Algo Salvaje Vol 3 Vinyl LP 2022
1. TIGGY - LOS GATOS
2. LIBRE DE TI - LOS JOVIALES
3. ERES ALGO SALVAJE - LOS GEMINIS
4. RING DAG DOO (ANILLO DE VOODOO) - LOS GATOS NEGROS
5. TACONES ALTOS - LOS TIBURONES
6. QUÉ CHICA TAN FORMAL - LOS BOHEMIOS
7. EL MINER - ELS 4 GATS
8. ESPERARÉ - LOS PIROMBODAS
9. AL ROJO VIVO - LOS WATTS
10. CORRER - LOS FLECOS
11. MENTIROSA - LOCOMOCION
12. UN ROMáNTICO AMOR - ES AMICS
13. MES ÉNLLà - ELS XOCS
14. NACí DE PIE - LOS PASOS
15. MINIFALDA - LOS DIANA
16. SILVIA - LOS PAJAROS LOCOS
17. UN AMOR SIN IGUAL - LOS NIVRAM
18. SOLO QUIERO AMOR - LOS BRUJOS
19. ME REIRÉ - LOS SHAKERS
20. MIGUEL - LOS YUNIOS'S
21. ALGO MáS - LOS ZOOMS
22. ESCúCHAME ATARDECER - VARIOUS
23. NO TE DEJARÉ - LOS PROTONES
24. MONTAÑA Y MAR - LOS YETIS
25. LA LLAVE - LOS NO
26. ME HAS PERDONADO POR FIN - BERTAS
27. GOLPES - LOS FAROS
28. BOHEMIO - LOS WATUSI
The long awaited third volume of our "Algo salvaje" series, featuring untamed 1960s beat and garage nuggets from Spain. "Algo salvaje" is an anthology devoted to a rich period when hundreds of bands appeared all over Spain and, after paying attention to what their US and British contemporaries were doing, found their own way to vent their teenage rebellion through loud guitars. With amazing results! Many of the 28 tracks are reissued for the first time, including very hard-to-find records. This double LP gatefold package includes extensive notes by Vicente Fabuel featuring all the original record sleeves and artist photos. Algo salvaje" ("Something Wild"), now reaching its third volume, celebrates the darkest, neglected and rebellious side of Spanish beat. Internationally labelled as nuggets (after the original compilation of the same name concocted by Jac Holzman and Lenny Kaye in 1972 for the Elektra label), the more common garage rock label has been used to place and describe one of the most fertile chapters of rock & roll history during its most creative years. An underground story which has luckily become known, with participants from all around the globe which included anonymous musicians, independent record labels with impossible names and ridiculously limited pressings, often not more than a few hundred copies. The tracks chosen for the occasion, a selection filtered strictly by their musical value, adhere to the rules of the classic nugget genre while demonstrating the permeability of garage sound and its inevitable evolution at the turn of the decade (1967-1974) through mixes that embraced psychedelia, soul and even prog rock. Epic and pretty wild. Just the kind of material that this record label usually handles.