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The Human Expression
The Human Expression
1
The Choir
The Choir
2
Mouse and the Traps
Mouse and the Traps
US band
3
The Litter
The Litter
1960s psychedelic rock band
4
The Outcasts
The Outcasts
5
GONN
GONN
6
The David
The David
7
The Starfires
The Starfires
8
The Outsiders
The Outsiders
US band
9
We the People
We the People
10
Leo and the Prophets
Leo and the Prophets
musical artist
11
Bohemian Vendetta
Bohemian Vendetta
12
Teddy and His Patches
Teddy and His Patches
San Jose, CA garage rock group active in the mid-1960s
13
The Music Machine
The Music Machine
band that plays garage rock
14
The Chesterfield Kings
The Chesterfield Kings
American punk rock band
15
The Groupies
The Groupies
16
The Ugly Ducklings
The Ugly Ducklings
musical artist
17
The Gentlemen
The Gentlemen
18
The Dearly Beloved
The Dearly Beloved
19
The Lollipop Shoppe
The Lollipop Shoppe
20
The Electric Prunes
The Electric Prunes
band
21
Kenny And The Kasuals
Kenny And The Kasuals
22
Mystic Tide
Mystic Tide
23
Green Fuz
Green Fuz
24
The Grodes
The Grodes
25
The Wilde Knights
The Wilde Knights
26
The Creation
The Creation
English rock band
27
The Crusaders
The Crusaders
American 1960s garage band
28
The Pandoras
The Pandoras
US musical group
29
Baby Woodrose
Baby Woodrose
30
The Grains of Sand
The Grains of Sand
musical artist
31
The Barbarians
The Barbarians
band
32
Bermuda Triangle Band
Bermuda Triangle Band
American band
33
The Gants
The Gants
Milan the Leather Boy
American musician

Milan the Leather Boy

Intro
American musician
Music

Milan Radenkovich (December 15, 1941 – March 14, 1971), who was always credited mononymously as Milan, was an American record producer, songwriter and recording artist on numerous songs made throughout the 1960s, mostly though not exclusively in the garage rock genre. He released an LP and numerous singles for seven different national record labels and other independent labels (a total of more than 30 songs) under a variety of names, including Milan with His Orchestra, Milan, The World of Milan, Milan (The Leather Boy), and The Leather Boy, and also worked under the name Rick Rodell. As a producer, arranger and/or songwriter, Milan oversaw many other releases by a variety of artists ranging from the pop singer Lou Christie to the psychedelic rock band the Head Shop.

Greg Shaw placed Milan's song "I'm a Leather Boy" as the opening track on two different albums in the Pebbles series: the Pebbles, Volume 10 CD and the earlier Pebbles, Volume 11 LP (which was also the first album to be released on his AIP record label). He has written of Milan as being "a cryptic artist who made a series of high image records offering himself as some leather-clad, bike-riding rebel, but so stylized he might've been imagined by Andy Warhol. . . . The only name to be found on these records is Milan, a name that also shows up as writer/producer on a big pile of records, from the early 60s right thru the end of the decade. . . . But who was he? No further clue has ever emerged. This is one guy whose story really cries out to be told."

In the promotional material for the 2009 retrospective album Hell Bent for Leather, Milan was described in this way: "From his earliest incarnation in the record industry as a Xmas twister, the enigmatic Milan has changed his name and re-invented himself several times: a teen idol with a cute hairdo and a preppy look, a garage gonzo savage, an all dressed-in-black biker stud, a psychedelic screamer in love with satellite sounds, and other characters known or waiting to be discovered. One thing is for sure: Few people can claim so many identities in less than a decade."