Knowledge

The Chargers (band)

Source 📝

229:, Barone hastily assembled "I'm So Alone", a pre-Chargers ballad he had presented to him by guitarist Carl Hunt in 1964. Upon release, "Taxi" was well-covered in Washington, and became a number three hit on the regional radio charts. In 1968, after experiencing the endeavors of recording a single and the success that came in its wake, the band began writing new songs, many of which they scrapped before re-entering the studios. Of the compositions thought suitable for recording, three were selected: "Need Your Love", "You Got a Hold", and "In the News in General". Speaking about the songs, music historian Chris Bishop attributed the distinctive catchiness to "heavy tom-tom opening, fine organ playing and interesting rhythm changes". However, before the recording could be settled on a follow-up single, the Chargers were forced to disband as a consequence of their management insufficiently supervising funds, causing them to go broke in 1969. 31: 182:, the group enlisted Steve Barone of the Hustlers, who they had competed against in a battle of the bands. Although Roller was praised as a capable lead singer, he was dismissed from the Chargers for not sharing payments to purchase musical equipment. Plucking members from the local group the Undertakers, the Chargers completed their line-up with the inclusion of Ron Kinscherf ( 201:"Say You Love Me" and "When I See You". A rivalry between the two bands fueled each other's popularity, dividing Wenatchee's "town loyalty" between the west side (The Chargers) and the east side (Billy and the Kids). The Chargers, however useful the rivalry was, had a much more expansive touring territory than their competitors, performing in 213:
for any teen gathering the group could manage. Late in 1966, the band was victorious in a talent show at Pioneer High School, earning first-placed prize: a recording session with Julian Records. Almost immediately thereafter, the group traveled to Spokane to cut their debut
146:"Taxi", which had been a regional success and remains a highly-collectible piece in its original format. Live favorites of the Washington teen scene, the Chargers recorded three additional compositions in preparation for a follow-up release, but went unreleased. 232:
Relatively unnoticed outside of Washington, the Chargers have made a resurgence as a result of collectors' interest in the "Taxi" single, which fetches high-price purchases on the market. The song has appeared on the
30: 225:
Of the two self-penned songs on the record, the Chargers selected Nelson's Beatlesque "Taxi", a tune about excusing oneself from a failed relationship. On the
457: 462: 239: 190:). Progressing in the same vein as early pop-oriented Beatles music, all five members contributed to the group's bright 197:
Another garage band hailing from Wenatchee was Billy and the Kids, a group of pre-teens who recorded the two
426: 206: 412: 135: 49: 35:
From left to right: Ron Kinscherf, Steve Barone, Curt Dorey, Steve Nelsen and Tony Morgan.
8: 187: 399: 174:, vocals) formed the three-piece version of the Chargers in 1966, which began as a 391: 361: 244: 219: 191: 147: 215: 198: 179: 139: 451: 248: 183: 175: 305: 335: 171: 163: 159: 143: 131: 60: 150:
has issued those songs years later when the band's music resurfaced.
272: 243:, which also displays a photo of the band on the cover. In 2013, 210: 255:. The Chargers have also arranged two reunions since the 2010s. 226: 202: 178:
band playing renditions of the Fab Four's songs. In need of a
167: 247:
released the three 1968 songs along with "Taxi" on an
449: 237:album series, and "I'm So Alone" is featured on 186:), Don Sandstrom (vocals), and Steve Nelson ( 158:With the three-year surge of popularity of 458:Garage rock groups from Washington (state) 385: 359: 303: 330: 328: 326: 299: 297: 295: 293: 450: 323: 290: 273:"The Chargers Wenatchee, Washington" 13: 463:Musical groups established in 1966 138:, in 1966. The group recorded one 14: 474: 240:Teenage Shutdown! I'm Down Today 29: 419: 379: 353: 265: 1: 258: 7: 170:, vocals), and Curt Dorey ( 10: 479: 153: 103: 99: 91: 66: 56: 45: 40: 28: 21: 16:American garage rock band 427:"Four by the Chargers" 41:Background information 136:Wenatchee, Washington 50:Wenatchee, Washington 388:Four by the Chargers 386:Brown, Kip (2013). " 362:"Billy and the Kids" 253:Four by the Chargers 235:Garage Punk Unknowns 366:garagehangover.com 310:garagehangover.com 407:Missing or empty 340:julianrecords.com 130:were an American 125: 124: 470: 442: 441: 439: 437: 423: 417: 416: 410: 405: 403: 395: 383: 377: 376: 374: 372: 357: 351: 350: 348: 346: 332: 321: 320: 318: 316: 301: 288: 287: 285: 283: 269: 166:), Tony Morgan ( 162:, Larry Roller ( 106: 87: 85: 79: 77: 69: 33: 19: 18: 478: 477: 473: 472: 471: 469: 468: 467: 448: 447: 446: 445: 435: 433: 425: 424: 420: 408: 406: 397: 396: 392:Get Hip Records 390:(EP booklet)". 384: 380: 370: 368: 360:Bishop, Chris. 358: 354: 344: 342: 334: 333: 324: 314: 312: 304:Bishop, Chris. 302: 291: 281: 279: 271: 270: 266: 261: 245:Get Hip Records 220:record producer 192:vocal harmonies 156: 148:Get Hip Records 120: 118: 116: 114: 112: 110: 104: 83: 81: 75: 73: 67: 52:, United States 36: 24: 17: 12: 11: 5: 476: 466: 465: 460: 444: 443: 418: 378: 352: 336:"The Chargers" 322: 306:"The Chargers" 289: 263: 262: 260: 257: 180:lead guitarist 155: 152: 123: 122: 107: 101: 100: 97: 96: 93: 89: 88: 70: 64: 63: 58: 54: 53: 47: 43: 42: 38: 37: 34: 26: 25: 22: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 475: 464: 461: 459: 456: 455: 453: 432: 428: 422: 414: 401: 393: 389: 382: 367: 363: 356: 341: 337: 331: 329: 327: 311: 307: 300: 298: 296: 294: 278: 274: 268: 264: 256: 254: 250: 246: 242: 241: 236: 230: 228: 223: 222:Don Bernier. 221: 217: 212: 208: 204: 200: 195: 193: 189: 185: 184:rhythm guitar 181: 177: 173: 169: 165: 161: 151: 149: 145: 141: 137: 133: 129: 119:Don Sandstorm 117:Ron Kinscherf 108: 102: 98: 94: 90: 71: 65: 62: 59: 55: 51: 48: 44: 39: 32: 27: 20: 434:. Retrieved 430: 421: 387: 381: 369:. Retrieved 365: 355: 343:. Retrieved 339: 313:. Retrieved 309: 280:. Retrieved 277:pnwbands.com 276: 267: 252: 238: 234: 231: 224: 196: 157: 128:The Chargers 127: 126: 115:Steve Barone 109:Larry Roller 105:Past members 68:Years active 23:The Chargers 172:bass guitar 164:lead vocals 160:the Beatles 132:garage rock 111:Tony Morgan 61:Garage rock 452:Categories 431:gethip.com 409:|url= 259:References 207:Bridgeport 144:Beatlesque 134:formed in 121:Ron Nelson 113:Curt Dorey 227:flip-side 188:keyboards 436:July 12, 400:cite web 371:July 12, 345:July 12, 315:July 12, 282:July 12, 251:titled 211:Spokane 199:singles 154:History 82: ( 74: ( 216:single 203:Yakima 142:, the 140:single 95:Julian 92:Labels 57:Genres 46:Origin 218:with 176:cover 168:drums 80:-1969 438:2016 413:help 373:2016 347:2016 317:2016 284:2016 84:1969 76:1966 72:1966 454:: 429:. 404:: 402:}} 398:{{ 364:. 338:. 325:^ 308:. 292:^ 275:. 249:EP 209:, 205:, 194:. 440:. 415:) 411:( 394:. 375:. 349:. 319:. 286:. 86:) 78:)

Index

From left to right: Ron Kinscherf, Steve Barone, Curt Dorey, Steve Nelsen and Tony Morgan.
Wenatchee, Washington
Garage rock
garage rock
Wenatchee, Washington
single
Beatlesque
Get Hip Records
the Beatles
lead vocals
drums
bass guitar
cover
lead guitarist
rhythm guitar
keyboards
vocal harmonies
singles
Yakima
Bridgeport
Spokane
single
record producer
flip-side
Teenage Shutdown! I'm Down Today
Get Hip Records
EP
"The Chargers Wenatchee, Washington"

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.