Psych 45s...
bass_fever
974 Posts
So I need to step up my weak Psych 45 game, any recommendations for cheap to moderately priced heaterz?
Comments
Just like soul is a singles game, psych is an album game, so I think you might want to step up your record speed as well (although psych singles do exist)...
i started a thread about this about a year ago or so, listed about 10 that i knew, and several other lists followed. it was helpful, and i found about 5 or 6 cheapie singles shortly after the lists. if you search hard enough, i'll bet you can find it.
ill post up my little list of favs when im in front of my records at home...
try asking the same question over on the vinyl vulture forum (sorry - verygood+) -- there's some guys with monster knowledge over there!!!
yes, but psych and garage/freakbeat weren't always the same thing. there are psych bands who arent very garagey and vice versa.
not to be a stickler, but if you were concentrating on SOLELY psych, you'd have to have some albums in there (as opposed to 45's)
Psyche
Garage
Freakbeat
My pleasure.
Depends on the act.
The Sonics and the Standells are as garagey as the day is long, yet had basically no psych influences at all. Theirs is basically three-chord AM radio music (and I mean that as a compliment).
I consider the Jimi Hendrix Experience to be a six-legged, walking definition of psychedelia, yet they'd sound waaay out of place on a garage compilation. I don't think that the Jefferson Airplane, the Quicksilver Messenger Service, or most of those Haight-Ashbury jam bands are garagey either.
Then you have bands like the Blues Magoos, the Seeds, the Chocolate Watch Band, the Thirteenth Floor Elevators, the Creation...to me, these bands are both garage and psych simultaneously. They've got enough of a teen-club feel to them, yet they were still experimental.
As far as the term "freakbeat" goes...that's just another semi-meaningless term to me. I know I'm gonna get a five-page disagreement, but to me[/b] that's just garage with a foreign accent, which is why I have no problem lumping the Creation in with the Blues Magoos. Like the Squires (who are garage - no psych!) once sang, "same all over, same all over the world..."
Have you ever heard 'All Fall Down' by the Standells?
Only since eBay have I seen dealers who think Gary Lewis & the Playboys are rare garage stoner psych...
http://cgi.ebay.com/SORCE-Heavy-Fuzz-Gar...1QQcmdZViewItem
Yes, I have, but that seems more like an exception (for the Standells) and not the rule. The rest of the time, that band was pure garage more or less.
I had to be careful who I listed as examples, 'cause even the Grateful Dead's first album sounds vaguely like some lost garage band!! (I ain't lyin'...)
I agree with you on 'All Fall Down' being kind of anomalous to the rest of their discography.
I hear you on the Dead.
Back in my mod/garage days I had a pal who fancied himself the Ace Face and had no taste for "hippy" stuff at all. So one day I whipped 'Cream Puff War' from the first Dead album (without telling him who it was). He - thinking I'd lifted it from 'Back From the Grave' - loved it. Imagine his shock when I let on who it was...
Yeah, I didn't want to sound stiff and narrow-minded when I was breaking down what was what, but I've met people who think that "garage" is code for any white rock band that existed during the Vietnam War...no shit, I've met people who were all like, "yeah, 'Green-Eyed Lady' by Sugarloaf is some really killer garage rock!!"
But even then, you get weird anomalies, like the Dead and Standells records mentioned above.
It be's that way sometimes. To be honest, I doubt if Soul Strut could agree universally on what funk is.
MP3: http://www.waxingdeep.org/radio/waxing_deep_28_09_07.mp3
M3U: http://www.waxingdeep.org/radio/waxing_deep_28_09_07.mp3
I'd call it psych, but even if it isn't, it would fit right in a psych set.
Lotta grey areas with this stuff, it's not always cut & dried. But it don't sound like no garage rekkid!
Cool, then psych it is. However we categorise it, I'm a fan of that track!