From ’’ The Gurus Are Hear! ’’
Label: Sundazed Music – SC 11130
Format: CD, Album, Mono
Country: US
Released: 2003
Tracklist
01. Come Girl
02. It Just Won’t Be That Way
03. Contact
04. Breakaway
05. Cry, Cry
06. Roads To Nowhere
07. Blue Snow Night
08. Louie Louie
09. Everybody’s Got To Be Alone Sometime
10. Rainy Day In London
11. Mystic
12. Shaker Life
Bonus Tracks
13. They All Got Carried Away
14. Blue Snow Night (Alternate Version)
15. Cry, Cry (Alternate Inst. Version)
16. Mystic (Alternate Version)
17. Contact (Alternate Version)
Vocals – John Lieto
Notes
Issued in a standard jewel case with an 8-page booklet.
Features the entire unissued 1967 Gurus album in its original intended running order, plus bonus tracks.
1, 7. Recorded: June 1966. United Artists 45 - UA 50089.
2, 9. Recorded: February 1967. United Artists 45 - UA 50140.
3, 13. Recorded: January 1966. Previously unissued.
4. Recorded: June 1966. Previously unissued.
5, 6, 8. Recorded: December 1966. Previously unissued.
10, 11, 12, 14. Recorded: August 1966. Previously unissued.
The Gurus Are Hear! was actually advertised in Billboard and Cashbox in 1967, but the album was canceled only a few weeks before its projected release.
More than 35 years later, it finally emerged as this Sundazed CD, augmented naturally by five bonus cuts.
So is it just as mysterious and exotic as psychedelic collectors suspected? Not exactly, but it’s a pretty interesting if slightly contrived and kitschy hybrid of psychedelic rock and Middle Eastern music.
As it turns out, the best of their demented anguished-psychedelia-in-a-falafel-restaurant-bellydancing-room had already been issued on their two singles (both sides of which are included on the album).
From those 45s, “Come Girl,“ “Blue Snow Night,“ and “Everybody’s Got to Be Alone Sometime“ are genuinely fine and rather ahead-of-their-time songs. Singer John Lieto howls like a pained cantor while the band plays psychedelia fit for a harem, with oud trills, raga-rock electric guitar, bent notes, and tortured minor keys aplenty, though not bereft of some garage rock energy and hooks.
------------------------
“Louie Louie“ is an American rock ’n’ roll song written by Richard Berry in 1955.
A recording by The Kingsmen in 1963 is the best-known version.
Richard Berry released his version in April 1957 (Flip Records 321), originally as a B-side, with his backing band the Pharaohs.
Cover versions
The Kingsmen
Raiders
Paul Revere & the Raiders
1960s
Otis Redding for his 1964 debut album Pain in My Heart
The Beach Boys
Ray Davies
The Kinks
The Who Pete Townshend
The Sandpipers
Els Corbs
The Troggs
Friar Tuck
Frank Zappa
The Sonics
The Swamp Rats
1970s
Motörhead
Flamin’ Groovies
Led Zeppelin
Flash Cadillac & the Continental Kids
Toots & the Maytals
Hot Chocolate
The Clash
1980s
Black Flag
39 Clocks
Pinker Tone
University of Southern California Marching Band - naked gun
Grateful Dead
Joan Jett and the Blackhearts
Ross Shafer
Craig Cole
The Fat Boys
Rhino Records - The Best of Louie Louie
Rice University Marching Owl Band
Ultramagnetic MC’s
1990s
Steve Plunkett (Autograph) The Simpsons Homer Goes to College
Iggy Pop
Michael Moore’s Capitalism: A Love Story
Jim Jarmusch Coffee and Cigarettes
Young MC
Coupe de Ville
Dave (1993) Kevin Kline’s Dave Kovacs
Robert Plant Wayne’s World 2
Mr. Holland’s Opus
Chevy Chase film Man of the House
Down Periscope
Buffy the Vampire Slayer - Band Candy
The Three Amigos
2000s
Stolen Kisses of Dawson’s Creek
24 Hour Party People - John the Postman
Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band
Michael Moore’s Capitalism: A Love Story
The Smashing Pumpkins
Legacy
It is unknown exactly how many versions of “Louie Louie“ have been recorded, but it is believed to be over 1,500 (according to .), surpassing “Yesterday“ by The Beatles as most recorded rock song ever.
The Kingsmen version has remained the most popular version of the song, retaining its association with wild partying. It enjoyed a comeback in 1978-79 and was associated with college fraternity parties when it was sung, complete with the supposedly obscene lyrics, by Bluto (John Belushi) and his fellow Delta House brothers in the movie National Lampoon’s Animal House despite the anachronism of the film taking place in 1962, a year before the Kingsmen recording.
Some bands have taken liberties with the lyrics, including attempts to record the supposed “obscene lyrics“. It is believed the first artists to do so were The Stooges, whose version can be heard on their live album Metallic K.O. Iggy Pop later recorded a more civilized cover version of the song, with new lyrics composed by Pop, for his 1993 album American Caesar. He continues to play it live at shows.
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