PA's Top 100 Prog Albums, Year by Year |
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Psychedelic Paul
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 40087 |
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Grumpy probably isn't too far out with his estimate of 4.5 years to finally reach 2023, bearing in mind it's taken me about a month to assemble each annual Top 100 Albums list so far.
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David_D
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 26 2010 Location: Copenhagen Status: Offline Points: 15119 |
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Well, you surely like it the big way. |
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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David_D
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 26 2010 Location: Copenhagen Status: Offline Points: 15119 |
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You could start from the other end, Grumpy, and make it top 10, or whatever you'd prefer.
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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Psychedelic Paul
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 40087 |
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83. 1969: Pussy - Pussy Plays - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_nXznIqXGKNj_wL8WAzA6zbDlHuYqBU2d8
PUSSY were a Psychedelic Rock band with a rather risque name that invites all sorts of rude double entendres, so no sniggering at the back. Their one and only album "Pussy Plays" (1969), featured a bizarre image on the cover of a startled pussy cat with VERY sharp claws. The band were formed in Hertfordshire, England in the mid-1960's and went through various name changes before apparently deciding on "Pussy" as the ideal name for a psychedelic sixties group, and why not. And so, without further ado, let's play Pussy.
There's an air of mystery surrounding "Come Back June". It's a typical American west coast Psychedelic Rock song (from England) but who or what is June? Is it the month of June or is it a lady of the female agenda? Well, let's find out by delving into the lyrics:- "My world's breakin' in pieces, My world's breakin' in two, My heart's breakin' in pieces, My heart's breakin' in two, Come back, June." ..... Mystery solved. The song is a boulevard of broken dreams where the lovelorn singer is clearly going through some deep emotional turmoil here after being dumped by his lovely lady June. Some of the best songs are written as the result of broken relationships though, and that's certainly true with this song too. It's no lilting ballad though. It's a rousing, rip-roaring opening burst of psychedelic sixties Rock. There's another great song on the way with "All of My Life". You can wait all of your life for a great song like this to come along, and then they all arrive together at once on one awesome album, and that's proving to be the case here. "All of My Life" is like a gorgeous summer breeze. It's a song that's perfect for surfing the soaring California breakers at Big Sur, although you don't see too many surf boards in the heart of Hertfordshire, England, where this particular band hails from. We're continuing the sunny California theme now with "We Built The Sun". This is an altogether mellower groove, and not the psychedelic purple haze of the first two opening sunbursts of raw solar energy. No, this sounds more like the saccharine sweet Psychedelic Pop of The Association than the wild and far-out Acid Rock of Jimi Hendrix. The clear honey-voiced vocals are what really shine like a beacon on this lovely laid-back song, featuring some beautiful sun-drenched Beach Boys-style harmonising from the whole band singing together in unison. Is it a bird? Is it a plane? No, it's "Comets", a weird out-of-this world excursion into the dark and mysterious realms of deep space where no one can hear you scream. "Comets' are in a highly irregular orbit if this wacky Twilight Zone song is anything to go by. To paraphrase Hawkwind, "Comets" represents an album highlight of "Astounding Sounds, Amazing Music". We've waited over half a century for "Comets" to come around again, a bit like Hailey's Comet, but the wait is now over, because this long-lost icy snowball (named "Pussy Plays") has returned with a stream of fantastic songs in its glowing wake. "Comets" is a scintillating sci-fi fantasy ride across the universe, featuring an exotic cosmic extravaganza of spooky voices and weird sound effects that could have come straight out of Doctor Who or Star Trek. Beam me up another great song Scotty! Side Two opens magnificently with "Tragedy In F Minor", which is no tragedy at all, but an absolutely sensational instrumental that's simply sublime. It's a lavishly-produced lush symphonic epic that's positively awash with sensational strings, creating a rich tapestry of sound, guaranteed to carry you away on an ecstatic pleasure wave of sweet blissful dreams. We have lift-off! Just when you think this album couldn't possibly get any better, along comes "The Open Ground" to astound and delight us in equal measure. This is a psychedelic supernova of truly epic proportions! Heavens above! This earth-shattering blast from the past has enough stored energy to lift the Space Shuttle up into orbit way above the Earth. This tremendous spacey music might even take you to the Dark Side of the Moon and back again, long before Pink Floyd travelled there with their stellar 1973 album. We're plunging back down to Earth now for "Everybody's Song", a storming psychedelic Jazz-Rock number where the dynamic keyboard player and wild wah-wah guitarist battle it out together to see who's the greatest musician of them all. "Everybody's Song" is indeed a song for everyone. It's almost impossible not to like this song. We've reached the ultimate piece of music on the album now with the intriguingly-titled "G.E.A.B." There's no clue as to what the initials might mean as it's an instrumental number, although to call this thunderous high octane blast of super-charged Rock & Roll an "instrumental", can't possibly do it justice. Make no mistake. This is a relentless all-out sonic assault, and just to remind us that this album is titled "Pussy Plays", there's a loud "Meow" from a pussy cat right at the end! Pussy Galore! This timeless psychedelic relic is a supersonic blast from the past. The album is an absolute masterpiece that sounds as fresh and original as it ever did, over half a century on from when Pussy first played. This outstanding album is the cat's whiskers! |
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Psychedelic Paul
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86. 1969: Man - Revelation - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2o6dEzsXl50
MAN, Oh Man! Where do we begin with such a prolific band of Welsh boyos whose long history stretches back over half a century in the vast kingdom of prog? Well, let's begin by travelling back in time to 1968 and the early Dawn of MAN in the lovely mining town of Merthyr Tydfil, deep in the heart of South Wales. MAN's remarkably long career has had more ups and downs than a whore's drawers and amazingly, they're still going strong well into the 21st Century with seventeen studio albums to their credit and with their latest album released as recently as 2019. MAN blasted off into orbit with their first Space Rock album "Revelation" in early 1969, which caused more controversy than a pregnant nun by featuring a simulated orgasm on the song "Erotica" (which was subsequently banned in the UK), long before Madonna struck a pose in her conical bra over two decades later with her sultry song and album of the same name. The Ascent of MAN continued with their second album, the comically-titled "2 Ozs Of Plastic With A Hole In The Middle", released in late 1969. That was followed by a string of seven back- to-back studio albums recorded during the 1970's, up until the release of "The Welsh Connection" in 1976, when MAN disconnected shortly afterwards and went their separate ways due to the age-old band problem of "artistic differences". The band reformed with a new line-up in the 1980's and released their comeback album "The Twang Dynasty" in 1992, with a further seven albums and an ever-revolving door of line-up changes taking us right up to the present day with the release of "Anachronism Tango" in 2019. MAN are arguably one of the best bands ever to emerge from Wales and they've endured almost as long as Doctor Who's TARDIS, so let's travel back through Time and Relative Dimension in Space now to the genesis of MAN-kind and delve into the secrets of "Revelation".
BOOM!! Apocalypse Now! "And in the Beginning" opens ominously to the apocalyptic sound of an atomic explosion, followed by a distant lonely organist, playing what sounds like a feeble budget-priced Bontempi organ. The haunting music conjures up a stark and forbidding image of an irradiated desolate landscape - similar to a typical day during the coronavirus lockdown - where the chances of coming across another living person are about as remote as finding a moderate member of the Taliban in Afghanistan. Mullah Lite, perhaps? It's not all doom and gloom though, as there's some Man-sized prog on the way. Forget the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. These are the Five Welshmen of Man, and they're charging right at you with all guns blazing. Take a look at the powerful message contained within these portentous lyrics:- "The ageless face of time, Smiles carefree and is gone, And in its wake leaves nothing, Save future yet to come, And out of fire and time, A world is born and lives, A world still young and virgin, Its face yet to be scarred, And they created man." ..... This Psychedelic/Space Rock extravaganza is a real blast! The music features a triumphal marching rhythm with some hippyish Good Vibrations from the spaced-out psychedelic guitarist. There's also a sombre organ and spoken word passage thrown in for good measure too, giving the music a sense of added drama and gravitas - just like the newsreader back in 1969 who had to keep a seriously straight face when he announced that the Vietnamese villages of Phuoc Me and Ban Me Tuat had just been bombed by the American airforce. Maybe the newsreader had a few choice words of his own for his news-team after being given that particular story to read out. Bursting onto the scene now is "Sudden Life", a quite extraordinary two-part song that opens as a basic British Blues number with a pounding rhythmic 4/4 beat, but then goes completely off the rails - a bit like this album review - and descends into a Crazy Train acid trip to hell and back. The music's crazier than rats in the attic nibbling on a diet of Bananas, Fruitcake and Nuts, not to mention the maniacal singer who sounds like he's away with the fairies in a straitjacket. The men in white coats are coming to take him away, Ha-haaa! Next, we hear the long-drawn-out echoing cry of H-E-L-L-O-O-O from a man in an "Empty Room", which just happens to be the title of the third song on the album, appropriately enough. On the contrary though, it turns out "Empty Room" is a fabulous Full House of scintillating Psychedelic Rock in the style of Jefferson Airplane and Big Brother & the Holding Company, with the male vocalist sounding remarkably like a curious cross between Janis Joplin and Grace Slick on this tripping flower-power song. Maybe he was wearing an extra-tight pair of trousers on that particular day to help him reach those really high notes. The band have come up trumps again with straight Aces in this psychedelic freak-out. It's time now for some gloriously pompous prog with the anthemic sound of "Puella! Puella!" (Latin for "Girl! Girl!"). There are no lyrics as such, but there's some wonderful choral harmonising to be heard from the five-piece Welsh choir of Man. Wow, Oh Wow! They're so incredible! This band of boyos have enough awesome vocal power between them to fill an entire cathedral. This tremendous album of classic Proto-Prog is turning out to be just as reliable and dependable as a 200- year-old Volkswagen Beetle that starts up first time after being found abandoned in a sea cave. Remember Woody Allen's "Sleeper" movie? Turn the lights down low now, because we're getting in a smoochy lovey-dovey mood for some deep and meaningful "Love", a lilting melancholic refrain with the lovelorn heart-broken singer in full romantic balladeer mode, so get those Man-sized tissues at the ready. Listen out again for the very occasional, helium-induced, high-pitched vocals, which brings to mind the Hee Bee Gee Bees classic, "Meaningless Songs in Very High Voices". And now we come to the positively orgasmic and orgiastic "Erotica", a song with more gasps and groans than an Emmanuelle movie, or a Wimbledon tennis tournament. It's steamier than a Joan Collins movie, or a bodice-ripping Jackie Collins novel. It's easy to see why "Erotica" was banned in Britain in the not so permissive sixties, although having a song banned in the U.K never did the Sex Pistols or Frankie Goes to Hollywood any harm. This rather racy and risque tune is hotter than Serge Gainsbourg & Jane Birkin's lustful "Je T'Aime" and Donna Summer's extended 12-inch "Love to Love You Baby" put together. The manic musical Viagra of "Erotica" is an unrestrained psychedelic organ and guitar jamboree from beginning to end, although it doesn't quite reach the zany level of insanity of Aphrodite's Child's "Infinity", which has to be a good thing. And so, after that hot and steamy love-fest of amorous fun and frolics, it's time for a cold shower now. Onto Side Two now and the "Blind Man" is leading the way. It's a two-part song, beginning with a rabble-rousing burst of boogie-woogie piano, but then plunging into a dark mournful tale of loneliness and despair with these plaintive, emotionally- wrought lyrics:- "From my window in the alley I see life, Passing below, So very far away, And it doesn't really matter much to me, I've nothing to think of, No words to say, And the only answer seems to be that life, Is lying there waiting, To take my life away." ..... This impassioned song is a real tearjerker with the powerfully-emotive singer pouring out his heart and soul in this suicidal tale, that's even sadder than being a member of an N-SYNC tribute band. Onto a real album highlight now with "And Castles Rise in Children's Eyes", a classically-inspired prog-tastic spectacular - featuring some heavenly harmonisation - that's built around the grandiose majesty and splendour of Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto No. 1, and it doesn't come much grander than that! It's time for some heavy Heavy Prog, as storming into view right now is "Don't Just Stand There (Come in Out of the Rain)", a non-stop artillery barrage of sonic nirvana and pounding machine-gun percussion. This tremendously-rousing Top Gun music is as awe-inspiring as a screaming F-14 Tom-Cat - piloted by Tom Cruise - swooping down on Biggles down below in his sputtering Sopwith Camel. And now for something completely different: "Missing Pieces", a manic melange of chaotic noises that sounds crazier than a Monty Python sketch, or as mad as a March Hare at the Mad Hatter's tea party. It's probably best to skip this wacky "song" altogether and move onto "The Future Hides It's Face" which brings us right back to where we started from with the tinny sound of the Bontempi organ featured in the introduction again. We're at Mission Control in Houston in 1969 for this spectacular out-of-this-world Space Rock extravaganza as we blast off into orbit with actual recordings from the Apollo missions. The Eagle Has Landed! In the beginning, God created Man, and Man created Prog, and it was Good..... Man have blasted off into Space Rock heaven with their dazzling debut album of psychedelic Proto-Prog. It's one small step for Man, one giant leap for Prog-kind! |
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Psychedelic Paul
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 40087 |
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01. 1970: Van der Graaf Generator - H to He, Who Am the Only One - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XQR6e_wpeiY 02. 1970: Emerson, Lake & Palmer - Emerson, Lake & Palmer - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UoTJPldB_Vc 03. 1970: Caravan - If I Could Do It All Over Again, I'd Do It All Over You - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_lxLu4pwFGTn57EfAvXFx0FWoQfqQUsy60 04. 1970: Miles Davis - Bitches Brew - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=50fB5L1vmn8 05. 1970: Santana - Abraxas - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9m9wwP4LNOQ 06. 1970: Soft Machine - Third - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SL7mq30nmF0 07. 1970: Genesis - Trespass - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2OzAvSe5WyM 08. 1970: King Crimson - Lizard - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_kMGNyh1KK7oKQyUt1cAra7k5VB0yweeNY 09. 1970: Van der Graaf Generator - The Least We Can Do is Wave to Each Other - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_lNuUilJm-b2csXdNoaBVzfCvJFuEhYIfo 10. 1970: Amon Duul II - Yeti - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FnVT86eQlas 11. 1970: Chicago - Chicago II - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_ndk90AgovYl4XkFqy-BwVKQnIAgLRlRos 12. 1970: Various Artists - Jesus Christ Superstar - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLvTdu1-ynLERVmux8xQVY_MiciHqg9SBs 13. 1970: Gentle Giant - Gentle Giant - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OqzH4NR2YU0 14. 1970: Magma - Kobaia - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_lknnw3iSAC73rF8yEV5YArvrX8xKDbvX4 15. 1970: East of Eden - Snafu - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DdAQpPuHjbw 16. 1970: T2 - It's All Work Out in Boomland - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I1cKMIfcumg 17. 1970: Pink Floyd - Atom Heart Mother - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLtO3qLgs5z6ZebqMPFfuqPYxBRbYMr2G9 18. 1970: Jethro Tull - Benefit - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fW9_NDR6z1I 19. 1970: Supersister - Present from Nancy - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SurjxwfHNu8 20. 1970: Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention - Burnt Weeny Sandwich - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q5-T1J2YTdQ 21. 1970: King Crimson - In the Wake of Poseidon - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mBeB4aeVBzORcLWae_cPFmLyL3pybrp3E 22. 1970: Traffic - John Barleycorn Must Die - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aEEf1GCyK_8 23. 1970: Czeslaw Niemen - Enigmatic - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OZ7hFHqon1E 24. 1970: Rare Bird - As Your Mind Flies By - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_sfzY7DmX5w 25. 1970: Captain Beefheart - Lick My Decals Off, Baby - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OGX8X_5cScc 26. 1970: Culpeper's Orchard - Culpeper's Orchard - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZDT-g3fHA4c 27. 1970: Atomic Rooster - Death Walks Behind You - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_lAc_Uwk2wGf-M_Xi-0lKDzsmd2Cl4ejA0 28. 1970: Tim Buckley - Starsailor - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_n12_PTEpAIH-AESUtmkqfBev2yO_C5Nts 29. 1970: Nucleus - Elastic Rock - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_ms6plbaB4sI3A3xHeRD5ztR5NwSeCHRM4 30. 1970: The Greatest Show on Earth - Horizons - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m59QlRFwnN0 31. 1970: Demon Fuzz - Afreaka! - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XQXGVIfYrGQ 32. 1970: The Web - I Spider - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4d8Jiq7S_yc 33. 1970: Can - Soundtracks - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_noscTGsQt9An66LNvqtL0HruD6ss7Vzmc 34. 1970: Egg - Egg - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oI8EPOSSplg 35. 1970: Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention - Weasels Ripped My Flesh - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mJg70B_PUl0rXiTFrXGgcm2cWob8SpOR8 36. 1970: Lucifer's Friend - Lucifer's Friend - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLGsP1puWea4wZkQfWRLvmaHn_OttTekp- 37. 1970: Ahora Mazda - Ahora Mazda - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iz0s_8vdS1o 38. 1970: Sweet Smoke - Just a Poke - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NJ36d28plgc 39. 1970: Marsupilami - Marsupilami - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SrNGPpa2QRM 40. 1970: High Tide - High Tide - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hfvJ4jIm-Q8 41. 1970: Quatermass - Quatermass - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZFy4liIpREQ 42. 1970: If - If 2 - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_kRP3__yHHZS2ozpWMS0Ve9mhJsrRyF2Cw 43. 1970: Gracious - Gracious! - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EYWpvU5Hihg 44. 1970: Colosseum - The Grass is Greener - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zNceRP42bGY 45. 1970: If - If - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mQ7Nn8Hlvnw 46. 1970: Bo Hansson - Sagan om Ringen - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_m9Wd3aTm9dmlkSDFyBPqCkB3kb9UNPcf8 47. 1970: Trees - The Garden of Jane Delawney - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_lzoO7sxFzS9q4tde9DafSJ9zmNZ9-S0ts 48. 1970: Ekseption - Ekseption 3 49. 1970: Black Widow - Sacrifice - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LbfZyYLX8Lk 50. 1970: May Blitz - May Blitz - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qa_ZkhgKw_o 51. 1970: Colosseum - Daughter of Time - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ciRkQ23aZ4 52. 1970: Affinity - Affinity - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gRbonAd2ee8 53. 1970: Embryo - Opal - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H-Z_SG6FmaI 54. 1970: Annexus Quam - Osmose - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wYlUcCcqfXo 55. 1970: Julian's Treatment - A Time Before This - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CTD9SWyXtvk 56. 1970: Beggars Opera - Act One - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gKyuhcIPapo 57. 1970: Kevin Ayers & the Whole World - Shooting at the Moon - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLGfb2R92OHulYFUl2BrHyjHm6AqX-2Dot 58. 1970: Audience - Friend's Friend's Friend - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL_TaS3ukydpIsHKVr23whlnu362qTZHM5 59. 1970: Guru Guru - UFO - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4mmK6etUMQ0 60. 1970: Modry Efekt & the Jazz Q Prague - Conjunctio - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1aPHrYoCMWA 61. 1970: Trees - On the Shore - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y2PU3e9d70E 62. 1970: Atomic Rooster - Atomic Rooster - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iaC6yUOQ9ZU 63. 1970: Out of Focus - Wake Up! - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6gjqgY-Phsc 64. 1970: Uriah Heep - Uriah Heep - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QoNlqlZH_SE 65. 1970: Cressida - Cressida - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dp2h_meh-hY 66. 1970: Procol Harum - Home - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mzSJ6IeNy35VxQBY7gNhZycvtBfYOA8t4 67. 1970: Warhorse - Warhorse - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Xd5Oh0ystA 68. 1970: The Moody Blues - A Question of Balance - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_khuX-OHhnjQYsjKusZOkSenrIKUrgsmuQ 69. 1970: Frumpy - All Will Be Changed - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aDEkJzYZ67I 70. 1970: Pentangle - Cruel Sister - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_kKKM9jAPCTICIF-c9zf3g3ZfBEUWb6Ox4 71. 1970: Ache - De Homine Urbano - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W3fYakBr6lM 72. 1970: Supertramp - Supertramp - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jBFnJBbwYPM 73. 1970: Gravy Train - Gravy Train - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cfMYaWXY1Tk 74. 1970: Focus - In and Out of Focus - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o34Hftlard4 75. 1970: Czar - Czar - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_lI1JkBZK3tgs0s0QuWPM4OIRTQl27ur18 76. 1970: Carol Grimes' Delivery - Fools Meeting - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kVuWbCdbgBw 77. 1970: Earth and Fire - Earth and Fire - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pK5nAXzk9t0 78. 1970: Ekseption - Beggar Julia's Time Trip - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_kPe1itZ1Bx9ombaK2StFGTtcSugvAkOyI 79. 1970: Family - A Song for Me - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLAAC2263B559AD368 80. 1970: Titus Groan - Titus Groan - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m2yT8Q531GA 81. 1970: Aardvark - Aardvark - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lvkCSjQqpjo 82. 1970: Family - Anyway - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mOo2QPMYUTWcI69Vxt8Jc7VSvua1yXDcs 83. 1970: Frank Zappa - Chunga's Revenge - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mAjUzWHE7FuILIi3ufMAQDH1-GM4eCg9g 84. 1970: Curved Air - Airconditioning - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JtR58UnQfPY 85. 1970: Hawkwind - Hawkwind - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ocYmnkK2pZc 86. 1970: Modry Efekt - Meditace - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLGYpbKCrIhQy77IKjN9zcsnYCJALQL0gK 87. 1970: Kraftwerk - Kraftwerk - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E4b0-juTiQ8 88. 1970: Uriah Heep - Very 'eavy, Very 'umble - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KzylV7LpDyM 89. 1970: Tangerine Dream - Electronic Meditation - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_nQZZuCKIjf7hp20J1lL-ssUkr6_EanEZg 90. 1970: Birth Control - Birth Control - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0wTcKEzD7aI 91. 1970: Robert Wyatt - The End of an Ear - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_lZWgv3mSthsAZCOauH1isGsIjTfFrkGng 92. 1970: Popol Vuh - Affenstunde - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7hwl20jmDOk 93. 1970: YES - Time and a Word - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_kxZ_UfjS0e2GOzJV3BRZ0kONloNagZHtk 94. 1970: Black Widow - Black Widow - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z_FIexMc5ls 95. 1970: Strawbs - Dragonfly - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_lqF1h0xO5oAHtQuur3QnboW0P7Qog2VqA 96. 1970: Wigwam - Tombstone Valentine - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_n70zpj3682iKDC18v1ktqHCOi_RNXZmRU 97. 1970: Barclay James Harvest - Barclay James Harvest - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3O9-zl3FnEc 98. 1970: Various Artists - Zabriskie Point (soundtrack) - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLHDLoOm3xu5iAmgYHm_OJSHvY6Av6YtAE 99. 1970: Il Balletto de Bronzo - Sirio 2222 - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s0Ab6FofNkk 100 1970: Roger Waters & Ron Geesin - Music from the Body - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9XefPICms3U Edited by Psychedelic Paul - May 28 2023 at 03:31 |
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Psychedelic Paul
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 40087 |
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30. 1970: The Greatest Show on Earth - Horizons - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m59QlRFwnN0
THE GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH were a short-lived, eight-piece Jazz-Rock band from Great Britain who released two albums in 1970 on the specialist Prog-Rock label, Harvest Records, a branch of EMI. The band consisted of two singers/guitarists, a keyboard player, a bassist and drummer, and a three-piece horn section. Their music has been described as similar in style to the Jazz-Rock of early Chicago and Blood, Sweat & Tears. This 1970 album, "Horizon", was their debut album and they followed it up later that same year with "The Going's Easy", shortly before their break-up. The striking artwork for this album cover was designed by Hipgnosis, a specialist art and design group who produced many famous album covers of the classic Prog-Rock era. Let's have a listen now and see if this band really ARE The Greatest Show on Earth.
"Sunflower Morning" opens the album like a beautiful flower blossoming in radiant sunshine. The song title perfectly matches the ebullient mood of the music. It's a powerful organ-driven sunburst of classic prog. It's atmospheric, it's anthemic, and it's terrific music. It's a feel-good opening number designed to brighten up the dullest of days. Just take a look at the positive message in these uplifting lyrics:- "To wake up one day, Find that my eyes can't believe, All the good things around, That keep happening to me, And the world is filled with love, On a sunflower morning." ..... Now that we're in buoyant spirits after such an exuberant opening to the album, let's have a listen to Song No. 2: "Angelina". No, it's not about Angelina Jolie. This is a bright and breezy Jazz-Rock number about a lady in an old folks home, reminiscing about days gone by and longing to be young again. Take a look at these heartfelt lyrics:- "Angelina remembers the pleasant days When she was young, But doesn't seem realized these pleasant days are gone." ..... It's another sassy and brassy, cheerful-sounding number, despite the sad message contained in the lyrics. Onto Song No. 3 now and "Skylight Man". What's it all about you may well ask. Take a look at these enigmatic lyrics:- "Tells me if you try to run with a skylight man, It could put a strain on your eyes, 'Cause the stage is set for a whole life, Trying to take your line to the sky." ..... No, I haven't a clue what it all means either, but it's great music. The singer sounds remarkably like Peter Gabriel on this particular song, which has to be a good thing. It's another lively Jazz-Rock number that's as bold as brass with the horn section in fine fettle. On we come now to the closing song of Side One and "Day of the Lady". It's another emotionally appealing tale of a lady longing for times gone by with these touching lyrics:- "Through the recalling she has longed in calling, For days of diamonds and lace, Victorian springs nights, Banquets by gas light, Now neon light shines on her face." ..... This charming little Jazz-Rock ditty is carried along nicely by the dulcet tones of the singer and the pleasing cadence and cascade (to quote King Crimson) of the music by this talented eight-piece group of musicians. And so, what's next on the "Horizon" as we delve into Side Two. Song No. 5 is "Real Cool World", which was later released as a single. It's a rollicking rock & roll number brimming with energy and vitality. The single did well in Europe although it didn't make much of an impact in the U.K. The music certainly packs a punch though with the pounding rhythm and the guitarist embarking on a wild riffing spree. This song rocks!! "I Fought for Love" is up next. The keyboard player is in his element here, displaying impressive dexterity with some amazing keyboard runs in the style of keyboard maestro Ken Hensley, of Uriah Heep fame. This is Jazz-Rock with an uncompromising take-no-prisoners attitude. You're bound to be impressed by this powerful piece of music. And now we come to the epic title track, the 14-minute long "Horizons". This is where the eight musicians really get to demonstrate their individual prowess, taking it in turns with some very impressive soloing. There's a long drum solo, a sonorous keyboard solo, a flute solo, and a stunning wild guitar solo. What more could you ask for!? It's booming and bombastic and it sounds fantastic! The musicians sound like they're having a real blast here. How can you possibly follow that!? You follow it with "Again and Again", that's what. It's the closing song on the album and it's a rousing and uplifting romantic ballad, only this is no gently lilting romantic ballad. No, this is a powerful ballad going full steam ahead with the unstoppable power and energy of a runaway train. Make no mistake, this is a Power Ballad with full locomotive power! This terrific Jazz-Rock album really DOES sound like The Greatest Show on Earth, or at least it would be if you could see this album performed Live. This is bright and breezy British Jazz-Rock at its best. The music is very much in the style of early Chicago and Blood, Sweat & Tears, so if you like those bands, then you'll love this album too. If you haven't heard this stunning album before, then you're in for a real treat. We never know what wonderful music awaits us just over the "Horizon". |
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David_D
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My faves from PA's top 100 Prog albums of 1970 (mk III) are: 01. Van der Graaf Generator - H to He, Who Am the Only One 02. Emerson, Lake & Palmer - Emerson, Lake & Palmer 04. Miles Davis - Bitches Brew (considered as Progressive Music) 05. Santana - Abraxas (not really considered as Prog) 07. Genesis - Trespass 10. Amon Duul II - Yeti 12. Various Artists - Jesus Christ Superstar (not really considered as Prog) 16. T2 - It's All Work Out in Boomland 18. Jethro Tull - Benefit (not really considered as Prog) 23. Czeslaw Niemen - Enigmatic 46. Bo Hansson - Sagan om Ringen 63. Out of Focus - Wake Up! 71. Ache - De Homine Urbano |
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Psychedelic Paul
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31. 1970: Demon Fuzz - Afreaka! - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XQXGVIfYrGQ
DEMON FUZZ were a psychedelic Jazz-Funk collective with a heart full of Soul! The seven members of Demon Fuzz all emigrated to Britain from Commonwealth countries in the early 1960's. THe name of the band and the title of their first album "Afreaka!" (1970) gives some indication of the funky, psychedelic-infused, African tribal rhythms you can expect to hear on this freaky debut album. A compilation album titled "Roots and Offshoots" (1976) was later released on an independent label following the break-up of the band in the early 1970's. A CD re-issue of "Afreaka!" added three bonus tracks to the original five lengthy songs on the album.
We enter the mysterious world of Demon Fuzz with "Past, Present & Future", a psychedelic trip back in time to a bygone age of half a century ago. This funky Jazz-Rock album has really stood the test of time. Stir in some Graham Bond Organisation, Ginger Baker's Air Force, Brian Auger & the Trinity, and add a liberal dose of Funkadelic (all from the same early 1970's era), and you have a recipe for success with the sound of Demon Fuzz. Altogether now..... "They don't make music like this any more!" - and that's certainly the case with this superb debut. When you hear the first burst from the acid fuzz-toned guitar in the opening, swiftly followed by a storming horn section, you know you're about to hear something rather special indeed here, and so it proves to be. "Past, Present and Future" is a 10-minute long instrumental masterpiece of bold and brassy Jazz, featuring a hypnotic captivating rhythm. This cool and groovy music is sure to delight hippyish fans of the psychedelic sixties era too. "Afreaka!" has announced its impressive arrival in no uncertain terms with a fabulous fanfare of trumpets! The second piece of music is titled "Disillusioned Man", but you certainly won't be a disillusioned man (or woman) when you hear this lively and soulful number for the first time. It's a five-minute wonder in a fifty-five-minute-long album of stonkingly good tunes. All of the Jazzy elements are here in full force too, featuring an extended sexy solo on the alto sax and with the organ player belting out some funky rhythms in dazzling accompaniment. The singer sounds in mighty fine voice too with just the kind of deep and soulful vocals needed for this kind of groovy psychedelic Jazz album. He's a Soul Brother! Our musical journey continues with "Another Country", another storming Jazz rocker in what is turning out to be an album full of highlights, and we're barely halfway through the album yet. This is eight and a half minutes of soulful Jazz-Rock heaven! We're in a mellower mood for "Hymn to Mother Earth", an 8-minute-long devotional epic praising the joys of life on our fair planet. This is a truly beautifully angelic number featuring a heavenly choir and some lovely laid-back percussion. There's also a soothing organ to help you reach the musical equivalent of Cloud 9. This tremendous piece of music also features a soaring horn section which will lift you heavenwards on a joyous emotional high. Yes, it really is THAT good! It's a truly outstanding slice of smooth and soulful Jazz which bears repeated listening, just like the album as a whole. This is the kind of gloriously inspirational music that would have folks flocking to Sunday church in their masses, if only..... The fifth and final song "Mercy (Variation No. 1)" opens with a tribal jungle drums rhythm which rumbles along nicely before the whole band "freaks out" and goes absolutely ape-crazy strutting their funky stuff in a Jazzy free-for-all of wild and sensational improvisation. This is wonderful stuff from seven musicians at the top of their game in what is a suitably rousing conclusion to a stupendous album! Demon Fuzz have left us with one marvellously unique album of what can best be described as soulful Jazz-Funk/Rock tinged with a healthy splash of fuzzy psychedelic colours. In other words, it's a veritable smorgasbord of musical delicacies which the band have expertly blended together to make one outstanding album. "Afreaka!" is a timeless evergreen album that always sounds great, whether you listen to it in the "Past, Present or Future". |
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David_D
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71. Ache - De Homine Urbano Danish album, recorded in 1969 and released February '70, interesting in relation to Progressive Rock history.
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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Psychedelic Paul
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That's a brand new find for me and I'm now aching to give the full album a listen, having heard a few juicy titbits from the album yesterday.
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Psychedelic Paul
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32. 1970: The Web - I Spider - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4d8Jiq7S_yc
The British band THE WEB are definitely NOT a band for arachnophobes! There's nothing at all scary about their first album "Fully Interlocking" (1968) with its colourful kaleidoscope image on the cover, but their second album "Theraposa Blondi" (1969) features a huge and extremely scary goliath bird-eating spider on the cover which is enough to give you nightmares if you're at all scared of spiders. Thankfully, we're reviewing their third and final album here, "I Spider" (1970), with a curious image of a hand in the shape of a bird's head on the album cover. There was a fourth album in 1971, but the band had changed their name to Samurai by then, so that's another story for another time.
The amusingly-titled, five-piece suite "Concerto for Bedsprings" opens the album, consisting of:- 1. "I Can't Sleep"; 2. "Sack Song"; 3. "Peaceful Sleep"; 4. "You Can Keep The Good Life"; and 5. "Loner". Judging by some of the sub-titles in this 10- minute-long epic, it's dedicated to insomniacs everywhere, although you're unlikely to sleep through this lively Jazz-Rock number. Part 1 "I Can't Sleep" has obvious similarities with the electrically-charged music of Van der Graaf Generator. There's a powerhouse performance from the keyboard player and the vocals are just as erratic and over-the-top as those of Peter Hammill in VDGG. The singer announces at the end of Part 1 "I've got to get some sleep", but there's absolutely no chance of sleeping through the powerful sound of "I Can't Sleep". Part 2 "Sack Song" is a Jazzy cocktail lounge instrumental, sounding somewhat reminiscent of Hatfield & the North in some of their mellower moments, and Part 3 "Peaceful Sleep" is a slightly off-key slice of Canterbury Scene-style Jazz. Part 4 "You Can Keep the Good Life" is a return to an energetic, pounding percussive wave of Van der Graaf Generator-type Jazz-Rock, featuring a scintillating sax solo, and Part 5 "Loner" is a brief return for another bright sunburst of Jazzy cocktail lounge music with a spring in its step to conclude "Concerto for Bedsprings". The whole ten-minute piece is a constantly shifting dynamic, weaving a complex web of stirring Jazz-Rock in dazzling combination with floating mellow waves of the Canterbury Scene sound. All in all, it's a shaken and stirred aperitif of Jazz and Rock combined together into a heady cocktail of great music. Watch out, there's a spider about in the title track coming up next: "I Spider". Let's hope it's just an incy-wincy spider and not a frightening goliath bird-eating spider, or ""Theraposa Blondi" to use the Latin name. No worries, "I Spider" is a slow processional march dominated by the sound of dynamic keyboards and sonorous saxophone. The stately music is soothing and sophisticated, but be prepared because this understated tune has fangs and it creeps up on you unexpectedly (like a spider) and delivers a mighty bite with a crashing crescendo of sound emerging for the grand finale. Opening Side Two now is "Love You", although this is no gentle sentimental ballad. No, this is a sonic explosion of high-energy Jazz-Rock, so fasten your seat belts and brace for impact. Make no mistake, this is an out-and-out raucous rocker! The bizarrely-titled "Ymphasomniac" is up next. So, what on earth is an "Ymphasomniac" you may well ask. Well, no one knows because it appears to be a uniquely made-up word for the purposes of this album. Don't let the strange song title put you off though, because this is a great song. It's a simply sensational Jazz-Rock jam session, featuring an extended dazzling display of virtuosity, with all of the musicians given the chance to display their magnificent plumage in bright musical colours. It's a real album highlight. You could *almost* believe The Web are a Canterbury Scene band because the final song "Always I Wait" is an 8-minute-long weird but wonderful excursion into the realms of experimental Jazz-Rock. The music sounds slightly discordant at times, but it's ultimately rewarding, like all of the best Canterbury Scene music. Imagine, if you will, a delicious shaken and stirred cocktail of Van der Graaf Generator in glorious combination with Hatfield & the North and that's the kind of unique album that The Web have woven here. "I Spider" is an album full of constant surprises. Hear it for yourself on the World Wide Web. |
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David_D
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This album is also interesting as one of the rare Danish Symphonic. |
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Psychedelic Paul
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And a very good album it is too. I now have a restless Ache to hear more music from Denmark, so a Danish Prog tribute blog may be in the offing and then I might finally get around to listening to all of the Savage Rose's albums for the first time. At least Danish Prog (not including Avant Prog and Metal, obviously) should be doable and relatively easy to tackle, whereas if I was tempted to dip my toes into Italian Prog (never a realistic possibility), then I might disappear down a bottomless rabbit hole and you may never see me again.
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David_D
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That would indeed be a pity.
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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David_D
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I also suppose, you'll be listening to the Italian albums on PA's top list, and there'll be at least 10 of the most prominent in the years 1971-73 alone. |
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Psychedelic Paul
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39. 1970: Marsupilami - Marsupilami - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SrNGPpa2QRM
MARSUPILAMI might sound like an exotic breed of Australian mammal, or maybe an Italian pasta, but they're really an English Prog-Rock band. They might not be quite as exotic as their bandname implies, but their music is pretty extraordinary. Their bizarre name derives from an obscure Belgian children's comic character. Marsupilami had a relatively brief lifespan with two albums to their credit:- "Marsupilami" (1970) and "Arena" (1971). It's their first eponymously-titled album that our attentions are focused on here, which features five long suites of music, varying anywhere between six and eleven minutes in length. Let's dive into the deep end now and check it out.
"Dorian Deep" has an eerie opening, sounding like a wind blowing over some vast windswept plain. Be prepared to be taken on an unpredictable journey into hitherto unexplored soundscapes of musical mayhem and delight. If this awesome 8-minute-long opening is anything to go by, this could well turn out to be an album of Astounding Sounds, Amazing Music - to paraphrase Hawkwind. "Dorian Deep" is such a perfect blend of all of the ingredients you'd expect from the very best of Prog- Rock, that it's almost impossible for any self-respecting prog aficionado not to like this. Not only will it delight Progressive Rock fans, but there's something here to suit Psychedelic Rock and Krautrock fans too, which is inevitably the reason why Marsupilami have found themselves in the Eclectic Prog section of ProgArchives. It's practically impossible to pin them down to one particular genre. If this band were ever pigeon-holed, then it would have to be a VERY big hole to include the tremendous variety of music on offer here. "Dorian Deep" is as multi-faceted as The Picture of Dorian Gray. It's the spooky musical equivalent of a crazy LSD-induced acid trip, so get ready for a wild ghost train ride on a Journey to the Centre of the Eye. This creepy manic music verges on hysteria, and almost goes off the rails - a bit like this album review. It may send a shiver up the spine and bring you out in goosebumps, so don't say you weren't warned! Hallelujah Freedom! Be wild, be free, because it's time to celebrate another great piece of music with "Born To Be Free". This is a flighty flute-driven melody which opens as a fairly laid-back Jazzy refrain. Get ready for some more Marsupilami magic though, because barely midway through the song, freedom reigns with a wild excursion into supersonic Jazz-Rock territory with the afterburners glowing on full power. This tremendously inspiring music will take you soaring up into the stratosphere, where you can slip the surly bonds of Earth and touch the face of the Prog Gods. You can always expect the unexpected though with the complex and endlessly unpredictable music of Marsupilami, because there's a return to calmer Jazzier climes again for the extended play-out session. "Born To Be Free" has all of the unpredictability and latent energy of an untamed sleeping Lioness named Elsa, but that's another song and movie altogether. Tie me kangaroo down, Sport! Never in the field of prog has so much been achieved by so few. Again, this scintillating sextet venture Where Eagles Dare to fly and other prog bands fear to tread with the inspirational epic: "And the Eagle Chased the Dove to its Ruin". The sound of the haunting ethereal organ in the opening instils the music with something of a religious devotional air. This first impression is soon shattered though by a crazy journey into the wild uncharted territory of prog. If Marsupilami were Australian, then this wild untamed music would represent a Walkabout in the wilderness of the baking hot outback. Marsupilami are as wild as a wandering band of wombats and wallabies. This extraordinary song may be less than seven minutes long, but there's plenty of exploring to do in this endlessly diverse piece of music. It's a song and album you'll want to boomerang back to again and again. Be prepared for the very sudden ending though. When in Rome, do as the Romans do and learn Latin, and then we can translate the title of the opening suite on Side Two: "Ab Initio Ad Finem (The Opera)", which literally means "From the Beginning to the End" (with a little help from Google Translate). It might be an opera (in brackets), but you won't hear the likes of Pavarotti, Domingo & Carreras on this outstanding piece of music. This par excellence song and album is worth three tenners of anyone's money. The music opens to the tinkling sound of a musical box and this 11-minute-long epic is indeed a musical box of delights. This song has everything! There's something here for the hippyish Folkies, the psychedelic acid-heads, and even the religious spiritualists amongst us too. Above all though, this is a Progressive Rock masterpiece of unparalleled pomp and glory. From the beginning to the end, this album has been an absolute phantasmagorical dream of a prog-fest, which could give any of the major prog bands a good run for their money. Hells Bells! Get ready for the wild men of prog to unleash Merry Hell for our final descent into the maelstrom. It's another Latin-themed 10-minute-long epic: "Facilis Descencus Averni", which translates as "Descent To Hell". It's a very apt title, as all Hell is let loose in the wildest and most unrestrained piece of music on the entire album. This epic suite represents a crazy helter-skelter ride into the darkest depths of prog and psychedelia. Don't despair though, because there are several uplifting Folky and Jazzy interludes thrown in for good measure to pull the listener out of the dark abyss. The crazy laughter and off- kilter vocals of the psycho singer only adds to the manic intensity and brooding atmosphere of the music. Even more bizarrely, there are brief spoken-word pieces too, voiced in an unmistakable charming English accent. This superb closing suite is undoubtedly a magnificent album highlight, combining all of the elements heard in earlier songs into an all- encompassing strange but magical Witches Brew of enchanting beauty and sheer delight. It's prog, but not as we know it. Put another tinny on the barbie and drink a toast to the weird and wonderful music of Marsupilami. They're a breed apart. Join them as they go ape- crazy with an intoxicating blend of Wild in the Jungle Jazzy psychedelia and proggy Folk. Marsupilami explore the Outer Limits of Prog-Rock, so expect the unexpected. This superb debut album has to be heard to be believed. Dare you explore The Twilight Zone of Prog where nothing is quite as it seems!?? |
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Psychedelic Paul
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41. 1970: Quatermass - Quatermass - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZFy4liIpREQ
QUATERMASS were a British Hammond organ-driven power trio, specialising in the kind of reckless keyboard abandon heard from such prominent bands as Emerson, Lake & Palmer and The Nice - bands who were just as well-known for their frantic stage antics as their music. The line-up consisted of bass player and vocalist John Gustafson, keyboard player Peter Robinson and drummer Mick Underwood. The original "Quatermass" (1970) album on the Prog-Rock Chrysalis label, was followed 27 years later by the second "Quatermass II: Long Road" (1997) album, when drummer Mick underwood put together a new line- up of the band. The original Quatermass album was reissued on CD in 1990 with two bonus tracks included. Let's dive into the Quatermass pit now and take a trip back in time to that magical proggy year of 1970 when Progressive Rock was just emerging like a phoenix from the ashes of the psychedelic sixties.
It's a very sedate 1-minute opening to the album with "Entropy". It sounds like we're attending a solemn religious occasion in church with the delicate sound of a solo organist introducing us to the album. Don't be fooled though, because this is just a prelude to "Black Sheep of the Family", a rip-roaring, organ-driven rocker. This is a solid-as-a-rock, heavy rocking song with a good pedigree: it was originally recorded by Chris Farlowe in 1970, turned down for Deep Purple's "Stormbringer" album in 1974, and later covered by Ritchie Blackmore's Rainbow on their first album in 1975. Forget about piano fortes, this is a full- force organ forte, played loudly, played proudly, and played powerfully. This raucous rocker is as rock solid as reinforced concrete! And now we come to the first of the long epic numbers on the album, "Post War Saturday Echo". At nearly 10 minutes in duration, it's a multi-part suite, opening with a moody and magnificent organ piece. There's no peace for the wicked (or the good) though, because this song really explodes into life like a stick of dynamite before we're even halfway through the song. Make no mistake, this is powerful all-guns-blazing rock & roll with a take-no-prisoners attitude. Prepare to be blown away, because this music will make your day! Let's take a look at the impassioned lyrics:- The city is a ravin' neon nightmare, Freudian symbols lay my soul bare, And every way I turn, Electric hoardings burn, And words that mean nothing, Are endlessly rushing, Telling me nothing I really wanna learn." ..... This is invigorating and reverberant music with powerful lyrics to match. "Good Lord Knows" we're onto Song No. 4 now, an altogether mellower number, so you can take it easy, make a cup of tea and put your feet up to this laid-back 3-minute ballad. It's back to some good old-fashioned hard rockin' again for the next song though, the 7-minute barnstormer "Up on the Ground". This powerful organ-driven number has Deep Purple written all over it. It's a riveting, rollicking, rock & rolling number with all of the surging power of a steam locomotive! Well, after the sonic attack of Side One, what does Side Two have in store for us. Let's find out. Fasten your seat belts and hold on tight because there's no let-up. We're going supersonic up into the stratosphere for "Gemini", a romping, stomping, branstorming song that's positively pulsating with energy. There's enough radiant power here to light up a lighthouse. It's time to "Make Up Your Mind" now for Song No. 7, another multi-part epic, running at nearly 9 minutes long. Well, I've made up MY mind that this song and the album as a whole is very reminiscent of the powerful keyboard-heavy sound of Deep Purple and Uriah Heep, which has to be a good thing. This grand-sounding piece of music has all the power and resonance of the Big Ben bell. Next comes the longest song on the album so get your "Laughing Tackle" around this. It's a 10-minute long instrumental number, giving the power trio a chance to flex their musical muscles with some very impressive and superlative soloing. This epic number features the requisite long pounding drum solo, an energetic and pulsating bass guitar riff, and of course, some frantic antics from the omnipresent keyboard player, who could give Keith Emerson, Rick Wakeman, Jon Lord or Ken Hensley a good keyboard run for their money any time of the day. And so, we end this high-flown, hard as a rhinestone Quatermass album the same way as we began, with a brief gentle reprise of "Entropy". You can stop headbanging and stomping those feet now. This grandiose and spectacular album of relentless, pile-driving British Rock is sure to appeal to fans of the sonorous keyboard-heavy sound of bands such as Deep Purple, Emerson, Lake & Palmer and Uriah Heep. This stupendous 50-year-old album has all the power and hard driving energy of a pneumatic drill. Quatermass are a supersonic blast from the past! |
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Psychedelic Paul
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BLACK WIDOW were a British Jazz-Rock band formed in Leicester in 1969. They released their first album under the name Pesky Gee! in 1969, before wisely deciding to change the name of the band to Black Widow. Their first album as Black Widow, titled "Sacrifice" (1970) caused some controversy at the time because of the dark satanic occult imagery in the lyrics and accompanying mock sacrifice video for the title song. It was all part of an elaborate stage act though and they were no more satanic than Black Sabbath and nowhere near as outrageous as the Shock Rock stage act of Alice Cooper. The band dropped the dark satanic imagery for their next two albums, the imaginatively-titled "Black Widow" (1971) and "Black Widow III" (1972), although those two albums failed to achieve the success of the first album. They recorded another album in 1972, predictably titled "Black Widow IV", although that album wouldn't see the light of day for another 25 years until 1997. Another album titled "Return to the Sabbat" was released in 1998, although it contained no original material as the album consisted entirely of an earlier recording of their 1970 "Sacrifice" album. Black Widow weren't quite dead and buried yet though because they rose from the grave with their long-awaited comeback album "Sleeping with Demons" in 2011.
The opening song "In Ancient Days" conjures up a spooky Hammer horror movie image of a graveyard at night, where the haunting sound of the solo organ gives the impression that some ghostly apparition is about to suddenly leap out of the shadows. Don't have nightmares though, because this is just a prelude to some uplifting funky Jazz-Rock. It's easy to see why some religious conservatives might have been spooked by these sinister demonic lyrics though:- "Here in my thirteenth life the mystic power of old returns, and as I say these words, my soul again in Hell, I conjure thee, I conjure thee, I conjure thee, I conjure thee appear, I raise you mighty demon, come before me, join me here." ..... The lyrics might be dark and occult, but the music is really jaunty and Jazzy and proggy and the satanic sacrificial imagery in the lyrics and video never did their album sales any harm. The lively and invigorating Jazz-Rock of Black Widow bears no relation to the dark Heavy Metal of Black Sabbath, who the band have sometimes been compared to. There's more doom and dark satanic gloom on the way with "Way to Power", where the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse are mentioned in the sinister lyrics, although the rollicking music is another solid slice of foot-stomping British Jazz-Rock. This lively feel-good music is more likely to inspire jumping and jiving on the dance floor, rather than giving the listener a scary touch of the heebie-geebies. The next song "Come to the Sabbat" DOES sound very sinister though, so it might be time to hide beneath the bedcovers, especially when you hear the repeated sinister refrain of "Come to the Sabbat, Satan's There". There's really nothing to worry about though, as we live in far more enlightened times these days, and this stirring harum scarum Jazz-Rock hokum is no more scary than a candlelit pumpkin at Halloween. Side One closes with "Conjuration", which rumbles along nicely to a slow marching rhythm with the rousing horn section weaving their magical spell. Black Widow have conjured up a big romantic power ballad for the Side Two opener: "Seduction". You're sure to be seduced by the lush string arrangements and the playful and pleasurable Jazz organ solo. This song is like a bright ray of sunshine breaking through the clouds compared to the dark satanic imagery conjured up in Side One. The singer sounds like he's head over heels in love with these warm and tender lyrics:- "Would you have me stay with you, Squeeze and hold you tight, Smooth you with my tender touch, Share your bed at nights." ..... From the sound of things, it could be his lucky night. Next up is "Attack of the Demon", a rompin' stompin' barnstorming display of Jazzy prog to stimulate and invigorate the senses. We end the album with the powerful 11-minute-long title track "Sacrifice". It's an all-out sonic assault of thunder and lightning for the final song. The music barrels along at a relentless pace with the manic drummer and frantic Hammond organist hammering away in a non-stop cacophonous frenzy of high-decibel sound and energy. This is music designed to hit you straight between the eyes with the awesome power of a thunderbolt. Black Widow represents British Jazz-Rock at its brilliant best. The band weave a wonderful web of timeless timbral tunes, ranging from raucous rockers to romantic refrains. It's no "Sacrifice" to say this stunning album deserves to be in any discerning Jazz-Rock connoisseur's collection. |
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Psychedelic Paul
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 40087 |
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My Top 60 Prog Albums of 1968 (including Proto Prog & Prog Related)
1968: Jan Akkerman - Talent for Sale - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_lB3_wqQz3RYGWyPpqKZ7WLsKyBYYlLYHU 1968: David Axelrod - Song of Innocence - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_nBJgNLqUL8A64tQMKFNPK3x7KzNOgfbUw 1968: The Beatles - The Beatles - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mMcxAy3_NLEnsuSq9I_qWIONOpdRfWlWw 1968: Jeff Beck - Truth - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_kR-4CMFi3C6kSGLW45cS4SL2PDkoICbhE 1968: Blood, Sweat & Tears - Child is Father to the Man - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fAlSciahOkI 1968: Bokaj Retsiem - Psychedelic Underground - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DMoa35sUXAc 1968: Duncan Browne - Give Me Take You - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JX5AQJLh9FM 1968: Caravan - Caravan - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLky8Mxrvk-59bXU8yNcQaswrUMFS2u2D- 1968: The Ceyleib People - Tanyet - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UpOoj1eAIJI 1968: The Collectors - The Collectors - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TNVCeEN6BZk 1968: Larry Coryell - Lady Coryell - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLMcAyJX7t2dFGEs2VT9gD9nAlFoHlZPwb 1968: Crazy World of Arthur Brown - Crazy World of Arthur Brown - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLM7k5L_U7M92b4ZKKyOD3Nk7NsTSMHlsS 1968: Cream - Wheels of Fire - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nSQrqhBEqI4 1968: Deep Purple - Shades of Deep Purple - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J3sqPIGGwHg 1968: Deep Purple - The Book of Taliesyn - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yg-5gqAE42A 1968: The Doors - Waiting for the Sun - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Q12wpgi4BI 1968: Earth Opera - Earth Opera - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLRaCiMh_Se6hUrVyhA4Wka-UeMvdRgqqs 1968: Fairport Convention - Fairport Convention - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLQ0A2SEX86ZztMUe-gMVovmBP-GEjV9yo 1968: Family - Music in a Doll's House - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1F6E4AF96C3F9481 1968: Ford Theatre - Trilogy for the Masses - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GlXuACQ2owo 1968: Freedom's Children - Battle Hymn of the Broken-Hearted Horde - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nM4pEt3dX0U 1968: Gentle Soul - The Gentle Soul - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mTXZ1TGrpLs 1968: The Gods - Genesis - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_kKewXemZGvb6ClosLqtUdDu_zwCpjzvnM 1968: Group 1850 - Agemo's Trip to Mother Earth - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_lv_M_08uratGdDKwXW2Gmp9E-V-ixoaqY 1968: The Gun - Gun - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ihbulbj0NM 1968: The Jimi Hendrix Experience - Electric Ladyland - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mYWPkHE6zV6px1NrufGZgni8KPoqsvC34 1968: H.P. Lovecraft - H.P. Lovecraft II - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oT4kWFWkgU0 1968: Iron Butterfly - Heavy - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xBf2ESAXc5Q 1968: Iron Butterfly - In-a-Gadda-da-Vida - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vAT4nIg00t0 1968: Jacks - Vacant World - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrBEQgnBhsOIBBveTtX0MfRyZJUdrCzuj 1968: Jefferson Airplane - Crown of Creation - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j67kwg8rjO8 1968: Jethro Tull - This Was - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J4wuSDJTWJQ 1968: Made in Sweden - With Love - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLRQKT-Cu2_2SxQtaONFFj9Xf1n3P3t3eS 1968: The Mandrake Memorial - The Mandrake Memorial - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLjZnpDlBzipIzU89vnrwG6YvUKMIfh4S5 1968: The Moody Blues - In Search of the Lost Chord - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k5UdP-SFNgY 1968: The Move - Move - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL78EwoP23ZrvHl-nvpjhqUBqhF8U3NQxM 1968: The Nice - Ars Longa Vita Brevis - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tt99wLDaTVg 1968: Nirvana - All of Us - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L5APAcm8IEQ 1968: Pearls Before Swine - Balaklava - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RWZSo01v_uQ 1968: Pentangle - The Pentangle - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tN15Hx2wWDE 1968: Pentangle - Sweet Child - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLhJQzhlVlxbc8lmLGbLOJ8DviDwbRyy55 1968: Pink Floyd - A Saucerful of Secrets - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rmmuHnXLJiw 1968: The Pretty Things - S.F. Sorrow - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2y-p2l0mDJY 1968: Procol Harum - Shine on Brightly - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLg_CTEz2IJdYd4pKmXxEUYQv2T-BXs7p0 1968: Terje Rypdal - Bleak House - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_n-8C9-e9Qk0kuQJj7KroS0Vx0S_P9fkEI 1968: Second Hand - Reality - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8sF3nZJFRic 1968: Spirit - Spirit - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HNZF43G8Piw 1968: Spirit - The Family That Plays Together - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oUuuakR-yAE 1968: Spooky Tooth - It's All About - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLEK9hdw21PdBDDO8i0570K6ctvjWmVBjN 1968: Sweetwater - Sweetwater - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLRQKT-Cu2_2Q7-LaL3W4fRdAvpxJG6fcu 1968: Tomorrow - Tomorrow - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jzpR5_A4Sb0 1968: Traffic - Traffic - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_nExr7RHftRqw9qKegOrl1GS6F8IJM47Sg 1968: Ultimate Spinach - Ultimate Spinach - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GSXjYGQogq8 1968: Ultimate Spinach - Behold and See - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hn9Nx-Y61yg 1968: The United States of America - The United States of America - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upYd0MZng9Y 1968: Vanilla Fudge - Renaissance - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLL44kuYYS8ylMgP5nL4RTT6hkAxCQtfxh 1968: Elmer Gantry's Velvet Opera - Velvet Opera - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLDD7B647064FBFC95 1968: The Web - Fully Interlocking - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLFJoVFNa8-ouxzaAaWnPXV-1QMkRjk9Pr Edited by Psychedelic Paul - May 18 2023 at 11:00 |
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