Loading detailsβ¦
Loading detailsβ¦
Artist
Hailing from Springfield, Pioneer Valley in Western Massachussetts, The Bold trace their beginnings back to the mid-1960s when band members met while attending the University of Massachussetts in Amherst. As The Esquires, the group recorded a single in 1965 on Salem SR-003 (Shake A Tail Feather / Down The Track). As The Bold, the group recorded and released a 1966 single, Cameo 430[/blue] (Gotta Get Some( A track that has featured on Pebbles,Garage Beat '66 and more comps)/ Robin Hood. That was followed by a 1967 single released under the name of Steve Walker & The Bold, Dynovoice 232[/blue] Train Kept A Rollin' / Found What I Was Looking For. They were the house band at the Playboy Club in NYC in 1968 where they played 7 nights a week (and jam sessions on Sunday afternoon to boot!) for a full year. It is during this time that guitarist Bob La Palm is said to have met and taught Joe Walsh (then of The James Gang) his techniques for using the echoplex effect on guitar (as is so elegantly exemplified on track "Free Fugue", from the ABC album). It's also around this time that as the band was moving with the times to a more psychedelic style, they dropped the "the" from their "the Bold" billing. It is interesting to also note, perhaps uncoincidentally, that producer Bill Szymczyk (who later went on to produce Joe Walsh's other band, The Eagles) took an interest in Bold during this time period and went on to produce their only full length LP, self-titled "Bold", on ABC records
Garage Beat '66 Vol.2

Songs We Taught The Fuzztones
Mindrocker - A US-Punk Anthology, Vol. 11

Garage Beat '66, Vol. 2: Chicks Are for Kids!
Songs We Taught The Fuzztones (Disc 2)

Cameo Parkway Pop And Soul Gems Of 1966 Vol. 1
Pebbles Vol. 9
Mindrocker Vol. 11

Gotta Get Some
Songs We Taught The Fuzztones, Disc 2
Mindrocker - A US-Punk Anthology, Vol. 11 (Remastered)
Garage Beat '66 Vol 2: Chicks