Can't Get Enough of You Baby
? and the Mysterians
"Can't Get Enough of You Baby" by ? and the Mysterians is a two-minute jolt of raw 1960s garage rock, all fuzz and forward momentum. The production is gloriously primitive — cheap organ, a driving beat, guitars recorded hot and trebly, everything crammed into a tinny mono immediacy that later generations would spend fortunes trying to fake. The vocal is a snotty, insistent teenage rave-up, more attitude than technique, delivered with the desperate horniness the title promises. There's no subtlety to the lyric and none is wanted: it's pure infatuation, the kind that flattens everything into a single repeated demand. This is the band forever famous for "96 Tears," Mexican-American kids from Michigan who helped invent the garage-punk template, and the track carries that same amateur electricity. Though a modest original, it found a huge second life when Smash Mouth covered it decades later, but the Mysterians' version keeps a scrappier, more urgent charm. The ideal scenario is a summer drive with the windows down, or a sweaty basement party — anything fast and young and slightly out of control. It doesn't ask to be studied; it asks you to move before you think.
fast
1960s
raw, tinny, primitive
United States
Rock. Garage rock. energetic, infatuated. Sustains a single note of urgent, snotty teenage infatuation from the first bar to the two-minute finish with no variation or release. energy 8. fast. danceability 7. valence 8. vocals: snotty, insistent, attitude-driven, raw, teenage. production: organ, fuzz guitar, primitive, mono, trebly. texture: raw, tinny, primitive. acousticness 3. era: 1960s. United States. A summer drive with windows down or a sweaty basement party — anything fast, young, and slightly out of control.