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bristolstclike
Ahh, Octopus, one of the most underrated records of the transitional era between psychedelic pop and
progressive rock, leaning much more towards the former than the latter. This album as an original is extremely
rare and unaffordably expensive, in fact I only have the Essex reissue of it, but I can tell you that this blows
away a lot of bands who did better commercially and this is a commercial album. Octopus sound somewhere
between The Beatles, Sweet, Badfinger, 10cc, and if you know their music both The Gods (pre Uriah Heep Ken
Hensley group) and The Koobas. The tracks are mainly short, not focused on solos, but with gorgeous
melodies and a great lead voice reminding me of a cross between the late Brian Connolly in Sweet and Paul
McCartney. If that sounds like a strange cross, then you can see that this album's going to effortlessly slide
from heavy to pop and beyond often in the same track! Opening cut "The River" features a great driving fuzz
guitar, strong vocals, and some really great upfront drumming. "Summer" is similarly a rocking track with great
harmonies and an obvious Beatles/Badfinger influence. I would have to say that this album blows many Beatle
rip off groups of the early 70s out of the water, even though I have a strong liking for anything inspired by the
Fab Four. Why is it so good? Because Octopus are original. They think about a riff, a melody, a lyric, and build
the song around that without being derivative. "Council Plans" is a song that could be said to be Octopus's
"Eleanor Rigby," but it sounds nothing like that. "Thief" is the hardest rocking track on the album with fast
driving rhythms, dynamic vocals, and again some great drumming. So little is known about Octopus that they
may have been a studio only project and not really a band, but that doesn't work against them. The 'tinkering
around in the studio' vibe adds to the greatness of this record mainly because there is so much variety. For
space rock into late 60s Beatles melodic pop check out the stunning last track "Tide," while one of my personal
favourites is "I Say" which has a great melody and super vocal. For reasons unbeknownst to me, Octopus is
almost always put down rather than praised while horrible groups like the Aerovons (shelved album for
obvious reason, should have remained unreleased!) get all the praise. Even Rockin' Horse on Phillips isn't as
good as Octopus, making Octopus one of the only post Beatles Beatle tribute bands worthy of the kind of
praise attributed to the band that influenced them. And this isn't really a tribute album, it's far too imaginative
and diverse for that. I haven't been able to find the original, hopefully I will someday, but if you can find this
masterpiece either as a vinyl or CD reissue you should treat yourself to a true work of brilliant musical artistry.
|5/5 |
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