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SteveG View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 06 2015 at 11:40
 
Iron Butterfly: Ball 1969. Real Gone Music 2015 Expanded Edition.

 

I'm sure that many folks at WEA Records are relieved that Real Gone Music has licensed this terrific follow up to Iron Butterfly's 1968 mega hit album In-A-Gadda-Da-Vidda so that one fan (ahem) of this album will stop pestering them to reissue it in remastered form.
 
It's not only been remastered with good sound quality for a budget label, but also expanded to include two non album 45 rpm singe cuts.
 
Iron Butterfly choose not to 'remake'  In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida and concentrated on short form compositions which ultimately failed to give the public In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida Part II, but in hindsight, delivered something much less dated and much more adventurous.
 
Ball is as close to a great Iron Butterfly album that the group was able to get, and is the closest interface between Psychedelic Rock and Progressive Rock as any sixties American band would get. It's five (out of ten) standout tracks include In The Time Of Our Lives, Soul Experience, Real Fright, Filled With Fear and Lonely Boy, which run the gamut from Vox Organ clinic on ghostly atmospheric themes from keyboardist/vocalist Doug Ingle, to stellar lead guitar work from eighteen year old Erik Braun, that becomes a story inside of the songs proper. Bassist Lee Dorsman takes his strong McCartney playing style displayed on In-A-Gadda-Da Vida and makes it his own on Ball, with influences from the Door's, The Beatles and the Gothic underpinnings of Edgar Alan Poe juxtaposed with American R&B and soul influences from Booker T and The MGs to ? And The Mysterians
peppered throughout every song on album without sounding the least bit derivative.
 
The psychedelic recording effects are not dated for a sixties album and an 'in your face' production sound, courtesy of California's renowned Gold Star Studios (Pet Sounds, Good Vibrations from the Beach Boys) and  rounded out by additional work at NYC's The Record Plant, easily sells the album.
 
Ball is not a consistent Iron Butterfly album due to band's hit or miss songwriting, but is clearly their best and is a welcome return of a lost Psych Rock classic. At least for one long time fan. (Ahem.) 


Edited by SteveG - June 06 2015 at 18:04
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2015 at 17:49
Thanks Doc. I've heard songs from My Friend Jack that were excellent, but this is the first time I've heard anything by The Open Mind, who are very good as well.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2015 at 11:57
Another one of my favorites from the old days.....
 
One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 15 2015 at 11:50
An obscure band from England...liked some of their tracks.....
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2015 at 19:35
The curious case of Michael Chapman.
Fully Qualified Survivor [Vinyl]
Michael Chapman: Fully Qualified Survivor 1970.
 
 
Way back in the heyday of the swinging British Folk Rock boom of the nineteen sixties, there was one reluctant acoustic guitar hero who instead of challenging the likes of Burt Jansch and John Renbourn, decided to turn away from his ever changing alternate guitar tunings (he never used the same tunings twice on the same album, or so he said) and an intoxicating mix of rapid fire raga, Arabic scales and un godly string drones that have been forever preserved in his debut album released in 1969 titled Rainmaker
 
Michael Chapman originally hailed from Hull, England and a dense accent coupled with words unfitting for his ever changing surroundings brought along some quizzical looks from stunned audiences, such as the time her was performing in NYC and after breaking out into a coughing fit said "these French fags are killing my throat" which would have made perfect sense to someone from Hull or Halifax or anywhere in England in the early nineteen seventies. But obviously not in NYC.
 
But I digress. After Chapman recorded his debut album for Harvest Records, he got it into his head that he wanted to be a singer/songwriter and dumb down the guitar pyrotechnics. This was fine with the artfully eccentric producer Gus Dudgeon, who himself would shorty rocket to fame as the producer of Elton John's seminal album Honky Chateau.
 
So Chapman's album was spared no expense and Chapman himself had hit a high watermark in his own songwriting that he would never again equal. The first of the album's tracks, Aviator, featured a melancholy rhythm section, Chapman's strummed acoustic and world weary vocals surrounded on the left channel by strains of solo cello that was answered on the right channel with solo violin, in what was the start of probably one of the finest Acid Folk albums to ever be forged into vinyl.
 
The albums' best known song in it's native UK was a John Peel favorite called Postcards From Scarborough, which started as an sentimental acoustic folk strum that morphes into a remembrance song of love in it's verses before abruptly changes into a angry caustic chorus that really needs to be heard in order to take in it's effect, as it's hard to compare to any other song.
 
Where the Holy Model Rounders, Pearls Before Swine and even Syd Barrett merely hinted at Acid Folk's path, Chapman took you on a long dark esoteric and, at times, existential journey through his life, loves and past memories, both good and bad, while Dudgeon's deft production skills made the songs atmospheric without being over powering. Fully Qualified Survivor was the result and it's an album that will keep you on your toes. Even the title track is misleading as it's a hard rocking love song with great guitar hooks by Mick Ronson (soon to be creating great music with one David Bowie.)
 
By 1970, Acid Folk seemed to run out of the same steam as the Psychedelic Rock to which it was related.
 
And Michael Chapman never became a well known singer/songwriter, but he gave it his all. And it's probably on this album.
 
 


Edited by SteveG - April 15 2015 at 17:56
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 08 2015 at 07:04
Perry Leopold Christian Lucifer LP (1973) 2015


http://psychedelic-sounds-international.bandcamp.com/album/perry-leopold-christian-lucifer-lp-1973-2015





Quote This album is some kind of a mystery and miracle, the latter due to the fact that except for some mixdown copies all the mastertapes have been erased for reuse soon after the recordings were finished for the studio went bankrupt and the material had been sold. In a miraculous way this album came to see the light as a reissue in 1999 and now, some forty years after the initial recording sessions, this music manages to enchant me in its entirety and I am left sedated, unable and unwilling to resist this temptation. The artist I write about here is Perry Leopold, an ambitious musician from the Philadelphia (USA) area who played in rock bands in the 60s and got to release his first acid folk masterpiece “Experiments in metaphysics” back in 1970, a rather twisted effort which strummed past the mainstream success back in its days. From 1971 to 1973 Perry worked on his opus magnum which should have been “Christian Lucifer”, an even more sophisticated and melodic album, still drenched colors man actually should not see and executed with a sense of progressiveness that was mainly associated with the rock scene in Europe. Perry Leopold created this album nearly all alone with a good hand in writing melodies of an unearthly, mythical beauty that he connected with cantilevered instrumental passages in which he piles layers of acoustic guitars, cellos, bells, strings, flutes and a few analogue keyboards and organs upon each other to achieve harmony structures of utter complexity in which the listener could get lost like he was trying to find a non existing path to escape a jungle. The whole piece of sound art, despite the overall accessible approach, bears a deeply spiritual atmosphere and sets your soul in a quiet and peaceful mood. Highly recommended to fans of progressive and symphonic folk and singer / songwriter artists of the ancient days like THE INCREDIBLE STRING BAND, DULCIMER and NICK DRAKE but also of contemporary psychedelic folksters like IN GOWAN RING or BIRCH BOOK.





Edited by Svetonio - April 08 2015 at 07:07
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 07 2015 at 16:01
^  I have an original vinyl of that one and I saw them live in 1969 at a local outdoor concert in my home time just south of Chicago.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 07 2015 at 11:46

Quote Heavy late-60s psychedelic acid rock from Chicago
hyperbolium | Earth, USA | 07/15/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"One of the great psychedelic rock albums in Columbia's catalog, originally released in 1969 by an obscure Chicago quartet (though apparently recorded in Detroit!). The tremendous production merged heavy rock with horns, orchestral strings and church organ in a swirl of attention-getting stereophonic touches. Those who enjoy Arthur Brown's post-Crazy World albums with Kingdom Come will enjoy the way this album is put together. Where Brown tended to ELP-like prog-rock, Aorta had more of a Chicago-influenced soul sound beneath their heavy Fillmore-styled ballroom electric rock.

There are apparently several different import reissues circulating. The Buy or Die label reissue from Germany has garnered poor reviews for its sound quality. The Alcinous Ltd. release from Greece sounds quite good in comparison to the original vinyl. Perhaps Alcinous had a better source than Buy or Die, or simply did a better job of re-mastering for CD. The Alcinous audio is crisp throughout, with plenty of high-end to supplement the heartbeat lows, and enough dynamic range to capture everything from the flute-and-guitar interludes to the heaviest rocking passages. The packaging is nice, with reproductions of the front and back covers and a full lyric sheet inside the four-page booklet."
 






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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 07 2015 at 11:03
Since Steve G mentioned Kraftwerk in his review of Neil Young's Trans, I figured I'd give them a nod here.



Lyrically, it's not psychedelic - just a lot of stuff about robots a la Fritz Lang's Metropolis and the later Blade Runner film. Musically, on the other hand, I think it very much qualifies. Especially with my favorite piece on the album, "Neon Lights", where the music captures the bright lights of a large city, one of the closer ways, IMO, of experiencing an acid trip without the acid. I love the synth tones on here, they're just otherworldly.
He looks at this world and wants it all... so he strikes, like Thunderball!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 07 2015 at 10:33
ex-Yugoslav 60s psych: Grupa 220






Quote Review by SeyoSPECIAL COLLABORATOR Honorary Collaborator
4 stars Debut album of Zagreb-based GRUPA 220 "Nasi dani" (eng. Our Days) belongs to the category of records about which one could say: "Even if it were released as an empty piece of vinyl without a sound, it would have still been historically important"! It was the first LP record released in Yugoslavia (late 1968) by a domestic label (Jugoton) and by a Yugoslav rock band (GRUPA 220), which at the time were called "vocal-instrumental combos" (local abbr. "VIS") or "beat ensembles" playing music influenced by the British invasion/rock'n'roll sound of the mid-1960s.

But "Nasi dani" was and still remains more than that. Unlike the fashion of the day when Yugoslav bands mostly played covers of international hits (in broken English or in translated versions) or instrumental surf rock of the Shadows, Drago Mlinarec and his group engaged in writing their own songs and thus manufacturing the first authentic, domestic rock hits in the local language like "Osmijeh" (eng. Smile) from 1967. This practice was groundbreaking and pioneering effort in ex-Yugoslavia and perhaps only INDEXI could match GRUPA 220 in that manner. Even politically significant for the period of Titoist "real socialism", this action showed to the Yugoslav establishment that "pop music" (as it was called those days) was not only an "American imperialist import" but also a global musical expression that could nicely fit into local cultures and produce quality.

Musically, this album sounds little bit like famous transitional albums of the BEATLES ("Rubber Soul", "Revolver") or Bob Dylan ("Highway 61", "Blonde on Blonde") with tiny elements of psychedelia impregnated in the songs, particularly the eerie Alan Price- like organ and wah-wahed guitar licks. The title track bookending the album invokes the quasi-classical organ melodies of PROCOL HARUM, while the most "progressive" is certainly 6-minute "Negdje postoji netko" (eng. There is Someone Somewhere) with a loose, hypnotic and jazzy arrangement. Strong eastern-tinged percussions and recorder solo played by Branimir Zivković reminded rock critic Zlatko Gall of some early TRAFFIC works when he wrote liner notes for 2000 CD reissue. This song would re-surface later on the namesake solo album by Mlinarec in 1977. The second songwriter in the band, guitarist/vocalist Vojko Sabolović, was more inclined towards straight pop melodies and danceable hits so three of his tracks somehow do not seem to merge well with Mlinarec's cynical and introspective "lonesome wolf" Dylanesque lyrics such as "Starac" (eng. The Old Man) and "Besciljni dani" (eng. Aimless Days).

Overall, do not expect much in terms of production, instrumental prowess or mammoth and complex song structures - it is too early for that! Remember, we are talking about 1968 and the closest we can relate this LP to prog rock is to say it might fit into the proto-prog category. But, the progress here lies in the form and in the historical/regional context, not in the vinyl grooves. This album represents the birthplace of Yugoslav (and hence Bosnian/Croatian/Macedonian/Montenegrin/Serbian/Slovene) long- playing discography of rock music and of many of its later subdivisions including progressive rock.



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 06 2015 at 10:25
Two more Easter eggs (albums) from 1968.  UK's The Small Faces' Ogden's Nut Gone Flake and the US's Country Joe and The Fish's I-Feel-Like-I'm-Fixin'-To-Die-Rag could not be more socially or culturally different from each other except for the fact that both albums resist the trend of adding Eastern instruments such as sitars,  or over the top recording tricks such as backwards and vari speeded tapes to their psychedelic sound mixes.
Ogdens Nut Gone Flake
Charly Records (UK) 2 CD Deluxe Remaster.
While "Fixin'-To-Die" starts off with the famous Fish Cheer (in it's clean original form) before seguing into the Vaudeville rag time romp of the album's title track before reverting into more of The Fishes by now well known blues tinged Psych rock, Ogden's Nut displays The Small Faces' Vaudeville rock fusion over the course of the entire album, with the misspoken song links of the album's second side connecting Happiness Stan with the four other hysterically, if not quite understood by Americans, second two songs.
 I Feel Like Im Fixin To Die
Verve Records (UK) 2 CD Deluxe Remaster.
 
 
 
Both albums were extremely well recorded for their eras and both of the CD remasters that are shown present these albums in audiophile sound as well as supplying rare stereo album masters (Fixin'-To- Die) or  alternate stereo song mixes for a possible stereo album presentation (Ogden's Nut).
 
This post is for Kevin (Lear'sFool) for peaking my interest again in The Small Faces, not only Ogden's Nut, but also in their other albums and single releases by The Small Faces and their proceeding incarnation The Faces.
 
A Happy Easter and Passover to all!
 
 Looks like I'll be heading to Japan and Asia for a few months. (I wonder what they celebrate?) Domo Arigato!


Edited by SteveG - April 06 2015 at 19:34
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 05 2015 at 00:54
Quote If you face a „Jesus“ look-alike in a white robe with an acoustic guitar and a beard in full blossom on the cover of a record you know you’re on the trail of a real oddity, in whatever way it might be. Then you check the name and it says D.R. Hooker on the cover. Is it his name or is he a doctor who cures prostitutes, so called “hookers” ? What is this all about? With a bit of effort you may find out that this is the name of a musician from the Connecticut scene of the early 70s and that he gathered a bunch of willing hired guns around to back him up instrumentally. You will also be able to get the information that the original vinyl pressing in 1972 had only a limited run of 99 copies and is nowadays as rare as gold dust but there may have been reissues in the meantime. Well, if something like that gets reissued, it should have some kind of a fan base among collectors of 70s music and most of them go nuts for psychedelic, hardrock and progressive rock. So, can we say that this little obscurity with the utterly odd cover is some kind of the early 70s hardrock and psyche scene’s Holy Grail? There might be even more obscure records (like STONEWALL – Stoner) with print runs even lesser in size but D.R. HOOKER – The truth definitely belongs to the most iconic records in the field of US rock. Now we come to the actual musical quality of this item and despite a little rough and unpolished sound, the music is definitely intriguingly composed, well executed and backed with feelings of peace or passion, whatever song you get to listen to. The fervid opener “The sea” is one of the best examples what a brilliant composer Donald R. Hooker (there we go), singer / songwriter and hippie with a substance abuse history, really was. A pulsating rhythm made of regular drums and obsessively beaten percussions, held together by an ever pumping bass guitar, was the background for an epic, picturesque vocal melody riding on a guitar stampede with excessive leads. Next comes a gentle pop tune or a steaming funky rocker with an easy and relaxed vocal line or another quite progressively structured composition of crushing heaviness. No matter where the needle or the laser are in the groove, each note here is captivating and will inspire you down to the bare bones. Hard to compare this music but it ranges from pop psyche of the highest order in the vein of the STRAWBERRY ALARM CLOCK to powerful late 60s rock with a funky attitude as played by so many rockbands those days to thought provoking singer / songwriter tunes in the vein of Neil Young, Nick Drake or even Donovan Leitch with either lush or sparse arrangements. And there is way more than that. Haunting synthesizer lines on powerful guitars build an epic beginning for a fuzzed out, yet relaxed garage rocker that could be a lost outtake of a JEFFERSON AIRPLANE session with THE SEEDS. The whole album bears a homemade feeling and creates a very imaginative atmosphere. Next to the ten original tracks of “The truth” we get six of eight songs that were recorded in 1974 and been released about five years later as “Armageddon”. And all of these songs come in the same way as the ones on “The truth”. 60s psychedelia, dramatic pop, progressive power rock and great folky bits and pieces flow into each other. The result is music in full blossom, so colorful and thrilling that you will definitely give this album a heavy rotation on or in your music player.







http://psychedelic-sounds-international.bandcamp.com/album/d-r-hooker-the-truth-cd-1972-2015
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 04 2015 at 12:38
Ahh, easter eggs from Steve
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 04 2015 at 11:16
For the Elevator's fan that has everything:
 
The 13th Floor Elevators: Kingdom of Heaven-Live. Airline Records 2015.
 
 
This collection of great sounding "audience recordings" mainly from 1966 features songs that were featured on The Psychedelic Sounds Of...album and is probably more important for who listened to these recordings  (Patty Smith, Tom Verlaine et al) and how these "alternate recordings" influenced their music. The end of the disc moves into three 1967 Easter Everywhere era tracks that show the heavy edge the band was moving into before prominent band members Roky Erickson and Tommy Hall went AWOL. A treat!


Edited by SteveG - April 06 2015 at 15:05
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 03 2015 at 07:46
We needs a Freakbeat thread.
Open up some eyes.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 03 2015 at 05:36
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

^ Ummm...Svetty, I've never heard of "The True", but based on the description of the band and their sound (Kinks? Who?), it doesn't seem that putting them with psych rock is applicable. I know you like to display your mad cut-and-paste skills, but to what purpose here?
The True was played Freakbeat, and above metnioned The Who was released a few songs in that obscure 60s psychedelic sub-genre that was called Freakbeat at that time, e.g. I Can See For Miles and Armenia City In The Sky. That's why they are here.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 02 2015 at 21:26
"From The 13th Floor Elevators to the Black Angels and Beyond"

N.P. :    the Beyond  lp  (on tape)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 02 2015 at 19:32
^Hello againWallace. You're right on schedule.
Perhaps your new book will better help you understand Psych rock and will stop you from just pretending that you know it's fundamentals.
Btw, the book I'm writing will be much more detailed then anything that you have read so far in the Psych Lounge or privately, but you will have to pay for that as well when it's published. And that statement extends to include Ben Graham's pedestrian text "A Gathering of Promises" which is named after a non psych Bubble Puppy album. Psych On!

Edited by SteveG - April 03 2015 at 09:29
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 02 2015 at 15:50
www.zero-books.net/books/gathering-promises
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 02 2015 at 11:59

Eric Burdon and The Animals:

 

Winds of Change

 

 

Winds of Change 1967.

East meets West. When the original Animals' broke up in 1965, lead singer Eric Burdon relocated to sunny San Francisco and haunted other southern central LA areas where he became the defacto East meats West psychedelic conduit  for British styled Psychedelic rock  by releasing two counter culture albums that channeled some of the British Psych motifs back into the California Bay area which also found their way back into the Texas Psych rock scene in addition to the British Psych albums being played on either local radio or at private vinyl listening sessions.
 
Burdon's firs album 1067's Winds of Change celebrated American beat poetry form writers like Kerouac, of whom he became enormously enchanted with, as well a recording a tribute song to Hendrix's coming of social coming of age question that was a poor homage to Hendrix's song (and album) Are You Experienced?, in which Burdon tries to imitate Hendrix's vocal style but sadly comes off sounding much more like Bob Dylan.
 
However, Winds of Change was a counter culture hit as was it's more adventurous follow up, 1968's The Twain Shall Meet, whose hippie endorsements in which Burdon and his new Animals backing group tackle more overt social issues on the great album track, and edited single Sky Pilot, while the rest of the album goes into experimental psychedelic songs that feature both sitar along with a British military style march with bagpipes within the same song. This was probably the zenith  of Burdon's ambassador's role of the California's hippie turn on , tune in and drop out  evangelization of Haight Ashbury movement and, even though extremely dated, the album still holds a quiet charm even today.
 
Eric Burdon and The Animals.
Twain Shall Meet
 
The Twain Shall Meet 1968.


Edited by SteveG - April 02 2015 at 13:38
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