Dreamgaze Overtone
01/31/25 ⚡️Punk, Psychobilly, Origins & more⚡️

⚡️Tune in Turn On⚡️
Dreamgaze Overtone with special guest host Evan Daley💖 A four hour show highlighting folk punk, anarcho, classic 77, d-beat, uk hardcore punk & lots more in addition to all the waves of psychobilly, rockabilly & other honky tonk punk sounds💫 History lessons & stories of days of old will be abundant; Take a trip into some deep nostalgia for me on KXFM Laguna Beach
Dreamgaze Overtone with special guest host Evan Daley💖 A four hour show highlighting folk punk, anarcho, classic 77, d-beat, uk hardcore punk & lots more in addition to all the waves of psychobilly, rockabilly & other honky tonk punk sounds💫 History lessons & stories of days of old will be abundant; Take a trip into some deep nostalgia for me on KXFM Laguna Beach
- Duration:
- 3h 58m
- Broadcast on:
- 01 Feb 2025
- Audio Format:
- other
(upbeat rock music) Hey, just turned in to dream gaze over tone. And right now you're listening to alternative Ulster, thy stiff, little fingers. (upbeat rock music) (bouncy rock music) ♪ So tomorrow's about fast ♪ ♪ The paths are meant to be ♪ ♪ Oh, guess who's chatting by? ♪ ♪ And then you walk back to the sand ♪ ♪ We ain't got nothing but they don't really care ♪ ♪ They don't even know you know ♪ ♪ They just want money ♪ ♪ We can't take it all even ♪ ♪ What we need ♪ ♪ Is that a type of Ulster? ♪ ♪ Ramen, can't you choose ♪ ♪ Get out of type of Ulster? ♪ ♪ Ignor the most never holds ♪ ♪ Get out of type of Ulster? ♪ ♪ Be electric, carry force ♪ ♪ A type of Ulster? ♪ ♪ All take your native land ♪ (upbeat rock music) ♪ Take a look where you live ♪ ♪ You're gonna all be on the street ♪ ♪ And I just hate that impression ♪ ♪ It's black and a jumping ♪ ♪ It's just a kind of place you wanna live ♪ ♪ Is this who you wanna be? ♪ ♪ It's just the only life we call hell ♪ ♪ What we need ♪ ♪ Is that a type of Ulster? ♪ ♪ Ramen, can't you choose ♪ ♪ Get out of type of Ulster? ♪ ♪ Ignor the most never holds ♪ ♪ Get out of type of Ulster? ♪ ♪ Be electric, carry force ♪ ♪ Call the other all-stars ♪ ♪ All take your native land ♪ ♪ They say they're for you ♪ ♪ And that's how I tell you ♪ ♪ They say they got to control you ♪ ♪ And that's a lie, you know ♪ ♪ They say you will never be free ♪ ♪ Free ♪ ♪ Free ♪ ♪ Free ♪ ♪ Free ♪ ♪ Free ♪ ♪ I'll tell you about Stu ♪ ♪ I'll tell you about Stu ♪ ♪ I'll tell you about Stu ♪ ♪ 'Cause I'll tell you about Stu ♪ ♪ I'll tell you about Stu ♪ - Welcome, welcome, welcome. You just turned into dream gays over town. I'm your host, the Well of Arrows. And you're listening to 104.7. Hey, X, F, M, Laguna's, community, radio. I have a very special guest in the studio with me tonight. Hi, Evan. - Hello, how are you? - I'm good, glad to have you. My boyfriend, Evan, is joining us for this special edition of Dream Gay's Overtone. We are doing a four-hour show tonight. I'm taking over for Hans Hagen, who usually plays from 7 to 9. And shiny things will not be on tonight. Instead, you'll have me, and you'll have Evan, and we're gonna be serenading you with Classic 77 Punk. We're gonna be doing deep dives on Sycabilly, Rockabilly. We're even gonna get into some anarcho-punk. And we're gonna do a lot. We're covering a lot of ground. And it's quite the eclectic mix because we are also gonna do some history on, you know, what Sycabilly is, what created Sycabilly. And for me, this is a very nostalgic track list. This is what I listen to as a teenager, and Evan too, right? Yeah, I listen to a bit of that for sure. I have friends that are in Sycabilly bands and whatnot. So, yeah, I definitely was around it quite a bit and dabbled in it myself. And enjoying the music. And your area of expertise is... In music-wise, for me? Yeah, for this. Oh, for this, I mean, overall, I mean, I'm in heavy metal, but for this, I would be more into the crustier side of things that the punk world goes. I'd say, you know, D.B. and anarcho, crust, grind, all that kind of stuff. It was too heavy for the day. Right. So, that's the other thing. We kind of had trouble picking a lot of songs that were like... Yeah. You know, it's punk. I mean, it's made to be offensive. Exactly. And so, hence not radio. And we were struggling. Yeah, we were struggling with that a bit last night because a bunch of these tunes that we like and we're like, "Oh, this is such a perfect song. This is such a perfect song." And then we're listening to it and we're like, "Whoa, we are so desensitized to how offensive this is." And it literally is a genre. Pretty much everything we're listening to other than the super classic stuff that we're going to go into, like the... We're going to listen to some Wanda Jackson and people like her as well to give you a background on what "psychabilly" is. But punk and "psychabilly" in general, they just made a genre of music to piss people off. Yeah. Yeah. Against the norm, that's for sure, so... Yeah. So we did our best. And we had a four-hour show. It's going to be a lot of fun. I am super excited. Like I said, it's quite the eclectic mix. Right now you're listening to "Link Ray." This is the song "Rumble." Great tune. And we started off with alternative Ulster. I stiffed little fingers, definitely a punk rock anthem. And what I'm going to do tonight, because one of the things about all the genres we're kind of going to cover here is they do get a little bit redundant. And so we're going to try to do miniature sets. So we're going to do a mini set here of some "psychabilly" music. And then we're going to move on to some older rockabilly stuff like that. And then we're going to move into another genre of punk, and we're probably going to circle back to some more "psychabilly." Back and forth. Just kind of keep it mixed up to where you know, not too much one thing. Yeah, because it definitely gets redundant. If you're listening to an all-psychabilly playlist, right? Yeah, especially if you're not a fan of psychabilly or punk. It's not your thing. You're kind of like, "I'll hear it," but that sounds just like the last song. So you've got to break it up for the masses if you will. Exactly. And that's what I'm trying to do here. This is a challenge for me. It's going to be fun because I'm doing my best to make music that pretty much goes out of its way to not be listen-to-able. Yeah. But we're trying to make it easy to listen to. Yeah, I mean, we had to pick, you know, the soft -- essentially kind of the softer, more generic stuff, to be honest. Yeah. And to a degree just because it is more the radio-friendly. It is. It's more -- I mean, we had to make it radio-friendly. And we did our best. We did our best. But as I stated last week, when I had the lovely, wonderful Cecily J on here, and we did New Year and New Wave, I'm not responsible for what punk rockers say in their lyrics. It is going to be radio-friendly. And if it's offensive, honestly, I had to -- That's their point. That's their point. I had to take a couple songs off that were offending me last night when I was like, "You know what? This is offensive." But that was the goal. So we're doing our best here. It's going to be a fun night. We're going to do some history on how all of this stuff got started. And it's fun because when Evan and I met each other, and for those of you who don't know, Evan is my boyfriend. And when we met each other, one of the things we were talking about was music, and he was sending me these underground psychedelia songs. And I was shocked that he knew who these guys were, that he was sending me because I was like, "I'm the only one who knows about these dudes." You know, and then Evan sending it to me and something else he did was he started -- we started talking about psychobilly. And I, in all my years as an adult outside of high school, I've never met somebody else who listens to psychobilly outside of, you know, my sister. So it was just pretty cool. Yeah, yeah. It was special, for sure. It was definitely -- Yeah. Yeah. So we're very excited to be here, y'all. Again, I'm here with Evan Daley, and you are listening to Dreamgaze Overtone on KXFM, Laguna's Community of Radio with me, your host, Luella Eros. [Whistles] And we're going to dive into some psychobilly music. And it's kind of hard to explain. But psychobilly is sort of like a mixture of punk and rockabilly music. Mm-hmm. What it does is it takes like horror punk themes, kind of like the misfits. Sorry, you're not going to be hearing the misfits on here tonight. I did my best to keep things -- I don't like the misfits personally. I like one song by then, but that's why we're not going to the misfits. But when it comes to psychobilly, it's kind of like a mix of things the misfits would sing about as far as horror punk and rockabilly music. There's a lot of surf tones going on. Another thing we're not going to dive into tonight because I play surf rock on here all the time. We're going to keep it strictly rockabilly when we're doing that kind of sound. But you've got a lot of reverb, you've got a lot of twang. And they're just thinking about darker things. The other key element -- Darker themes for sure. Scary themes. Scary themes. Scary things. Yeah, almost. Yeah, it's just like scarier stuff. It's very silly. You're kind of generic, like spooky. Yeah, exactly. It's very honestly, it's silly and it's campy, but both of us like it. It can be a little cheesy, but that's part of the fun sometimes. Exactly. You're aware of it. Yeah. It's kind of lean in. I mean, for example, later on in the show, I'm going to play a song by this band called The Lower Class Brats, and they have the funniest song. It's called Safety Pinned and Sick. And it's kind of like making -- it's almost so obnoxious that it's like making fun of punk music. You know? And that's kind of the vibe that you get with some of this music too, where it's just like -- they're going out of their way to talk about zombies and werewolves, like all the time. And it's fun though, I dig it. So one more key element that is psychobilly music is -- I don't think you can really have a psychobilly band unless you have a stand-up bass. Yeah, you got to have the upright bass. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Absolutely. I don't think you can have a psychobilly band without it. I haven't. I don't know. I can't remember. Yeah. So they all play stand-up bass, and what they do is they have this technique where it's called slap bass, and they slap the bass. You're going to hear it clicking. You're going to hear a clicking noise. And when you hear that clicking, that is the person's hand, you know, pulling up the bass string and dropping it down. And that's pretty much in every psychobilly band that exists. So we're going to start this off. We're going to go with one of my favorites. This is King Rat by the group, Goana Bats. And I'm looking forward to sharing all this stuff with you guys. And yeah, thanks for tuning in. Here's King Rat by Goana Bats. [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] [MUSIC PLAYING] is your introduction into Psychability. A lot of people really don't know much about this genre. It's very nostalgic for me. A lot of fun. Kind of camp. Very campy. But it's cool. I dig it. I dig it. So Psychability is a rock music fusion genre that fuses elements of rockability and punk rock and has been defined as loud frantic rockability music. It has also been said that it takes the traditional, contrified rock style, known as rockability, ramping up its speed to a sweaty pace and combining it with punk rock and imagery lifted from horror films and late night sci-fi, creating a gritty honky-tonk punk rock. Well, I think that that pretty much sucked it up. Yeah, that sounded up pretty good right there. Yeah, thank you, Wikipedia. That was it. I was funny because I pulled that out too. I was like, well, let's see what they say. So we're going to listen to another one of my favorites here. This one is a little bit more produced this song. I feel like this song is really listen toable. I actually jammed to this still. It's on one of my favorite favorites playlist. It's called Out of Sight. It's by a group called The Gutter Demons. And after that, we're going to listen to some Tiger Army. We're getting closer so you can feel your touch in the ashes of my memory. Oh, no silence yet to learn it until, but I am lost already. In the middle of the room, I'm waiting sending still, the flashing lights into your eyes. Life I do won't kiss a fill. Now I'm feeling the time. Yeah, all I need is one more chance. Yeah, in those dreams, I'm rolling the dice. The big tears will bring you back to your life. I'm down in hell and out of sight. Well, back I can't see through the dirt, it most of the shadows of this I feel. This low, yeah, I'm hiding in vain. I'm crawling under the ground. Plus, I am trapped in your house, 'cause I believe in me and say, "My mind is dying, I need you dying in the oblivion of your charm." Yeah, all I need is one more chance. Yeah, in those dreams, I'm rolling the dice. The big tears will bring you back to your life. I'm down in hell and out of sight. Yeah, in those dreams, I'm rolling the dice. Yeah, in those dreams, I'm rolling the dice. Yeah, in those dreams, I'm rolling the dice. Yeah, in those dreams, I'm rolling the dice. Yeah, in those dreams, I'm rolling the dice, I'm rolling the dice. Yeah, in those dreams, I'm rolling the dice. Yeah, in those dreams, I'm rolling the dice. Yeah, in those dreams, I'm rolling the dice. Yeah, in those dreams, I'm rolling the dice. That was out of sight for the group-gutter demons. And I want to let y'all know that tonight we've started off pretty light here. We're going to get into the heavier stuff as the evening goes on. We've kind of started off with the more mellow things as the evening goes on. I like getting in the hot tub, you know, you just kind of ease into it. Yeah, that's a great analogy, exactly. We're kind of easing into it here. So we're playing some of the more laid-back stuff. In a second here, we're going to listen to my favorite Tiger Army song ever. This song stands the test of time. Like, it's still a great song and not just a great psychabilly song. Actually, Evan and I were just talking about it the other day. Like, I kind of want to cover this next one here. It's called Outlaw Heart, a Tiger Army. I think it's my favorite by them as well. I remember it when it came out. Yeah, yeah, it's a good one. Tiger Army! Yeah, they had some, you know, people that seemed kind of turned against them because they had gone a bit, not even mainstream. They did go mainstream. I don't even recall. I wasn't a big fan of them, myself personally. That then, because I found them too soft for me. Okay. Because I was into a lot heavier stuff. For sure. But then, but I did always appreciate this song. So... In this album, I was like, "It's a good album." Everybody's kind of trippin', but I didn't really... I would tell people like, "Yeah, this is a good song." You know, but people... The MTV or something. I can't remember what they did, but they did something. I know exactly what they did. And I can tell you how I feel about Tiger Army because I was into the thick of it. This was kind of like one of my ultimate favorite bands. I genuinely have to give Tiger Army credit where credit is due. I feel like they influenced me and my music taste so much in the years moving forward. Next week, I'm actually thinking about doing the pipeline from like, punk and psych-billy to cosmic twang and old country and stuff like that. Because this song, if I heard this song right now today, it was the first time I ever heard it, I would be obsessed with it and be like, "Oh my gosh, it's my new favorite song." Tiger Army has a lot of that where it really blends into the music that I listen to these days. However, one album, amazing second album, fantastic third album. I love the third album, fourth album. It sucked. Quite frankly, I know. And this was a big problem. It was a huge thing that happened when Tiger Army made the fourth album because my friends and I, we all loved them. They made the fourth album and it was. It was playing on MTV and it's so silly. That'll, that'll, you'll lose your, you know, if you're punk or any kind of alternative really, you know, and then you did, you get on that stage, you're going to lose your, you're probably more than likely going to use, lose your like your fan, your original fan. And they did. They lost us. They'll be like, "Nope, we're done." And it's so dumb. And you're on MTV. Yeah, it's so dumb. And now, you know, looking back, I really is how stupid it is. We don't want you guys to be in, you know, you guys, we don't want you guys eating dinner because we're punk. You can't be successful. Stay on your ground. We don't want you to get any money off of music. Yeah, exactly. You can't make a living off this, you're supposed to be punk. That's not raw. That's not punk, right? No, me. I know. However, I will say that I have listened to the album in like hindsight and I still don't like it. Yeah, not me. But that's what happened with Tiger. I mean, I mean, it was like a bomb dropped. The kids who had Tiger on me back patches went and got a giant ex on them and then put, you know, F Tiger. That's how big of a deal it was. Not sure if immediately that's coming off. Well, you know, it's interesting is that pipeline you're talking about with the cosmic twang and stuff, you know, somebody that would probably be a good one to like even speak about during this show would be Hank Williams. Hank Williams, the third one, 100% because we listened to him. He's in like a lot of like, he plays with like dudes from, you know, enter heavy metal bands and stuff like that and very much involved in the punk scene, kind of more the crustier side and kind of that folk punk kind of thing going on. And it's country stuff. And you look at him and you're like, that's Hank three, like what? Like that dude looks like full on like train hopping crusty, you know, crust fun. But he's, you know, sending to the great Hank Williams and Hank Williams a second. And he's just kind of suck, but Hank is the first. No, the first Hank Williams was cool. Hank Williams too. No, he's fantastic. All right. All right. I beg to differ, but that's okay. See, honestly, you know, we did this last week when we were doing the New Year New Wave with Cecily and I, and we were like, you know, getting concerned about genre police policing us. And then we started cracking up off the air and we went, Oh my gosh, we're the genre police. And Evan and I are very much the same as far as like we go. And it's fun. But yeah, it's just being involved like, you know, you're passionate about it. Why not get deep into it and know about it? Exactly. Can't tell you about it, know about it, you know? Yes, exactly. And that's why, you know, in a little bit here, we're going to listen to this Tiger Army song, but a little later, we're going to listen to some, you know, like classic old school, 50s rockabilly. And it's funny because some of the songs you're going to hear, you can hear it starting to turn into surf rock, but it's like two years prior to like classic surf rock. And it's funny. You can see that shift, but we're going to go with Tiger Army here. This is Outlaw Heart, still one of my favorite songs ever of all time. I forgive Tiger Army at this point in my life. I can move past their fourth album and say that the first three albums are still just fantastic. So here's Outlaw Heart by Tiger Army. There's a knight under, along the stars, cruising down a highway, taking it far from home, whisking hand, regret, neither can I raise the fact that I have the wrong. There's the love of the run, the light is on my trail, and I'm the only girl who never seemed to be the one for me, so now I wanna go alone. Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh. Along in a cheap motel room, praying to the Lord above, working on your past rest of heavy on my shoulders, my conscience carried away to flood, see the random smoke and shadow, heard me on campus in the night, see what I did 'cause I thought that I had no choice, but there's always another way to hurry, look to her moon and start home, so run beneath them, she's the hell, never even spoke to her, words of love held in my heart of she heard now, what she's no care, where is this thing gonna be? Does she hate me for what I thought of? I wish that I could change, everything is gone back, now how'd my last time's just gone? It's gone! [Music] So will you tell her for me? Once I've grown in trouble and I've gone home, it's only happy to find a way to return to something for I've loaned, the bullet in my home, but I fear that I've known for this power, because I will not go out without a fire, I'll run in forever, if they should catch me one more number before gun is fired. [Music] One of my favorite songs ever that was Outlaw Heart by Tiger Army, I have played it on the show before because it's just, it's so good. There's this song that came out kind of recently, I think it was last year that it came out, it's called Cherries. Oh shoot, I can't remember what the name of that band is off the top of my head, I'll have to look it up in a little bit, but I feel like it's part one and part two, but we're not going to do that today, I'm sticking on track, I was almost just going to play it, we're trying here. Yeah, we're going to get distracted pretty easy with both of us being in here. Yeah, we're having fun, Evan and I are chatters, we're chatty, we like to chitchat, and we have four hours of music prepped and we've been talking for most of the first half hours, so that's great. That's how we, I mean, you know, banter's good. It is good. I like it. I know, I love having you in the studio, you know, it's listener, just active. Exactly. You feel involved, I don't know. You do. You feel like you're somewhere, you're in the conversation, you know? Yes. Listening, like, oh, shoot. Well, it'd be cool if we had a call-in thing, we will maybe get there one day. Well, we do have a call-in thing. We're not doing that at this moment, at this very moment. In the future, it'd be kind of, I don't know, I like that stuff. I do too. We're already going off subject, so. Yeah. Well, I expect that a lot tonight, because both of us are pretty, we're openly, you know, we got pretty bad ADHD, both of us, and it's fun. We love it about each other. We're glad we found that in one other person, because it's kind of hard for other people to keep up with us, I feel like, right? Yeah, absolutely. So, if you're just tuning in right now, you are listening to Dreamgate's Overtone. I'm your host, Luella Eros. I am here with my boyfriend, Evan Daly. Hello. And this is one of 4.7 KX FM, Laguna's community radio, and just a little refresher, we are doing a four-hour show tonight. We are going to be playing all the way until nine o'clock. I'm taking over for Hans Hagen and his show, "Shiny Things." And what we're doing today is psycho-billy, rock-a-billy, and all different kinds of punk. So, the next one we're going to play here is a song by the meteors. I'm going to play the tune, "Crawling." It's off of the album, "Psycho Down." And I almost played this other song. They do a cover of "Little Red Riding Hood." And I've realized that the beginning of that song really is kind of what my favorite guitar tone of all time. It's just so, you know, reverb up to 10, so twangy, but also a little spooky. It's like my favorite way for a guitar to sound, but we're actually going to listen to "Crawling." And yeah, maybe-- And maybe you'll get that later. We may throw it in there. We might. We might throw it in there. And now that we mentioned it so much that it has to go down, because me personally, I'd be like, you know, I really want to hear that one they're talking about all the time. We have to double check that it's radio-friendly. Oh, yeah. And that's what we're going to do while we're listening to "Crawling." We're going to make sure-- We're always safe out there from our debauchery. Yeah, totally. Yeah, so we're probably going to do that in a minute here, but first we're going to start with "Crawling." I love this song. And maybe you can see, you know, if you've tuned in to "Dream Gaze Overtone" before and you can hear the influences and how this kind of brought me to where I'm at with the music that we've listened to a lot of times today. And like I said next week, we're going to be doing how we got to the cosmic twang stuff that I'm usually playing on "Dream Gaze Overtone." So here's "Crawling" by the meteors. 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⚡️Tune in Turn On⚡️
Dreamgaze Overtone with special guest host Evan Daley💖 A four hour show highlighting folk punk, anarcho, classic 77, d-beat, uk hardcore punk & lots more in addition to all the waves of psychobilly, rockabilly & other honky tonk punk sounds💫 History lessons & stories of days of old will be abundant; Take a trip into some deep nostalgia for me on KXFM Laguna Beach
Dreamgaze Overtone with special guest host Evan Daley💖 A four hour show highlighting folk punk, anarcho, classic 77, d-beat, uk hardcore punk & lots more in addition to all the waves of psychobilly, rockabilly & other honky tonk punk sounds💫 History lessons & stories of days of old will be abundant; Take a trip into some deep nostalgia for me on KXFM Laguna Beach