Shake Some Action

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Shake Some Action album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 35:48

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Great Lost Jangle Pop Album

CosmicBob

This is my favorite jangle-rock record of all time. Get this, and then get some of the later Barracudas records, which also featured Chris Wilson and his harmonies, but also sound more like "Children of Nuggets" early 80's sound. One note -- I don't see the punk influences here. This is pre-psych Beatles done up with good original song writing, great vocals, and a lot of spirit.

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Scene: San Francisco 1966-69

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The perfect storm creates an awe-inspiring rainbow. In the Summer of Love, that star-crossed solstice of the psychotropic year of 1967, all third eyes pointed toward San Francisco at the nexus of Haight and Ashbury, a sound-and-vision track of mind-genre expansion. Set and setting, like the happenstance of tripping itself, enhanced the soupcon of musical expression that shot the Bay Area to the forefront of popular consciousness. The counter-cultural and political upheavals of the 1960s had… more »

They Say All Music Guide

A lot had happened with the Flamin’ Groovies in the nearly five years that separated the epochal Teenage Head album and their return to American record racks with Shake Some Action. The Groovies lost their record deal with Buddah, lead singer Roy Loney had quit the band leaving Cyril Jordan as uncontested leader, and they had spent a lot of time in Europe, building a significant following in the United Kingdom. As a result, the Flamin’ Groovies on Shake Some Action almost sound like a different band, albeit one driven by a similar obsession with the utter coolness of pre-hippie rock & roll. (The fact that Jordan and bassist George Alexander were the only holdovers from the Teenage Head lineup probably had a lot to do with the different approach as well.) The rawer blues and rockabilly accents were gone from the Groovies’ sound, with the guitar-fueled cool of the British Invasion era taking their place. While this version of the Flamin’ Groovies didn’t rock out with the same manic fervor as they did on Flamingo or Teenage Head, they could indeed rock when they felt so inclined, as demonstrated by the glorious “Please Please Girl,” “I Can’t Hide,” and “Let the Boy Rock and Roll,” while the Brit-flavored take on “St. Louis Blues” showed that some shades of the old band were still visible. And the title cut was a stunner — a brilliant evocation of the adventurous side of British rock circa 1966, “Shake Some Action” was tough, moody, wounded, and gloriously melodic all at once, and by its lonesome served as a superb justification for the Groovies’ new creative direction. If Shake Some Action was the first salvo from the new and improved Flamin’ Groovies, it also demonstrated that this edition of the band had as much promise as the Loney-fronted group. – Mark Deming

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