That bittersweet feeling that my second favourite band of all time maybe came together through the devastating death of a member of my all-time favourite band 😢 Thank you for this buddy, 17 minutes of enjoyment! 👏
The Ides of March are upon us and with it comes one of the all-time legendary LA bands, formerly known as The Bangs and more recently The Bangles. Let me know what you think!
Tim, as a music nerd and industry veteran, I absolutely adore your videos. They’re incredibly informative and I consider you the, “Anthony Bourdain” of the LA music scene. Bravo 🙌
Saw them as the Bangs and this young LA Mod was hooked. Then becoming friends and neighbors with Debbi later in life was the icing on the cake. Such a kind, talented person.
I got to see them once as the Bangs and I was so impressed with their talent. I seem to recall them playing Hazy Shade Of Winter even though it didn't come out by them for years.
My aunt got to see them at Cantrell's in Nashville in April of 1983, shortly after the name change. But Annette Zilinskas was still on bass and they still had that 60's rock and roll sound in those days. Something I love about the original line up. She told me that people were talking for months about how amazing they were. She said it's still one of her top 3 favorite concerts/band club shows she's ever heard. She's been to over 100 concerts. So that really says something. She said the raw garage sound they had in those days was so great, I can't explain how great they were. @@RockessentialTim
Great job on this video and story! The Bangs/Bangles really ended up having two different sounds. That pure 60's garage rock sound of the original lineup "The Bangs" and the more polished/pop sound of The Bangles with Micki. Both were great and I'm shocked this band doesn't even have a nomination of the R&R HOF yet. Their Billboard chart success was greater than the GoGo's and people didn't even know about them in the early days. There was no internet or cell phones. Such a fantastic band, made up of five key members over the years who never gave the band a black eye.
My favorite part of your videos is you go to the places where the “history” happened. Brings back great memories of going to Hollywood and Melrose during the 80’s
Thanks Tim for this cool vid about the Bangles. I never got to see them in concert unfortunately. Saw the Go Gos twice but not the Bangles. I love their work and yours as always.
I LOVED The Bangles! Their first EP was my favorite! I had it on cassette and when my daughter was a baby, she got into the stereo cabinet (lol) and I caught her happily pulling out the tape from that cassette! This was 2000 so it was hard to track another one down for years 😆
You forgot to mention that the inspiration for their final name change was because they were such big fans of The Beatles, so they merged the names "Bangs" and "Beatles" to become The Bangles.
I Great video!! I Love The Bangles they're a great band. In Your Room, Manic Monday, and their rendition of Hazy Day Of Winter are some of my favorites💖💯
In making the vid I've been listening to them a lot again and they were so damn good. I also really like their lo-fi early stuff like The Real World and Mary Street. I agree, they were (are) great!
Susanna Hoffs is the perfect woman. Absolutely beautiful (even in her 60s it never stops) absolutely fantastic taste in music and loves Rickenbacker Guitars and has her own Ric Model. That mold was broken.
Great Video! I have always loved THE BANGLES😁I first saw them live in the summer of 1984 at a club in Palo Alto, Ca. I think it was the KEYSTONE. IT was their vocals , Harmonies all around. I loved all their voices but Susannah has that special timbre in her voice that just is unforgettable. They should be in the RNR HOF in my opinion.
I was in the Paisley Underground in a band called The Eyes Of Mind we were signed to Greg Shaw’s Bomp/Voxx label Susana came to some of our rehearsals when she was dating Greg from Three Oclock I was friends with Michael Quercio and he also would hang at our band rehearsals our drummer Troy was the Salvation Army’s drummer before they became Three Oclock I miss the 80s. I sang with Bob and John Cowsill in the 2000s at Fox n Hound in Studio City one nite I was with The Late John Wick from The Records and Vickie was there also it was kinda a who’s who that nite. I sang No matter what by Badfinger and Eight days a week by Beatles people seemed to approve anyway I just wanted to share some stuff from the past with everyone . Another great vid Tim.
That is too cool! I can't say I was part of that scene but I would cross paths with it from time to time and did see The Three Oclock at Raji's (for the life of me I cannot remember much of the show, maybe that big pole was just in the way) There doesn't seem to be much of anything happening anymore and I don't know if its just cuz I'm old or because everyone has moved out of LA. Anyways, the 80's and 90's were such a great time to be young and play music in LA.
“The Eyes of Mind.” That really takes me back. I was in a paisley-ish trio called The Turn. Our drummer, Kurt, was friends with Troy. We played a show with your band in 1983. It was outside in what seemed like the desert. Huge crowd and fun but that’s about all I recall.
This. This is amazing, Tim. A lot of stuff I didn’t know about the pre-Bangs. Annette Zilinskas was a senior when I was a sophomore in high school but she gravitated to my little music geek crowd. We saw an early Colours performance on a Sunday night at The Rock Orphanage (NW corner of Victory & Lankershim in N. Hollywood). There were six people in the audience and the band was FEROCIOUS! Did an unreal version of “Outside Chance.” ❤
That is too cool! I don't remember Rock Orphanage but I do remember a club called HJ's right near there. A total dump is putting it nicely. But you are right, they were ferocious!
Dude! I ALWAYS enjoy your videos, but you know that. Video quality is OUTSTANDING! And I laughed when you showed the back of an album with the address where you could write to The Bangles...8033 Sunset Blvd. Same P.O. drop box address I had when I first moved to L.A. in 1991. Thanks for the memories, as it were!
@@RockessentialTim Right there at Crescent Heights, across from what had been the old Virgin Mega Store (or Schwab's Pharmacy, if we go back that far!)
@@KurtfromLaQuinta Thanks much. I usually write/produce about 1new song every video and build up my library but for The Bangles I did several. I love this kind of music and don't often get to do it. One day I might put an album together but just don't have the time to devote to it right now. Again, thanks for making my day!
@@RockessentialTim I Power Pop is one of my favorite genres of music.I've been following it, well... since I realized what it was about 50 years back now.. Do you know Jeff Sheldon? He was in the Spinning Jennies and currently in The Well Wishers, Deadlights, Hot Nun and more.. He also host the weekly ""Power Pop Show"..
I really appreciate these videos because I find myself introduced to bands I didn’t know of as well. Also, getting history lessons on places in LA where they frequented and made history is so cool. The way they got connected to Prince is so fascinating to know!
The point it always drives home for me is in reality how small the music community actually is. This band's whole career revolved around working and collaborating with other artists and its why I think they had such great music. Thanks for the cool comment.
Very cool video documentary. As a fan who loved the Paisley Underground scene and their first full length album - All Over The Place - I wish they had released a couple more albums in that musical vein.
I think a lot of folks assumed that their career started with Manic Monday and there is just so much more. I love All Over The Place too. I got to see them play not long after that on a club bill with The Replacements. Even way back then I remember them playing Hazy Shade Of Winter.
I learned a lot in this video! It’s wild that Maria McKee responded to Susannah’s ad. Their styles were similar but different. Susannah was a fan of Love, which I think was mentioned in the ad, and Maria’s brother, Bryan MacLean, was in that band.
Awesome Tim! I’m from Long Beach and was stationed in West Germany at the time. One of my favorite bands then, I saw them in 1986 at the epic 3-day festival Rock am Ring at the Nurburgring race track. We were right at the stage and I was right in front of Sue most of the concert. I have a few great pics of her sitting on the stage jamming. I was melting ha. I’m going to share this with my buddy who was there! He had told me about them and their LA history. They were great on stage. My favorite song was always Liverpool. 🇬🇧 Our Army unit would fly there so we had that connection ha. Peace and love to you Tim! 😎
The Bangles were great. Susanna Hoff's voice and catchy harmonies and guitars. I seem to recall reading that Prince said he wrote Manic Monday by basically putting new lyrics to his own hit 1999. They do seem to fit that melody.
Great band, vocals and musical prowess but penetrating harmonies. I was in a band with a very talented drummer, Marcos De la Cruz, who usually was in a band with his brother, Vince, but Vince had hooked up with Katrina and the Waves- yeah that sunshine was a gold mine one hit wonder that was used by so many movies and stuff they all got rich. Anyway, the waves wrote two or three songs for the Bangles. Going down to Liverpool was one and l forgot the other two. I really enjoyed seeing them in LA but they did a show at Irvine Meadows that was amazing.
I think Jay Roach (filmmaker & Susanna's husband) should do a film about the Paisley Underground much like filmmaker Randall Miller did with his film 'CBGB' regarding the birth of Punk Magazine and Punk Rock Music in New York City.
Though I failed to realize it when my job entailed playing this band's songs as current hits on the radio, now it's plain to me how simultaneously retro and cutting edge they were. Looking back, "Hero Takes a Fall" seems particularly prescient.
Ah yes another great video by Professor Tim. Such a great learning experience and fun to watch. Can’t wait for your next lesson. Thanks Professor until next time.
Another great video. I really enjoy your casual delivery and your visits to the locations. You could just as easily pop photos up of the places, but seeing them the way they look now makes the story that you weave even more enlightening. Can't wait for the next story. Thanks for all of your work.
Thanks for cool comment. Being as I live here in LA it just makes sense to drive or in some cases even walk to the locay. Besides, it gets me the hell out of the house once in awhile!
I saw the Bangles open for the English Beat on an IRS tour. This was my favorite period of the band as they sounded rougher, fully capable of playing well but with an edge. I loved the show. The Beat, too. But before the show Susanna and Annette walked into the indie record store that I managed, and I was mightily impressed that they did not act as stars. Instead we talked punky 60s music, and they name checked band and tunes that I loved (Turtles 'Outside Chance' - a non-hit, Paul Revere and the Raiders, New Zealand's La De Das (!), and others. I still liked them later, especially 'Egyptian,' but they had become too slick and produced. And the first CBS album covers were pretty unappealing. But I did go see the "Doll Revolution" tour = and was a bit disappointed.
I actually host a Bangles radio show on Sunday nights, called the "BangleSunday Funday Hour". We don't only play the Bangles music, but all the bands the members were in. So Annette's Blood on the Saddle, Medicine, The Ringling Sisters. Vicki's bands, The Action Skulls, Continental Drifters, and so on. It's a total celebration of all five Bangles members over the years. The help that Annette Zilinskas and Vicki Peterson have given, including stories and music is just insane. Two of the most wonderful people I've ever met. Forget just what great musicians both of them are. If you get the chance to ever meet them, it's the coolest thing ever.
I honestly liked their sound better in the early day. I got to see them in Nashville in 1983 at a club called Cantrell's. I was 22 at the time and I had never heard of them. My best friend had heard them and got the EP. We went to all kinds of concerts together. To this day, it was still one of the best concerts I've ever seen. Certainly best club concert. Annette Zilinskas was still on bass and they were the best garage/punk band I've ever heard live. I went to see them again in 1987 when they were bigger, but the music had changed. It just wasn't the same. They had something special in the early days.
@@Angie80sgirl It is a matter of taste, but I agree. I am not the biggest fan of glitzy production work - although Walk Like an Egyptian is the exception that proves the rule.
Wow this one is out of left field. I always try to guess what your next video is going to be. Great surprise! I always loved this band, Hoffs still sounds and looks amazing today. You outdid yourself again. I always figured them to be a NY band. Thanks Tim
Thanks much. The music scene the Bangles (they were the Bangs then) came up in was also actually the age specific one that I did so I have some first hand memories of the band. They were always a good band and I think it surprised the hell out of everybody else in the LA music scene when they went to number 1 on the Charts.
@@RockessentialTim Totally get that! I lusted after a Vox Phantom for a long time. Paul Reviere and the Raiders drove me a bit insane wanting to be that cool! 🤣
No doubt one of the coolest guitars but my brief experience in playing a 6 string was the action was a half inch over the neck---great for an adept slide player like yourself but not so slick for a lowly strummer like me@@Cliffswanson
Great video. Walk Like An Egyptian has to be one of the most catchy songs ever. I was living and working in the San Francisco area at the time it came out. It was a rare moment of joy in a pretty sad time in my life. I was interested to find out the Suzanna Hoff attended the University of California in Berkeley. Although I was never a student there my parents met there and created me, so to speak. They are now long deceased. My parents were UC Berkeley students towards the end of the Second World War.
@@RockessentialTim Thanks for the reply. I was probably living there when they shot the Hero Takes a Fall Video. I'll have to check dates, etc. At the time i was working as an Arborist for the National Park Service based at Fort Mason near the SF Marina. I left there for the Central Coast in San Luis Obispo County in December of 1987. I ended up coming to Arizona for a job with Arizona State Parks and have been here since 1992. The last time I was in the San Francisco area was August of 2016 with my father in law.
I remember when John Lennon was shot. The Greatest Rock & Roll radio station ever 94.7 KMET. Played nothing but Beatle songs for the rest of the week 24/7. R.I.P. KMET Feb.14, 1987 the day that Real Rock & Roll died in Southern California.
Remember watching mtv in the 80s and an interview with go gos and one girl said she didnot eat anything green but the bangles were nice with good sounds
Awesome video. Saw the Bangles in the late 80s. Like most people I guess, I knew about the Prince connection but nothing esle about their origin story, assuming they were probably a manufactured band. Thanks for settling the record straight and a look into the scene that fostered them.👍👍
thanks for presenting such an interesting story Tim... you are now hosting a 'cult classic' youtube channel. thumbs up. You have to clone yourself so you can make more videos. So many stories to tell...
Saw the "All over the place" tour at Magic Mountain. Snuck into the Greek Theater for the Different Light tour. And was at the instore Tower Records ( Sunset ) for the premier of Doll Revolution. ( short set.) Finally, maybe 2013 (?) at the Fonda , the Paisley Underground show : all four bands played.
@@RockessentialTim , Magic Mountain was Solid. Security showed me the door after a couple songs at the Greek. Tower records show was fun, but short. The Paisley Under ground show , well.... I pregamed a bit too hard...and watched most of the show with one eye opened and marbles in my mouth as I attempted to sing along . Did meet the band after the show and had a poster signed.
Hi Tim, it's Randy. Awesome job on this documentary, as always. Would love it if you make one of your band, the fantastic Flies On Fire. Would also love to get ahold of that background music that you play in these videos. Thanks for all the hard work you do, much appreciated and very insightful. You rock!
Its not spicytunaroll? Hey there Randy, thanks much. I'm a bit of a lazer when it comes to doing anything that requires real effort---like putting out music. I'll get to it one of these days but thanks for asking. In the mean time, keep on rockin in the free world!
Guess I better hit the notification bell. Thanks Tim for 'another incredibly cool story.' Any chance you could do something on Los Lobos? Different part--but still an essential part--of the LA scene perhaps...
Los Lobos and the Blasters were two of the most original bands that ever came out in the US. The Blasters literally re created the best tones, lead runs, melodies, all of it from the the 50S to early 60s. NO ONE EVER CAME CLOSE. Los LOBOS are simply the most multi versed original band of many genres ive ever seen. The scope of the music they have written is enormous. And just a real cool bunch of down to earth good dudes who have shown more brilliance overall to me JMO than ANY BAND spanning the periods they have produced music in.
Well done, Tim. I always thought of the Bangles as a much more sanitized version of the GTOs. It would have indeed been interesting to see what Frank Zappa could have done with them....
I remember them doing an interview in England explaining why 'Bangs' became 'Bangles'....they wanted to lessen the sexual innuendo that could be implied by 'Bang'.
Hi Tim 👋, thank you for taking us inside Whiskey A GO GO and a glimpse of The Viper Room .👍 Cool! 😎. This video content reminds me of a recent documentary I saw on PBS. It was of the all girl group “Fanny” The Go Go”s had said they themselves put out 3 Ablums, and Fanny had put out 5 albums,But they made it big “.Fanny had never gotten the notoriety they deserved.🎼🎸🎤🎹🎧🏆🏅💿💽📀 Thanks Tim . 🐊
@@RockessentialTim no kidding I think a lot of people would be interested where’s all this LA history stuff start your a musician we see that I’m a guitar player and a little dirty piano it seems like you lived a lot of years in La
There Where Many Girl Bands During This Time That Just Didn’t Make It…. The Back Door Angels The Rag Dolls Boys Town Kill Sister Kill These Girl Bands Were More Like Metal Girl Bands That Came Out Of The Hully Gully Scene in Silver Lake
Thanks for the info. Interesting! Mary's Danish used to rehearse there on Fletcher as I recall. They weren't a "Girl" band per say but they were very popular.
That bittersweet feeling that my second favourite band of all time maybe came together through the devastating death of a member of my all-time favourite band 😢
Thank you for this buddy, 17 minutes of enjoyment! 👏
THanks much. I think I like this band even better after all these years. Timeless.
The Ides of March are upon us and with it comes one of the all-time legendary LA bands, formerly known as The Bangs and more recently The Bangles. Let me know what you think!
Ides of March had a hit in 1970 called Vehicle.. Now that's a great tune!
Right you are!
Outstanding!! Four lead singers became a kick ass beautiful rockin band that will never be duplicated 😻
Tim, as a music nerd and industry veteran, I absolutely adore your videos. They’re incredibly informative and I consider you the, “Anthony Bourdain” of the LA music scene. Bravo 🙌
Well put. I second that! 🤘🤘👍
Except I never get fed! Thanks much, it is truly gratifying to hear.
@@CathodeRayNipplez I third it. Nick
Tim. What are some other good Power Pop bands besides The Last and The Nerves?
@@EricSimmons-m3v I always liked 20/20 and then the offshoots of The Nerves. Paul Collins Beat is fantastic and of course so are The Plimsouls.
Bangles play great music, and were fun live. It didn't hurt that they were easy on the eyes.
The Bangles just made utterly enjoyable fun music that still holds up well today. I think they were (well, are) a great band.
Couldn't agree with you more!
That was good, the places they played still exist amazing.
Nobody does these vlogs better than you Tim.
Thank you old chum. Appreciated!
Susanna Hoffs was my boyhood crush growing up and even now in her 60's she's still beautiful!
Saw them as the Bangs and this young LA Mod was hooked. Then becoming friends and neighbors with Debbi later in life was the icing on the cake. Such a kind, talented person.
I got to see them once as the Bangs and I was so impressed with their talent. I seem to recall them playing Hazy Shade Of Winter even though it didn't come out by them for years.
My aunt got to see them at Cantrell's in Nashville in April of 1983, shortly after the name change. But Annette Zilinskas was still on bass and they still had that 60's rock and roll sound in those days. Something I love about the original line up. She told me that people were talking for months about how amazing they were. She said it's still one of her top 3 favorite concerts/band club shows she's ever heard. She's been to over 100 concerts. So that really says something. She said the raw garage sound they had in those days was so great, I can't explain how great they were. @@RockessentialTim
Agree totally. @@jamiethornton6101
that was A+ Tim! you always do a great job!
Thanks!
Great job on this video and story! The Bangs/Bangles really ended up having two different sounds. That pure 60's garage rock sound of the original lineup "The Bangs" and the more polished/pop sound of The Bangles with Micki. Both were great and I'm shocked this band doesn't even have a nomination of the R&R HOF yet. Their Billboard chart success was greater than the GoGo's and people didn't even know about them in the early days. There was no internet or cell phones. Such a fantastic band, made up of five key members over the years who never gave the band a black eye.
I still like the sound of the early days better. Hearing them in 1983 and 1987, I would take the early Bangles over the mainstream Bangles.
My favorite part of your videos is you go to the places where the “history” happened. Brings back great memories of going to Hollywood and Melrose during the 80’s
It was fun to revisit the former Lhasa Club site for the video.
Thanks Tim for this cool vid about the Bangles. I never got to see them in concert unfortunately. Saw the Go Gos twice but not the Bangles. I love their work and yours as always.
I LOVED The Bangles! Their first EP was my favorite! I had it on cassette and when my daughter was a baby, she got into the stereo cabinet (lol) and I caught her happily pulling out the tape from that cassette!
This was 2000 so it was hard to track another one down for years 😆
You forgot to mention that the inspiration for their final name change was because they were such big fans of The Beatles, so they merged the names "Bangs" and "Beatles" to become The Bangles.
I didn't forget to mention it, I just didn't know it. Love it!
I
Great video!! I Love The Bangles they're a great band. In Your Room, Manic Monday, and their rendition of Hazy Day Of Winter are some of my favorites💖💯
In making the vid I've been listening to them a lot again and they were so damn good. I also really like their lo-fi early stuff like The Real World and Mary Street. I agree, they were (are) great!
Susanna Hoffs is the perfect woman. Absolutely beautiful (even in her 60s it never stops) absolutely fantastic taste in music and loves Rickenbacker Guitars and has her own Ric Model. That mold was broken.
I think I saw her in that Olympics video with Tom Cruise going to LA. I'm not even kidding.
Hell she looked adorable in a recent pic coming out of Von’s with her grocery cart and ugg-tastic comfy shoes.
Everybody wanted Suzanne Hoff back in the day…
She’s still a very beautiful woman!
One of the best bands of the 80s.
Totally!
Great Video! I have always loved THE BANGLES😁I first saw them live in the summer of 1984 at a club in Palo Alto, Ca. I think it was the KEYSTONE. IT was their vocals , Harmonies all around. I loved all their voices but Susannah has that special timbre in her voice that just is unforgettable. They should be in the RNR HOF in my opinion.
I couldn't agree with you more!
I was in the Paisley Underground in a band called The Eyes Of Mind we were signed to Greg Shaw’s Bomp/Voxx label Susana came to some of our rehearsals when she was dating Greg from Three Oclock I was friends with Michael Quercio and he also would hang at our band rehearsals our drummer Troy was the Salvation Army’s drummer before they became Three Oclock I miss the 80s. I sang with Bob and John Cowsill in the 2000s at Fox n Hound in Studio City one nite I was with The Late John Wick from The Records and Vickie was there also it was kinda a who’s who that nite. I sang No matter what by Badfinger and Eight days a week by Beatles people seemed to approve anyway I just wanted to share some stuff from the past with everyone . Another great vid Tim.
That is too cool! I can't say I was part of that scene but I would cross paths with it from time to time and did see The Three Oclock at Raji's (for the life of me I cannot remember much of the show, maybe that big pole was just in the way) There doesn't seem to be much of anything happening anymore and I don't know if its just cuz I'm old or because everyone has moved out of LA. Anyways, the 80's and 90's were such a great time to be young and play music in LA.
Just listened to some of your turquoise stuff. Really enjoyed it. Must have somehow flown under my radar at the time. Thanks!
@@RockessentialTim Glad you enjoyed it Tim I was 22 when we recorded that.
@@farrington7971 It sounds really good. Very textured. Bravo!
“The Eyes of Mind.” That really takes me back. I was in a paisley-ish trio called The Turn. Our drummer, Kurt, was friends with Troy. We played a show with your band in 1983. It was outside in what seemed like the desert. Huge crowd and fun but that’s about all I recall.
Great stuff, Tim !
I’m not a huge Bangles fan, but this was an excellent documentary. Very well done and well presented.
Thank you!
This. This is amazing, Tim. A lot of stuff I didn’t know about the pre-Bangs. Annette Zilinskas was a senior when I was a sophomore in high school but she gravitated to my little music geek crowd. We saw an early Colours performance on a Sunday night at The Rock Orphanage (NW corner of Victory & Lankershim in N. Hollywood). There were six people in the audience and the band was FEROCIOUS! Did an unreal version of “Outside Chance.” ❤
That is too cool! I don't remember Rock Orphanage but I do remember a club called HJ's right near there. A total dump is putting it nicely. But you are right, they were ferocious!
Thanks Tim! As always a great and informative video. Can’t wait till the next one will be aired 😊
Thanks much. Always working on an idea.
Dude! I ALWAYS enjoy your videos, but you know that. Video quality is OUTSTANDING! And I laughed when you showed the back of an album with the address where you could write to The Bangles...8033 Sunset Blvd. Same P.O. drop box address I had when I first moved to L.A. in 1991. Thanks for the memories, as it were!
Was that the PO Box Mail place that was across from where Guitar Center on Sunset is now?
@@RockessentialTim Right there at Crescent Heights, across from what had been the old Virgin Mega Store (or Schwab's Pharmacy, if we go back that far!)
Yesss a new video very informative 😊
Thank you!
This is brilliant. Thank you
My pleasure, thanks!
Thanks! Tim Nice work. Thanks for the history!🎶🎸🥁
Right on, thanks!
Amazing amount of research of the personalities and onsite locations like a travel video.. Loved your series earlier on Laurel Canyon locations.
Thank you kindly!
What a great video! Love the walk-and-talk on-location. Adds so much colour to what could be a pedestrian story.
Glad you liked it. Right on, thanks!
Love your background music Tim.
Thanks much. I prolly work harder on the background music than anything else in the videos and its gratifying when someone notices!
@@RockessentialTim I was trying to Shazam them to find out who it was. I wanted to purchase them. 🙃 Love the Power Pop sound of them!
@@KurtfromLaQuinta Thanks much. I usually write/produce about 1new song every video and build up my library but for The Bangles I did several. I love this kind of music and don't often get to do it. One day I might put an album together but just don't have the time to devote to it right now. Again, thanks for making my day!
@@RockessentialTim I
Power Pop is one of my favorite genres of music.I've been following it, well... since I realized what it was about 50 years back now.. Do you know Jeff Sheldon? He was in the Spinning Jennies and currently in The Well Wishers, Deadlights, Hot Nun and more.. He also host the weekly ""Power Pop Show"..
Tim !! Thank you .. alaways enjoy your videos, entetaining and educational ...!!
Thanks, Phil!
I really appreciate these videos because I find myself introduced to bands I didn’t know of as well. Also, getting history lessons on places in LA where they frequented and made history is so cool. The way they got connected to Prince is so fascinating to know!
The point it always drives home for me is in reality how small the music community actually is. This band's whole career revolved around working and collaborating with other artists and its why I think they had such great music. Thanks for the cool comment.
Your videos are always well done in depth attention to details musical history treasures😎Thank you for the tours✌
Thank you!
Very cool video documentary. As a fan who loved the Paisley Underground scene and their first full length album - All Over The Place - I wish they had released a couple more albums in that musical vein.
I think a lot of folks assumed that their career started with Manic Monday and there is just so much more. I love All Over The Place too. I got to see them play not long after that on a club bill with The Replacements. Even way back then I remember them playing Hazy Shade Of Winter.
I learned a lot in this video! It’s wild that Maria McKee responded to Susannah’s ad. Their styles were similar but different. Susannah was a fan of Love, which I think was mentioned in the ad, and Maria’s brother, Bryan MacLean, was in that band.
I just learned a lot from your comment. Love it!
Loved this video! The Bangles were the soundtrack to my childhood ❤x
Right on!
Awesome Tim! I’m from Long Beach and was stationed in West Germany at the time. One of my favorite bands then, I saw them in 1986 at the epic 3-day festival Rock am Ring at the Nurburgring race track. We were right at the stage and I was right in front of Sue most of the concert. I have a few great pics of her sitting on the stage jamming. I was melting ha. I’m going to share this with my buddy who was there! He had told me about them and their LA history. They were great on stage. My favorite song was always Liverpool. 🇬🇧 Our Army unit would fly there so we had that connection ha. Peace and love to you Tim! 😎
Great story. Liverpool is there most underrated song.
A LOT OF MAGNIFICENCE !!!!!!!!!!!!
Thanks Tim , ya' brought me home .
"Play it loud and that's what I mean"
The journeys you take us on are always wonderful. 🎉
Love making them, thanks!
The Bangles were great. Susanna Hoff's voice and catchy harmonies and guitars. I seem to recall reading that Prince said he wrote Manic Monday by basically putting new lyrics to his own hit 1999. They do seem to fit that melody.
Their video of walk like an Egyptian was all over mtv when I was a kid. Great song.
Vicki is married to John Cowsill, another of my favorite bands.
Don't they play in a band together too?
Great band, vocals and musical prowess but penetrating harmonies. I was in a band with a very talented drummer, Marcos De la Cruz, who usually was in a band with his brother, Vince, but Vince had hooked up with Katrina and the Waves- yeah that sunshine was a gold mine one hit wonder that was used by so many movies and stuff they all got rich. Anyway, the waves wrote two or three songs for the Bangles. Going down to Liverpool was one and l forgot the other two. I really enjoyed seeing them in LA but they did a show at Irvine Meadows that was amazing.
I think Jay Roach (filmmaker & Susanna's husband) should do a film about the Paisley Underground much like filmmaker Randall Miller did with his film 'CBGB' regarding the birth of Punk Magazine and Punk Rock Music in New York City.
I think its a great idea. I saw the CBGB film years ago and although I thought it was flawed it was still a good watch.
hi Tim👋 thanks so much for sharing this , I really appreciate the hard work you do to get these videos put together ✌️🇺🇸✌️🇨🇦✌️
It is my pleasure to make them. Thanks Mark!
Great work as usual; love the whole LA music history thing!
Right on, thanks!
Though I failed to realize it when my job entailed playing this band's songs as current hits on the radio, now it's plain to me how simultaneously retro and cutting edge they were. Looking back, "Hero Takes a Fall" seems particularly prescient.
Retro and cutting edge. Perfectly put.
I learn so much about the music I love from your videos. Thanks again Tim~ Anthony
Ah yes another great video by Professor Tim. Such a great learning experience and fun to watch. Can’t wait for your next lesson. Thanks Professor until next time.
Thanks much!
Another great video. I really enjoy your casual delivery and your visits to the locations. You could just as easily pop photos up of the places, but seeing them the way they look now makes the story that you weave even more enlightening. Can't wait for the next story. Thanks for all of your work.
Thanks for cool comment. Being as I live here in LA it just makes sense to drive or in some cases even walk to the locay. Besides, it gets me the hell out of the house once in awhile!
@@RockessentialTim You are very welcome!!! I lived in Hawthorne a long, long time ago; so I really enjoy seeing the locations. Thanks again!!😀
I saw the Bangles open for the English Beat on an IRS tour. This was my favorite period of the band as they sounded rougher, fully capable of playing well but with an edge. I loved the show. The Beat, too. But before the show Susanna and Annette walked into the indie record store that I managed, and I was mightily impressed that they did not act as stars. Instead we talked punky 60s music, and they name checked band and tunes that I loved (Turtles 'Outside Chance' - a non-hit, Paul Revere and the Raiders, New Zealand's La De Das (!), and others. I still liked them later, especially 'Egyptian,' but they had become too slick and produced. And the first CBS album covers were pretty unappealing. But I did go see the "Doll Revolution" tour = and was a bit disappointed.
Right on. I saw them right after that tour and they were great.
I actually host a Bangles radio show on Sunday nights, called the "BangleSunday Funday Hour". We don't only play the Bangles music, but all the bands the members were in. So Annette's Blood on the Saddle, Medicine, The Ringling Sisters. Vicki's bands, The Action Skulls, Continental Drifters, and so on. It's a total celebration of all five Bangles members over the years. The help that Annette Zilinskas and Vicki Peterson have given, including stories and music is just insane. Two of the most wonderful people I've ever met. Forget just what great musicians both of them are. If you get the chance to ever meet them, it's the coolest thing ever.
I honestly liked their sound better in the early day. I got to see them in Nashville in 1983 at a club called Cantrell's. I was 22 at the time and I had never heard of them. My best friend had heard them and got the EP. We went to all kinds of concerts together. To this day, it was still one of the best concerts I've ever seen. Certainly best club concert. Annette Zilinskas was still on bass and they were the best garage/punk band I've ever heard live. I went to see them again in 1987 when they were bigger, but the music had changed. It just wasn't the same. They had something special in the early days.
@@jamiethornton6101 Nice people rule!
@@Angie80sgirl It is a matter of taste, but I agree. I am not the biggest fan of glitzy production work - although Walk Like an Egyptian is the exception that proves the rule.
Great stuff as always, thanks for keeping LA rock history alive.
Thanks Steve!
Fascinating. I never knew their history. I suppose I assumed they had been 'manufactured'. I got that wrong. This is my favourite music channel. Nick
Favorite comment of the day. Thanks Nick!
Great stuff! Thanks!
Right on, thanks!
Wow this one is out of left field. I always try to guess what your next video is going to be. Great surprise! I always loved this band, Hoffs still sounds and looks amazing today. You outdid yourself again. I always figured them to be a NY band. Thanks Tim
Thanks much. The music scene the Bangles (they were the Bangs then) came up in was also actually the age specific one that I did so I have some first hand memories of the band. They were always a good band and I think it surprised the hell out of everybody else in the LA music scene when they went to number 1 on the Charts.
Hero Takes a Fall I loved and introduced me to Them
Power Pop at its highest level!
What's not to like about a Ric 610 and a Vox Teardrop bass??? Great band and another on the list I never got to see live. Nice job, Tim!
Always wanted a Teardrop if for nothing else than to hang it on the wall. They are so cool looking!
@@RockessentialTim Totally get that! I lusted after a Vox Phantom for a long time. Paul Reviere and the Raiders drove me a bit insane wanting to be that cool! 🤣
No doubt one of the coolest guitars but my brief experience in playing a 6 string was the action was a half inch over the neck---great for an adept slide player like yourself but not so slick for a lowly strummer like me@@Cliffswanson
Great video. Walk Like An Egyptian has to be one of the most catchy songs ever. I was living and working in the San Francisco area at the time it came out. It was a rare moment of joy in a pretty sad time in my life. I was interested to find out the Suzanna Hoff attended the University of California in Berkeley. Although I was never a student there my parents met there and created me, so to speak. They are now long deceased. My parents were UC Berkeley students towards the end of the Second World War.
I'm going up to Berkeley to shoot a vid in a couple weeks. I Can't wait! PS: The Bangles shot "Hero Takes A Fall" on Market Street in SF.
@@RockessentialTim Thanks for the reply. I was probably living there when they shot the Hero Takes a Fall Video. I'll have to check dates, etc. At the time i was working as an Arborist for the National Park Service based at Fort Mason near the SF Marina. I left there for the Central Coast in San Luis Obispo County in December of 1987. I ended up coming to Arizona for a job with Arizona State Parks and have been here since 1992. The last time I was in the San Francisco area was August of 2016 with my father in law.
Another terrific, fun, informative vid - thanks!
Thanks!
Tim.... An fabulous video.... Well done!
Thanks as always!
Your videos are very well done. I was born and raised in Los Angeles and my Dad was an editor for the daily variety and would have loved your channel
Right on, thank you. I would have loved to see what he thought too.
I remember when John Lennon was shot. The Greatest Rock & Roll radio station ever 94.7 KMET. Played nothing but Beatle songs for the rest of the week 24/7. R.I.P. KMET Feb.14, 1987 the day that Real Rock & Roll died in Southern California.
another great video and locations - thanks Tim - the “Anthony Bourdain” of the LA music scene.
Ha! If only the places I film at would feed me...
I love waking up to see you’ve done another video. Cuppa morning coffee and watch! Loved this, thanks Tim, you are a legend!
At my age I'm loving just waking up. Thanks for the cool comment!
@@RockessentialTim ha ha I hear ya 👌🤣
@@rossybink
I didn't know the Bangles had played with Prince. Thanks for the enlightenment.
Love that song!
Honestly thought I knew everything about The Bangs/Bangles. Boy!, was I wrong. Great vid. Really appreciate the schooling.
Right on, I'm you enjoyed it!
Well done... can't say I was a big fan of the Bangles but I love the back story. You have great content and your love for the music is evident.
Remember watching mtv in the 80s and an interview with go gos and one girl said she didnot eat anything green but the bangles were nice with good sounds
Great band!
Awesome video. Saw the Bangles in the late 80s. Like most people I guess, I knew about the Prince connection but nothing esle about their origin story, assuming they were probably a manufactured band. Thanks for settling the record straight and a look into the scene that fostered them.👍👍
Right on. I saw them only once and it was before they were famous and they were really great.
Great video as usual Man , informative and always enjoyable !
Thanx!
👍👏👏👏🤘 Bro ✌️ great story.
Thanks, Garry!
Yep, I was in love with Susanna too. They looked like a good live band and would have liked to have seen them in a club.
Nicely done. Thank you.
Thanks much. This was one of my favorites to film.
Thanks again Tim for the awesome video of Hollywood music history, great stuff!!!
Thanks much!
thanks for presenting such an interesting story Tim... you are now hosting a 'cult classic' youtube channel. thumbs up. You have to clone yourself so you can make more videos. So many stories to tell...
Right on, thanks! I've always aspired to be a cult leader :)
Good stuff
Saw the "All over the place" tour at Magic Mountain.
Snuck into the Greek Theater for the Different Light tour.
And was at the instore Tower Records ( Sunset ) for the premier of Doll Revolution. ( short set.)
Finally, maybe 2013 (?) at the Fonda , the Paisley Underground show : all four bands played.
Holy shit! I guess it wouldn't be fair to ask you which was the best show?
@@RockessentialTim , Magic Mountain was Solid.
Security showed me the door after a couple songs at the Greek. Tower records show was fun, but short.
The Paisley Under ground show , well.... I pregamed a bit too hard...and watched most of the show with one eye opened and marbles in my mouth as I attempted to sing along .
Did meet the band after the show and had a poster signed.
Saw one of those Paisley shows back in the day. I was impressed, especially with Dream Syndicate.@@DEVOn.A.Skertic
@@RockessentialTim , Dream Syndicate at the Roxy, promo show for the Out of the Grey album.
I’ve really enjoyed these videos. You’ve earned a new subscriber.
Right on, thanks and thanks for the sub!
Greatest Band
Tim, love your channel! When are you going to do the quintessential LA band made up of extraordinary session musicians, Toto?
Thanks! No plans to cover Toto as yet but who knows? Its all about making the time
@@RockessentialTimMake the time! please? 😀
Cool. Thanks.
Right on.
Absolutely love these videos, tho I cant say I’m a fan of the Bangles. Keep the content coming!
Thanks much. Like I mention in the video, I was lucky enough to see them play back in the day and have been a fan ever since.
I saw they in 2007 with Abbi Travis on Bass
Love The Bangles. Mazzy Star was great too. Tim, do a video on another iconic "girl group", The Go, Go's, please.
Right on.
Hi Tim, it's Randy. Awesome job on this documentary, as always. Would love it if you make one of your band, the fantastic Flies On Fire. Would also love to get ahold of that background music that you play in these videos. Thanks for all the hard work you do, much appreciated and very insightful. You rock!
Its not spicytunaroll? Hey there Randy, thanks much. I'm a bit of a lazer when it comes to doing anything that requires real effort---like putting out music. I'll get to it one of these days but thanks for asking. In the mean time, keep on rockin in the free world!
Guess I better hit the notification bell. Thanks Tim for 'another incredibly cool story.' Any chance you could do something on Los Lobos? Different part--but still an essential part--of the LA scene perhaps...
That's actually a really good idea. Another band that doesn't always get their due!
@@RockessentialTim They probably played a different set of venues...
No, they played Raji's and Al's Bar just like everybody did at first.
Los Lobos and the Blasters were two of the most original bands that ever came out in the US. The Blasters literally re created the best tones, lead runs, melodies, all of it from the the 50S to early 60s. NO ONE EVER CAME CLOSE. Los LOBOS are simply the most multi versed original band of many genres ive ever seen. The scope of the music they have written is enormous. And just a real cool bunch of down to earth good dudes who have shown more brilliance overall to me JMO than ANY BAND spanning the periods they have produced music in.
Great video as always!
I hope you would consider doing one on Concrete Blonde.
Thanks!
Well done, Tim. I always thought of the Bangles as a much more sanitized version of the GTOs. It would have indeed been interesting to see what Frank Zappa could have done with them....
The first bangle to step on the stage of the Whiskey was actually Micki.
I remember like a photograph my wife waking me up at about 11 pm PST telling me to get up it was on the TV John Lennon had just been shot 😩
I remember them doing an interview in England explaining why 'Bangs' became 'Bangles'....they wanted to lessen the sexual innuendo that could be implied by 'Bang'.
Interesting. Personally I like the Bangs better but I understand why they did it.
I love Susanna even more now that then. What a fox.
What a geat vid!
Hi Tim 👋, thank you for taking us inside Whiskey A GO GO and a glimpse of The Viper Room .👍 Cool! 😎. This video content reminds me of a recent documentary I saw on PBS. It was of the all girl group “Fanny” The Go Go”s had said they themselves put out 3 Ablums, and Fanny had put out 5 albums,But they made it big “.Fanny had never gotten the notoriety they deserved.🎼🎸🎤🎹🎧🏆🏅💿💽📀 Thanks Tim . 🐊
I saw that Fanny documentary too! I loved it. They were a little before my time but I did get to see The Runaways once.
Tim, write a book!
LOL! I'm just a tad too lazy and besides, completely dyslexic!
if you want a book on this look for "All Over the Place - The Rise of the Bangles from the L.A. Underground" by Eric M. Shade on Hozac Books.
There you go!@@ericshade9632
Tim when can we expect ROCKS ESSENTIALS THE LIFE AND TIMES OF TIM IN LA
Now you're really scaring me :)
@@RockessentialTim no kidding I think a lot of people would be interested where’s all this LA history stuff start your a musician we see that I’m a guitar player and a little dirty piano it seems like you lived a lot of years in La
The Palace was where American Bandstand was filmed?
No, I believe Bandstand was filmed at ABC Television which is in Silverlake on Prospect, maybe 2 miles down the road from the Palace.
@@RockessentialTim yep you are right, it was "The Hollywood Palace" show I was thinking of.
I think they did film the Hollywood Palace show there! Its a really great venue but its more or less a dance club now.
@@RockessentialTim ua-cam.com/video/3V8VvEzuQ6Y/v-deo.htmlsi=kFJwLyR0CuriR1BC
There Where Many
Girl Bands During This Time That Just Didn’t Make It….
The Back Door Angels
The Rag Dolls
Boys Town
Kill Sister Kill
These Girl Bands
Were More Like
Metal Girl Bands That Came Out Of
The Hully Gully
Scene in Silver Lake
Thanks for the info. Interesting! Mary's Danish used to rehearse there on Fletcher as I recall. They weren't a "Girl" band per say but they were very popular.