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The only thing that bugs me on this song, is the quavery electric piano ...
I really LIKE IT! I wonder what type of electric piano they were using in 1962. Thanx RP!
Before the Beatles arrived in North America, this kind of music was the bee's knees.
Those damn mop heads ruined everything.
Classic
And GREAT!! Thanx RP!
True, but Dick Dale and Jimi Hendrix did.
If you had a garage band in the early 60's you played this song. I remember my bro's band jamming on this over and over. This and Wipeout. The band members were all 14 or 15 years old.
RIP bro. I miss ya....
Both songs are just as bad ass today as 50+ years ago!!
-John
Yep...1st song my band played at a dance!
was Hendrix's way of encouraging Dick Dale while he was undergoing treatment for colon cancer . . .
The Great Surf Guitar! Lives
Is that right? Wow. I always thought it as a 'warning' that surf music era in general was at an end.
Context:
According to an article in the "L.A. Weekly", after the film was edited, Michael Hynson and Bruce Brown (I) toured the U.S. in a bus in the summer of 1964, screening the documentary in high school auditoriums and Lions Clubs. The film originally didn't even have audio; Brown would play surf records and narrate the action live
RIP bro. I miss ya....
Both songs are just as bad ass today as 50+ years ago!!
-John
Vox Jaguar organ and Rhodes electric piano were 2, for a start. Vox also made other models too.
"The Chantays toured Japan and the United States, joining the Righteous Brothers and Roy Orbison on a few occasions, and they were the only rock and roll band to perform on The Lawrence Welk Show."
Impressive.
Thanks to Bill for bringing it back on RP.
Same here, I thought I was a guitar hero...
Now move on.
THIS CHANTAYS TUNE IS A LANDMARK OF THE SURF GENRE.
It has been covered and recorded by a large number of other musicians including Johnny Thunders (whose live version plays over the closing credits of the television series 'The Sopranos' episode 74, entitled 'The Ride'), Dick Dale (with Stevie Ray Vaughan and with Jimmie Ray Vaughan), The Eagles, The Ventures, Nokie Edwards with the Light Crust Doughboys, Takeshi Terauchi & Blue Jeans, Art Greenshaw, Incredible Bongo Band, Hanoi Rocks, Hank Marvin (duet with Duane Eddy on Hank's 1992 album 'Into the Light'), Elton Motello, Agent Orange, The Challengers, Anthrax, The Low Babies, The Astronauts, Assassin, Hot Butter, Bruce Johnson, Sandy Nelson, Australia's 'Exploding White Mice', and Les Claypool's Duo de Twang's 'Four Foot Shack'.
Stevie Ray Vaughan and Dick Dale's version was also on the soundtrack for the 1987 film, 'Back to the Beach', as well as their separate compilation albums.
Retirement-home music!
What the hell is wrong with RP tonight?
I guess I take a walk....
...sigh.....
what was that line again?..."Do not give what is holy to...etc etc..." ?
OK, replied... now where the heck was that retirement home? ... ah, first let me grab those 45s....Bombora...Wipeout...Telstar....
all set now...
Retirement-home music!
What the hell is wrong with RP tonight?
I guess I take a walk....
Wow, you need an education.
Retirement-home music!
What the hell is wrong with RP tonight?
I guess I take a walk....
You DO see the album cover, right? I guess somebody thought it was surf music....like maybe the performers? Retirement home music? Maybe someday but not yet...ha ha.
Wow: if this isn't surf music, tell us what is. From atop that giant mackin' wave in Cologne, Germany.
S-curvy wrote:
Oh, that's just Stingray spewing his usual pompous tripe. Me thinks he drinks way too much black coffee ... gives one a very sour tummy. If only all of us could be so brilliant and wise as Stingray.... Troll NOT moi.
Is it the black coffee? Or poorly administered electroshock therapy? If Stingray didn't exist, someone would have to invent him.
Wow: if this isn't surf music, tell us what is. From atop that giant mackin' wave in Cologne, Germany.
Yes, an odd remark from the old Stingray. This is exactly surf music, by it's definition - instrumental music ABOUT SURFING. What's more annoying is when any other genre of instrumental guitar music (The Shadows, Link Wray, etc.) gets called "surf music".
...and burned into my muscle memory. There was a surfing craze on Long Island (yeah- I know there's no surf there) in the mid-60's and my kid band was compelled by a discrete mixture of feminine allure/popular opinion/threat of violence to play this and Wipe Out over and over and over. It was why I sold my electric bass when I went to college. The music business, even on the crappiest localest level, makes stuff like this spread like some twisted ear-nereal disease.
Sorry for your loss
We had a surfing craze in SoCal in the 60's and we did have surf and this was our hometown music.
I was once associated with a band (OK I drove, carried, hooked up, booked, bought drinks and lusted after the groupies) and went to many "Battle of the Bands" events. On one such night in Lewisham, there were 7 bands competing and we made it through rounds one and two, but not to the finals. By the end of the evening, this tune had been played by every band at least once.
This tune and 'Wipeout' are tattooed on my eardrums.
...and burned into my muscle memory. There was a surfing craze on Long Island (yeah- I know there's no surf there) in the mid-60's and my kid band was compelled by a discrete mixture of feminine allure/popular opinion/threat of violence to play this and Wipe Out over and over and over. It was why I sold my electric bass when I went to college. The music business, even on the crappiest localest level, makes stuff like this spread like some twisted ear-nereal disease.
I was once associated with a band (OK I drove, carried, hooked up, booked, bought drinks and lusted after the groupies) and went to many "Battle of the Bands" events. On one such night in Lewisham, there were 7 bands competing and we made it through rounds one and two, but not to the finals. By the end of the evening, this tune had been played by every band at least once.
This tune and 'Wipeout' are tattooed on my eardrums.
Wow: if this isn't surf music, tell us what is. From atop that giant mackin' wave in Cologne, Germany.
Oh, that's just Stingray spewing his usual pompous tripe. Me thinks he drinks way too much black coffee ... gives one a very sour tummy. If only all of us could be so brilliant and wise as Stingray.... Troll NOT moi.
Retirement-home music!
What the hell is wrong with RP tonight?
I guess I take a walk....
Wow: if this isn't surf music, tell us what is. From atop that giant mackin' wave in Cologne, Germany.
Chuckle, chuckle. A favorite of mine, too. A hippie driving a tank -- with a helluva record playing system -- during WW2.
Surf's up!
was Hendrix's way of encouraging Dick Dale while he was undergoing treatment for colon cancer . . .
The Great Surf Guitar! Lives
Apparently there was more to Jimi's statement. From an interview with Dick Dale:
I read that when Jimi Hendrix said, "You'll never hear Surf music again," that was in reference to your battle with cancer. Is that true?
You know what's so funny? Why didn't they say the rest of his sentence? Do you know what the rest of the sentence is?
No, I have no idea. What is it?
I had never missed a gig in my life, and I had a temperature of 104, and I couldn't even talk...and had got hit real bad with rectal cancer. Jimi was recording in the studio and said, "I heard Dale did a no-show. That's not like him. You know?"
His guitar player said, "No man, he's dying."
They had given me three months to live.
Then Jimi said, "You'll never hear surf music again." And then he said, "I bet that's a big lie. Let's pack up, boys, and go home."
That was the full f-king sentence.
His dad was no slouch either.
This is a 10.
Gloria - one of my fave "garage band" tunes. I still play it once in a while with my band - just for grins.
In the "knock upon my door" part, I do a bit where I can't hear the knock cuz I've got the stereo up too loud.
When we did it recently, the drummer kept missing his cue to do the "knock" and it was three or four times before he caught it!
Gloria too...G L O R I A...1968
Gloria too...G L O R I A...1968
Gloria - one of my fave "garage band" tunes. I still play it once in a while with my band - just for grins.
In the "knock upon my door" part, I do a bit where I can't hear the knock cuz I've got the stereo up too loud.
When we did it recently, the drummer kept missing his cue to do the "knock" and it was three or four times before he caught it!
Serious rock music oriented stations need that on occasion to keep things from getting too serious.
Big surf guitar fan here!!!
This is one of the prototypes for the genre!
Just a notch below godlike....there are better SG tunes out there these days.
Retirement-home music!
What the hell is wrong with RP tonight?
I guess I take a walk....
"Always with the negative waves, Moriarty" ....
Are you ripping on this? Has your enthusiasm ebbed? Or are you riding the wave of admiration for a timeless piece of surf history?
Gloria too...G L O R I A...1968
I can assure you that when THIS song came out, people were blown away by the "different" guitar licks....remember this was AM radio days....not many choices around.
Yep, the original and still the best.
was Hendrix's way of encouraging Dick Dale while he was undergoing treatment for colon cancer . . .
The Great Surf Guitar! Lives
Retirement-home music!
What the hell is wrong with RP tonight?
I guess I take a walk....
we've got a swell coming in tomorrow... woo hoo...
why isn't there a surfing banana??
I can assure you that when THIS song came out, people were blown away by the "different" guitar licks....remember this was AM radio days....not many choices around.
And this is one of the best!!!
...ok, second.
I really LIKE IT! I wonder what type of electric piano they were using in 1962. Thanx RP!
OK, I did some research. Multiple sources stated that it was a Wurlitzer electric piano. An early "tube model" in a wooden (not plastic) body.