Rock Blog Rapidshare
'stylish cdr version of instantly sold out 200 copies only bootleg album. 'do what thou wilt - the satanic rites of british rock delivered from acetates and rare pressings 1970 - 1974' features 14 tracks from unknowns such as camelot, pony, shado, heatwave, sioux, yellow, wooden lion and more. The recordings are often very primitive as apart from 2 or 3 tracks which were released on private pressings, all the remainder did not get further than acetate stage, making this album the only way to hear these tracks'. YELLOW: The only band on this compilation that had any real luck as they had a single out on CBS in the late 60s and went on to enjoy other releases. YELLOW regrouped after two splits and laid down some demos at Impulse studios inNewcastle and then at Multicord studios in Sunderland from where this demonic and twisted beast arose in 1971. A quickly formed Abreaction record label released 'The Hobo song' alongside 'Daylight Child' by LUCAS TYSON who went on to become CIRKUS. Also included on the EP were BRASS ALLEY and TRIOLOGY.
Originally, a film production journal and on-going blog about the beach party rock and roll monster movie. Now, this is my Garage Rock blog-- whatever I've recently. The blog 'venenos do rock' in the rst radio rock!! All the saturday night!! Saturday 10:00 pm the program rock n roll goldmine in the rst radio rock.
LUCIFER: 'Fuck you' sums up this entire project suitably. LUCIFER was Peter Walker of late 60s psychedelic set THE PURPLE GANG. Having retired himself from this band as the lead singer and kazoo player in 1969, Walker turned to his old affair with witchcraft and joined a coven. Obviously the big wig labels wouldn't touch this shit with a lengthy bargepole so he decided to go it on his own. 'Fuck you' was his first ventured and advertised it in underground mag OZ for 50p as 'A love song - FUCKROCK' the lucky bleeders were also entitled to a Fuck You poster too (plus P+P)!! Recorder live at Sunbury in 1973!!
Featuring Lobby Lloyde and the Coloured Balls, with special appearances by Billy Thorpe and Leo de Castro. Extremely rare, long out of print and impossible to find!! 'Going Down' is pretty damn good heavy blues rock.
But man, 'God' is something ELSE. Extremely good and heavy, and less explicitly blues-based.
It also ends on four minutes of KILLER guitar noise, so that's a plus. Side A is blues rock; it's admittedly played loose and jammy and gives itself plenty of room to stretch out into more interesting and fun areas than you'd expect from the genre (moreso on the much shorter 'Going Down' than on the lengthy 'Help Me / Rock Me Baby', surprisingly), but it's still ultimately blues rock. 'God', however, fills up all of side B with almost nineteen minutes of triple-filtered, crystalline hard rock, with all of the good stuff left in and absolutely no bullshit tolerated. This EP has all the energy and all the long jam sessions that its live performances. The trio features four nostalgic songs from the '60s and' 70s that include 'Going Back Home,' an eight-minute blues-rock masterpiece. The EP has an intense and bluesy sound that brings us back to the golden years of rock again. Shelter People is bringing the genuine rock 'n' roll back and we're hailing it here on the blog Venenos do Rock.
Few current bands deserved to be here on the blog and here is one of them for sure!!! The discovery of these master tapes and this subsequent release of Devil’s Kitchen’s first full length album, more than forty years after the recordings were made, is an exciting find for the collectors of obscure 60’s psychedelia.
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How a great band like this remained under the radar and unreleased for all these years is mystifying. Limited pressing of 1000 hand-numbered copies. Includes a reproduction of Family Dog handbill from March, 1970, featuring Big Brother & The Holding Company, Kaleidoscope and Devil’s Kitchen. Welcome again to the great San Francisco sound of the late 1960’s!