AIP Records is a record label that was started by Greg Shaw’s Bomp! Records, being launched in 1983 to continue the Pebbles series. The abbreviation AIP stands for “Archive International Productions”. In 2007, AIP Records released the Pebbles, Volume 11 CD as the last of the albums in this landmark series. (More from Wikipedia)
One name that has come up repeatedly in these 40-odd posts is Greg Shaw, a widely respected music historian and the founder of Bomp! Records – which also includes the labels AIP Records, Voxx Records, Total Energy Records, and Alive Naturalsound Records (usually just called Alive Records) – and their associated Bomp! mailorder music service. It would not surprise me at all if I haven’t mentioned Greg Shaw in a third of these UARB articles. In addition, more than a few of the Under-Appreciated Rock Bands have released albums or EP’s on one of the Bomp!-affiliated labels. If I also included the albums on non-Bomp labels that I ordered through the Bomp! mailorder service, close to half of the UARB’s and UARA’s would likely have a Bomp! connection.
(May 2013)
In 1983, another long series of Pebbles LP’s came out on a brand-new label called AIP Records (standing for “Archive International Productions”) that was openly affiliated with Bomp! Records. As it happened, the very next disc, Pebbles, Volume 11 – with catalogue #AIP-10001 – would turn out to be my favorite album in the entire series.
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Even the most recent Pebbles CD’s on AIP normally have a copyright notice for BFD Productions (clearly a reference back to the original label for the albums, BFD Records).
GONN is another legendary garage rock band; their amazing song "Blackout of Gretely” was slated to be included on the original Nuggets album but was omitted due to its length (4:29 – most garage rock tracks clock in at 3:00 or less). But Greg Shaw had included this song as a bonus track on the reissue on AIP Records of Pebbles, Volume 1 CD and also put their follow-up single “Doin’ Me In” on the Pebbles, Volume 10 CD.
I have been collecting Pebbles albums for around 30 years and have also purchased many, many other albums that have come out on Greg Shaw’s record labels: Bomp, Voxx, AIP, Total Energy, and Alive. There have also been several compilation albums that have collected highlights from Bomp! Records releases over the previous several years, and I have most of those as well. One of the most comprehensive is Destination: Bomp!, a two-CD set that is subtitled “The Best of Bomp! Records’ First 20 Years”. Bomp celebrates its 40th anniversary next year.
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One of the other garage rock bands that I wrote about is the Outcasts. They won the statewide Battle of the Bands contest in 1966, the high water mark of the garage rock era – furthermore, they won in Texas, which probably had the highest concentration of 1960’s garage rock and psychedelic rock bands in the nation. The AIP Records series Highs in the Mid-Sixties concentrates on regional musical scenes rather than groupings of obscure songs from across the nation, and 5 of the 23 albums in that series are on Texas bands.
(September 2013)
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The Communists could not keep rock and roll out of the country entirely.
I have two delightful albums in my collection entitled Surfbeat Behind the Iron Curtain that were released several years ago by AIP Records. They feature mostly instrumental recordings made by Russian and Eastern European bands that were evidently officially sanctioned by the Communist governments. The small number of these recordings made it necessary for the label to create a faux “battle of the bands” between these groups and similar sounds produced by Western bands of the same time period. The music is actually quite good though fairly tame.
(April 2015/1)
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