Girls With Guitars Got Eyes On You!

https://www.injerah.com/web/image/product.template/41049/image_1920?unique=cd790d8
(0 review)

BIS => 2025 04 25
1LP - ACE RECORDS
2024

26.00 € 26.0 EUR 26.00 € VAT Excluded

26.00 € VAT Excluded

Not Available For Sale

  • Statut
  • Genre
  • Format
  • Release date
  • Label

This combination does not exist.

Statut: BACK IN STOCK
Genre: ROCK
Format: 1LP
Release date: 2024
Label: ACE RECORDS

TRACKLIST 



Side 1


01    Get Away From Me - The Angels


02    The Hoochy Coo - The Fatimas


03    Ask Me - Debbie Williams & The Unwritten Law


04    Grave Digger - Unknown Group


05    Give Me Rhythm And Blues - The Mysteries


06    Bus Stop - The Hairem


07    Pink Dominos - Chiyo & The Crescents




Side 2


01    I Got My Mojo Working - Joyce Harris & The Daylighters


02    Chico's Girl - The Girls


03    If You Wanna Be Happy - The Debutantes


04    Dimples - The Missfits


05    Skinny Minnie - The Beat-Chics


06    Mary Had A Little Kiss - The Tomboys


07    Glue - The Ace Of Cups




DESCRIPTION




Bona fide all-girl bands the Hairem, the Girls, the Debutantes, the Missfits, the Beat-Chics and the Ace Of Cups are stars of the show on this new vinyl volume in our ear-grabbing “Girls With Guitars” series, providing further confirmation that girls can do what the guys do.


This collection opens with ‘Get Away From Me’ by the mean-sounding Angels (probably not the ‘My Boyfriend’s Back’ group of that name), a slice of feisty she-rock recorded circa 1965 that remained on the shelf at Philadelphia’s Swan Records until Ace rescued it about 40 years later, and closes with ‘Glue’ by the Ace Of Cups, a hippy outfit raved about by Jimi Hendrix in a Melody Maker interview back in 1967.


Elsewhere, ballsy-voiced Joyce Harris (think Wanda Jackson meets Tina Turner) teams up with Texas bar band the Daylighters to tear the roof off ‘I Got My Mojo Working’, teenage ice skater Debbie Williams sings lead with male garage band the Unwritten Law, guitarist Chiyo fronts the Crescents on the instrumental ‘Pink Dominos’ and, well, you get the picture. Those so inclined can learn more about all the tracks on the swanky inner bag containing a picture-packed 3,000-word track commentary by series compiler Mick Patrick.