Aviso/Warning

Se algum link estiver inacessível envie-nos um email ou deixe-nos um comentário/ If by any chance there is a broken link send us an email or leave us a comment.
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta The Surf Stompers. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta The Surf Stompers. Mostrar todas as mensagens

The Surf Stompers - The Original Surfer Stomp (Bruce Johnson Surfin' Band)

quarta-feira, 26 de janeiro de 2011


AQUI:    ou    ALI:

The Surf Stompers - The Original Surfer Stomp (LP DEL-FI DFST 1236, 1963).

This is a LP of the 1963 by The Surf Stompers.
Recorded live at the Sigma Pi Fraternity House at UCLA, Los Angeles, California in the early 1960s.
This is truly one of the great, unheralded raw rock & roll live albums of all time. The rockin' contents cannot be denied. Working with a pickup band of more enthusiasm than accuracy while pounding the daylights out of a distorted Wurlitzer electric piano (think of Ray Charles' intro on "What'd I Say" off a 45 that's been played about a million times, and you're beginning to get the idea), Beach Boy of the future Bruce Johnston lays it down rough and rockin' for the UCLA college kiddies with a shake-'em-down spirit that's hard to ignore. The set list is a frat-party classic with versions of "What'd I Say," "Kansas City," "Surfer's Stomp," "Ramrod," "Green Onions," and "There's Something on Your Mind" being counted up in the noisy mix. With vocals going on and off mic, an occasional sax section darting in and out, a reverb-soaked lead guitar, and a hyperactive drummer, this is bare-bones Saturday-night rock & roll from the post-twist, pre-Beatles era, a period seldom documented with this much abandon.


Faixas / Track List:

01 Ramrod
02 Last Night
03 The Original Surfer Stomp
04 What'd I Say?/ Something On Your Mind
05 Surfer's Pajama Party
06 Kansas City
07 Mashin' The Popeye
08 Gee But I'm Lonesome
09 Green Onions
Bonus:
10 Soup Shuffle Stomp (instr)
11 Soup Shuffle Stomp (vocal)
12 What’d I Say (reprise)

LP gentilmente cedido por Luís Futre, a quem agradecemos.
Ripado do vinil. Digitalização (capas e áudio) e masterização, por Carlos Santos.