It's strange to think that the whole time I thought I was so cool back in college in the 80's listening to "Pushin' Too Hard", "A Question of Temperature", and "She's About A Mover" that there were even more layers of the garage punk weirdness onion that I had no idea about - like this one, among many others. Thanks for sharing!
Back in the mid 60s when those songs were new and playing on the AM radio, I had no idea that there was more like them, much more. There was a whole scene that was invisible to me because I was only a pre-teen in Los Angeles.
GREAT Detroit garage from the '60's. I'm from Detroit and this groups 1st song went top 5 in Detroit, 2nd went top 10 but THIS one never saw the chart. The band came out of a local high school. Lead singer was 14 when they made their 1st record Story Of My Life. He might have been 15 when they made this. Great group. SUPER RARE RECORD. They sell bootleg/repressings of it (out of England) on ebay.
Post - Sixties Punk never topped the raw abandon and intensity of the best Punk from 1965-67. Two years or so versus decades; the 70s, 80s ,90s and on into now. The originals are still the best. Sorry Mr. Rotten.
Garage bands were always the best and they certainly Rocked. This certainly is a great band and playing in a garage is where they got their start. Buddy Holly and the Crickets was one classic example.
The last of the actual garage rock, anyway. The stuff coming from a band of a couple teens at a little recording studio. After that, it seems garage became better produced, leaving out that raw gargey sound
Ha! I really did learn this song from Michael, who literally made it his own, as w/all his covers, . But tthat said, Ron owns it; it's mos def his, hands down. Pity these guys didn't have the opp to release more tunes. They were so authentic & young, could've had a long, successful run. I wonder what happened? Regardless, their quality more than makes up for lack of quantity.
My da id the singer. the Detroit riots really messed things up in 67 for them but in 1970 they signed with Motown and had a band named lost nation. check it out
@@brandonstults1569 You must be very proud of his contribution to our music history. I see now, altho I was only four at the time, so didn't yet understand the goings-on in the world around me. I'm glad they acquired a label shortly thereafter. Is L.P. entitled "Paradise Lost?" Thanks for the info, I'll take 'er for a spin!
If these guys didn't write the book on Detroit garage punk, then they were co-authors. They don't call you Mean Mojo Mathias for nothing. You're a punk master.
@@Glendoras The vocals sound a bit like Eric Burdon. They certainly have a bad-ass punk attitude. Great backing vocals and harmonies, too This is a wicked garage number. Ruff & tuff & No foolin" around stuff, and...... How about that freakin" incredible fuzz tone? and how about when that solo erupts? What about that killer bass? It's a garage punk masterpiece from these Michigan boys.
I'm trying to find a old rock 60's or 70's song. Fast rhythm guitar and cool lead guitar with string bending through reverb. Chorus part goes something like " she keeps playing that pie pie music!" I tryed lyrics.com and lyricster.com with no luck...I appreciate any help finding it...
as far as the industry is concerned they r loosing billions 2 illegal downloads,i got 2 say its yr greed that has cost u so much,the fact is u lie 2 the public when u claim digital tech is superior,also u pointlessly try 2 make analogue vinyl the most sonically complete format,a carbon copy of yr sonically inferior cd n mp3,this disrespects what musicians intended 4 vinyl release,with criminal overdubs no one can justify this at all.this has sent millions in2 the arms of secondhand vinyl.
great tune great band did 3 top 45s,but i wont buy sundazed digital vinyl,all they do is carry out multiple overdubs,compress it 2 midrange n falsely claim they r being tru 2 the original vinyl release,try respecting what the musicians intended 2 b heard on 45.n u might start respecting musical history,analogue captures topend midrange n bottomend all with totally separate sound levels thru out,all digital lps n 45s r a copy of a inferior cd n all original releases r superior a FACT u abuse.
It's strange to think that the whole time I thought I was so cool back in college in the 80's listening to "Pushin' Too Hard", "A Question of Temperature", and "She's About A Mover" that there were even more layers of the garage punk weirdness onion that I had no idea about - like this one, among many others. Thanks for sharing!
Damn straight
Back in the mid 60s when those songs were new and playing on the AM radio, I had no idea that there was more like them, much more. There was a whole scene that was invisible to me because I was only a pre-teen in Los Angeles.
You should’ve bought The Back from The Grave from Crypt Records back in the 80s then you would’ve been even cooler, like me.😎
GREAT Detroit garage from the '60's. I'm from Detroit and this groups 1st song went top 5 in Detroit, 2nd went top 10 but THIS one never saw the chart. The band came out of a local high school. Lead singer was 14 when they made their 1st record Story Of My Life. He might have been 15 when they made this. Great group. SUPER RARE RECORD. They sell bootleg/repressings of it (out of England) on ebay.
Whoa! Sweet. I heard a bit of. Bob Seger belt as if '2+2'
That's my dad singing, I think he was 18 but that band got signed after 3 weeks of starting
@@brandonstults1569 Awesome Brandon! I'm from Detroit and remember this band.
👏👏👏👏👏👏✌
@@brandonstults1569 18 years, or any age singing like this is grrreat! 15 years would have made him as strong as Superboy.
Wow!!! Fab vocals and arrangement. Love it!
Just weren't enough talent agents nor the time to get amazing music like this on the charts
Plus the fact that they were signed to Liberty records
@@dayglostudio Sign with Liberty - you'll become a hundredaire overnight!
Amazing vocal and the way that bass stomps down that run when it kicks in...and the drama by the end...omg pure magic. I never tire of it
Post - Sixties Punk never topped the raw abandon and intensity of the best Punk from 1965-67. Two years or so versus decades; the 70s, 80s ,90s and on into now. The originals are still the best. Sorry Mr. Rotten.
Garage bands were always the best and they certainly Rocked. This certainly is a great band and playing in a garage is where they got their start. Buddy Holly and the Crickets was one classic example.
How can it be that born in 1960 I have never heard of this awesome track? Thanks for sharing this masterpiece for us to hear. 👌🏽👍🏽
wow I thought I was savvy regards music but you have shared so much I haven't heard, thanks, I love the lead vocalist's voice...
anonymous anonymous thanks! Yes, this is a huge favorite, and like you I love his voice and vocals.
Dang! Excellent record.
learnt these are all garage punks/rocks.. thank you for sharing! must have taken a lot of effort to upload, appreciate much.
+Mahdhi Jamal Thank you for listening, that makes it all worth while. ;-) Just happy more people discover these amazing musical treasures.
Tank
you very much.
Thank you! From Southern California! 2020
I thought "Ann" by the Stooges was the darkest, most ambiguous love song I had ever heard. It makes me think differently after 2:06.
One of the best screams in garage rock history, and the ending on the song is just fantastic!
You should maybe listen to "Not going to cry" by The Sages then. Very striking
this band are an old fav they did 5 songs i think but every song was quality great post peace...
An all time classic tune of the garage scene... Soon the 70s came and the garage disappeared. At my opinion 1968 is the latest Garage year officially.
What about 69..Graf Zepplin etc....
The last of the actual garage rock, anyway. The stuff coming from a band of a couple teens at a little recording studio. After that, it seems garage became better produced, leaving out that raw gargey sound
Oh ya, one of the best titles in this time
WOW. Just found this band. LOVE IT!
Perfect in every possible way.
Glyn Bowen Agreed!
True 60s away from the big commercialized
Austin powers scene 🤓🕺lol 🤣
ive got the other 2 45,s & a reissue of this 45 which is analogue thank fuck great band & great post peace...
Rough ‘n’ gritty.😎✌🏽☮️🎸
This is so good
I dedicate this fantastic song to an old good timer friend Denis the Riff
Un classique :) Merci Glendoras !!!
Ha! I really did learn this song from Michael, who literally made it his own, as w/all his covers, . But tthat said, Ron owns it; it's mos def his, hands down. Pity these guys didn't have the opp to release more tunes. They were so authentic & young, could've had a long, successful run. I wonder what happened? Regardless, their quality more than makes up for lack of quantity.
My da id the singer. the Detroit riots really messed things up in 67 for them but in 1970 they signed with Motown and had a band named lost nation. check it out
@@brandonstults1569 You must be very proud of his contribution to our music history. I see now, altho I was only four at the time, so didn't yet understand the goings-on in the world around me. I'm glad they acquired a label shortly thereafter. Is L.P. entitled "Paradise Lost?" Thanks for the info, I'll take 'er for a spin!
1969 downriver Lincoln park USA...YEA BABY I WAS THERE!
Okay this song is bomb
GOOD........................
GEM!
Great punk psych .
these guys a great !!!
Awesome!
wow. yeah.
If these guys didn't write the book on Detroit garage punk, then they were co-authors.
They don't call you Mean Mojo Mathias for nothing. You're a punk master.
Thanks mate! I love The Unrelated Segments, their three 45s are all brilliant garage punk!
@@Glendoras
The vocals sound a bit like Eric Burdon. They certainly have a bad-ass punk attitude. Great backing vocals and harmonies, too
This is a wicked garage number. Ruff & tuff & No foolin" around stuff, and......
How about that freakin" incredible fuzz tone? and how about when that solo erupts?
What about that killer bass?
It's a garage punk masterpiece from these Michigan boys.
Can we hear more releases from them
They did three fantastic 45’s, all worth checking out!
Classic.
Love your icon pic, got all the DVD's at home
Cool swinging 60s #Britishinvasion
The REAL #AustinPOWERS
Haha!
This one clocks at over 3 minutes, which I guess is unusual for this genre, lol. But it still went by too fast, like any great song does.
I got a Promo of this one....
A voz é parecida ao Music Machine
thx -dig it
Friday January 17, 2020 9:01 pm
I'm trying to find a old rock 60's or 70's song. Fast rhythm guitar and cool lead guitar with string bending through reverb. Chorus part goes something like " she keeps playing that pie pie music!" I tryed lyrics.com and lyricster.com with no luck...I appreciate any help finding it...
we got to get out of this place the animals beginning
Haha, not really, but thank you!
Punk elvis
Punk elvis!
I dare you to play that at 78 rpm!
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Detroit City
Glendoras is GOD!
as far as the industry is concerned they r loosing billions 2 illegal downloads,i got 2 say its yr greed that has cost u so much,the fact is u lie 2 the public when u claim digital tech is superior,also u pointlessly try 2 make analogue vinyl the most sonically complete format,a carbon copy of yr sonically inferior cd n mp3,this disrespects what musicians intended 4 vinyl release,with criminal overdubs no one can justify this at all.this has sent millions in2 the arms of secondhand vinyl.
DJ big leg yeah I’ve found that all modern vinyl even of old stuff sounds very flat however the cheep second hand stuff has got a real kick to it
great tune great band did 3 top 45s,but i wont buy sundazed digital vinyl,all they do is carry out multiple overdubs,compress it 2 midrange n falsely claim they r being tru 2 the original vinyl release,try respecting what the musicians intended 2 b heard on 45.n u might start respecting musical history,analogue captures topend midrange n bottomend all with totally separate sound levels thru out,all digital lps n 45s r a copy of a inferior cd n all original releases r superior a FACT u abuse.
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐