Music Machine
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Clenching The Fists Of Dissent
Show: Download Festival
Date: June 9, 2007
RPR: 90%Download Festival 2007
Talk Talk
Show: American Bandstand
Date: 1966
RPR: 58%The Music Machine 1966 Talk Talk

Clenching The Fists Of Dissent
Show: Download Festival
Date: June 9, 2007
RPR: 90%Download Festival 2007
Talk Talk
Show: American Bandstand
Date: 1966
RPR: 58%The Music Machine 1966 Talk Talk

Clenching The Fists Of Dissent
Show: Download Festival
Date: June 9, 2007
RPR: 90%Download Festival 2007
Talk Talk
Show: American Bandstand
Date: 1966
RPR: 58%The Music Machine 1966 Talk Talk

Talk Talk
Show: American Bandstand
Date: 1966
RPR: 58%The Music Machine 1966 Talk Talk
Clenching The Fists Of Dissent
Show: Download Festival
Date: June 9, 2007
RPR: 90%Download Festival 2007
1 day 16 hours ago
| The Music Machine | |
|---|---|
| Origin | Los Angeles, California, United States |
| Genres | Psychedelic rock, garage rock |
| Years active | 1965-1969 |
| Associated acts | The Ragamuffins, The Bonniwell Music Machine |
| Website | bonniwellmusicmachine.com |
| Members | |
| Sean Bonniwell Ron Edgar (drums) Mark Landon (guitar) Keith Olsen (bass) Doug Rhodes (organ) | |
The Music Machine (1965–1969) was an American garage rock and psychedelic (sometimes referred to as garage punk) band from the late 1960s, headed by singer-songwriter Sean Bonniwell and based in Los Angeles. The band sound was often defined by fuzzy guitars and a Farfisa organ. Their original look consisted of all-black clothing, (dyed) black moptop hairstyles and a single black glove.
History
The group came together as The Ragamuffins in 1965, but became The Music Machine in 1966. In addition to Bonniwell, the original line-up consisted of Ron Edgar (drums), Mark Landon (guitar), Keith Olsen (bass), and Doug Rhodes (organ).
Their debut album, (Turn On) The Music Machine, was released in 1966 on the Original Sound label. Seven of the twelve tracks were originals, written by Bonniwell. One of these, "Talk Talk", became a Top 20 hit[citation needed] in the U.S. The follow-up single, "The People In Me", peaked at #66.[citation needed] Bonniwell blamed the weak showing of this single on a supposed feud between the band's manager and a top record executive. Four cover songs were included on this release, due to record company pressure.
After a promotional tour of the U.S., the rest of the original line-up (Edgar, Landon, Olsen, and Rhodes), left Bonniwell, due to internal conflicts. Rhodes and Edgar subsequently teamed with Curt Boettcher and others to record as part of The Ballroom and The Millennium.
In 1967, Music Machine (essentially only Bonniwell at this point) were signed to Warner Bros. and re-named The Bonniwell Music Machine. The name was changed to give more prominence to the band's core member, songwriter and vocalist. A self-titled LP was released that year, made up mostly of previously recorded singles with the original line-up. The recording spawned no big hits, despite the inclusion of a few more pop-oriented songs.
A third Music Machine album was recorded but never released. In 2000, a Bonniwell Music Machine album called Ignition was released on Sundazed Records. This is a collection of songs from the unreleased 1969 album, as well as demo tracks from the band's Raggamuffin days in 1965.
In 2000, Bonniwell wrote about his life and The Music Machine in the autobiography Beyond The Garage, published by the small press publisher Christian Vision.
Studio albums
- (Turn On) The Music Machine (1966)
- The Bonniwell Music Machine (1967)
Extended plays
- Talk Talk (1967)
Compilation albums
- The Best of The Music Machine (1984)
- The Music Machine (1994)
- Beyond the Garage (1995)
- Rock 'N' Roll Hits (1997)
- Turn On: The Best of the Music Machine (1999)
- Ignition (2000)
- The Ultimate Turn On (2006)
Singles
- "Talk Talk" / "Come On In" (1966)
- "The People in Me" / "Masculine Intuition" (1967)
- "Double Yellow Line" / "Absolutely Positively" (1967)
- "The Eagle Never Hunts the Fly" / "I've Loved You" (1967)
- "Hey Joe" / "Taxman" (1967)
- "Advise and Consent" / "Mother Nature, Father Earth" (1969)
- As The Bonniwell Music Machine
- "Bottom of the Soul" / "Astrologically Incompatible" (1967)
- "Me, Myseld And I" / "Soul Love" (1968)
- "Tin Can Beach" / "Time Out for a Daydream" (1968)
- "You'll Love Me Again" / "In My Neighbourhood" (1968)
- "Point of No Return" (1997)
External links
- The Bonniwell Music Machine
- Bonniwell Music Machine: Bottom Of The Soul[dead link]
- entry in Allmusic guide
- interview with Doug Rhodes
- interview with Bonniwell
- interview with Bonniwell
- interview with Bonniwell

