What is Garage Rock? It is decidedly not the clothing company “Garage,” which sells distressed clothing for aesthetics sake. Real garage bands are a staple of the musical industry. It defines the backbone of many mainstream artists of old and has various branches. One such branch, or scene, is Garage Rock. Rock by itself is also a huge popular scene, but Garage Rock also has its own huge following. It is more raw form of the classical rock and roll created by various American bands in the 60s. it was created as a way to combat the British “invasion,” aka the Beatles, the Rolling Stones and the Kinks. There was a revival in the 80-90s and since then Garage Rock has always had a lively following.
The 60s where the pinnacle of Garage Rock music. The Brits where invading American music, and so, American teenagers took it upon themselves to create bands and travel coast to coast creating this Anti-British movement, which in turn created a whole new music scene and genre. As the landscape all around America was quickly changing to suburban living, it provided the garages out of which bands could practice and even perform for a passing audience. These bands didn’t have much, but they did the most with all they had. What they lacked in experience, training, and equipment, they made up for by the power and rawness of their talent. However, for each successful group we discuss and listen to today, there are thousands that didn’t make it.
The first group that really made an impact on garage rock is, ironically, an English band called, originally the Troglodytes, and then shortened to Troggs as stated in the article. They began in Hampshire, England in the UK in 1964. They were composed of four people, Reg Presley as lead vocals, Chris Britton on guitar, Ronnie Bond on drums, and Pete Staples on bass. The band’s most famous song, and the one that almost all garage rock artists look back on, was “Wild Thing.” The song was released in 1965, and its popularity rates was helped due to the television appearance on “Thank Your Lucky Stars.” The song reached number 2 in the UK and number 1 in the US. Its flirty sexual lyrics and a simple guitar riff, plus the song’s catchiness made it into a garage rock standard, and they even influenced the Jimi Hendrix Experience.
The next group is a group that helped to reintroduce garage rock into main-stream music in the 21st century. The White Stripes are a staple American, Detroit duo, created in 1997, who have created a name for themselves by being weird. They had begun as a high school senior and a waitress at a restaurant, struck up a friendship, and in the midst of playing with various bands, they fell in love with one another. The duo, once successful, was often regaled as the early 2000s garage rock kings. They used limits on instruments and color scheme, allowing for their creativity and musical talent to shine through. Jack and Meg White (married and divorced, with Jack taking and keeping Meg’s last name) had a unique, mystique feel to their band. Laden in controversy, with the pair claiming they were siblings rather than married, helped them stay in the news and be relevant. Meg’s on-beat, minimalistic style of drumming paired with Jack’s vocals and “freewheeling guitar” complemented each other perfectly. Their song, which thousands of people know, “Seven Nation Army,” won a Grammy for best rock song, and even became a staple at sporting events. It has such a catchy beat and the lyrics are wonderfully poignant. Almost everyone can recognize the song by the opening notes.
Finally, the most recent iteration of garage rock is found in the Black Keys. The Black Keys is an American rock group/duo/band formed in Akron, Ohio in 2001. Dan Auerbach is on guitar and the vocals, while Patrick Carney is on drums. The group began as a duo, creating and producing their own music, but now have become one of the most popular garage rock bands in this second wave revival of the 2010s. Their song “Howlin’ For You” was a little nod to Auerbach’s blues influence, Howlin’ Wolf. The song is has a background clap/stomp rhythm that just hooks the audience and makes you want to sing along. It also is very similar to how “We Will Rock You” has a beat that is unforgettable and easy to replicate. Its a fun song and makes anyone feel more powerful.
All these songs are in the Garage Rock scene, and you can see their similarities. They all are dark, and grungy, yet still have a youthful fun feeling. They do feel somewhat unsophisticated, and like its name, based in a garage- band, but I think that is the joy of it. It isn’t polished, and it can be aggressive, but it’s back to musicians doing it themselves and having basic chords with distorted sounds. Basically, they are that clothing company, Garage, in the sense that young people can truly vibe with Garage Rock, even if some are posers. And that was the whole point of the movement. It was to stop the spread of British bands, who did help shape garage rock, but also establish music for the younger generations to listen to, other than pure rock and roll. It was made to be “cool” and “hip” and somehow, it still is. I personally think its because people love to let their “wild, bad boy/girl” personas out and just embrace that dark side. And these songs do a great job of making it feel like it something cool and not something to be ashamed or embarrassed of. I love all these songs, and truthfully I didn’t think I really had a music scene I was in. Now, I know, I’m definitely into more Garage Rock music and songs like this. Who doesn’t want to feel powerful and “bad”, even just for pretend?



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