Garage rock wasn’t just an American phenomenon. While teenage American knuckleheads were banging on their guitars and singing in fake English accents, English knuckleheads were banging on their guitars and singing in fake American accents. The Troggs, who formed in 1964 in the UK town of Andover, weren’t true garage rockers. They weren’t teenagers; frontman Reg Presley was 25 by the time “Wild Thing” hit. And they weren’t sloppy amateurs, either. “Wild Thing” wasn’t a regional obscurity that hit big; the Troggs were a professional band with a manager and everything. And yet “Wild Thing,” in all its simplistic hammering hormonal brilliance, is a sacred garage rock text — the sort of song that might as well be a standard the first time you hear it
A few months ago, Gorillaz released their second album in as many years, The Now Now, and today they’ve returned with a new music video for “Tranz” off of it. It finds the animated band getting together for what a press release says is their first live performance since their 2010 MTV EMA’s appearance. The “Tranz” video finds the four animated cartoon band members playing on an intergalactic light-up stage.
The “Tranz” clip was co-directed by Jamie Hewlett and Nicos Livesey. Watch it below.
0 Yorumlar