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Back from the Grave, Volumes 9 & 10 (CD) : ウィキペディア英語版
Back from the Grave, Volumes 9 & 10 (CD)
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''Back from the Grave, Volumes 9 and 10 (CD),'' is numerically, though not chronologically, the fifth installment in the series of Back from the Grave of garage rock compilations released on compact disk in 2015 which, unlike the previous set of CD releases issued between 1996-2000, which it will be replacing, attempts to faithfully replicate the contents of the ''Back from the Grave'' LPs, which will bring the series for the first time into multi-medium coherence. Like all of the entries in the series it was assembled by Tim Warren of Crypt Records. In keeping with all of the entries in the series, and as indicated in the subheading which reads "Raw Blastin' Mid 60s Punk," this collection consists of many songs which display the rawer and more aggressive side of the genre and are often characterized by the use of fuzztone-distorted guitars and rough vocals.〔〔 - CD Liner notes and cover artwork.〕 As with all of entries in the series, the set generally excludes psychedelic, folk rock, and pop-influenced material in favor of basic primitive rock and roll.〔〔〔
The CD is enclosed in a Digipack which, on front, features a highly satirical cartoon by Olaf Jens depicting noticeably gleeful revivified "rock and roll" zombies who, on this occasion, target their customary victims: followers of supposedly "heretical" genres of music which have come to prominence over the years, which in this case include heavy metal, hardcore punk (with the insinuation that it not "true" punk), rap, and modern pop-country—all done with a noticeable disdain for iPhones, music downloads, and other specimens of current popular technology.〔 In the foldout of one of two booklets enclosed is another satirical cartoon by Olaf Gens taken from the front cover of the Volume 10 LP.〔 The two booklets contain well-researched liner notes written by Chris Bishop of Garage Hangover.com which convey basic information about each song and group, such as origin, recording date, and biographical sketches, as well as photographs of the bands.〔 Each booklet's information corresponds to the tracks on one of the LPs, the first for Volume 9 and the second for Volume 10.〔

The first half of the set consists of tracks from the Back From the Grave, Volume 9 LP, beginning with the driving protopunk of "Circuit Breaker," by the Pastels, from Pasco, Washington.〔 The High Spirits form Saint Louis Park, Minnesota, do a version of the Zombies' "It's Alright With Me," which at one point shifts from a slow tempo that accelerates in cadence, rising to an organ-drenched climax consummated by a guitar solo and cathartic screams.〔 The Emeralds from Greenwood, Indiana perform the gritty blues-based "Like Father Like Son," which recounts a tale based on ''A Tale of Two Cities'', by Victorian novelist Charles Dickens, in which the character Jerry Cruncher is a porter by day and a grave robber at night, whose lyrics chime: "...my son goes to the church where they wear the black capes where you're taught not to have your fun..."〔 The Gentlemen, from Dallas, Texas perform the 1965 demo acetate version of "It's a Cry'n Shame."〔 Knoll Allen And The Noble Savages sing the highly primitive sexually-charged "Animal."〔 On track 16, James Bond & The Agents perform "Wild Angel," which is the opening cut on the Back From the Grave, Volume 10 LP edition.〔 The Four, from Brownville, Tennessee sing the highly suggestive "69," which was recorded at Sam Phillips' Sun Studio in Memphis and is set to crunching Kink's style riffs.〔 "Return to Innocence" is by the Expressions, from Ringgold Georgia, and previously appeared on the ''Destination Frantic Volume Three'' compilation, put out by Zone 66 Records. The Hotbeats from Bristol, Rhode Island perform "Listen."〔 The set closes with GMC and the Arcelles humorous send up of the Sonics' "The Witch."〔
==Track listing==

#The Pastels: "Circuit Breaker"
#The High Spirits: "It's Alright with Me"
#The Warlocks: "Beware"
#The Emeralds: "Like Father Like Son"
#The Why-Nots: "Tamborine"
#The Turncoats: "Something Better"
#The Classics: "I'm Hurtin'"
#The Raevins: "The Edgge Of Time"
#Lord Charles & The Prophets: "Don't Ask Me No Questions"
#The Gentlemen, "It's a Cry'n Shame"
#The Shakles: "Whizz #7"
#Unknown Artist: "When I Feel Better"
#Knoll Allen and the Noble Savages: "Animal"
#The Donshires: "Sad and Blue"
#The Starfyres: "No Room for Your Love"
#James Bond and the Agents: "Wild Angel"
#John English III and the Heathens: "I Need You Near"
#The Four: "69"
#The Expressions: "Return to Innocence"
#The Orphans: "Without You"
#The Sires: "Don't Look Now"
#It's Them/TTHHEMM: "Baby (I Still Want Your Lovin')"
#The Orphans: "Hey Gyp"
#Nobodys Children: "Mother's Tin Moustache"
#South' Soul: "Lost"
#The Hotbeats: "Listen"
#The Hard Times: "Mr. Rolling Stone"
#Four More: "Problem Child"
#The Color: "Young Miss Larsen"
#GMC and the Arcelles: "The Witch"

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