Starting in the 1970s, years after the last fuzzy garage rock chord had faded away, interest in the genre was reignited, spurred on by compilations with such titles as “Nuggets” “Pebbles” and “Back from The Grave.” Collectors searched for all but forgotten vinyl records from the 1960s, and magazines devoted to garage rock filled their pages with unearthed tales of teenage band lore.
The Dantes didn’t miss out on this revival. In the mid-1980s, “Can’t Get Enough Of Your Love” was featured on the “Highs In The Mid 60s” collection. The band reformed to play several successful reunion shows in the 1990s and 2000s and stayed in the public eye through positive media coverage and social media attention.
It’s been over fifty years since the Dantes, the Fifth Order and their fellow garage rockers ruled the Columbus teen music scene, fifty years of shifts and changes in popular culture and society, which might lead one to overlook or dismiss the importance of white suburban teenagers picking up guitars in the 1960s. Nevertheless, the music that those teenagers created originally for fun was a part of the massive wave of social, political and creative upheaval and energy that swept up their generation during that decade. And while it’s inarguable that nostalgia colors the lenses when looking back at the 1960s, it remains clear that the teenage garage bands of that era helped define their own times as well as influence the music of generations to come.
And the excitement and energy they generated lingers on. Even now, when the needle drops into the grooves of an old record, and the sound of a 12-string guitar, a cascading jangle of notes, emerges from the crackles and pops as “Can’t Get Enough Of Your Love” bursts from the speakers, it’s obvious that not even the dust, scratches and nicks of time can dull the sound that the Dantes unleashed on Columbus that long ago spring of 1966.
Further Reading
www.buckeyebeat.com
https://garagehangover.com/dantes/
https://doclehman.wordpress.com/category/ohio-60s-bands/