blissblogger
Well-known member
I heard this version of "Psychotic Reaction" first and owing to this fluke can't help preferring it (although there's not a lot in it - the guitar freakout is just a little bit more freaked out)
I heard this version of "Psychotic Reaction" first and owing to this fluke can't help preferring it (although there's not a lot in it - the guitar freakout is just a little bit more freaked out)
You could have said there before I carefully selected 80,000 youtube links just for you.I wonder how much of this stuff has ended up on Spotify? I'll have to check later. I hate listening to music on YouTube.
I wonder how much of this stuff has ended up on Spotify? I'll have to check later. I hate listening to music on YouTube.
neither stones-y or beatlesque, just burners
low-hanging fruit but why not. A Boston lullaby, oddly enough sung by an LA surf/garage band.
These guys actually were from Boston
very nice i'd like to see this become common practice on hereHelpfully - but really for my own convenience / enjoyment - I shoved nearly everything in this thread (excluding a few things too wimpy or too 1970s) into a YouTube playlist, so that's a bit more like Spotify
I'm not sure how un-Dissensus this thread is really, it'd be different if it was 70s prog stuff. This stuff is definitely part of a pulp-modernist continuum. I'm not the first to make this comparison (e.g. https://www.discogs.com/release/136...s-Volume-One-British-Psychedelic-Rave-1989-92 ) but it's similar to hardcore in its DIY-ness and crass druginess, and the best of it still overcomes its quaintness and holds genuine thrills IMO.
there's totally the same spirit animating it as ardkore and early jungle - frenzy, cutting loose, juvenile dementia, a DIY explosion. And some of the same broad sonic attributes: speed, rhythm, riffs, overloaded FX, smeared and distorted sounds, kids messing with technology (amplification and fuzztone and wah-wah back in the '60s), lo-fi production meets extremism. Some of the same imagery in the titles and lyrics even - "Psychotic Reactions" could be a darkside track title almost.I'm not sure how un-Dissensus this thread is really, it'd be different if it was 70s prog stuff. This stuff is definitely part of a pulp-modernist continuum. I'm not the first to make this comparison (e.g. https://www.discogs.com/release/136...s-Volume-One-British-Psychedelic-Rave-1989-92 ) but it's similar to hardcore in its DIY-ness and crass druginess, and the best of it still overcomes its quaintness and holds genuine thrills IMO.