STACEY The HANGMEN of Fairfield County GARAGE ROCK 45 HOLY GRAIL Lyres VERY RARE
$
1,803
$ 1803
Sold For
Aug 22, 2021
Sold Date
Aug 15, 2021
Start Date
4
Number Of Bids
USA
Country Of Seller
eBay
Auctioned at
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Description
You are looking at a TRUE HOLY GRAIL of garage rock gems - an anthem about a girl who is more addictive than Cocaine, Ecstasy, LSD, you name it. Popularly covered by the Lyres, this is the REAL DEAL from 1966 on High Castle records! A true golden goose!
Make no bones about it The record is in visual VG condition but with that said BOTH SIDES PLAY THRU NMINT. YES IT PLAYS THAT GOOD! Yes it looks like someones cat did a break dance on it but as you garage collectors well know these old 45's hold up well and play as good if not better than your older sister's beat up Beatles 45's. The audio is as good as it gets. This is truly a crown jewel for any collector of gritty garage rock. Very clever lyrics and a catchy tune!NO RESERVE !!!
THIS GARAGE MONSTER DOES NOT TURN UP OFTEN SO DON'T OVERTHINK IT. YOU MIGHT NOT SEE IT AGAIN.
IF YOU WANT TO CHECK OUT THE OTHER INSANELY RARE RECORDS WE'RE INSANELY SELLING THEN STAY TUNED TO ...
VINYL JUNKIES !!!
SEE PICS and TRACK INFO and BE SURE TO READ THE BIO ON THE BAND BELOW ...
The Hangmen Of Fairfield County – Stacey / I Don't Want You Around
Label: High Castle Records – HC-401 Format: Vinyl, 7", 45 RPM, Single Country: US Released: 1966 Genre: Rock Style: Garage Rock A Stacey Supervised By – M. Montanaro*, R. Castaldo* Written-By – L. T. Castaldo* Supervised By – M. Montanaro*, R. Castaldo* Written-By – L. T. Castaldo* 2:30 B I Don't Want You Around Supervised By – J. Denike*, M. Zellich* Written-By – M. Zellich* Supervised By – J. Denike*, M. Zellich* Written-By – M. Zellich* 2:40Credits
- Producer – L. T. Castaldo Enterprises
APRIL 17, 2016
THE HANGMEN OF FAIRFIELD COUNTY (Fairfield, CT)
I first heard “Stacey” back in the early 1990s when The Lyres from Boston covered it. The song was a live staple and recorded on one of their singles. But since I never paid much attention to the words, the full effect of the song never hit. It wasn't until Tim Warren of Crypt Records started quoting the pharmaceutically-incorrect lyrics (with much hootin’ and knee slappin’!) when he passed through the Northeast on a 2014 U.S. road trip that I revisited the original Hangmen version. And sure enough, underneath a clean, bouncy melody — about the furthest thing from mind-altering psychedelia as you’d get — lay a veritable who's who off of Nancy Reagan's naughty list.Singer and guitarist Mike “Zel” Zelich claims the monumental “ground zero” moment of The Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show prompted neighborhood pal Mike Montanaro to call him up the very next day saying, “Let's start a band!” The two Mikes previously played folk music together, but had no experience with rock and roll. Montanaro’s parents had friends whose son played drums, so they arranged for him to get together with Rick Castaldo. Rick, in turn, had a friend who played bass, John Denike, and now all the components for a full-fledged rock and roll band were in place. The Hangmen’s first gig was a dance at Fairfield University, and they soon went on to other venues including Sacred Heart University mixers, regional music festivals, and also an opening slot for The Strangeurs (with pre-Aerosmith Steven Tyler) at a local teen club. They concentrated mainly on British Invasion-era covers with some originals mixed in.
From left: Mike Zelich (lead vocals, lead guitar), Richard Castaldo (drums), Mike Montanaro (rhythm guitar, 12 string), John Denike (bass), and last but not least, the “Fifth Hangman,” Louis Castaldo (master linguist, financier). Rick's older brother Lou wrote “Stacey” for the band, with verse after brilliant verse about a chick more addictive than any combination of illegal substances you can match her up against. Lou financed the record, which was recorded in New York City, and pressed it up on his own High Castle label. The flipside, “I Don't Want You Around,” is a moody monster written by Zelich and opens with Montanaro’s ringing 12-string guitar and features vocal harmonies by Zel and Rick.
“Zel” at the helm during an Andrew Warde High School dance. Zelich left the band in 1967 and hooked up with other local musicians including former Mojo (The Mojos “Love Does Its Harm” 45) Matt Lewis. He spent time in The Fun Band, whose “Welcome To The Circle / It’s Good” 45 was released on the ABC label in 1968, with Zelich again writing the b-side. Members of The Hangmen continued to play together in different configurations in the southern Connecticut and New York City region.
In the 1980s, during the height of the “televangelist” phenomenon, Mike Montanaro and Rick Castaldo whipped up an updated version of “Stacey” with the lyrics changed to “Jesus.”
We'll leave you with the twisted genius of Lou Castaldo!
To heck with pot and LSD too
I’d rather take a trip with you - Stacey
Goodbye to shots of white cocaine
You have put them all to shame - Stacey
I’ve sniffed glue right from a bag
Compared to you it’s really a drag - Stacey
Stacey - You’re quite a child
Stacey - You drive me wild
Lovin’ you is really in
You’re better than Coke with aspirin - Stacey
I’ve heard of the high from Dexedrine
But you’ve got a kick like a 20-mule team - Stacey
I don’t need tea or the poppyseed
Cause with you I can do the good deed - Stacey
Stacey - You’re quite a child
Stacey - You drive me wild
Some go far on magic mushrooms
But with you I’m first to the moon - Stacey
Trading your love for a million bennies
Is like selling New York for a few pennies - Stacey
People go nuts from taking goofballs
But after you I’m climbing the walls - Stacey
Stacey - I shoulda had warning
Stacey - You’re habit forming
Thanks to Mike Montanaro for help with the lyric deciphering.
THE HANGMEN OF FAIRFIELD COUNTY
Stacey / I Don't Want You Around
High Castle (HC-401)
1966
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