The Flamin’ Groovies

THE FLAMIN’ GROOVIES
 
 
The Flamin’ Groovies  is an American rock music band whose peak was in the 1960’s and 1970’s.  They began in San Francisco in 1965, founded by Ron Greco, Cyril Jordan and Roy Loney.  They are perhaps best known for their song “Shake Some Action”; a cover version by American band Cracker was later featured in the 1995 movie Clueless.  The group have been called one of the forerunners of punk rock, and they also had a major influence on the power pop genre.  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 
In late 1974, Greg Shaw’s first release on his Bomp! Records record label were two tracks from 1972 album sessions by the Flamin’ Groovies that the band could not get anyone to release.  The “A” side was “You Tore Me Down”, backed with a fine treatment of the old Paul Revere and the Raiders song “Him or Me”.  As Shaw put it:  “All I knew was that music this good had to come out. . . .  And that’s as good a foot to start on as any, I reckon.”
(April 2010)
 
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The second single by the Poppees for Bomp later in 1975Jealousy” b/w “She’s Got It – was produced by Cyril Jordan of the Flamin’ Groovies; the first 45 on Bomp was by this band and was released in December 1974 
 
(December 2010)
 
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One fascinating view of the whole story is the history of the British Invasion as told from a musician/fan’s perspective – Cyril Jordan, a founding member of the Flamin’ Groovies (whose roots go all the way back to 1965) – which is the cover story of the current issue of Ugly Things magazine that also includes my own article on Milan the Leather Boy.  
 
(January 2013)
 
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The Charlatanssecond drummer was Dan Hicks, who later formed the band Dan Hicks and His Hot Licks.  In the late 1970’sCharlatans founding member Mike Wilhelm joined the Flamin’ Groovies as their lead guitarist for 6 years. 

 

(August 2013)

 
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The first CD of Destination: Bomp! in particular walks the listener through the chronological history of Bomp! Records, beginning with the “A” side of their very first release:  You Tore Me Down by the Flamin’ Groovies.  Greg Shaw’s liner notes about this song describe how Bomp! Records got started:  “When Cyril Jordan first played me this, and the other stuff that they’d done in England (including ‘Shake Some Action’) that nobody would release, I was stunned.  Then he said, ‘why don’t you put it out?’  I couldn’t think of a good reason, except of course that there was no way to distribute, promote or sell it. . . all I knew was that music this good had to come out.  So we did.  And that’s as good a foot to start on as any, I reckon.” 

 

(September 2013)

 
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The Flamin’ Groovies showed the way when their 1976 album, Shake Some Action (on Sire Records and Aim Records) moved a lot of vinyl by looking backwards to the 1960’s, vindicating Greg Shaw’s decision to step up and launch Bomp! Records by releasing their 1974 single, You Tore Me Down b/wHim or Me

 

As quoted in the book by Simon Reynolds called Retromania: Pop Culture’s Addiction to its Own Past:  “Greg Shaw soon decided that words weren’t enough anymore; it was time for action.  He folded the magazine Bomp! and injected all of his energy into Voxx, a Bomp! [Records] subsidiary label dedicated to the new breed of post-[Flamin’] Groovies garage bands.”    

 

(January 2015/2)

 

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The two songs that introduced me to Phil Gammage were on a sampler album entitled The Electric Radio Sampler Music Test (1993).  The album is probably intended to be played inside record stores as an inducement to purchase albums on sale by the label who released it, Marilyn Records.  It doesn’t look like much, but there is some great music on this little CD.  Besides the two Phil Gammage songs, there are two by Flamin’ Groovies guitarist Chris Wilson.   

 

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Marilyn Records was a European label that was founded by French musician Patrick Boissel in the mid-1980’s.  After a number of French and Spanish releases, Marilyn began handling the sort of musicians and bands that gravitate to Bomp! Records.  Suzy Shaw of Bomp! Records met Boissel at a record convention, and Marilyn Records became their distributor in Europe.  One result was a great compilation album that I have of previous Bomp! Records releases called From L.A. with Love (1992) that features the Plimsoulsthe Flamin’ GrooviesStiv BatorsJeff Dahl, the Stooges, and the Zeros

 

(March 2015)

 

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Robert Mulrooney recalls: “My first thought was, ‘What happened to all the fun rock ’n’ roll bands, like the Flamin’ Groovies or even Johnny Thunders the Heartbreakers?’ I used to make up silly nicknames for myself all the time. One was ‘Surfer Bootsey’ as a joke because you’d never see any funky brothers surfin’ . . . and the name just caught on. We were Bootsey and the Banshies at first — we misspelled it that way just to piss off all the serious Goth fans around Detroit at that time. And then one night, I drove by a strip club and saw on the marquee: ‘Featuring Reggie the Love Master!’ I just thought that sounded cool.”
 
(March 2016)
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Greg Shaw launched Bomp! Records in December 1974 with the release of the Bomp 101 single, “You Tore Me Down” b/w “Him or Me” by the Flamin’ Groovies, with the latter song being the Paul Revere and the Raiders song.  The first band signed by the new label was past UARB the Poppees, whose unabashed Beatlesque stylings were at odds with the established rock scene and the punk/new wave scene alike. 
 
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In the liner notes for Destination: Bomp!Greg Shaw says: “‘I Got a Right’ . . . remains one of Ig’s best songs ever, and one he still performs regularly.”  Both I Got a Right” and “Gimme Some Skin are included on The Best of Bomp, Volume One (as is the flip side of the first Bomp single, Him or Me by the Flamin’ Groovies); that’s where I first heard them. 
 
(December 2017)
 
Last edited: April 3, 2021