Texas Psychedelic Rock!
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Wednesday, March 31, 2010

13th Floor Elevators I've Got Levitation mono mix


13th Floor Elevators I've Got Levitation lyrics:

Heading for the ceiling, I’m up off the floor
I’ve broken my horizon, out distancing my door
High above the ant hills, in among the planes
Swooping down to hear the sound and movements of the trains

I don’t need these wings to guide me, they are hardly ever there
It’s the clear I made in-side me, makes me feel light as air
I’ve got levitation

The ocean rolls below me in liquid plastic views
My vision cones to nearest land and brings me latest news
The waves of higher bodies soon dazzling in me ears
Will center my vibrations with the music of the spheres

I don’t need these wings to guide me, they are hardly ever there
It’s thing buildings up in-side me, makes me feel light as air
I’ve got levitation
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Monday, March 29, 2010

13th Floor Elevators Handbill - Doris Miller Auditorium 1/7/67

13th floor elevators handbill

Check out this 13th Floor Elevators handbill from the Doris Miller Auditorium promoting a 1/7/67 gig. This show was promoted by the Electric Grandmother which became the Vulcan Gas Company. The 'Elevators were trying to hit the big time with the concert promoting. These Doris Miller shows could be looked upon as their commercial peak.



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Monday, March 22, 2010

KILOH NEEDS HELP! READ!

kiloh KILOH NEEDS HELP!

As most of you know, I had my amp & pre-amp worked on by Guitar Electronics in Phoenix, AZ. I have old-school, solid state, stuff. My amp is a 500 watt Soundcraftsman and it’s a dual stereo channel meaning that when I hook four speakers up to it there are 500 watts coming out of each speaker. Its dual stereo; two channels of stereo. It’s a monster.

My pre-amp is a Carver from the same period and it’s a top-end one. I paid almost a thousand dollars for it back in 1987.

Anyway, my system has had “problems” for the last eight years (or so). It had glitches, popping, cutouts, everything. I’d have to do shit like tap the output knob, on one of the stereo channels of the amp, to get it to come on.

I was bummed. I was so fucking bummed that I (about) quit listening to music, Man, my speakers are West German and TOTALLY kick ass. It was such a bummer to listen to music like that and so I (pretty much) quit.

Then the Village Idiot told me that he could fix my amp. I picked up the Village Idiot at the local drug rehab. I use the drug addicts to clean my home on weekend. I hire ‘em, work ‘em real hard, and scream at them when I’m not whispering sobriety in their ears. Anyway, the Village Idiot said that he could fix my amp.

This is a video of the Village Idiot working on my amp:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YjVnWbvUT9c

The Village Idiot and I went to Guitar Electronics to buy parts for the amp. After the Village Idiot couldn’t fix my amp, I brought it to Guitar Electronics. They told me that I had a BEAUTIFUL amp and that it would be their pleasure to work on it.

Guess what? It was just dirty is all! They gave it an acid bath and polished it up. They then re-calibrated it. I liked the job so much that I had then do my Carver pre-amp too. That was dirty too.

I then bought 100 feet of Monster Cable speaker wire. I bought expensive, thick and gold-tipped, wires to network all of the components together. The wire that hooks the amp to the pre-amp was almost $300.00.

I then bought two, personal, fans that I hung on the back of the Soundcraftsman amp blowing right onto the aluminum cooling fins. I hooked those fans into a wall socket controlled by a switch on the wall.

I fucking CRANK the music up and flip that switch; my amp stays as cool as a cucumber. I am LOVING LIFE right now. I am like a huge Phoenix rising up with laser beam eyes and a huge, throbbing… bass signal coming out.

It’s fucking GREAT! It is LOUD and 100% CLEAR. I am loving listening to music now. I am loving it.

You guys have sent me about a few hundred CD’s over the last eight years. Most of them were in a box in my closet. I was THAT bummed out. This weekend, I bought 500 discs worth of storage space and I have all of those discs put away in the proper category. I can’t wait to listen to them all!

For the last eight years, the only thing that played 100% on my system was cassettes. Luckily, I had a few thousand cassettes. But shit, this is an entirely different ballgame. This is POWER and CLARITY and I am wailing out!

This is one of the best things that I have done in the last ten years. The guys at Guitar Electronics said to NOT get rid of that amp. I’m glad that I didn’t.

Anyway, I want your help! Think about all of the music that I have helped whore out to you over the last ten years. I helped whore out a lot. You know that I did. I did it all for free too, never seeking one dime. I bitch-slapped whomever I needed to at the time to keep doing it. You all know that I did.

I’m asking for some payback! Help yer old buddy Kiloh with some music. If all of the thousands of you that I whored music out to just made me a couple of CD’s why… Do you see the vision?

By the way, I don’t do MP3, SHN, FLAC, APE any of that. I need WAV CD discs.

I’m seeking old Pink Floyd, Texas Psych, Garage Psych, Blues, Ennnnnnnnnnglish Psychedelic, new stuff (for me) like Jane’s Addiction, Violent Femmes, I need more Velvet Underground, Stooges, MC5, I need lots of psych comps. I need stuff!

Contact me here:
Rokysyd11@yahoo.com

That’s: rokysyd11 @ yahoo . com (remove spaces to mail)

I am LOVING LIFE! I have my own home so I can BLAST IT! Help a brother out!


Kiloh



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Friday, March 12, 2010

13th Floor Elevators Poster - Fake?

13th floor elevators poster
Re: 13th Floor Elevators poster:

This exchange was recently posted on the Texas Psych group and my Facebook page. I'm pasting it all here.

Ebay listing says:
VERY RARE Way back in the day the urban legends tell of smoking banana to obtain heavy duty highs. All you really got was a hell of a massive dose of being sick as a dog. This poster is one of the very first psychedelic posters ever made, it is very very rare and only for the advanced collector of this art form. From what i have learned about it over the decades, it dates right around to the appearance of "The Seed" with The Charlatans at the Red Dog Saloon summer of 1965. This is what old timers who knew this poster were telling me during the years.

Sonic 124 says on the Texas Psych Google Group:
Looks like some kinda cross between psych sounds&Velvets Warhol's Banana seller claims "From what I have learned about it over the decades, it dates right around to the appearance of "The Seed" with The Charltons at the Red Dog Saloon summer of 1965." Way out of my price range.

Kiloh Smith says on the Texas Psych Google Group:
The 'Elevators LP came out in late 1966 and the Velvets LP came out in 1967 so how can this poster date from 1965? Fake! It's not even a really quality poster.

Mike Harvey says on Facebook:
Kiloh, and the guy looking to buy the banana poster: Before I worked at Love Street, I spent some time at the Underground Railroad on Market Square. That was 1968 and I remember that poster. It came out after Donovan Leich's record, Mellow Yellow. There was even a rumor at that time that smoking banana peel could get y...ou high. It could easily be a knock-off, but the original was everywhere. I'm surprised more of them didn't survive.

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Thursday, March 11, 2010

Psychedelic Sounds of the 13th Floor Elevators Mono

Psychedelic Sounds of the 13th Floor Elevators Mono
Psychedelic Sounds of the 13th Floor Elevators Mono

Psychedelic Sounds of the 13th Floor Elevators Mono



Check out this vintage Psychedelic Sounds of the 13th Floor Elevators mono LP! It’s rare to find these in such nice shape.
This particular specimen went for $491.00 on eBay.

What's most the best about this album (and the band, really) is how they manage to sound truly trippy and totally weird without any over-the-top production techniques or surplus of technical skill. The album was recorded on a three track machine. The ONLY mix to get of this album is the powerful mono mix.

At this point, the 'Elevators really were a garage band, with all of the usual trappings; their songs were rooted in wonderful, grease-coated rock n roll, complete with nasty guitar riffs (courtesy of Stacy Sutherland) and snarled vocals (thanks to wildman lead singer Roky Erickson).

Their lyrics are pure gonzo poetry, loaded with mysticism and druggy imagery (and accented, of course, with a healthy dose of good old fashioned bad attitude). The guitar notes are fed through Stacy Sutherland's battery of effects, and there are plenty of acid-soaked solos flying around all over the place. Riffs and melodies are perched somewhere between blues-based garage punk and dream-addled pre-punk rock.

The most notable addition is Tommy Hall's "electric jug," a bizarre rhythmic instrument that garnishes several of these songs. Tommy Hall actually sang all those sounds. He held a microphone alongside the top of the jug and would make those noises into the jug. The jug was a prop that *maybe* added a resonation effect.

Just listen to some of these songs! "You're Gonna Miss Me" is a deranged slice of teenage snarl with a meaner-than-mean guitar line and a meaner-than-meaner-than-mean vocal, with Hall's jug floating menacingly in the background. "Roller Coaster" is an "epic" (over FOUR MINUTES!) mindbender with an absolutely archetypal guitar drone and a ghostly vocal from Erickson. "Don't Fall Down," with its chugging bass line and woozy backing vocals, is out-and-out hypnotic, and "Fire Engine" moves into full-on rock out territory.

The result is a whacked-out classic that bridges the gap between rock and the world beyond. It's the sound of a bunch of zitfaced teenagers formerly obsessed with cheeseburgers 'n' fast cars stumbling upon the mysteries of the universe. It's the sound of the 60s lurching into overdrive. It's the mono psychedelic sound, baby!

The Roky CD Club were the first to issue this album on CD waaaay back in 2003. It's still, arguably, the best sounding version. In 2008, Sundazed reissued it on vinyl from a copy of the long-lost master tapes and the mint IA original. Last year, Charly included it in their Sign of the Three Eyed Men box set.

TRACK LISTING:
1. Your’re Gonna Miss Me
2. Roller Coaster
3. Splash I (Now I’m Home)
4. Reverberation
5. Don’t Fall Down
6. Fire Engine
7. Thru the Rhythm
8. You Don’t Know
9. Kingdom of Heaven
10. Monkey Island
11. Tried to Hide





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Tuesday, March 2, 2010

J.M. Dobies / Mal Thursday Interview - Texas Tyme Machime

Texas Tyme Machine
Texas Tyme Machine Recently, J.M. Dobies (Mal Thursday) was kind enough to sit with us and answer some questions. Below is the interaction:

How did you get involved in radio?


I started doing college radio at WMUA in Amherst, Mass., back in '87, after I got out of college. I was the lead singer in a local band, the Malarians, and got invited to do a guest DJ thing where I brought in a bunch of garage records, and said a bunch of stupid things on the air. After that, they gave me my own show, which was the original incarnation of "The Mal Thursday Show." I would mix it up, playing new releases as well as the old buried shit that was my bread and butter, and segue from a Sinatra record to Iggy & the Stooges doing "Louie Louie."

By the way, the Malarians are reuniting in June to do a tour of Massachusetts to support the CD reissues of our LP catalog. It's pretty much of tour of Route 9: Boston, Worcester, Northampton, and Amherst. We're doing Boston and Worcester with Lyres, who have done some great Texas covers in their day: "We Sell Soul," "Enough of What I Need," etc.

Where does your interest in sixties psych stem from?

I was a little kid in the '60s, but thanks to AM radio and my older sisters, I got early exposure to not only the Beatles and Paul Revere & the Raiders, but also the Doors, Hendrix, and Vanilla Fudge, as the decade wore on. Like I said in an interview with the Miami Herald last year, "As far as I'm concerned, music's been going downhill since 1966." As John Lennon said, referring to Chuck Berry and Jerry Lee Lewis, "That's my period and I'll never leave it."

Sixties psych doesn’t seem like a great career move. Why?

Neither is radio, for that matter. And when I was working in commercial radio, I found it pretty much impossible to divorce myself from what I was playing. If I couldn't get off on it, it seemed dishonest to pretend that I did for the benefit of the listening audience. With the podcasts on GaragePunk, I may be preaching to the choir, but I know the audience is digging it. One reason that '60s garage and psych isn't a great career move is that the records were made over 40 years ago, which is to the present day what the roaring '20s were to the '60s. While the baby boomers' death grip on pop culture, combined with the fact that there was more great rock 'n roll made between '64 and '69 than there has been in the four decades since, has kept the music alive, there's no getting around the fact that it's ancient history. Pretty soon it'll be like Doo-Wop, totally marginalized. But not yet, thankfully.

Why Texas Psych?

I don't know if there was something in the water here, or what, but there was more good music coming out of Texas in the '60s than almost every other state in the U.S. Sure, New York and California had the major record companies, and San Francisco got all the hype, but the Texas psychedelic bands not only had a certain purity, they also rocked. Hard. Listen to the 13th Floor Elevators 1966 show at the Avalon Ballroom - none of the San Francisco bands could come close to that intensity. Of course, Janis and Chet Helms gave that scene the Texan flavor that helped put it over the top.

How did the "Texas Tyme Machine" come about? Is the show going to enter into syndication?

When I moved down to Florida in the fall of 2001, I created the "Florida Rocks Again!" radio show. It was my way of giving back to the culture, to show Floridians that so much great music had come from there, that Florida was more than just a national joke about rednecks, retirees, and hanging chads. It also allowed me to play a bunch of great garage and psychedelic records along with the Skynyrd, Tom Petty, and Sam & Dave stuff. Although we had a couple of lengthy runs on commercial radio, there was resistance on the part of most programmers to the overall obscurity of the show. There's also the unavoidable fact that a large percentage of the population wasn't even there in the '60s and '70s. They were in New York or Cuba.

In Texas, it's a different story. People take pride in their culture here, especially in Austin. I wanted to do a Texas version of "Florida Rocks Again!" even though there are already a couple of all-Texas music shows on the local airwaves ("Lone Star State of Mind" on KGSR and "Texas Music Matters" on KUT), I figured there was room for a more rockin' variation on the formula. Again, I could play all those great local '60s records, and give airtime to people like George Kinney, Roky Erickson, and others. I came up with the title "Texas Time Machine," and I even had some investors and a host, Dickie Lee Erwin, who had the right persona.

I encountered difficulty in the fact that corporate-controlled commercial radio is not at all receptive to new ideas or specialty programming, which they consider to be an "audience-killer." So if you manage to get your show on the air, you're stuck with a late-night time slot or Sunday mornings, which is not going to attract much in the way in the way of sponsorship.

Then I found out that the University of Texas has the trademark on the name "Texas Time Machine," which is some kind of a geographical mapping project. What a waste of a great title! So I changed it to "Tyme" with a Y, like Kenny & the Kasuals' "Journey to Tyme," and rather than wasting a year of my life trying to get the show syndicated for chump change, I decided to make it a regular part of "The Mal Thursday Show," which already has a built-in worldwide audience. And unlike a radio show or streaming internet show, a podcast is available indefinitely, 24/7, and it's free on iTunes.

What has the feedback been like so far?

There have been two all-Texas episodes so far, and I've gotten great feedback not only from the listeners, but from bands and labels here in Texas. The promo CDs have been pouring in, which is great. Also, I'm reaching out to the guys in the '60s bands, and giving them an opportunity to tell their stories. On Volume 3, the surviving members of the Wig are going to tell their tale, accompanied by their 45s and live tapes from the Jade Room.

If no syndication, are any individual stations interested in broadcasting "Texas Tyme Machine." Has there been any interest from the University of Texas at Austin’s student radio station?

I'd like to take a shot at it, but what's more likely is that I'll do "The Mal Thursday Show" on KOOP, the local community FM station, which shares a frequency with the UT student radio station. The UT station is limited to enrolled students, and going to grad school isn't in the cards at the moment! Part of the problem is that I've got a family to support, including two little kids, Liam, 5, and Lola, who's almost 4. I've got to hustle every day just to pay the rent. And I got laid off from my hated Microsoft job last July, so it's not easy.

I take whatever gigs I can get. For instance, I'm writing a Classic Movies column for the Austin Examiner, a Celebrity Headlines column for the Dallas edition, in addition to my blog, and I'm up for a featured extra role in the Coen Brothers' remake of True Grit. Luckily, I can ride a horse and I'm growing my hair out for the Malarians reunion tour, so I've got properly Wild West sideburns going on.

Are you going to focus on cities/regions per show? That could be cool.

Oh yeah. The current episode has a segment on the Dallas/Fort Worth area circa '65-'67, taken from Norton Records' great Fort Worth Teen Scene series. Of the new bands I'm playing on the "Texas Tyme Machine" shows, I'm showing a huge bias towards Austin and San Antonio bands, but those are the bands I've seen and heard, and more importantly, that I've gotten promos on. If any bands from the rest of Texas are reading this, send me your stuff. LPs, CDs, mp3s, whatever you've got.

Ten years ago hardly anybody, outside Texas, had heard about this genre on music. What do you attribute the (late) rise in popularity to?

Well, the first renaissance in the genre was in the '80s, when you had all those semi-legit garage and psych comps, and people like Doug Hanners, David Shutt, and Dave Baldwin doing those vinyl releases like Texas Flashbacks, Fire in My Bones and Houston Hallucinations.

In the early 2000s, there was a revival of interest in the music when garage rock was declared the Next Big Thing, and Little Steven started doing his "Underground Garage" show, and later his Sirius channel. There have been some great documentaries, like You're Gonna Miss Me and Dirt Road to Psychedelia, and all the fine work of the Roky CD club. There's also the undeniable fact that good music is good music, and people will listen to it if they get the chance. And thanks to the internet, that's easier than it was back in the days of scouring the Goodwills in hopes of finding some obscure psych 45 or waiting around for Pebbles, Vol. 69.

Are you uncovering any new gems? If so, tell us about it.

While most of the records from that era that haven't been completely lost have already been documented, there's still a lot of stuff that remains unheard, that was unissued, or only exists on acetates collecting dust in someone's attic. Researching the show, I'm always hearing great stuff for the first time. Or stuff I haven't listened to in 25 years. And although I'm something of a dinosaur, I'm hearing a lot of new bands that are really incredible. Austin has the Ugly Beats, the Jungle Rockers, Love Collector, the Black Angels, and I'm getting together with the Texreys to do some live shows. There's a great band from the UK, the Higher State, who do a killer version of the Golden Dawn's "My Time" on the new episode.

What’s the future of Texas Tyme Machine?

It's going to be more or less a quarterly feature on "The Mal Thursday Show," and if I can get it on the airwaves here in Texas, that will be a bonus. In the meantime, I just want it to be heard by as many as people as possible, especially fans of Texas music, like your readers.

DOWNLOAD:
The Mal Thursday Show #24: Texas Tyme Machine, Vol. 2

Mal Thursday sets the controls for the heart of the Lone Star State, as he takes y'all on another trip in a Texas Tyme Machine. The second volume in the series features tracks from Norton Records' essential Fort Worth Teen Scene series, killer cuts from bands out of Austin, Tyler, and Sherman, and San Antonio, and a set of songs by Texas artists reinterpreted by bands hailing from Boston, Pittsburgh, the UK and elsewhere.Presented in Living Monophonic Sound.


Tracklist:
THE BOTUMLESS PIT: 13 Stories High

THE BOURBONS: Of Old Approximately
THE FIVE CANADIANS: Writing on the Wall
SIR DOUGLAS QUINTET: It’s a Man Down There
THE GRAVEN IMAGE: Take a Bite of Life
ZAKARY THAKS: Won’t Come Back
THE WIG: DRIVE IT HOME
THE PASSIONS: Lively One
THE SENSORS: Rumble (bed)
LARRY & THE BLUE NOTES: In & Out
MARK V: Night of the Phantom
THE BARONS: Live and Die
THE CHOCOLATE MOOSE: Chocolate Moose Theme
THE ROOTS: It’s a Long Journey
THE BARDS: Alibis
THE CHOCOLATE MOOSE: Half-Peeled Banana (bed)
13th FLOOR ELEVATORS: I’m Gonna Love You Too
DMZ: You’re Gonna Miss Me
THE HIGHER STATE: My Time
THE BROOD: I Need You There
THE CYNICS: I’m in Pittsburgh (And It’s Raining)
THE CHESTERFIELD KINGS: 99th Floor
AMPLIFIED HEAT: Neighbor, Neighbor
THE UGLY BEATS: Take a Stand
THE FREDDIE STEADY 5: Cavestomp 2001
THE SONS OF HERCULES: Brain Dead
THE JUNGLE ROCKERS: Shake it
THE TEXREYS: Cave Girl
THE HICKOIDS: The Talking Hot Pants Blues

PLUG:
J.M. Dobies Writer/Producer
THE MAL THURSDAY SHOWFLORIDA ROCKS AGAIN!


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