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The Raunch - Total Raunch

The Raunch - Total Raunch

Musician: The Raunch
Album title: Total Raunch
Style: Garage Rock
Released: 2015
Country: Germany
Size MP3 version: 1670 mb
Size APE version: 1180 mb
Size WMA version: 1856 mb
Rating ✫: 4.7
Votes: 190
Format: MP1 ADX DXD AC3 MP3 XM AU
Genre: Rock

The Raunch - Total Raunch

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The Raunch - Total Raunch
MP3 version ZIP archive

1180 downloads at 21 mb/s
The Raunch - Total Raunch
APE/FLAC version ZIP archive

1856 downloads at 22 mb/s
The Raunch - Total Raunch
WMA version ZIP archive

1670 downloads at 18 mb/s

Tracklist Hide Credits

A1 A Little While Back
Written-By – S. Katz*
A2 I Say You're Wrong
Written-By – S. Katz*
A3 Hungry
Written-By – B. Mann - C. Weil*
A4 Hey Joe
Written-By – D. Valenti*
A5 Tobacco Road
Written-By – John D. Loudermilk

Companies, etc.

  • Recorded At – Ren-Vell Records

Credits

  • Bass – Frank Taxiera
  • Design, Layout – Andreas Ehrengard
  • Drums – Tommy Walker
  • Lead Guitar – Jay Manning
  • Rhythm Guitar, Vocals – Sandy Katz

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Rights Society: GEMA



Link:

Hirah
The Raunch from Ossining, N.Y. were one of countless mid sixties groups born into a healthy local garage scene. In the short time of their existence, the Raunch released a legendary 7”, made it with one track onto the collectable “Battle Of The Bands” LP on the regionally active Ren-Vell Label and in 1967 recorded another until now unreleased pair of tracks. Both sides of their sole single on Bazaar Records, are good examples of classic 60s garagepunk. “A Little While Back” is a crude heavy fuzz punker with a blistering guitar solo perfectly backed with “I Say You’re Wrong”, a tough ’n’ moody song with the classic garage girl-treats-boy-bad lyrics on the flip. While both sides of the 7” were group originals written by Sandy Katz, their LP contribution for Ren-Vell was a cover of Paul Revere & The Raiders’ “Hungry” - played by the group in their unique “raunchy style” of course. Even more unique is the treatment the boys gave to their unreleased recordings of “Hey Joe” and “Tobacco Road”. Again recorded at Ren-Vell in 1967, both covers are unbelievable ultra heavy fuzz killers with a wild brand of slashing and uncompromising guitar playing. By all accounts, the studio engineer ran into the cellar to escape the loud, fuzzy noise! Despite losing several battle of the bands contests, their ultimate victory comes in the shape of this one-sided Break-A-Way release. Five tracks with the excitement and power for two LP sides, all of which are savage Garage Punk and once heard, unforgettable raunchy 60s punk.