No-brainer top-shelf garage from Europe (and beyond..?)


Was never released on vinyl only a flexi was produced by "Notenbank", this is a DUB, "Hadshi" on the flip!
East-German Psych from Dresden!
 
Definitely the most tripped-out track I ever heard from Eastern Germany. As it was pressed on a flexi- it was probably an illegal, secret venture. Do you know anything more about the circumstances of its production?
Or is it a hoax...?
 
This is a selfmade dubplate, I want this song on a vinyl 45!
I've heard that "BlackPearlRecords" from Berlin want to issue it, but I don't care about that!

Some history:
On October,11 1965 summarizes the SED government a decision "On Some Problems of youth work and the onset of "rowdy groups"(Beatles)". Suddenly the beat music is prohibited in the media and the beat groups in the GDR disbarred. English names for bands are prohibited, henceforth they have to call themself "combos".

The flexi is from 1969 produced by "Notenbank" I don't know how much were pressed, I didn't find much info about "Notenbank"!

Joco-Dev-Sextett - "Das Einzige Was Mir Übrigblieb", "Geh Den Weg Nie Allein!" and "Hadschi" were pressed on Notenbank flexi-disc in 1969!
 
In 1971, DT64 brought a small edition of 45 vinyl out on Amiga! Only 23 runs with a quantity of 1,000 copies per issue!
Amiga DT64 Nr.3(1971) Joco-Dev-Sextett - "Stapellauf" / "Wenn die Schwalben wiederkehren"
Amiga DT64 Nr.5 (1971) Split 45 Joco-Dev-Sextett - "Wir lagen im Grase" / Uve-Schikora-Combo - "Das alte Lied"

At this time 1965-1970 the Beat and Psych was an underground movement in the GDR, hunderets of bands exist but they havn't the possibility to made a vinyl 45 or LP the only way was a 4-track-tape(8-track did not exist in GDR) to save their songs, the most of them covered songs from the Beatles or Stones or the sound was like that!
 
Resurrecting this thread to provide something I came across. It's from 1969 but it sounds like something from 3 or 4 years earlier.

Technically it's Irish beat...

 
Very interesting for 1969, and unusual for the post Hendrix/Cream heavy guitar era. Could have been a killer with the addition of a fuzz guitar break in place of the doot-doot vocals. Still, a great record. Showing again how cool a clean guitar played hard sounds.

Thanks Harvestman Man!
 
At the risk of crossing this with the (A+B)/2 thread, here are some top Euro two-siders that seem to have escaped mention:

The Namelosers "Land Of 1000 Dances/Suzie Q" (Sweden)
The Persons "All The World Is Mine/Drive My Mustang" (Greece)
The Fab "I Can Only Give You Everything/Our Little Rendezvous" (Holland)
The Kolmans "All'Improvviso/Ballata Di Un Giorno" (Italy, and a TOP want!)
The Dynamites "Tell Me Yes Or No/Too Late" (Switzerland)
Here are a few of these:
 
I have always found American labels much prettier to look at. Now I'm sure there is a simple reason for this like the lack of custom presses in Europe, or the fact that Europe was a dark grey place for years after the war. My ears also tend to respond better to an American sound, only the skirl of distant bagpipes can lift them more. Is this because those who rebelled against good king George had free-er thinking minds than us as a result of this traitorous behavior ? The French too rebelled against kings at the same time, but I have no French records in my collection, nor a desire for a vintage French car...
 
There are a few very cool Dutch language 45s around. One of my faves, translating as Purple Trousers.


Maybe obvious, but one of the most unhinged freakbeaters of all time: