First Reaction To Dead End Street by The Kinks

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  • Опубликовано: 8 фев 2023
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Комментарии • 141

  • @johnniekight1879
    @johnniekight1879 Год назад +58

    "Waterloo Sunset" is their masterpiece. The great Nicky Hopkins on piano on Dead End Street.

    • @alabhaois
      @alabhaois Год назад +4

      One of many

    • @citizenghosttown
      @citizenghosttown Год назад +3

      And one of the best uses of trombone you'll ever hear on a rock track.

    • @robertmarlow255
      @robertmarlow255 Год назад

      My funeral song!

    • @toniyoung5131
      @toniyoung5131 Год назад +5

      To me, Waterloo Sunset is on of the most perfect pop songs, which isn't really a pop song, but the Kinks sharp social commentary writ large.

    • @m06een00
      @m06een00 Год назад

      It's one of their best. Personally I think Lola s even better, as is Days, the song (Sir) Ray Davies would like to be the one played at his funeral.

  • @lannydante9390
    @lannydante9390 9 месяцев назад +4

    I’m a kinks fan since 1964 - I’m 74 now - they have 700 songs in their catalog- with Ray saying he has written over 2000 songs in his career - I would rate the kinks second only to the Beatles with the stones following them - 100’s of their unknown songs just as good as their HITS! Give me …..Around the Dial ….Holiday “live” …Artificial Man….I need you …. Big Sky …..You can’t stop the music…..Alcohol “live” …. Only a Dream ….Moments…..Picture Book …..Two Sisters…..Still Searching……Animal ….To the Bone….the list goes on and on!

  • @adamdunbar8260
    @adamdunbar8260 Год назад +26

    The Kinks are one of those bands who are impossible to pigeon hole. I grew up with punk and metal in the late 70's and 80's. The one thing my punk people and my metal people could agree on was Motorhead, The Ramones, Johnny Cash, and The Kinks were all bands we could agree were awesome.

  • @jimmeltonbradley1497
    @jimmeltonbradley1497 Год назад +6

    The Kinks were an exceptional band. Lots of truly great songs you still need to listen to.

    • @alabhaois
      @alabhaois 7 месяцев назад +1

      They are still exceptional. Way ahead of their time!!
      😎🎸

  • @davidblackburn3396
    @davidblackburn3396 Год назад +25

    For my money the Kinks are right up there with the Beatles and Stones in terms of their body of work, and are the most "British" band of the 3. Check out the "Arthur" album, especially the title track, "Victoria" and "She's Bought a Hat Like Princess Marina's."

    • @davescurry69
      @davescurry69 Год назад +3

      And their suburban masterpiece "Shangri-La".

    • @davidblackburn3396
      @davidblackburn3396 Год назад +1

      @@davescurry69 Yes, absolutely. Brilliant song. The whole album is just one gem after another.

  • @z-man2343
    @z-man2343 Год назад +23

    Muswell Hillbillies (1973) is one of my top ten all-time albums, from all groups. Ray Davies is a genius songwriter, mixing keen insight, biting sarcasm, sweet sentimentality and classic British humor, many times all in the same song. He is up there with all the best.

    • @Farmlandsfallfan
      @Farmlandsfallfan 10 месяцев назад +1

      MH was 1971 to be pedantic. And yes it is a fantastic LP, Holloway Jail being my personal fav.

  • @lawrencesmith6536
    @lawrencesmith6536 Год назад +28

    Ray Davies....one of the great lyricists of the rock era. The catalogue is deep

  • @Hartlor_Tayley
    @Hartlor_Tayley Год назад +21

    Kinks have a wide range of songs. A terrific ability for satire and sentimentality rolled into one. Great stuff.

  • @markatsvensson
    @markatsvensson Год назад +7

    How is it possible for someone who is into music to not have heard so many incredible songs?

  • @jnagarya519
    @jnagarya519 Год назад +8

    "You Really Got Me" has never been described as "sweet". What was noted was its grittiness.

    • @newremote
      @newremote Год назад +1

      Yes, I thought that was strange too. Been a Kinks fan for decades and I've never thought of "YRGM" as being sweet.

  • @ChipG3000
    @ChipG3000 Год назад +10

    The Kinks rule! Listen to “Victoria,” “Celluloid Heroes,” “20th Century Man,” “Ape Man,” all different and all great. Keep up the good work! 👍

  • @alabhaois
    @alabhaois 7 месяцев назад +3

    You can’t go wrong with the Kinks!! Every song is a masterpiece. Truly!!
    👍👍

  • @mattshaw6180
    @mattshaw6180 Год назад +12

    "Celluloid Heroes," especially the live version recorded 1979 (from their live album "One For the Road"), is a rich and beautiful song that showcases their talents.

  • @isaacgraham5727
    @isaacgraham5727 Год назад +4

    My father was born in 1952 and grew up as a MASSIVE fan of The Kinks - his older brother as well. It became a bit of a competition to them and the greatest moment of my uncle’s life (and he was a fairly famous conceptual artist in his own right) was when he had dinner with Ray Davies once xD

  • @davescurry69
    @davescurry69 Год назад +7

    The Kinks have left behind an astonishing body of work. Hugely influential and often ahead of their time, the deeper you delve into their catalogue the more impressive they become.

  • @sjames1955
    @sjames1955 Год назад +1

    Sir Raymond Davies is one of the great songwriters of his era. He's been called Rock's Poet Lauriate and Shakespeare. He's in the Songwriters Hall of Fame and the Kinks were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame the first time they were nominated. Ray received his knighthood (long overdue) for his contribution to modern music.
    I think you don't understand how absolutely revolutionary You Really Got Me was in 1964. No one had done anything like it. The distorted guitar, the power chords and intensity were completely new. Leonard Bernstein called it fantastic. It's been called the first heavy metal song and even the earliest punk or grunge. It's the only Kinks song to have a Grammy. It is acknowledged as changing the course of music history. Please note that Ray wrote it when he was 15 and when they recorded it Dave, the lead guitarist, was 16. There's a conspiracy theory that says Jimmy Page played it but it's simply not true.
    Waterloo Sunset is number 14 on Rolling Stone's list of most beautiful pop songs of all time. Now these kinds of lists are always somewhat questionable but that enough people who are supposed to know about this stuff regard it so highly must mean something.

  • @markcorcoran482
    @markcorcoran482 Год назад +2

    “Some Mother’s Son, “ killer, heartbreaking, beautiful, as to the effect of war on the parents, mothers, of course, in particular.

  • @richarddefortuna2252
    @richarddefortuna2252 Год назад +3

    20th Century Man, off of their "Muswell Hillbillies" album, is quite a statement, if you ask me. A very under the radar declaration.

  • @harlanginsberg7269
    @harlanginsberg7269 Год назад +9

    The amazing thing about this song is it was never on a Kinks album (Kinks Kronikles was a compilation album put out in the early 70's). This was a single that bombed but it was a key part of every Kinks concert. I saw them maybe 15 times between 1973 and 1994 and I am pretty sure they played this at every show and it was always a highlight.

    • @Grithron2
      @Grithron2 Год назад +1

      It didn't bomb, it got to No. 5.

    • @harlanginsberg7269
      @harlanginsberg7269 Год назад +3

      @@Grithron2 In England it got number 5. in the US it got 73. The Kinks were banned from the US from 1966 till near the end of 1969 so this song the VGPS album and the Arthur albums all bombed in the US because the Kinks couldn't tour behind them. I've been a Kinks fan since 1973 and if not for Kinks Kronikles that great compilation double album I never would have heard Dead End Street's studio version.

  • @robertmiller1655
    @robertmiller1655 Год назад +5

    They can get deep. Try Celluloid Heroes.

  • @phillipharrison7283
    @phillipharrison7283 Год назад +7

    In the 60s us kids heard and loved what radio played. The songs of the day on radio were our 'Best Of' albums. The Kinks singles, like Beatles, Stones, Who and dozens of other groups were our life soundtrack. Deeper diving into catalogues were a little financially out of reach. Thank you radio. Kinks tracks 'All day and all of the night', 'Set me free', 'Ape man', 'Death of a clown', 'Tired of waiting', 'Dedicated follower of fashion', 'Well respected man', 'Waterloo Sunset', and 'Sunny Afternoon' all heard on the radio first and I'm pretty sure most were top 10. Cheers Syed✌

  • @richardclark2290
    @richardclark2290 Год назад +7

    you've not listened to sunny afternoon or warterloo sunset yet have you :)

    • @sahewins
      @sahewins Год назад +3

      Sunny Afternoon

  • @lesart3446
    @lesart3446 5 месяцев назад +2

    The kinks were one of the most important bands of the 60s and 70 also a massive on influence Punk.

  • @briantimmons3075
    @briantimmons3075 Год назад +4

    Ray davies is an exceptional songwriter

    • @alabhaois
      @alabhaois Год назад +1

      He had a social conscience way before it was fashionable

  • @lisarainbow9703
    @lisarainbow9703 Год назад +5

    Keep digging into this rabbithole, there's actually highly intelligent lyrics in a lot of their songs...

  • @Richarddraper
    @Richarddraper Год назад +3

    Good video but you're underestimating how revolutionary and influential the raw guitar sound was on You Really Got Me. The Village Green Preservation Society would be a good next Kinks' song to try.

  • @jeffreybooth5129
    @jeffreybooth5129 Год назад +2

    Shangri-la and celluloid heroes are two of their finest songs a top group certainly.

  • @CousinWhatIsIt
    @CousinWhatIsIt Год назад +1

    This is one of my favorites. I love the melodies and the cheer-style backup vocals.

  • @robertk2311
    @robertk2311 4 месяца назад +1

    One of the most socially conscious of theirs is Get Back In The Line. Definitely worth a listen

  • @danhurst9048
    @danhurst9048 Год назад +1

    There is to the kink's music.they undoubtably have the very best lyrics...and very few of their many songs are love songs,which is refreshing

  • @safespacebear
    @safespacebear Год назад +1

    GOD SAVE THE KINKS! Just keep going please. We need more folks understanding the brilliance of the Davies brothers

  • @citizenghosttown
    @citizenghosttown Год назад +3

    So glad you're enjoying the Kinks. Such brilliant song writing by Ray Davies - a true genius. Unlike many of the British invasion bands, he wasn't trying to pander to the American audience. He sang about the world he saw in the UK --- and he combined a hard edge (garage rock, proto-punk) with older dance hall music (you can here it on this one) --- and always with wit and social consciousness. I recommend "Waterloo Sunset", "Get Back in Line" "This is Where I Belong" and the albums "Arthur" and "Village Green Preservation Society"

  • @p.millard557
    @p.millard557 Год назад +1

    You are right, the lyrics of The Kinks' songs are on a different level than those of the Beatles. Many of the Kinks' songs are about life or social issues in London and the UK while those of The Beatles (as a group) are normally more personal, usually about love. The Kinks are one of the top groups of the sixties.

  • @rickkane7913
    @rickkane7913 Год назад +1

    Sooo many deep tracks! You mention the marching rhythm; you will hear something similar in "Tin Soldier Man"-- very British!

  • @richardclark2290
    @richardclark2290 Год назад +2

    there quintessential Englishness especially in Shangri la and village green presevation society is probably why they did not break america in the same way their contemporaries did

  • @grassygnoll3345
    @grassygnoll3345 Год назад +2

    It's all coming back. The UK is the most socially divided now than at any time in my life.

  • @AP-gb3eh
    @AP-gb3eh 9 месяцев назад +2

    Come Dancing is a beautiful song

  • @asgard5968
    @asgard5968 Год назад +1

    The kinks wrote about real life and real life was much harsher in the London they grew up than now, growing up in bombed out ruins

  • @lisarainbow9703
    @lisarainbow9703 Год назад +4

    Other deep Kinks tracks:
    This Time Tomorrow
    Well Respected Man
    Ape Man
    The Money Go-Round
    Rats
    Long Way From Home
    Strangers

    • @alabhaois
      @alabhaois Год назад +1

      Days
      Sunny Afternoon
      Celluloid Heroes
      Waterloo Sunset
      Superman
      and on and on

  • @brentlund2272
    @brentlund2272 Год назад +2

    KINKS...............GOD SAVE THE KING AND GOD SAVE THE K I N K S !

  • @Thejazzfan66
    @Thejazzfan66 2 месяца назад

    I’m glad this reactor is getting it. Ray Davies wrote this in 1966. Even The Beatles weren’t singing songs about this subject matter.

    • @nicolagianaroli2024
      @nicolagianaroli2024 Месяц назад

      The Beatles have never been singing anything remotely significant on subject like this

  • @franceshaas8255
    @franceshaas8255 Год назад +1

    Really liked this song. Will listen to more.

  • @thomascanfield9165
    @thomascanfield9165 Год назад +1

    There’s a good biographic doc about Ray Davies on YT called “Imaginary Man” and also a single by that name that’s a beauty. He showed he still had his songwriting chops into his 60’s with his “Workingman’s Cafe” album ( 2007).

  • @robertmills8640
    @robertmills8640 Год назад +3

    Try their "Village Green Preservation Society"

  • @CalumCarlyle
    @CalumCarlyle Год назад +4

    Loved this. There are so many Kinks tracks you should hear, actually. Especially if you're looking for gems among the album tracks (though actually the Kinks had a string of excellent singles throughout the sixties).

  • @kevinjones4559
    @kevinjones4559 Год назад +1

    Original drummer Mick Avory still going strong with tribute group 'Kastoff Kinks'. Well worth catching .

  • @troyshilanski380
    @troyshilanski380 Год назад +1

    Love ya guy. Then kinks are so real.

  • @timarmstrong3251
    @timarmstrong3251 Год назад +4

    'You Really Got Me' is a lot of things, but 'bland' and 'vanilla' ain't two of them. It is often regarded as the the song that invented heavy metal.

  • @cuebj
    @cuebj Год назад +1

    Check out the film, 'Cathy Come Home', about follows a family throough a descent through the housing systems at the time

  • @jbellinger99
    @jbellinger99 Год назад +1

    "Apeman" is the song. Gotta hear it.

  • @robertlisternicholls
    @robertlisternicholls Год назад

    Excellent review.

  • @paulkruger491
    @paulkruger491 Год назад +1

    I love this band..

  • @lathedauphinot6820
    @lathedauphinot6820 Год назад +2

    On their first tour of the USA in 1965 The Kinks drank too much, got in fistfights on stage and, worst of all, didn’t pay their U.S. musicians union dues. They were banned from performing in the USA for four years at the height of their popularity. That’s why they’re not as well known in the USA as the rest of the British Invasion bands, and probably also why their sound is more “English”, if that’s valid. They’re not perfect, but they have released some brilliant music over the years. For fun, “She’s Got Everything”, featuring the great Nicky Hopkins, or “I Gotta Move”, with Jimmy Page and Dave Davies on guitars. Thanks!

  • @jnagarya519
    @jnagarya519 Год назад +1

    This track -- Ray Davies had for some time been writing social criticism -- actually stiffed in the US. The LPs "Face to Face" and "Something Else" contain others; the latter includes the exquisite "Waterloo Sunset".

  • @leedobbs9419
    @leedobbs9419 Год назад +1

    The Brothers Davies put the Kinks on par with any of the great bands of the 60's British Invasion.
    Arthur, Village Green, Something Else, Muswell Hillbillies are all brilliant albums.

  • @noheamike5036
    @noheamike5036 Год назад +3

    The Kinks have a long and varied career, going through several different styles and periods. Ray Davies is an excellent lyricist, mixing pointed observations, humor and unique view points. They're not a perfect band by any stretch, but when they are good it's something special. Try Gallon of Gas, written during the oil crisis in the seventies

  • @raymeedc
    @raymeedc Год назад

    The morbid beat & French horn combo formed a death March of sorts, & quite appropriately so. Davies was well versed in relating the tone of the music to the lyrics.

  • @janicejohnson2744
    @janicejohnson2744 3 месяца назад

    Only Ray writes great songs about tea/toast/ rheumatic back. lol! marvellous.x

  • @willraresheid34
    @willraresheid34 Год назад +1

    Uh-Oh, you went down the Kinks rabbit hole, Bless you! You won't regret it! Listen to Muswell Hillbillies. 'Uncle Son' All Life we work but work is a bore if life's for living what's living for?
    There are many Kinks scenarios as to how they look at life.

  • @scottwallace5180
    @scottwallace5180 Год назад

    It was this 1960s mod music about the working classes. One of the 3 greats mod bands with the Who and the small faces. Try Lazy Sunday afternoon

  • @duderoo1975
    @duderoo1975 Год назад +1

    totally agree, I fell for the Jay Z issue you mentioned. The Kinks were so ahead of the times, people living like this were not living but working to die, very working class of the UK at the time, hence the MOD movement, then skinhead until taken over by racists.

  • @jnagarya519
    @jnagarya519 Год назад +1

    "Dead End Street" is a great single -- totally STIFFED in the US.
    Ray Davies was the only one writing social commentary.

  • @robertlisternicholls
    @robertlisternicholls Год назад

    What many people who didn't live through the 60s don't realise is there was poverty and deprivation as Ray's lyrics demonstrate so eloquently. The image of Britain in the 60s is that of Swinging London, Carnaby Street and such like. The reality was much different

  • @mitoo4880
    @mitoo4880 Год назад +2

    i liked the Beatles and then i met the Kinks.

  • @Markhypnosis1
    @Markhypnosis1 Год назад

    Most of the great bands of the 60s.....The Kinks, The Beatles, Rolling Stones, The Who, started in the early 60s with very what we see as mainstream sounding "bubblegum pop" tunes. Then they all started experimenting and maturing. The early Kinks tracks like You Really Got Me and All Day and All of The Night are actually quite punky, and paved the way for the distorted guitar sounds of rock and metal.

  • @petermizon4344
    @petermizon4344 Год назад

    ONE OF MY FAVS ALONG WITH VICTORIA AND SITTING ON MY SOFA, CHEERS

  • @jamespopeko9557
    @jamespopeko9557 Год назад +1

    For a fun Kinks song try “Apeman”

  • @jnagarya519
    @jnagarya519 Год назад

    In the UK WW II rationing continued into the 1960s. That was finally eliminated as result of "The Beatles" worldwide success and the money they brought in.

  • @andrewbrennan7291
    @andrewbrennan7291 Год назад

    I'd put the Kinks up there with the Stones and that popular beat combo from Liverpool.

  • @the_judge_8262
    @the_judge_8262 Год назад

    I've never heard this but knew they were edgy. I always heard they were guessing brothers so the Galaghers from Oasis were compared to them a lot in the nineties. P.s. you outro clipped your vocals on the way out of this vid, I missed some if you end statements.

  • @goosefarm3602
    @goosefarm3602 Год назад

    Scorpions- 'Wind of Change'.....this video has 1 BILLION views for a reason...they are phenomenal..saw them in the 80s

  • @sharonsnail2954
    @sharonsnail2954 Год назад

    SyedRewinds: This was a UK #5 hit in 1966 which would make it a "poppy track", no? I gather that you haven't heard "Dedicated Follower Of Fashion", "Sunny Afternoon" and "Waterloo Sunset" yet. All great tracks with wit and charm, all UK top 5 hits, all "poppy" tracks. Hhmmm.

  • @PanglossDr
    @PanglossDr Год назад

    Times haven't changed that much since then. The UK now has one of the worst poverty levels in Europe.

  • @123wat456sea
    @123wat456sea Год назад

    Would love to hear your reaction to Shanghai-la

  • @maryotoole7389
    @maryotoole7389 Месяц назад

    Must listen to come dancing

  • @dino335
    @dino335 Год назад +2

    "You Really Got Me" is a "sweet pop tune"? I think you are confused.

  • @larsholzke8475
    @larsholzke8475 10 месяцев назад +1

    People are living in dead end street. This is tragical.

  • @richardclark2290
    @richardclark2290 Год назад +1

    people were certainly poorer then and living conditions were worse, the difference was things were getting better every year average wages and conditions going up /getting better , now we are in reverse by both of those measures

  • @oliverboone8111
    @oliverboone8111 Год назад

    The Kinks have so much great music and Muswell Hillbillies (1971) is a must as it showcases Rays writing depth of statements exhibiting reality, sarcasm, and humorous lyrics with unique musical overtones about the tensions and frustrations of modern life at the time in the area where the band started. Acute Schizophrenia Paranoia Blues and 20th Century Man tell stories that need to be heard.

  • @BensSoZen
    @BensSoZen Год назад

    Reminescent of "Eleanor Rigby", a song by The Beatles

  • @cuebj
    @cuebj Год назад +1

    Just possible that, of Beatles, Stones, Who, Yardbirds, Kinks were the most interesting. They were a bit less driven and a bit more varied and a bit more English rather than American to the point of not being quite as popular and certainly less fortunate in how management and USA worked out as well as bad relationship between the Davies brothers. I, for one, missed their significance at the time as I was a bit young with no radio

  • @jnagarya519
    @jnagarya519 Год назад

    Ray Davies and John Sebastian ("Lovin' Spoonful") is second only to "The Beatles" as songwriters.

  • @cuebj
    @cuebj Год назад +1

    You Really Got Me was a revolution for its time. As Paul McCartney has said. Only reason it sounds twee or dated, it's because it was immediately copied by many others

  • @richarddefortuna2252
    @richarddefortuna2252 Год назад

    You should see the promotional video The Kinks cut for this track back in '66; the band as pall-bearers carrying a black coffin through what I presume to be the East-end after collecting the body. Very not The Beatles, that's for sure.

  • @jnagarya519
    @jnagarya519 Год назад

    John Lennon said that despite "The Beatles" breaking through the class system didn't change.

  • @jnagarya519
    @jnagarya519 Год назад

    At the same time these records were being released I was reading Mark Twain, including his anti-imperialist writings.

  • @griffygut7683
    @griffygut7683 5 месяцев назад

    His voice sounds so much like the lead from cage the elephant on this song

  • @jlspindler
    @jlspindler Год назад

    You should treat yourself to the album that's considered by many to be their best: a concept album titled The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society. Lots of themes similar to this track you so skillfully analyzed. Also, the song "Waterloo Sunset," done around this time, is considered by many to be one of the best songs to come out of the '60s.

  • @michaelm6948
    @michaelm6948 Год назад

    Kinks, the greatest English band of the 60s. They cannot be pigeonholed into one style. They used blues, 50s rock, music hall, ballads, folk, country and jazz. One of their great albums is Arthur. It's about WWII life in Britain and post war emigration from Britain.

  • @markjohnson4936
    @markjohnson4936 Год назад

    Don't forget to check out the best holiday song ever Father Christmas!

  • @jnagarya519
    @jnagarya519 Год назад

    "Lola" is one of their worst. But record buyers like "freaky," even though they don't necessarily know what it's about. Add in that so-called "cross-dressing" is a tradition in British theater: at the time of Shakespeare all roles were played by MEN.

  • @davidrauh8118
    @davidrauh8118 Год назад

    As usual somebody got the lyrics wrong. It's...A Sunday joy is bread and honey. Meaning they don't have a lot to eat. Not Sunday joint. Please react to their song APEMAN. From the same album as Lola from 1970. The social commentary is still appropriate today.

  • @machoward6443
    @machoward6443 Год назад

    Many of the early 60s British groups were made up of kids from working class backgrounds - often the industrial northern cities such as Liverpool, Manchester and Newcastle. Their lyrics would reflect their lives and a rebelious reaction to the deprivation they suffered but were slowly emerging from. Rock music was to the working class young Brits what folk music was to the Civil Rights movement in the USA.
    The British film industry was the same with films like "Saturday Night and Sunday Morning" with "angry young (working) men" as their heroes.
    It was a period of awakening for the working classes after the post-war doldrums of the 40s amd 50s.

  • @BakedTuber
    @BakedTuber 6 месяцев назад

    The only question is who was a better songwriter. John Lennon, Paul Mcartney or Ray Davis?

  • @jimyoung6271
    @jimyoung6271 Год назад

    Chin up.

  • @alexflemming5982
    @alexflemming5982 10 месяцев назад +1

    Only one lyricist better than Ray Davies!

  • @duncanpearce7499
    @duncanpearce7499 Год назад

    please check out small faces, tin soldier tune mate

  • @DawnSuttonfabfour
    @DawnSuttonfabfour Год назад

    Please Syed react to Rock n roll Fantasy and Superman by The Kinks. both brilliant.

  • @jacobohara2636
    @jacobohara2636 Год назад

    Best British band of all time mate. One mans vision greater than Lennon/McCartney combined

  • @ArmandoMPR
    @ArmandoMPR Год назад

    I think fans in the 60s were more open to new sounds from their favorite artists. The acts that rose in the 60s can sound incredibly different from track to track.
    In the 70s and onwards, I feel like artists, particularly bands, were more heavily scrutinized by fans when they deviated from the established sound.