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4.0 out of 5 stars
Early Garage Classic, But Why Did They Mutilate Haunted Castle?, September 19, 2005
This review is from: In Person (Audio CD)
I bought this CD a few years ago, partly because it had the B-side "Haunted Castle". The only good copy of the song I had was on the noisy 45 RPM out of my sister's record collection (she hates all that old music now---lucky me, since she doesn't even miss the records I appropriated). "Louie, Louie" was the A-side.
Before I get into my only gripe against this CD, I'll briefly say what it is I like about it. Then I'll get back to the album itself in a minute. My regard for the music I owe in large part to the fact that I was approaching my next level of evolution when it came along, and I imprinted this and a lot of other music of the time onto my eager young psyche. It may not appeal to the younger listener. There are no extraneous exhibitionist guitar pyrotechnics here. It's minimalist and scruffy, strictly from the heart & soul, with just a dash of sham on the side. On the live material, they're like priests of Dionysus on a tear playing to a mass of drunken Greeks at an oversized frat party. Not literally, but it sounded like they were having a good time. Put the platter on the same spindle with Rusty Warren and Doug Clark & The Hot Nuts to recapture that time. Don't forget the booze and the sand on the floor, sticky and dirty.
As for "Haunted Castle", I loved that gritty, bare-foot, R&B dance instrumental. It was a trip to the amusement park funhouse. It was eerie, it was pagan, it was primitive, mating rite-of-passage stuff. It was great, to my impressionable preadolescent brain, and my older sister must have thought so too, because she played the 45 over & over & over (as was the custom in those days), with the raunchy sounding flip "Louie, Louie", at high volume when the parents were gone. It smelled like---freedom. I looked forward to those things that I would do when I got older, like get drunk & have sex, and play music loud. Yeeeee-haaaaaaayyyyy!!
Anxious to hear a good clean copy of "Haunted Castle" after so many years, I was totally dismayed, outraged, and disgusted, when I got to track 13 (how appropriate) & found that the beloved tune was inexplicably mutilated. About 2 minutes 11 seconds into the recording, a few crucial seconds of the last guitar ride (and the rest of the music) is brutally chopped out. What insensitive, incompetent dolt is reponsible for this? Did somebody nod out at the control panel during remastering, then catch themselves a few seconds later to switch off the pause button, figuring nobody would notice anyway? That's kind of like hearing: "My fellow Americans, ask not what your for your country." Just words, just a few seconds missing---right?
I can't stand to hear it. I made a digital transfer of the recording from off the 45 record, which is a shame, but what the hey---at least it's intact, and the scratchy sound adds character. Be forewarned: if you love this song as I do, this version has a serious flaw. Unless Sundazed, or whoever is responsible for the master, cleaned up their act and this is a re-release of the CD I have, which I doubt, track 13 is defective. If anyone knows anything to the contrary, please say so. There are no flaws on the read surface of my CD, it plays the same whatever player I use, and anyway I have another Kingsmen collection CD with the song on it ("The Very Best Of" on Varese Vintage)---and it has the identical flaw. So it's not a skip issue. I hope that they haven't ruined the original master. If they did, they need to splice in the missing piece from a good vinyl copy.
Aside from that, I love this CD. As per a previous review here, I think I have an old scratched up vinyl of this lp somewhere in my record collection, I'll check to compare crowd sounds. They probably did change it. Some of these tunes belong on the same homemade CD with "House Of The Rising Sun", "Hello Stranger" (another favorite of my Sis), "Green Onions", "Big Boss Man", "Heatwave", "Fingertips", and the like, maybe "Dancing In The Street" or even the throwback "Double Shot" if you're not stuck in period. Interspersed with "Out Of Limits", "Pipeline", "Since I Fell For You", "Our Day Will Come", "Fly Me To The Moon", "Cast Your Fate To The Wind", "Route 66 Theme", and so forth. The "Twilight Zone" theme wouldn't be out of place here. A shady region where the line between black and white becomes blurred and forgotten.
Although I love the Beatles, I like the Kingsmen version of "Money" better than theirs. It's grittier and it cooks. "Bent Scepter" (ha ha, get it?) is a moody instrumental 3 bar musically similar to "Money" that could remind one of staggering across the dance floor with the ceiling spinning, a bad hangover, or maybe crawling out of a primordial swamp. "The Waiting", yeah, like that one, surreal (the B-side "The Climb" ain't included). "Louie, Louie", of course. I like 'em all on this CD, pretty much, some better than others, the live with crowd sound is cool. Just a bunch of raucous alley cats yowling for mates. They definitely filled a niche back then in those days just prior to the British Invasion. America's Rolling Stones, before the Rolling Stones, before the Animals. But then, they were all just white boys copping the black man's blues. Nothing wrong with that. Let it spread, we all got the blues now.
© 2005 RAPWreckerds
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