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What happened a year afther they won un “bandas de garaje”?

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Garage rock (in Spanish, garage rock) is a subgenre of rock that combines sound aspects of doo-wop, cool jazz, R&B and soul with the musical influence of surf music with the characteristic rhythms of blues with the musical elements of instrumental rock . This musical subgenre is a form of rock and roll and rockabilly.

Garage rock
Musical origins
Rock, rock and roll, rockabilly, instrumental rock, R&B, cool jazz, trad jazz, surf music, soul, blues, doo-wop
Cultural origin
Mid / late 1950s in America
Common Instruments
Guitar, bass, drums, organ (especially farfisa) and voice
Popularity
Medium / High in the United States in the mid-1960s

There have been several revivals known as "returns" in the 1980s and 2000s in the rest of the world (United States, Europe, Latin America, Japan, and Australia).
Derivatives
Punk rock, hard rock, acid rock
Sub genres
Freakbeat, garage rock revival, proto punk
Mergers
Punk garage
He usually uses very basic and simple chord structures, played with distorted electric guitars (mainly with pedals like the fuzzbox); although the use of keyboards is also common. In general, the lyrics are not sophisticated and sometimes show an aggressive and angry attitude.

The term garage rock comes from the fact that its interpreters were groups made up of teenagers and young fans, with very little musical preparation, who used to get together "to play and rehearse in their garage at home. The music of these bands was generally much less elaborate. than the originals from which they were inspired (as their players had little instrumental experience. Children between the ages of fifteen and twenty could barely play a few chords); but in return, it was full of passion and youthful energy, which some consider to be is the true spirit of Rock'n'Roll. Most bands used simple 8th and 5th note sequences due, in addition to what was explained above, to the fact that the amps of the time had a lot of distortion at high volume and were overdriven, using these notes (to which aggressive drums and catchy lyrics were added) this problem was disguised and surprising results were achieved.

In the early 1970s, when the movement had already disappeared as such but (paradoxically) was rediscovered by music critics, the word "punk" came to be used to define both this type of music and the groups that played it. Therefore, garage rock and garage punk are practically interchangeable terms. Or that sometimes the term Sixties Punk (or "60's Punk") is also used as another name for the original Garage Rock. And that is also why, when the punk movement proper emerged in 1976-77, many of its members vindicated ideologically, musically and aesthetically, declaring themselves direct heirs to the garage bands of the mid-sixties.
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