close
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20111008012909/http://www.devildick.blogspot.com/

Friday, October 7, 2011

The Blisters - Sleepers E.P. 1988

BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
I posted a great 1986 demo by this awesome N.J. punk band over at my almost defunct demo blog Here: If you care to read & hear about that.

You can also access their Facebook page Here: Instead of me just copying and pasting. You should go "Like" them. They ruled. One of my fave old school Jersey Punk bands. Tell them Tommy from Social Decay sent ya....

Oh, and by the way, I'm getting Married today!

Cheers!

The Blisters - Sleepers

The Blisters - H2M / I Call You

The Blisters - That Boy Better Scram

Thursday, October 6, 2011

The Clique - Superman

BERJAYA
In honor of R.E.M. breaking up i give you a song they covered some long time ago. Not the biggest R.E.M. fan here but i dated a bunch of chicks who were and i guess some of that rubs off over time... Don't hate on them, don't love them... Check out my last post of them doing TDrak Globe from Syd Barrett.

"Superman" is a 1969 song by the Texas band The Clique, made more famous in 1986 when recorded by R.E.M.
It was written by Mitchell Bottler and producer/songwriter Gary Zekley and originally released as the b-side to The Clique's hit "Sugar on Sunday," itself a cover of a Tommy James and the Shondells song.
R.E.M. recorded it for their fourth album, Lifes Rich Pageant. It was released as a single and received a fair amount of radio play, but did not chart on the main U.S. singles chart, though it did reach #17 on Billboard magazine's Mainstream Rock Tracks chart.

Lead singer Michael Stipe was not as enthusiastic about recording the song as the other band members were, and as a result bassist Mike Mills debuted on lead vocals with Stipe providing background.

Anyway here is the original. A Pretty cool little 60's pop rock nugget.

The Clique - Superman

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

hated & lothed mix tape - june 2006

BERJAYA
BERJAYA

hated & lothed mix tape - june 2006 side a

hated & lothed mix tape - june 2006 side b

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Cat Mother and the All Night News Boys - Good Old Rock 'N Roll - Bad News

BERJAYA
BERJAYA
Just some good old Rock and Roll music. Produced by Jimi Hendrix. The record is a little noisy but its a crappy styrene copy and i only paid 25 cents for it! BUT HENDRIX PRODUCED IT!

Cat Mother and The All Night Newsboys was co-founded by Roy Michaels and Bob Smith in the fall of 1967. Michaels had previously been playing with Stephen Stills and Richie Furay in the Au Go Go Singers, prior to the formation of Buffalo Springfield. Initial members were Bob Smith on vocals, keyboards and drums, Roy Michaels on vocals and bass guitar, William David "Charlie" Chin on vocals and guitar, Larry Packer on guitar and violin, and Michael Equine on drums and guitar. Jay Ungar was also initially associated with the group, on violin, and rejoined the group for their second album. Core band membership consisted of Michaels, Smith and Equine.
The band's popularity in New York grew during 1967 and 1968, through regular appearances at the Cafe Wha?, which led to an engagement as the house band at New York's Electric Circus.
The band was particularly notable for releasing a Top 40 hit in the summer of 1969, reaching no. 21 on the U.S. Billboard Pop Chart, with the rock and roll medley "Good Old Rock 'n' Roll". The medley included cover versions of "Sweet Little Sixteen" by Chuck Berry, "Long Tall Sally" by Little Richard, "Chantilly Lace" by The Big Bopper, "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On" by Jerry Lee Lewis, "Blue Suede Shoes" by Carl Perkins and "Party Doll" by Buddy Knox. The single and the band's first album, The Street Giveth and the Street Taketh Away, were produced by Jimi Hendrix. The association with Hendrix came through the band meeting him in New York City. Cat Mother was initially managed by Michael Jeffrey, who also managed Hendrix. Cat Mother opened for Hendrix on several occasions, as a result. Other notable early appearances included playing at the Toronto Rock and Roll Revival, the historic concert headlined by The Doors, where John Lennon and The Plastic Ono Band appeared in a surprise performance.
Other popular songs by the band included "The Street Giveth and the Street Taketh Away", "Strike a Match and Light Another", and "Cat Mother". However, the band's principal chart success remained "Good Old Rock 'n' Roll", which was not representative of the diversity of its sound. Similar to contemporaries Moby Grape, Poco and the post-1967 Byrds, as well as predating The Eagles, Cat Mother was one of the first rock bands to blend rock and country music.
As part of the band's actions to sever ties with manager Michael Jeffrey, the band relocated to San Francisco as of 1970, and later settled in the Mendocino area. By the time of their 1970 second album, Albion Do-Wah, they were joined by Jay Ungar (violin, mandolin, guitar, & vocals), Paul Johnson (guitar), and special guest Lyndon Lee Hardy (vocals on two songs). The third album, Cat Mother, released in 1972, featured Michaels, Smith and Equine joined by Charlie Prichard (lead & slide guitar) and Steve Davidson (congas & percussion). By the time of the band's final album, Last Chance Dance, in 1973, Charlie Prichard had been replaced by Charlie Harcourt on guitar, harmonica and vocals. The band continued to perform until 1977.

Cat Mother and the All Night News Boys - Good Old Rock 'N Roll

Cat Mother and the All Night News Boys - Bad News

Monday, October 3, 2011

Something For The Car - Mix Tape

BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
Another worthless mix tape.... i made this for someone a long time ago.... when they left it stayed. a few of these tunes came from CD's.... yeah this is a vinyl blog. sue me...

Something For The Car - Mix Tape - Side A

Something For The Car - Mix Tape - Side B

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Glenn Burris - Drinking Song

BERJAYA
I Like Drinking!!!

Glenn Burris - Drinking Song

Saturday, October 1, 2011

Gillan - Mutually Assured Destruction

BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
One time Deep Purple & Black Sabbath vocalist Ian Gillan giving some food for thought.

Today is my birthday. Happy B-Day to me...

Gillan - Mutually Assured Destruction

Friday, September 30, 2011

The Troggs - The Troggs 1975 PYE REcords

BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
The Troggs were one of the toughest and most gloriously unpolished bands to emerge from the U.K. during the British Invasion era -- the leering, monolithic pound of "Wild Thing" and "I Can't Control Myself" was about the closest thing to the Stooges that emerged on vinyl before James Osterberg reinvented himself as Iggy Pop, and lead singer Reg Presley all but defined the word "lascivious" with his guttural howls and moans on their best recordings. The Troggs had dropped off the charts by the end of the '60s, but they were the sort of band that simply didn't believe in giving up, and in 1975 they returned to the studio to cut their first album in five years. Simply called The Troggs, the album found the group updating their sound just a bit, with the results at times suggesting a cross between Status Quo-style boogie and blue collar glam in the manner of Slade, especially on the honest self-celebration of "Full Blooded Band." The Troggs is dominated by covers, boasting only three new songs, but one of them, "Summertime," was inspired sleaze in the classic Troggs tradition (and features the best rudely suggestive stutter since "My Generation"), and you can't argue that the grimy and stripped down re-imagining of the Beach Boys' "Good Vibrations" (which rewrites the opening line as "I like the clothes she almost wears") took the song someplace Brian Wilson never would have imagined. The Troggs' take of "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" doesn't need to go on for five-and-a-half minutes, and the reggae-influenced recut of "Wild Thing" doesn't work especially well, but The Troggs demonstrate that these guys never forgot how to be rude and crude in the studio, and at their best they turned it into an art form -- not that they'd ever dream of calling it that.

This is a weird record....

The Troggs - The Troggs 1975 PYE REcords

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Steel Pole Bathtub - Voodoo Chile - Arizona Garbage Truck

BERJAYA
BERJAYA
Steel Pole Bathtub w/ a great noisy take on the Hendrix classic and an equally noisy flip. I always liked these guys w/ their wild brand of post punk grungy psychedlic rock and samples galore. I was lucky enough to catch them here on the East Coast back around the time Lurch came out. Still even have my Lurch T-shirt.... Although it seems to have gotten smaller over time..... I still need a copy of Tulip on vinyl. Anyone?

BERJAYA
You can check out their website HERE:

In the meantime, here is the Steel Pole Bathtub Wiki:

Steel Pole Bath Tub was a hardcore punk/noise rock band, formed in 1986 in Bozeman, Montana by Mike Morasky (guitar/vocals) and Dale Flattum (bass/vocals).

Morasky and Flattum moved the band to Seattle, Washington where Darren Mor-X (drums) joined the band, before they all moved to San Francisco, California.[when?] The band became known for their chaotic, noisy style and frequent use of television and movie samples, with several 7" singles and albums on Boner Records, before being signed to Slash Records and releasing their major label debut in 1995. Their signing to Slash was part of a mid-1990s free-for-all signing bonanza of alternative rock bands, particularly bands from the Northwestern United States in the wake of the surprising commercial success Geffen Records had with Nirvana, many of which ended in creative and ownership conflicts. Steel Pole Bath Tub and Slash's relationship was no different. The only album they ever released on Slash contained very few samples, which had previously been a staple of the band, at the insistence of Slash's legal department. The band hoped their second album for Slash would be a cover of The Cars' first album in its entirety, but the label would not allow that idea and then deemed the demos the band submitted (which contained three Cars covers) unlistenable and refused to release them. The band wouldn't release any more significant material until the rights to the music they recorded for Slash would revert to them 2002. In 2002, the band released those recordings as the album "Unlistenable", the title a play on a Slash executives comments on the material and reformed to play the Beyond the Pale festival at the DNA Lounge in San Francisco in November 2002, where they co-headlined with Neurosis and Tarantula Hawk.[1] They reunited to play a show at the Doug Fir Lounge in Portland, Oregon on September 4, 2008 as a part of MusicFestNW.
The group's song "Train to Miami," from the album The Miracle of Sound in Motion, was featured in a November 2008 television ad for the PC and Xbox 360 game, Left 4 Dead.[2] Mike Morasky is also responsible for writing and performing the songs by the fictional band Midnight Riders in the game's sequel, Left 4 Dead 2.

Darren Mor-X
Side projects

The band joined with Jello Biafra to form the group Tumor Circus, releasing a self-titled album in 1991.
Milk Cult, with Morasky and Flattum (and sound man Eric Holland) using the names The Bumblebee and C.C. Nova, released 4 albums between 1992 and 2000. Their last album, Project M13, was the result of an invitation from the French Government to be guests of the La Friche Art Collective in Marseille.[3]


Dale Flattum
Novex, a Dale Flattum and Darren Mor-X project, recorded with Vern and Justin at the Unwound farm, released as Kleptophonica (2002).[4]
Pink Teeth, a project including Dale Flattum and Zak Sally of Low


Steel Pole Bathtub - Voodoo Chile

Steel Pole Bathtub - Arizona Garbage Truck

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Gone Daddy Gone - Mix Tape

BERJAYA
BERJAYA
I made this tape the night before i left for a tour way back in 94 or 95 w/ my Dad. Hence the "Gone Daddy Gone" motif... We were 3 sheets to the wind. My dad chose the Steppenwolf song among others....

Gone Daddy Gone - Mix Tape - Side A

Gone Daddy Gone - Mix Tape - Side B

Monday, September 26, 2011

Jim Orange - That's My Baby

BERJAYA
Ok, a little help here. I could not find anything and i mean anything out about this records. I can't find anything about Mr. Jim Orange on a green record. I couldn't even find out anything about "Golly Records". The only Gaylarks i could find are from mid/late 50's and this doesn't sound that old and none of their songs are the same as this or on Golly records. As for Myron Smith on piano.... well, there is a bunch of them out there and none seemed to match. And nothing on L. Thompson & W. Gollender.... Anyone know anything about this "unknown" soul cut?

Jim Orange - That's My Baby

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Pvt. D.J. Sottilaro - The Voice Of Your Man In Service Through Courtesy Of Pepsi-Cola

BERJAYA
BERJAYA
When your digging for records you never know what you will find. And you find some strange stuff sometimes. I always buy the strange stuff as long as the price it right. But finding stuff like this always bums me out. It's like throwing out a part of someones life. Tossed away & discarded and no one gives a shit... Did Pvt. D.J. Sottilaro even make it out of the war alive? And why doesn't any family member care about this recording? I find it strange and sad.... Seems these were made by the Pepsi Cola company for service men in World War II to send home to family. They would set up portable machines and the men would make a record to send back home to fill family in on what was going on. The record is noisy but you can hear old D.J. telling it like it was back in 1943. I wonder why this was tossed away...?

Pvt. D.J. Sottilaro - The Voice Of Your Man In Service Through Courtesy Of Pepsi-Cola

Friday, September 23, 2011

22 New Songs: The Excellents, The Elchords, The Cadillacs, Ron Holden, Joe Hinton, Ronnie Love, The Blue-Belles, Safaris, Little Willie John, Etc...

BERJAYA
BERJAYABERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
BERJAYA
A bunch more 45's i picked up recently. I figure if i don't start putting these up in bulk i am never going to get to all the crap i have... I'm going to try to bunch some 45's like this on the reg.... Anyway, there is a nice mix of music here of all different styles from 1955 to the early 60's, if you can't find something you like in this bunch you should move along and never come back...

The Excellents - Coney Island Baby


The Excellents - Why Did You Laugh


Elchords – Peppermint Stick


The Cadillacs - Gloria


The Cadillacs - I Wonder Why


Ron Holden - My Babe


Ron Holden - Love You So


Joe Hinton - Love Sick Blues


Joe Hinton - You Know It Aint Right


Ronnie Love - No Use Pledging My Love


Ronnie Love - Chills And Fever


The Blue-Belles - I Sold My Heart To The Junkman


The Blue-Belles - Itty Bitty Twist


The Safaris - Image Of A Girl


The Safaris - 4 Steps To Love


Little Willie John - Until Again My Love


Little Willie John - Mister Glenn


Chris Powell And The Blue Flames - Goodbye Little Girl


Chris Powell And The Blue Flames - Chinatown


The 3 Friends- Happy As A Man Can Be


The 3 Friends - Dedicated (To The Songs I Love)


Micki Marlo - Little By Little