They should just make it about the 13th Floor Elevators instead. Drugs, drugs, drugs, cops, rock & roll, Janis Joplin, drugs, crazy people, the Austin psych scene, drugs, cave dwelling, drugs, and drugs. All the bases covered right there.
They should just make it about the 13th Floor Elevators instead. Drugs, drugs, drugs, cops, rock & roll, Janis Joplin, drugs, crazy people, the Austin psych scene, drugs, cave dwelling, drugs, and drugs. All the bases covered right there.
I saw it and it rules! Lotsa kickass footage of the 5 at their peak and some sad shit when they were circling the drain.
Gunther Toody said:
MC5: A TRUE TESTIMONIAL is one of the best, if not THE BEST, rock and roll documentaries ever made. It is out there, available, if you look....(HINT: bit torrent).
TeenFink said:Speaking of rock-and-roll movies, will we ever get to see MC5 * A True Testimonial?
MC5: A TRUE TESTIMONIAL is one of the best, if not THE BEST, rock and roll documentaries ever made. It is out there, available, if you look....(HINT: bit torrent).
Speaking of rock-and-roll movies, will we ever get to see MC5 * A True Testimonial?
I never said that "Velvet Goldmine" was historically accurate. I knew watching it the first time that it was a highly fictionalized version of the relationship between Bowie and Iggy. However, I still enjoyed it mainly because it was so visually stunning, which is very fitting for a movie about glam. I loved the soundtrack as well, including the songs that were meant to sound like Bowie songs from that era. On a side note, Barney Hoskyns did hint in his book, "Glam: Bowie, Bolan, and the Glitter Rock Revolution," that Bowie may have had a fling with Marc Bolan, so maybe Todd Haynes took that idea and turned it into a gay romance between Kurt Wild and Brian Slade.
Here how "Velvet Goldmine" got me into garage rock...A few months after the movie played here in Pittsburgh, a local music writer named Ed Masley wrote an article about glam rock, and he mentioned an upcoming glam rock tribute show that would be held at the Decade. I went to the show, which consisted of a house band named Spaceball Ricochet and a series of local performers singing their favorite glam songs. Michael Kastelic of the Cynics was one of those performers, and he sang "Search and Destroy," "Ziggy Stardust," and "Rock'n'Roll Suicide." At that time, the Cynics were on hiatus, and Michael was singing in a band called HoneyBurst. I saw HoneyBurst later on, and I liked them, and I also saw Michael perform at a second glam show, along with a David Bowie tribute show in which he sang the entire "Ziggy Stardust" album. I became friends with him during this time, and I saw him perform with the Cynics for the first time in June 2000, which was my first exposure to garage rock.
BTW, when I first listened to the Underground Garage, Little Steven played "Lookin' for a Kiss" by the New York Dolls, which delighted me, and more recently he got me into Prima Donna, a very cool glam revival band. That is why I like the UG, because they play old stuff that I like (The Dolls are my favorite glam band), along with turning me on to new stuff. Since I was fairly new to garage rock at the time, I really didn't have any preconceived notions of what he should or shouldn't play. That is why I view these things differently than you.
Dana V. Hatch said:
MikeL said:BTW, I like all of these suggestions for making movies about real bands, but then you run into the problem of people being such sticklers for accuracy, along with how the story itself is told, i.e. it was too sugar coated, too dramatized, to hokey, too grim, too much emphasis on one thing or another, too little emphasis on one thing or another, etc. Maybe this is the reason why producers and directors prefer to make movies about fictional bands.
BTW, did anyone here ever see "Velvet Goldmine"? If so, tell me what you thought of it. That movie led to my discovery of garage rock, and I'll tell you that story if you're interested (Hey, stop snoring back there! This is my life I'm talking about).
Yeah, I saw that lie of a movie. Todd Haynes changed the names of Bowie and Iggy so he could film his fantasy of their relationship but all concerned say Bowie and Iggy were friends not lovers (Angie B. says "my question would be, who'd be the bottom?"). Not only that but the Iggy character's lines don't sound like anything the Ig would ever say. The character is much more similar to Kurt Cobain or some emo pussy. Still, hearing "Needle Through a Camel's Eye" blasting in Sensurround was great and if the movie led you to dig garage rock, that's awesome.
MikeL said:
BTW, I like all of these suggestions for making movies about real bands, but then you run into the problem of people being such sticklers for accuracy, along with how the story itself is told, i.e. it was too sugar coated, too dramatized, to hokey, too grim, too much emphasis on one thing or another, too little emphasis on one thing or another, etc. Maybe this is the reason why producers and directors prefer to make movies about fictional bands.
BTW, did anyone here ever see "Velvet Goldmine"? If so, tell me what you thought of it. That movie led to my discovery of garage rock, and I'll tell you that story if you're interested (Hey, stop snoring back there! This is my life I'm talking about).
BTW, I like all of these suggestions for making movies about real bands, but then you run into the problem of people being such sticklers for accuracy, along with how the story itself is told, i.e. it was too sugar coated, too dramatized, to hokey, too grim, too much emphasis on one thing or another, too little emphasis on one thing or another, etc. Maybe this is the reason why producers and directors prefer to make movies about fictional bands.
BTW, did anyone here ever see "Velvet Goldmine"? If so, tell me what you thought of it. That movie led to my discovery of garage rock, and I'll tell you that story if you're interested (Hey, stop snoring back there! This is my life I'm talking about).
Thanks for being you;)
Dana V. Hatch said:
Little Steven's involvement will insure the music sucks and the story will probably be bland and nostalgic rather than specific and weird like the stories of real bands like the Monks or my fave story, the Novas, a bunch of teens who sold a quarter million of their first single then fell apart after one of them got caught with a beer. Moulty would be a great subject for a movie too (Barbarian!).They'll get the clothes wrong too, putting the band in mod threads when most of 'em either wore the same duds they wore to school or dorky matching outfits.
Thanks for being you;)
brotherkyle said:
Johnny DumAss said:One thing is for sure is that when I found out about Little Steven liking Garage music it was weird. I mean the Boss guitarist actually could possibly be kinda cool? No Way! I don't particularly like his music at all but whatever. I do wish they would make a movie about the Sonics or some band like that. Then they would have to deal with all the copyrights and stuff this way they can make all the money and who knows if they get a half ass popular song then they make even more.
A movie about the Sonics would be bad ass.
Little Steven is a square.
Keith is also going to be interviewed by Little Steven next week on the Underground Garage's Sirius/XM channel. The total interview will be six hours long, and it will be broadcast Monday through Friday at 7 p.m. in hour long segments each night. The Friday night interview will be two hours long. Should be interesting to hear him talk for so long.
I think it will be great. I hear he talks about Mick's tiny penis hahaha.
Keith was paid $7.3 million in advance for his story, I hope it's good. He will also be on CBS Sunday Morning this week.
I saw them two weekends back in a small seafront venue in Southend, Essex, UK and they tore the place up. Top volume but not so much that it hid the tunes. If you haven't seen them already catch them at the first chance you get. Both LPs are on constant rotation too. Great to see a band building support through word of mouth and performance not hype.
I'm a fan for sure. There take on Little Richard's Hey, Hey, Hey, Hey really get's me going.
Sunny Afternoon, I'm Not Like Everybody Else, I Need You, ect. All fucking KILLER. This right here is absolutely beautiful to me: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vsrqfvwO_xE
great vid!!!!
ratoonie said:
its a lil strange watching the Kinks do the Blues...an then they come bak w/ ther siguere sound Pictures!!!
Lee Wilkerson said:
its a lil strange watching the Kinks do the Blues...an then they come bak w/ ther siguere sound Pictures!!!
Lee Wilkerson said:
Here you go... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SYtOPjPtVS0
Great review. Thanks for writing!
Love Bass Drum of Death/John Barrett!
This Mississippi Dou is one of my favorite bands right now. They make a lot of noise for a 2 piece, and write killer tunes. When I listen to them they remind me of a cross between Devo and Nirvana. BDOF doesn't have full length yet but the have put singles out on 3 different labels, Fat Possum, Baby Don't and Cat's Purring. Just Goggle them and check out their Myspace, you can hear 6 or 7 songs and judge for yourself. The Daily Choice also offers a free listen to their cover of The Chiffons "He's so Fine". I haven't seen anything on them here at the GPH, so I thought I'd mention it.
Keith Richards will be on CBS Sunday Morning October 24th. I think It will focus on his new book, which he calls Mick "unbearable".
Locking tuners work fine, but I am not too sure how the ywould work on a Teisco as far as performance. They install easily enough just make sure you have the correct tools - the fit has to be perfectly snug. I forget the name of the tool I used (dremmel?) but ask your local guitar shop.
You can usually find inexpensice locking tuners on ebay - You might went to spend a few bucks though to ensure the highest quality performance.
Right, I'd like to start with a little arse-kissing cus it's my first post. I like this website alot, and have only really started to use it properly recently. But I think it's a real nice community we got going on here and I like the cut of everyone's jib that ive had dealings with. So nice one to kopper for starting this.
On the Free Music Archives.
A live WFMU show they did in August
http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Mondo_Topless/Live_at_WFMU_on_Teenage_Wasteland_with_Bill_Kelly/
I've posted about this site before (and did a Free Music Archives segment on the Big Enchilada a few months ago.)
Search around and you can find The A-Bones, The Reigning Sound, Dirtbombs, Dead Moon,Wau y Los Arrrghs!!!!, ,Dan Melchior, New Bomb Turks, Cynics ... and most importantly SINGING SADIE!