Groobygirls Spite I Love Rock And Roll Sh Best May 2026

I love rock and roll / So spite me again, baby / Put another dime in the jukebox, baby / I love rock and roll / So watch me ruin your reputation.

If you enjoyed this article, share it with someone who still buys CDs at merch tables. And if you’re in a band called Groobygirls — please send a demo.

When the Groobygirls play cover sets (rarely, but it happens), they always include I Love Rock and Roll — but altered. One bootleg recording from a basement show in Youngstown, Ohio, features a version where the lyrics become: groobygirls spite i love rock and roll sh best

It could be a search from someone trying to find a long-deleted MP3 of a local band they saw once in 2018. It could be a fragment of a fan’s live journal entry. Or it could be a mantra: Be grooby. Use spite. Love rock and roll. And be the best sh (she, shit, super-human) you can be.

Or perhaps—it’s pure attitude.

This article won’t pretend to decode a typo. Instead, we’ll use it as a launchpad to explore a real musical subculture: Welcome to the world of the Groobygirls. Chapter 1: Who Are the Groobygirls? (A Fictional Underground Movement) The term "groobygirls" doesn’t exist in mainstream music databases. So let’s invent it — because great music history is full of scenes that started with a misspoken word or a homemade flyer.

Unlike the “love and peace” hippie archetype or the polished pop-punk star, the Groobygirls embrace pettiness, grudges, and resentment — and turn them into hooks. A Groobygirl song doesn’t just break up with you; it keys your car and writes a bridge about it. I love rock and roll / So spite

She hates the way I dance / I hate the way she lies / But when the bass drum hits / Spite opens my eyes / SH best, SH best / I’m the one they’ll forget last.

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