Teenage Head

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (61 ratings)
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Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 60:15

eMusic Review

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Jayson Greene

International Editor

06.30.09
A sleazy blooze-rock classic from the First Power Pop Band
1999 | Label: Buddha Records

The Flamin' Groovies are one of the odder cult bands in rock and roll. They began, in the late 60s, as a band that unabashedly worshiped Beggar's Banquet-era Rolling Stones, and then they gradually morphed into a band that unabashedly worshiped pre-Sgt. Pepper's Beatles. The only thing that changed between these two periods was the lead singer. Either way, their devotion was total, even slavish, and they strove harder than almost any band around them — even in the Copycat Land of '60s British rock — to disappear completely into the skin of their idols. Of such curious ambitions was born a curious new kind of band: behold the first power pop group.

What makes the whole thing more remarkable, of course, is how the Groovies themselves have become the object of the very same cultish adoration that drove them. As the first Power Pop Group, they also became one of the very first bands that Record Store Clerks used to Inform You Of Your Ignorance. This record, from Groovies Version One, gets roughly 50 percent the Record-Nerd love, while the other half goes neatly to Shake Some Action, the pinnacle of their 12-string Rickenbacker period. It's sort of a… read more »

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5 stars just for the title

ricardo222

Seminal rock and roll: primitive and catchy, irreverent and mindful of the masters of the art. Catch some.

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Awesome

zaireeka

Rock! The first 10 songs are terrific. The next 6 are good but not as great as the first ten.

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They Say All Media Guide

Miriam Linna once opined that the Roy Loney-era lineup of the Flamin’ Groovies suggested what the Rolling Stones would have sounded like if they’d sworn their allegiance to the sound and style of Sun Records instead of Chess Records. If one wants to buy this theory (and it sounds reasonable to me), then Teenage Head was the Groovies’ alternate-universe version of Sticky Fingers, an album that delivered their toughest rock & roll beside their most introspective blues workouts. (In his liner notes to Buddha’s 1999 CD reissue of Teenage Head, Andy Kotowicz writes that Mick Jagger noticed the similarities between the two albums and thought the Groovies did the better job.) While the Flamin’ Groovies didn’t dip into the blues often, they always did right by ‘em, and “City Lights” and “Yesterday’s Numbers” find them embracing the mournful soul of the blues to superb effect, while their covers of “Doctor Boogie” and “32-20″ honor the originals while adding a energy and attitude that was all their own. And the rockers are among the best stuff this band ever put to tape, especially “High Flying Baby,” “Have You Seen My Baby?,” and the brilliant title track. And unlike Flamingo, Teenage Head sounds just as good as it deserves to; Richard Robinson’s production is clean, sharp, and gets the details onto tape with a clarity that never gets in the way of the band’s sweaty raunch. While Flamingo rocks a bit harder, Teenage Head is ultimately the best album the Flamin’ Groovies would ever make, and after Roy Loney left the band within a few months of its release, they’d never sound like this again. [Buddha reissued the album in 1999, adding quite a few bonus tracks in the process.] – Mark Deming

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