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Sunday, July 5, 2026

Mickey Keller & the Spitfires

Million Dollar Shack   EP

(Tessy Records)




This four-rollick Hillbilly jackrabbit wax circulates at 45 rpm, and keepin' up is gladsome recreation. Elbows-flying buck-dancers can be forgiven for thinking these poultry-pluckers are from back up in the Ozarks, but truth to tell, the drummerless three hang hats in Hannover. Cover art by Marcel Bontempi.

Recommended: "Gone Baby Gone," "My Suzy Jane," "Sneaky Pete," "I'm Ready"

Videos: "Gone Baby Gone" (live 2023)   "My Suzy Jane" (live 2022)   "I'm Ready" (features both trio footage and scenes from b/w teens B-film.)


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Mickey and band played the 2025 Massen Dirt Track festival, in Lichterfeld-Schacksdorf

Vampire Bats  

Vampire's Delight

(Gollipop Records)







The swerving Rock'n'Roll someway etched into discs rarely stomps its brakes, preferring instead to smash clean through impediments and rocket to destinations uncharted. Merged warning/relish is here intended. Only the trash-faithful could cobble Punk/Metal/Surf/ Zombie Go-Go so fetchingly, and none but the happily heedless would rev it into loud abandon.

Recommended: "Witch Stomp," "Dr. Mad Daddy," "Full Moonlight," "Zombie in Love," "Batman Theme," "Red Apple Pie," "Please Give Me Something"

Videos: "Witch Stomp" (Official video)   "Zombie in Love"   "Red Apple Pie"   "Please Give Me Something" (live)


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The Mezcal Brothers

Bing Bang Boom

(Speed! Nebraska Records)



On occasion, life presents Sweet/Sour experiences. 

In the ten slices served, the Mezcals display exactly why the more hep among krazykool brethren dig both the combo's way with devastation implements, and their enjoy-falling-riffs song choreography. Sweetness.

Within the Sour division, regrettably, reside two phenomena. Bing Bang Boom is their final disc (there were six, previously), following some 28 years of laying down sounds that left tire-tracks on earlobes.

Still more saddening is news of lead guitarist Benjie Kushner's lamentable passing. (He did play on the disc.) "This record was deeply personal to Benjie," uprightist Charlie Johnson wrote on the group's Facebook page. He, Shaun Theye, and Gerardo Meza intend Bing Bang Boom as honor-afire to their fallen bandmate.

A series of shows are planned around the record's issuance, with friend Dave Gonzales (Paladins, Hacienda Brothers) administering soloing labors.

Recommended: "Bing Bang Boom," "Get Along Just Fine," "Rocket to the Moon," "Feel ThisWay Again," "Ragtop Cadillac," "Double Boogie," "Alone Again Tonight," "Ready to Go," "Cryin'," "Train On a Track"

Videos: "Bing Bang Boom"   "Ragtop Cadillac"   "Double Boogie"   "Cryin'"


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Back in the Day, 1999: 

Various artists   

Swing Out to Victory!   Four-disc set

(Platinum)




Just back in the U.S. of A. from carrying a carbine in the Big One, the crew-cutted, erstwhile gravel agitator surveyed the ballroom from behind a rum-and-cola: Khaki-wacky tomatoes and ducky shincrackers truckin' around the totem pole. The entire place shook to musicalizing perpetrated by axe-choppers cookin' with premium, and decked out in glad rags sharp enough to stun Sugar City.

A victory-rolled, satin-swathed glamour dish swung to his elbow. "What's buzzin', cousin?"

GI Joe drank in her getwaway sticks before gazing into her baby blues. "I was thinking...protecting killer dillers like you was what over there was all about!"

Recommended, disc one: "We Did It Before" (Carl Hoff and His Orchestra), "Hats Off to MacArthur! and Our Boys Down There" (Dick Robinson and His Orchestra "He Wears a Pair of Silver Wings," "Cash for Your Trash" (Fats Waller), "He's 1-A in the Army and He's A-1 in my Heart" (The Four King Sisters, "A Slip of the Lip Can Sink a Ship: (Duke Ellington and His Orchestra)

Recommended, disc two: "For the Flag, For the Home, For the Family" (Johnny Long and His Orchestra), ""What Do You Do in the Infantry" (Bing Crosby with Chorus and Orchestra), "Captains of the Clouds" (Dick Powell with The American Four)

Recommended, disc three: "Let's Put the Axe to the Axis" (Abe Lyman and His Californians), "Ma I Miss Your Apple Pie" (The Jesters), "No Love No Nothin'" (Ella Mae Morse), "D-Day" (Nat King Cole)

Recommended, disc four: "Any Bonds Today?" (The Andrews Sisters), "Bell Bottom Trousers" (The Jesters), "Stars and Stripes on Iwo Jima" (Sons of the Pioneers), "Leave the Dishes in the Sink Ma" (Spike Jones and His City Slickers)

Videos: "We Did It Before"   "Hats Off to MacArthur and Our Boys Down There"   "Cash for Your Trash"   "A Slip of the Lip Can Sink a Ship"   "For the Flag, For the Home, For the Family"   "Bell Bottom Trousers"   "Star and Sripes on Iwo Jima" 


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The Forty Fours

Among Where the Action Is airs refreshed in scant bubbly minutes are Donovan's "Sunshine Superman" and a plethora of early-days Lennon/McCartney ones. And, just as chipper '60s harmonies fully bloom, scrupulous attention is paid attire, clipped coifs, and general comportment - all the way to toothy noggin-joggling.

Video: "Now She's Gone"


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Panther Burns

In 1979, Tav Falco and Alex Chilton copped the new band's handle from a Mississippi plantation that had stood near Greenville. Listeners freshly graduated from the Punk Class of '77, and ignorant of the infamous Adkins, were likely as flabbergasted as fractured by the shambolic primitivism, as Rockabilly and Skronk played Run Rabbit Run in its bloodstream.

Video: "I'm on this Rocket"


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Screaming Lord Sutch's ghost won't stand down                  




It was in 1999 that Londoner David Sutch, only 58, bid goodbye to us, one and all. Depression's smothersome bleakness exacted horrible penalty. Among distressing matters, he'd never gotten over the passing of his mum, with whom he'd been quite close.

Details of his mortal coil exit are insignificant to deserved celebration of his singularity.

By his own admission, the self-dubbed 'Lord' was not a gifted singer. But enthusiasm splashed front rows. His knack for shocking presentation was ever manifest, and his place in the pantheon assured. 

Over decades, his ghoulish songs have assumed revered status, having been covered by bands like the Sharks, Gruesomes, White Stripes, and a score of hyper-amped Psychobilly mutations.

Sutch was in the rank of early 1960s British rockers like Marty Wilde, Tommy Steele, Cliff Richard, and Wee Willie Harris. But it would be gross understatement to observe he merely differed from marquee fellows.

While impeccably combed sensations purred of matters fluffy, Sutch set about the horrid business of resurrecting England's infamous Jack the Ripper, and intoning craftily of a vampire's retiring to silk-lined repose.



Notable of that era was the string of Joe Meek-produced, horror-drenched 45s Sutch unleashed upon shops. ("When I went up these rickety stairs, I couldn't believe this was where all these number one records had come from," Sutch would later recall to a BBC interviewer, of his initial encounter with the storied producer.)

Titles "Jack the Ripper," "Monster in Black Tights," "Dracula's Daughter," "Til the Following Night," and "She's in Love with a Monster Man" bespoke dark and fetid phenomena - with a wicked wink.

Spirited covers of "Don't You Just Know It," "Honey Hush," "Great Balls of Fire," and "Good Golly Miss Molly" further ensured his welcome in sideburned surroundings. 

(Later Lordy tunes included "All Black and Hairy," "Murder in the Graveyard," "Monster Rock," "Loonabilly," "Disco Crusher," and "Rockabilly Madman.")

Sutch had nicked his character moniker from Cleveland-born Screamin' Jay Hawkins. He injected into namby-pamby, Pop-crooner days, Rock'n'Roll that made much of its scandalous, wildside mien, with both the snarl of a ghoulish maldoer and the maniacal laugh of a rabidity-ravaged hyena.

Nattily suited, innocuous Liverpudlian moptops may have been "yeah-yeah-yeahing" to swooning schoolgirls on Ed Sullivan's program, but Sutch was of far sterner metal. He sometimes slathered on a greasepaint fright mask and wrapped himself in the folds of a black creeper cloak, wielding oversized menacing dagger. 

Other nights, he donned a leopard-skin caveman fur and hefted a cartoonishly awkward axe. Whichever costume he chose, he always scared audiences into fears unforgettable. 






Sutch prowled stage fronts in swirling cloak and horrific creature coloration, cavorting as the notorious axeman of Olde London's gaslit, cobbled roads. His Rock'n'Roll horrorshow costumery and theatrics scandalized sedate Britishers, sent chills down the spines of toe-tapping fans, and recalled the fabled Parisian Grand Guignol.

But they also proved influential.

According to his Wikipedia page: "During the 1960s, Sutch was known for his horror-themed stage show, dressing as Jack the Ripper, pre-dating the Shock-Rock antics of Alice Cooper. Accompanied by his band the Savages, he started by coming out of a black coffin...Other props included knives and daggers, skulls, and 'bodies.'"




(Blurry auctorial recollections: I read, years ago, of Sutch's once appearing on a late-1960s festival bill. Then-unknowns the Alice Cooper band was among others appearing. It's hardly unthinkable that Vince Furnier and his fellows drew much inspiration from monstrous minstrel Sutch. In fact, a later interview portrayed Cooper pulling legs from a spider and expressing his wish that the insect were competitor the Screaming One.)

One tour was dubbed Sutch and the Roman Empire. In related performances, the singer and mates were garbed in suitably-historic armor.

A Dangerous Minds profile read: "Sutch appeared to have done most of Pop's rebellious things (long hair, the wildest songs, act, etc) but never received the credit for any of it."

His assumptive Lordship would eventually jettison "Screaming" from his title. Membership in his revolving cast of bandmates proved propitious for future professional fortunes. Among later-famed players who toiled at the monster-man's elbow over years were Jimmy Page, Charlie Watts, Jeff Beck, Noel Redding, Keith Moon, and Nicky Hopkins. 




A 1972 festival concert featured Sutch, backed by musicians including Moon, Redding, and Ritchie Blackmore. Legend holds that recording the live Hands of the Ripper was done surreptitously, and it wasn't until participating players saw the LP that bore their names on racks, that they even knew of the vinyl's actuality.



A common critical brickbat was "worst record ever." Not that the stalking menace likely gave a toss. (Similarly doubtful is that any 'heavy friends' involved listed the record on their resumes.)

Sutch remained on the road through subsequent decades, spreading his iconic message of Rock'n'Roll's grisly glories to beery punters 'round the countryside. Festival crowds through the nineties also beheld his show-bizzy abominableness.

The top-hatted, leopard-print-coated rouser was in later performances likely to drape a toilet seat/lid about his neck, whilst pumping arms frantically and fixing front-row loonies with a googly-eyed, broadly grinning countenance. 

Whether what transpired next was convivial romping or chilling maliciousness was anyone's guess. (A mixture of the pair often sprouted.)

Donning a piggy mask, fireman's red helmet, yellow construction hard hat, torching fires on stage boards, flapping bolts of fabric, or madly ringing town-crier handbells were amongst Sutch's antics. 

 ("He's a right nutter," a fan might have laughed. "And he's all aces in my book!")

All the while, frantic Rock'n'Roll guitars zoomed piercingly, and thunderous rhythms shook halls. For all the macabre eyewash, Sutch was as solidly of relentlessly pounding musical uproar as any jukebox JD.

During this same period, he inflicted his oddness on English politics as the founder and chieftain of the Official Monster Raving Loony Party. (Which may well have inspired Monty Python jesting.) 

The bearer of helter-skelter, willy-nilly ill tidings became something of a curious fixture in electoral spectacles. His gaudy getups and theatrically demented joviality made for gladsome spectacle in otherwise drab doings.

He and other OMRLP party candidates for Parliment always lost, though a couple of small-pond council aspirants did take home victories. Too, his proposed notion of enfranchising younger voters did eventually gain purchase.



Monster Raving in the Long Black Coffin, a 2011 Western Star Records tribute, gave the Sharks, Jack Rabbit Slim, Wild Bob Burgos, Frenzy and more an opportunity to rock out homage to the dreaded cult star in whose wake generations of bop monstrosities had risen. (The same year, the Sharks had themselves issued their own tribute EP: Songs from the Sarcophagus, also a Western Star disc.)






Raise a mug, then, to Screaming Lord Sutch - a flamboyant and histrionic, bigger-than-big, three-chord vulgarian whose ebony carryings-on are today beloved and emulated by Psychobillies both above and beneath sod. His true-believer-from-the-darkside ravings will surely resound into perpetuity.


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FORMER staff writer for Rockabilly and Pin Up America magazines. FREELANCE credits include Daily Caller, American Thinker, Free Republic, Huffington Post, Counterpunch, Dissident Voice, Independent Political Report, USA Today, Des Moines Register, Iowa City Press-Citizen, Waterloo Courier, Cedar Falls Times, Marshalltown Times Republican, Cincinnati.com, IndyStar, Arizona Republic, No Depression, Goldmine, Blue Suede News, Rock and Rap Confidential, Crackerjack, Blues News, Wrecking Pit, Punk Globe, Prairie Sun, Music and Sound Output, BAM, New Music, and 1980s NYC fanzines Shake, Rattle, and Roll, Rebel Rouser, and Off the Wall. AUTHOR: Shake, Rattle and Rocket!, Ghost Saucers in the Sky!, Stratosphere Boogieman!, Flesh Made Music, That a Man Can Again Stand Up: American spirit vs, sedition during the incipient Trump Revolution, and Ideas Afoot: Political observations, social commentary, and media analyses. WORKED as 2004 Iowa coordinator for Ralph Nader independent presidential campaign; co-founded Iowa Green Party, also served as statewide media coordinator; press coordinator, 2002 Jay Robinson (Green) IA gubernatorial effort. Wrote extensively re Trump campaign..