Various Artist - Teen Beat, Volume 5: Another 30 Great Rockin' Instrumentals (2000)
BAND/ARTIST: Various Artist
- Title: Teen Beat, Volume 5: Another 30 Great Rockin' Instrumentals
- Year Of Release: 2000
- Label: Ace
- Genre: Rock & Roll, Surf Rock
- Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
- Total Time: 01:13:57
- Total Size: 197/343 Mb (scans)
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Routers - Let's Go (Pony)
02. Sandy Nelson - Let There Be Drums
03. Surfaris, The - Point Panic
04. Jack Nitzsche - The Lonely Surfer
05. Booker T. & the MG's - Green Onions
06. Sil Austin - Slow Walk
07. Phil Harvey - Bumbershoot
08. Billy Joe & The Checkmates - Percolator
09. T-Bones, The - No Matter What Shape (Your Stomach's In)
10. Martin Denny - Quiet Village
11. Doc Bagby - Dumplin's
12. Gone All Stars, Buddy Lucas - 7-11
13. Kingsmen, The - Week End
14. Mar-kets, The - Surfer's Stomp
15. Frantics, The - Werewolf
16. Paul Revere & the Raiders - Like Long Hair
17. James Booker - Gonzo
18. Boots Randolph - Yakety Sax
19. Link Wray - Raw-Hide
20. Ray Bryant Combo - The Madison Time, Pt. 1
21. Pat & the Satellites - Jupiter
22. Rumblers, The - Boss
23. Mar-Keys, The - Last Night
24. Mark II, The - Night Theme
25. Pyramids - Penetration
26. Chuck Alaimo Quartet - Leap Frog
27. Jimmy & the Nighthoppers - Night Hop
28. Arthur "Guitar Boogie" Smith - Guitar Boogie
29. Bill Doggett - Honky Tonk, Pt. 1
30. Bill Doggett - Honky Tonk, Pt. 2
The appearance of this fifth volume in the Teen Beat series is a testament to its continuing popularity among thousands of red-blooded instrumental fans who have supported the series as it has evolved into the ultimate compendium of classics from the late 50s and early 60s.
Sadly, it seems this volume may be the last simply because the supply of hits on which the series depends has become exhausted. However, rest assured we are already busy formulating new instrumental concepts for those unable to satisfy their craving for those seemingly endless configurations of wailing guitars, blastin' saxes and thunderous drums, not to mention the odd keyboard blast, which make up the so-called "instro" genre.
We hate to compare like with like but Volume 5 is arguably the best TEEN BEAT yet, because it most accurately reflects the spirit and musical diversity of the times, while retaining its cohesion as a listening experience. There are surfing classics - Point Panic (Surfaris), Penetration (Pyramids) and Boss (Rumblers)-.-R&B grooves spearheaded by Bill Doggett's groundbreaking Honky Tonk whose influence can also be detected in Sil Austin's Slow Walk, Doc Bagby's Dumplin's, "7-11" (Gone All-Stars) and Weekend by the Kingsmen-.-and pounding rockers, (Jupiter C by Pat & the Satellites), Leap Frog (Chuck Alaimo) and Paul Revere's Like Long Hair, all set against a rich backdrop of hardy perennials such as Last Night, Green Onions and Let There Be Drums. And there are half as many goodies again, almost all of them classics.
Surfer's Stomp (Mar-Kets), Let's Go (Routers) and No Matter What Shape (T-Bones) were three hits produced by Joe Saraceno, a business graduate from New York who migrated to California in the mid-50s and was working as an auditor for US Steel when a friend introduced him to someone in the record business. Fancying himself as a vocalist, Saraceno got together with a friend and lucked into a one-off hit (as Tony & Joe) with The Freeze in the summer of 1958. Emboldened by this seemingly effortless rite of passage, Saraceno became an indie producer specialising in studio-contrived rock instrumentals characterised by their razor-sharp production.
As always, it's the photos (including previously unseen pics of the Frantics and the Mark II), original trade ads and ephemera which bring it all to life and it goes without saying that the digital reproduction from primary sources is second to none. It's a winner!~By Rob Finnis
Sadly, it seems this volume may be the last simply because the supply of hits on which the series depends has become exhausted. However, rest assured we are already busy formulating new instrumental concepts for those unable to satisfy their craving for those seemingly endless configurations of wailing guitars, blastin' saxes and thunderous drums, not to mention the odd keyboard blast, which make up the so-called "instro" genre.
We hate to compare like with like but Volume 5 is arguably the best TEEN BEAT yet, because it most accurately reflects the spirit and musical diversity of the times, while retaining its cohesion as a listening experience. There are surfing classics - Point Panic (Surfaris), Penetration (Pyramids) and Boss (Rumblers)-.-R&B grooves spearheaded by Bill Doggett's groundbreaking Honky Tonk whose influence can also be detected in Sil Austin's Slow Walk, Doc Bagby's Dumplin's, "7-11" (Gone All-Stars) and Weekend by the Kingsmen-.-and pounding rockers, (Jupiter C by Pat & the Satellites), Leap Frog (Chuck Alaimo) and Paul Revere's Like Long Hair, all set against a rich backdrop of hardy perennials such as Last Night, Green Onions and Let There Be Drums. And there are half as many goodies again, almost all of them classics.
Surfer's Stomp (Mar-Kets), Let's Go (Routers) and No Matter What Shape (T-Bones) were three hits produced by Joe Saraceno, a business graduate from New York who migrated to California in the mid-50s and was working as an auditor for US Steel when a friend introduced him to someone in the record business. Fancying himself as a vocalist, Saraceno got together with a friend and lucked into a one-off hit (as Tony & Joe) with The Freeze in the summer of 1958. Emboldened by this seemingly effortless rite of passage, Saraceno became an indie producer specialising in studio-contrived rock instrumentals characterised by their razor-sharp production.
As always, it's the photos (including previously unseen pics of the Frantics and the Mark II), original trade ads and ephemera which bring it all to life and it goes without saying that the digital reproduction from primary sources is second to none. It's a winner!~By Rob Finnis
Instrumental | Oldies | Rock | FLAC / APE
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