« Back to Top Level | Various Artists

Various Artists - 2131 South Michigan Avenue: 60's Garage And Psychedelia From Usa And Destination Records

Track listing:
Volume 1
  1. One Girl Man - The Lost Agency 3:04
  2. I'll Make You Pay - The Shady Daze 1:58
  3. Got To Have Your Lovin' - Oscar And The Majestics 2:38
  4. Take Me Back And Hold Me - The Foggy Notions 2:31
  5. Echoes - Lord And The Flies 2:05
  6. Midnight Hour - The Messengers 2:32
  7. If You Ever Go - Ronnie Ross And The Good Guys 2:01
  8. Soul Finger - Oscar And The Majestics 2:33
  9. I'll Never Let You Go - The Jokers 2:20
  10. Do You Still Love Me - The Sheffields 2:46
  11. I'm The One For You - The Great Society 2:20
  12. Ben Franklin's Almanac - The Cryan' Shames 2:02
  13. Need A Little Lovin' - The Foggy Notions 3:00
  14. I Can't Explain - Oscar And The Majestics 2:15
  15. Don't Want To Cry - The Buckinghams 2:13
  16. Come With Me - The Boyz 2:33
  17. You're Gonna Lose That Girl - The Cryan' Shames 2:17
  18. I Cannot Stop You - The Cherry Slush 2:38
  19. Time To Dream - The Lost Agency 2:15
  20. Rowe Jukebox Promo - The Buckinghams 0:30
Volume 2
  1. Stop Cheating On Me - The Counts 2:34
  2. Til The End Of The Day - Trafalgar Square 2:09
  3. Hard Times All Over - The Boyz 2:14
  4. You Made A Fool Of Me - Lord And The Flies 2:42
  5. I Don't Want You - The Ricochettes 2:23
  6. Hard Hard Year - The Messengers 2:39
  7. No Chance Baby - Oscar Hamond & The Majestics 2:37
  8. What'cha Gonna Do - The Jokers 2:50
  9. I Don't Need Your Help - Gary And The Knight Lites 2:44
  10. Are You The Kind - The Flock 1:56
  11. Help Me Boy - The Daughters Of Eve 2:36
  12. I'm A Man - The Buckinghms 5:12
  13. My Girl Is Waiting - Oscar Hamod & The Majestics 2:27
  14. Lipt (Don't Mean Nothin') - Michael & The Messengers 1:56
  15. The Trip - Park Avenue Playground 2:29
  16. I Know - Prk Avenue Plaground 2:17
  17. Gotta Take It Easy - The Cherry Slush 2:07
  18. What Would You Do If The Sun Died - The Flock 2:47
  19. Time To Dream - The Lost Agency 2:17
  20. The Daughters Of Everadio Spot - The Daughters Of Everadio Spot 0:18

Notes


In the mid-'60s, Chicago had one of the liveliest rock & roll scenes in the nation, with great bands packing the city's teen clubs and a few even making their way onto the national charts. The most notable act on the Windy City garage rock scene was the Shadows of Knight, but they were far from the only game in town; while they recorded for the local Dunwich Records label (who had national distribution through Atlantic), the Buckinghams, the Messengers, and a number of other notable Chicago groups were signed to U.S.A. Records, an important regional label run by Jim Golden. Most of the U.S.A. masters have been out of print for years, but thankfully, Sundazed Records has stepped up to release a comprehensive sampler of their output (as well as their sister label, Destination Records), and 2131 South Michigan Avenue: 60s Garage and Psychedelia from U.S.A. and Destination Records is a fine, lavishly packaged collection of 40 rare tracks from their archives. Dunwich tended to focus on the tougher and grittier Chicago-area teen acts, while Golden demanded a bit more polish from his U.S.A. artists, so anyone hoping for a set of Back from the Grave-style bashing should look elsewhere. Similarly, the label petered out in 1968, so most of the "psychedelic" material here is of the "Wow, I Feel Strange" variety rather than authentic stuff for connoisseurs. But U.S.A had plenty of acts who could rock out, and Golden and his crew knew what to do with them in the studio; anyone with a serious taste for mid-'60s rock will be impressed with the scope and talent displayed on this set. The Buckinghams were U.S.A.'s biggest act, and their hit, "Kind of a Drag," wasn't available for this set, but their energetic take on "I'm a Man" shows they were heavier than their signature tune would suggest. While Oscar Hamod & the Majestics had one of the least graceful names in the history of Chicago rock & roll, they delivered some forceful R&B-influenced performances, including a great vocal take of the Bar-Kays classic "Soul Finger." The Messengers scored a Midwest hit with their version of "In the Midnight Hour," but the flipside, "Hard, Hard Year," is a great slice of moody folk-rock that deserves a wider hearing. Every scene had at least one all-girl band back in the day, and the Daughters of Eve were a great one, and "Help Me Boy" is top-notch AM pop. A long way from their later horn-infused recordings for Columbia, the Flock offers up some Byrdsian jangle on "Are You the Kind" and the impressively addled "What Would You Do If the Sun Died." The Lost Agency let loose with some deadly fuzztone swagger as they warn the opposite sex about their troubles with commitment on "One Girl Man." And The Cryan' Shames merge tough garage rock guitar with silky harmonies on the terrific "Ben Franklin's Almanac." As usual for a Sundazed project, the mastering makes the most of these rare tapes, the liner notes are entertaining and informative, and there are lots of great photos and label scans to go along with the great music. 2131 South Michigan Avenue is a superb tribute to one of the key labels on the Midwest rock & roll scene in the garage rock era, along with the excellent bands who created music worth documenting, and this is likely to be the landmark garage rock reissue of 2009.

Though the '60s garage band explosion was felt in every corner of the country, the local uprising of talent in Chicago thrived unlike anywhere else. The Windy City had the perfect infrastructure in place; from a booming population of teenagers, to hip music stores in every suburb, a proliferation of teen clubs willing to take their money, and a powerhouse radio station (WLS) equally up to promoting local bands.

When it came to giving local groups a shot at 45 rpm fame, no Chicago label--not even the hallowed Dunwich Records--was more prolific than USA Records. USA's Jim Golden was such a strong supporter of Midwest talent that he started up a second label focused solely in this area, Destination Records.

A quarter century into the CD age, it's hard to believe these pivotal labels have never been properly anthologized. Until now, that is! Sundazed once again arrives to the rescue with an exhaustive dive into the pure, undiluted garage side of USA and Destination Records; tapping into everything from priceless artifacts from the Lost Agency, the Foggy Notions, and Park Avenue Playground to label hitmakers the Buckinghams, the Cryan' Shames, and the Flock at their most rockin'. There's so much impossibly great music on these labels, we had to expand this collection to 40 tracks available as both a 2-CD set and a 3-LP high-definition vinyl set.