I had to stand out and look in the windows, but there were these girls, just the sexiest girls that you've ever seen in the tightest clothes and the one great dance was the Bug. I thought it was the greatest one ever, 'cos they'd just do all this stuff, they'd move around and touch themselves all over, searching themselves as if they had a bug on them, just like a cat or something, and they would just be grabbing it from every place they shouldn't have been, and then finally they'd grab it, and they'd throw it on the person next to them and then that girl would start doing her dance - oh, man. It was kind of a dance; it was more like a conniption fit, but wow, a very sexy dance.
Showing posts with label Mad Daddy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mad Daddy. Show all posts
rhyming speedfreak who introduced every song as 'The Greasy Chicken'
pdf (256 pages/83MB) with thanks to the original sharer
When looking at an
album of music you know nothing about, song titles can help—for example: “She’s
My Witch,” “I’m Gonna Murder My Baby,” “Mama Keep Your Big Mouth Shut,” and
“Evil” are all good song titles, and they are all great songs ... Places with a higher murder or insanity
rate usually produced a lot of good music, Memphis and Detroit being two fine
examples. Same goes for places with a lot of drunks, like New Orleans and
Texas. Eventually you may learn to recognize what gentlemen with beards call
“regional styles.” For example, black guitar players from Memphis played too
loud through broken speakers; this was good. Drummers from New Orleans were
usually drunk and fucked up, so if they couldn’t find the beat they’d just play
a march and call it “second line.” ... Pittsburgh’s WAMO
boasted the legendary Porky Chadwick—“the daddio of the raddio, a head snapper and
dapper rapper, a porkulatin’ platter pushin’ poppa.” He wasn’t “Cary Grant but
can do what he can’t” and got his “PhD in insanity at the University of Spinner
Sanctum” where he always had a grape in his ear “to make my head ferment.”
Labels:
Burlesque/Pin Ups,
Comics,
DJs,
Fanzines,
Friedman,
JB,
Linna,
Mad Daddy,
The Hound recommends,
Tosches
We've boiled up wavy gravy and it's ready to flow
pdf scan from Cle #3 (5 pages/3MB)
this most intense,wildly talented man who sat in the studio surrounded by eight turntables and a variety of homemade noisemakers,gabbing full tilt in rhyme.Playing previously all-black labels (known then as race music) unknown to most white disc jockeys and pioneering the southern white version called rockabilly,Myers helped to popularize the low-budget records that were being cut in music stores, basements and the back rooms of diners. He followed his own tastes and eventually introduced a kind of humorous off-beat rhythm 'n' blues that he called wavy gravy.
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