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Who Put the Bomp was a rock music fanzine edited and published by Greg Shaw from 1970 to 1979. [1] [2] Its name came from the 1961 hit doo-wop song by Barry Mann, "Who Put the Bomp". Later, the name was shortened to Bomp! Bomp!, and extended by Shaw to the record label Bomp! Records, which he headed until his death in 2004. [3] [4]
Pages in category "Bomp! Records artists" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9. 20/20 (band) B.
Records albums or lists of Bomp! Records albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Bomp!
During the 1970s, Shaw worked for Sire Records, and was instrumental in the signing of Flamin' Groovies, a band that he also managed for a couple of years. [4] In 1974, Bomp! became a record label, and Shaw released records by Devo, the Weirdos and Iggy Pop, and worked with several artists including Stiv Bators and the Dead Boys. [7]
The Weirdos' first release was a 7-inch EP, "Destroy All Music," released in 1977 on Greg Shaw's Bomp! Records. [3] It was followed by the 1978 single "We Got the Neutron Bomb," released on the Los Angeles punk label Dangerhouse. [3] The band later released two 12-inch EPs in 1979 and 1980.
Disconnected is the debut solo album by Stiv Bators, released in December 1980 on Bomp!.The album is a radical departure from the punk rock sound of his previous band the Dead Boys, [6] and sees Bators venturing into 1960s-inspired power pop.
AIP Records also issued numerous CDs in the English Freakbeat series and Pebbles series, with the first 6 Pebbles volumes being basically the same as the LPs, with bonus tracks. The 6th Pebbles album was reissued more appropriately as the 6th CD in the English Freakbeat series , since this LP also featured British music.
After the first label to sign her folded, Bomp! Records released the song as a single. [1] The performance of the single attracted the attention of Elektra Records, which re-released the single and a full album, with the future Kingdom Come member Johnny B Frank on keyboards, in 1982.