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The Sting-Rays, also Stingrays, were a UK psychobilly band which recorded on Ace Records' garage and psychedelic subsidiary Big Beat in the 1980s.〔David Stubbs, Rob Young ''Ace Records: Labels Unlimited'' 2008 p.87 "Another example of the type of group Big Beat worked with was The Stingrays. As Alec Palao, the American-based English expat, one time member of the band and subsequent Ace consultant, recalls: "The band was an amalgam of everything we were into, be it rockabilly, garage punk, 1970s punk, surf, northern soul, folk-rock; we were omnivores." The Stingrays were the classic example of a band who had supersized on Ace's ever-increasing and eclectic output of lost music."〕〔Martin Jones ''Lover, Buggers, and Thieves'' 1900486415 2005 p.153 "This, and the fact that Big Beat were releasing ... ...played a track by then-current psychobilly band The Stingrays."〕〔Marc Masters ''No Wave'' 2007 Volumes 287-292 p.267 "as punk rock mutated into psychobilly there was a demand for an outlet for the primordial rock music of such acts as Johnny & The Jammers, The Meteors, The Stingrays and The Cramps - and in 1980 the Big Beat label was born."〕〔George Gimarc ''Post Punk Diary: 1980-1982'' 1997 031216968X p.275 "The Stingrays are proponents of the "back to Billy Haley" sound that has been lurking in English basements for the last two years."〕〔''The Virgin Encyclopedia of R&B and Soul'' 1998 p.369 "...in the UK where his influence on 'trash' guitar groups, notably the Stingrays and Milkshakes, has been considerable."〕〔''Maximum Rocknroll'' No.15 1984 "The STINGRAYS look rockabilly, act punk, and sound more 60s than anything else (note their covers ...)"〕 ==Discography== Most of the band's songs were written by Alec Palao: * ''On Self Destruct'' EP : Dinosaurs / Math Of Trend / Another Cup Of Coffee / You're Gonna Miss Me 1983 *"Escalator" 1984 *"Don't Break Down" B: "Cover Version" 1985 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「The Stingrays (1980s band)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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