Showing posts with label wild things. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wild things. Show all posts
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Get Lost 3: 15 Unreleased KIWI Rhythm and Beat Gems 1964 to 1967
Don't be fooled -- there were never (yet!?) any vols. 2 or 1.
This freekin' amazing rekkid comps a few of yr faves (Larry's Rebels, The Chants, Bluestars, Roadrunners) with some totally unknown but nevertheless angry young men, all Beatle-booted, shaggy and surly.
'Fraid I can't give much more information, as there's none here. Judging by the sound quality, I'm guessing some of these are crispy old live tapes (Ray Woolf taking on the Chants' biggest hit, only faster and louder), private pressings or acetates (Grimm Ltd., The Raves).
Brought to you by your friends at Zerox records, who gave you klassic kiwi komps like "Pie Cart Rock 'n' Roll" and "Get a Haircut." Don't bother to visit the website printed on the back cover (art included in the file), as it doesn't actually exist. Mysterious!
One Ugly Child
Labels:
beat,
garage,
kiwi,
new zealand,
psych,
r and b,
wild things,
zerox
Thursday, December 17, 2009
No. 8 Wire - Psychedelia Without Drugs

The existing counterculture in late-60s New Zealand listened to the likes of Radio Hauraki as the ballooning consciousnesses -- some of those balloons filled with vegetal smoke, others with lukewarm, slightly moist, air -- of the bands in the rest of the western world set their tape-echoes and phasers to "stoned." They crowded round the American troops coming through the ports, where they heard even dirtier rock'n'roll and R&B. Having no native New Zealand soothing herbs, some resourceful Kiwis hinted inquiries to the soldiers. Some were even lucky enough to take a taste: "Awwww... yeah? My mate's brother tried it over in Aussie, and he said it was like..." While they might not yet have the drugs, for now they could get the drug music (though some of this stuff shows that they didn't really get it). So, slightly bewildered and beer-fuddled, they followed suit. And soon they got pretty good at it.
Compiled by John Baker, this record is sometimes called the third of his 'Wild Things: Wyld Kiwi Garage' series. It certainly seems to be the rarest -- I've seen one copy other than my own, and mine is damaged. I've replaced the damaged tracks with cleaner versions where available, but tracks like "Bengal Tiger" by the Brew (with Doug Jerebine, soon to leave his name behind when departing NZ shores for the UK, cutting a tape as Jessie Harper, "Guitar Absolution in the Shade of the Midnight Sun") I've never seen anywhere else, so yr stuck with my noisy copy.
Labels:
garage,
kiwi,
new zealand,
psych,
sixties,
wild things
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)

