Vacuum Cleaners In The 60s

TINTERN ABBEY - VACUUM CLEANER/BEESIDE VINYL NON-NORTON VINYLNON-NORTON 7 INCHUK FreakbeatThe Horrors fourth album ‘Luminous’, which is set for release on the 4th of May, follow up to the moody, Simple Minds-esque pop of 2011′s ‘Skying’ suggests that they are further delving into the depths of elevating synth melodies building on their previous Krautrock influences. Yes, the ‘Strange House’ edge may be long gone but their cult club night The Cave Club, held on every third Saturday of the month, is still going strong. Here you will hear the best selection of ‘60s Psych and Garage, occasionally spiced up with some ‘70s Glam, Post-punk and Disco gems. Calling it The Horrors club night is not entirely accurate since it is Rhys Webb who initiated Cave. Rhys, keen record collector and DJ on the Mod/Psych scene since his early teens, knows how to maintain the perfect balance between hits and obscurities; therefore you can expect psychedelic-era Beatles and Stones as well as The Mirage or Les Fleur Des Lys.
Unlike most ‘60s psych club nights in London Cave Club does not aspire to be revivalist or retro although the sartorial element of the ‘60s is certainly present; generally you will not find too many ageing blokes with Paul Weller haircuts complaining about how kids of today are getting Mod wrong. Most of the crowd are under-25s simply interested in discovering great music and drawing on the spirit of the late 1960s in order to create something new and exciting – or, if you will, moving towards the future backwards with their eyes set firmly on the past. This is certainly reflected in the choice of bands which are selected to perform at Cave Club. TOY played their debut gig here back in 2011, early performances of Temples, The Proper Ornaments and Charlie Boyer & The Voyeurs soon followed. So, whether you want to check out a cool new band before everyone else or discover great ‘60s songs you have not heard anywhere else before, Cave Club is the place to be and apparently Alexa Chung thinks so too! 
After all, where else can you find a bunch of kids singing along to ‘Vacuum Cleaner’ by Tintern Abbey or ‘Guess I Was Dreaming’ by The Fairytale?” Listen to my friend Sam Davies’ mixtape who isn’t only bass player in Charlyie Boyer and The Voyeurs but also a regular DJ at Cave Club: Via Frock & RollYOU ARE HERE: LAT HomeCollectionsMysteries SAN FRANCISCO — Spurred by new information from a former inmate, the U.S. Marshal's Service has revived its hunt for three bank robbers who escaped from the notorious Alcatraz Island penitentiary in 1962 and were presumed drowned or eaten by sharks.Ex-convict Thomas Kent, interviewed for an episode of "America's Most Wanted" airing later this month, provides "significant new leads" in the remarkable escape made popular by a Clint Eastwood movie, a spokesman for the Marshal's Service said Wednesday.The information may offer the first clear explanation of how Frank Lee Morris and Clarence and John Anglin broke out of their cells and fashioned a raft they presumably used to cross the chilly
, treacherous waters of San Francisco Bay.Originally, the FBI concluded that the trio used spoons to dig out of their cells. Baby Bath Tub Ring WalmartBut Kent, who now lives in San Diego and reportedly helped plan the jailbreak, said the inmates stole a vacuum cleaner motor and fashioned it into a drill they used to widen a ventilation duct. Cheap Cavalier King Charles Spaniel Puppies For Sale In OhioTo conceal the noise of the drilling, he said, the men worked during the prison's evening music hour.Small Puppies For Sale In Lubbock TexasAfter crawling through the duct to reach the roof, the convicts slid down a pipe to the ground and climbed a barbed-wire fence to reach the island's foggy shore.
There, Kent said, the escapees boarded a makeshift raft they created by smuggling raincoats into the prison sewing shop and transforming them into rubber pontoons."Although we never found bodies, we presumed they had drowned because a makeshift oar and a life vest turned up on (nearby) Angel Island," said Dave Branham, a marshal's service spokesman in Washington. But now that the escapees' ingenuity has been revealed, "we think there is a possibility they are alive."If the fugitives did pull off the June 11, 1962, breakout featured in the film "Escape From Alcatraz," they would be in their early 60s today. Kent, who was paroled in 1965, said he would have joined the escape had he known how to swim.Alcatraz, the federal government's maximum security prison until it was closed in 1963, was known as "The Rock" and housed such infamous gangsters as Al Capone and Mickey Cohen. Situated more than a mile off San Francisco's eastern shore, it was designed to be escape-proof--and nearly lived up to expectations.
Forty-one inmates tried to break out during The Rock's 29 years of operation. Of those, 26 were recaptured, seven were shot to death, three drowned and five were never found.The Anglin and Morris escape has been an enduring mystery, fascinating millions of tourists and federal agents alike. Through the years, investigators have received scattered tips about the fugitives, but little recent work on the case has been done.In one intriguing development in 1986, a prisoner in Wyoming--a man also named Clarence Anglin--claimed to be the grandson of the escapee of the same name. He said his grandfather had made it out and died in Iowa, while his two cohorts had been eaten by sharks.Kent, meanwhile, was interviewed by agents but apparently had little to say about the escape until the television program's producers knocked on his door. He was paid $2,000 in expenses for appearing on the show.Contrary to the FBI's findings, Kent reports that more than 40 prisoners were involved in planning the escape and fashioning the tools it required.