in Spanish rock. Not even Los Brincos - one of the most important bands of the period - have a biography written about them. Compared to the US and UK where rock has become a nostalgia industry the Spanish seem quite uninterested in their recent past. An explanation for this apparent indifference could be, as I mentioned in my post on Los Brincos, "that for many Spaniards "the swinging 60s" did not exist. There was censorship and no freedom of speech. Any form of protest could get you locked up, beaten up or even killed. Spain would have to wait until the late 70s and the death of Franco to regain democracy. So, the Spanish tend not to look back nostalgically on the 60s as a golden era of change and musical / artistic development because, for them, it wasn't".

However, as I said in my introduction, in their own subtle way perhaps these bands offered a glimpse of a future where change was indeed possible.
For that they deserve respect.



more stranger than known
Los Brincos - Glorious 60s Garage Beat Psych Pop...

20 years of the Xixon Sound

Horizonte Eléctrico - 10 Great contemporary Spanish bands that should be better known outside Spain

Horizonte Eléctrico 2 - 10 Flamenco Rock Classics



Friday, 23 May 2014

"Elvis is on the guest list" - Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, Gijon, Spain 22/05/2014


The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion put in a thunderous 90 minute set in Gijon, Spain last night. Although I must admit I have never been a massive fan - there just aren't the songs there for me - they are definitely a band to be experienced live. 90 minutes of non-stop relentless blues-storming punk'n'roll feedback-drenched pneumatic guitar riffage played at brain-piercing volume and blood-draining speed left those still standing at the end of the set numb, dazed and dumbstruck.

There were few technical issues - lights, dodgy sound and the band came on later than expected - but the last 30 or 40 minutes were intense and exhilarating. And proof that primordial is also eternal.

And Elvis was on the guest list. You know he was there...


Take a listen



 
Encore





More on stranger than known

20 years of the Xixon Sound

Baby Woodrose and Kadavar in Gijon, 3rd May 2013 

The Return of the Manta Ray - Manta Ray live ... 

The Sadies - This Week's Greatest Rock 'n' Roll Band in the World live... 




Sunday, 30 March 2014

Garage Punk Ethics - Who needs originality when you can have Soul Power?


There's too much confusion, I can't get no relief.
Businessmen, they drink my wine, plowmen dig my earth
None of them along the line know what any of it is worth.

Bob Dylan


Garage Punk Ethics - Who needs originality when you can have Soul Power?

Take a listen...


Uploaded to youtube by ESLMusicDC. See below for tracklisting



Last week I went to see another band. A local blues band called the Blues Sherpas. A mate of mine is the lead singer and they do blues and dadrock covers by the Stones and the Stray Cats and so on.

Someone made a comment that the band wasn’t particularly original. Well, two things strike me. Firstly, it’s very difficult to be original with an art form, rock music in this case, which has been around for nearly 60 years. Should we even be looking for originality in rock music when there’s plenty of other stuff going on outside rock music that might be more creative?

Secondly, is originality really that important anyway? When people first heard Elvis, Little Richard or Jerry Lee Lewis back in the 50s were they really struck by how innovative the music was or was it the brute force, the sexuality and the liberation from emotional restraint that made an impact?

Isn’t the whole “originality” thing, when applied to something like popular art or music, really just a little disingenuous? People started applying this notion to rock / pop music back in the 60s and 70s. A bunch of middle class rock journos with recently acquired degrees deconstructed the latest Beatles, Rolling Stones or Pink Floyd albums and discovered they could earn a crust from it. This kind of thing is actually pretty easy to do and anyone can bluff their way into making themselves look cool by saying things like “Well, yes, Led Zeppelin, they stole it all from Willie Dixon, you know” or “Oasis. They were just a poor man’s Beatles, weren’t they?” while at the same time ignoring any emotional impact that the music has on people.

Originality only really started to matter when rock / pop music became big business and the lawyers got involved and suddenly any cheap two note guitar riff was “intellectual property”. Was bluesman Robert Johnson influenced by anyone? Did he adapt and rewrite already existing tunes? He was working within a blues tradition so it is possible… But do you know? Do you really care? Does it affect the way you listen to him or the manifold versions of Crossroads or any of his other songs out there?

Unless you are a lawyer or a journalist isn't it all just anecdotal? Bob Dylan took old folk tunes and rewrote the lyrics. He even rewrote the Beatles' Norwegian Wood as Fourth Time Around on Blonde on Blonde, and though admittedly that may have been a bit tongue in cheek, Fourth Time Around is NOT Norwegian Wood.

Anyway, my point is that pinching stuff from others was always the tradition in traditional folk or blues. It’s nothing new.


So maybe there isn’t anything original about the Blues Sherpas yet at the end of the show they had worked their arses off and had everyone dancing to a hard rocking version of Ray CharlesWhat’d I Say? A thoroughly good time was had by all, the required emotional catharsis had taken place and we were all left shouting for more. Yea! Soul Power!

We now live in a post modern 21st Century pop culture when you can find stuff on the internet, mash it up, change it around, recreate it as something different and stick it on facebook for your friends. How is that different from itinerant folk or blues singers hearing songs and rewriting them to tell their own stories when they went from town to town in previous centuries? It’s communication. Telling a story. Making people feel good or bad or sorry or inspiring them to do something better. Soul power. The most important thing about music or art is the effect that it has on you.

How does it make you feel? What does it make you want to do next?

Tough questions eh?

"There must be some way out of here" said the joker to the thief.




Garage Punk Classics Track List
The best illustration of my point. Nothing particularly original about many of them is there? But pretty stunning rock and roll all the same..

01. The Undertakers - Unchain My Heart
02. The Kinks - I Need You
03. The Moving Sidewalks - 99th Floor
04. We The People - My Brother, The Man
05. The Sparkles - Hipsville 29 BC
06. The Sonics - Shot Down
07. The Jades - Little Girl
08. Thee Sixpence - My Flash On You
09. The Remains - Diddy Wah Diddy (Bo Diddley Cover)
10. The Henchmen - Get Off My Back
11. the electric prunes - Too much to dream last night
12. The Omens - Searching
13. the haunted - 1-2-5
14. The stoics - hate
15. The Barons - Now you're mine
16. The Pretty Things - Midnight to six
17. Teddy And His Patches - Suzy Creamcheese
18. The Music Machine - Talk Talk
19. The Syndicats - Crawdaddy Simone
20. The Cirkit-Yesterday We Laughed
21. Larry Knight & the Upsetters - Hurt Me
22. The Avengers - Caveman
23. Larry & the Bluenotes - In and Out
24. Count Five - Psychotic Reaction
25. The Wilde Knights - Beaver Patrol


More on stranger than known
Optimism, Positivity and SOUL POWER!



© D. Mainwood