axel
Tennalaga Class
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2011
The fact that Mr.Voelkel runs one of the biggest 60s mailorders in Europe somehow distracts from the fact that he also runs one of most excellent 60s garage labels these days, in my opinion.
At one point when ordering stuff from his mailorder I started buying one or two Break-A-Way releases just out of curiosity. It turned out that every single release was great: The Jagged Edge, United Travel Service, The Fifth Order, Morning Dew, The Roosters, The Jujus etc. Also the split 10"s with one group on each side. All of them superb.
The latest one I got is the Abstracts "Hey, Let's Go Now". Great early British Invasion stuff, somewhat after the Beatles but before the Stones, with touches of surf and other pre-Invasion elements. I really like that style. I guess not too many bands were so quick in adopting the new style, before the influence of the harder rocking R&B groups was probably much stronger than that of the Beatles. (Jack London & the Sparrows is another favourite of that specific era.) Funny thing is that the singer of the Abstracts says that they were doing this kind of thing before hearing the Beatles, and that at the time he even claimed that the Beatles stole from them. "Sanity returned somewhat later", he says.
There's a cool article and interview on www.60sgaragebands.com/abstracts.html
So, yeah, I'm a fan of Break-A-Way I must say.
By the way the label homepage seems to have been upgraded recently:
http://www.break-a-way.de/
At one point when ordering stuff from his mailorder I started buying one or two Break-A-Way releases just out of curiosity. It turned out that every single release was great: The Jagged Edge, United Travel Service, The Fifth Order, Morning Dew, The Roosters, The Jujus etc. Also the split 10"s with one group on each side. All of them superb.
The latest one I got is the Abstracts "Hey, Let's Go Now". Great early British Invasion stuff, somewhat after the Beatles but before the Stones, with touches of surf and other pre-Invasion elements. I really like that style. I guess not too many bands were so quick in adopting the new style, before the influence of the harder rocking R&B groups was probably much stronger than that of the Beatles. (Jack London & the Sparrows is another favourite of that specific era.) Funny thing is that the singer of the Abstracts says that they were doing this kind of thing before hearing the Beatles, and that at the time he even claimed that the Beatles stole from them. "Sanity returned somewhat later", he says.
There's a cool article and interview on www.60sgaragebands.com/abstracts.html
So, yeah, I'm a fan of Break-A-Way I must say.
By the way the label homepage seems to have been upgraded recently:
http://www.break-a-way.de/