The Lively Ones - Hang Five!!! The Best Of The Lively Ones (1995)
Artist: The Lively Ones
Title: Hang Five!!! The Best Of The Lively Ones
Year Of Release: 1995
Label: Del-Fi Records
Genre: Surf Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 01:03:48
Total Size: 160/416 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Hang Five!!! The Best Of The Lively Ones
Year Of Release: 1995
Label: Del-Fi Records
Genre: Surf Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 01:03:48
Total Size: 160/416 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. High Tide (Tranquilizer) 1:55
02. Walkin' The Board 2:23
03. Goofy Foot (Surf Battle) 3:02
04. Surf Rider 3:21
05. Misirlou 2:34
06. Chicken Scratch 2:59
07. Surf Beat 2:28
08. Exodus 2:17
09. The Caterpillar Crawl 2:40
10. Telstar (Surf) 1:59
11. Mr. Moto 2:00
12. Crying Guitar (Surfer's Lament) 2:38
13. Livin' 2:36
14. Guitarget (Hotdoggen) 3:02
15. Crazy Surf 2:29
16. Paradise Cove 3:52
17. Bustin' Surfboards 3:15
18. Rawhide 2:31
19. Shootin' The Pier 3:00
20. Forty Miles Bad Surf 2:14
21. Rik-A-Tik 3:01
22. Happy Gremmie 3:07
23. Night & Day 2:11
24. Hey Scrounge 2:22
Surf band from Southern California.
The Lively Ones made recordings built around storming, reverb-drenched Fender guitars embellished by occasional raunchy sax breaks. Over a period of about 12 months, they ground out about five albums, filled out with many covers or retitled numbers based on rock and R&B compositions. They had a couple of hits in the L.A. area in 1963 ("Surf Rider" and "Rik-A-Tik"), but their best moment was probably "Goofy Foot," whose staccato gunfire of riffs deservedly propelled the track onto several modern best-of-surf anthologies. They ranged far and wide for source material, giving surf treatment to "Telstar", "Exodus", "Rawhide", and Cole Porter's "Night and Day."
The Lively Ones made recordings built around storming, reverb-drenched Fender guitars embellished by occasional raunchy sax breaks. Over a period of about 12 months, they ground out about five albums, filled out with many covers or retitled numbers based on rock and R&B compositions. They had a couple of hits in the L.A. area in 1963 ("Surf Rider" and "Rik-A-Tik"), but their best moment was probably "Goofy Foot," whose staccato gunfire of riffs deservedly propelled the track onto several modern best-of-surf anthologies. They ranged far and wide for source material, giving surf treatment to "Telstar", "Exodus", "Rawhide", and Cole Porter's "Night and Day."