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Psych Britannia - Strange Daze |
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Psychedelic Paul ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 45236 |
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Psych Britannia Six: A-Z Album Links
PINK FLOYD Syd Barrett, the guitarist with Pink Floyd, was a creative genius in his Time, having written such psychedelic Relics as "Arnold Layne" and "See Emily Play", where his abstruse lyrics were sometimes Obscured by Clouds. Sadly, his overuse of the psychedelic drug LSD led to Brain Damage and mental illness. In A Momentary Lapse of Reason, he's rumoured to have walked all the way from London to his home in Cambridge. While most Pink Floyd fans will be aware that Shine On You Crazy Diamond was written as a tribute to Syd Barrett, I wonder how many Pink Floyd fans know that their first album, The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, was a chapter from Kenneth Grahame's book, "The Wind in the Willows". It's with Sorrow we remember that Syd Barrett (1946-2006) and Richard Wright (1943-2008) are no longer with us and they're now Comfortably Numb, having both gone to The Great Gig in the Sky. I've never seen Pink Floyd perform live In the Flesh, but their music will live on forever. No Prog-Rock band will ever Eclipse the music of Pink Floyd, no matter how much Time goes by in The Endless River of eternity. The space-themed songs of Pink Floyd Speak to Me with special appeal because one of my passions in life is Astronomy Domine. It's nice to Stop for a moment and dream of One of These Days leaving Mother Earth behind and flying Round and Around the universe forever. It'd be Goodbye Blue Sky as I Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun. I'd be Learning to Fly with A New Machine capable of unimaginable speeds in Interstellar Overdrive. I'd fly with the Pulse jets Flaming past The Dark Side of the Moon towards the Fat Old Sun and then out into the Empty Spaces beyond. Eventually, I'd arrive at the Alpha Centauri Cluster One star system looking for Signs of Life where there are Two Suns in the Sunset. I've often wondered Is There Anybody Out There in the vast universe or is there Nobody Home. I Remember a Day back in the mid-1960's when landing a man on the Moon seemed about as likely as seeing Pigs on the Wing. At the Time, The Dogs of War had just been unleashed in Vietnam, when the USA took the disastrous decision to Meddle in a foreign war in a faraway land. The more recent calamitous decision to invade Iraq in 2003 has resonant Echoes of the Vietnam War. Both terrible wars bring into stark contrast the Poles Apart difference between war and peaceful space exploration. American Presidents Keep Talking about one day landing a man on Mars and plans are now Coming Back to Life for a Mars mission. I have High Hopes that we'll one day land men on Mars and that will be A Great Day for Freedom. I'll be Lost for Words if it ever happens in my lifetime. It'll be Another Brick in the Wall of space exploration where Money is no barrier to scientific discovery. The first men on Mars will be Fearless explorers who've made The Final Cut and they won't Run Like Hell at the prospect of One Slip-up leaving them Marooned on a distant planet. Thanks to the Internet, we're now living through some of The Happiest Days of Our Lives and Prog Archives is One of the Few websites devoted to Prog-Rock. It's just the website we needed to Breathe new life into the genre, which appeared to be dying out in the late 1970's with the arrival of Punk Rock. It was a case of Us and Them, with "Us", the prog-rockers, ranged against "Them", the punk-rockers. Prog-Rock is now Coming Back to Life with a vengeance and there's much More than A Saucerful of Secrets just waiting to be rediscovered in the wonderful world of Prog-Rock. The choice of music these days is virtually unlimited and it's not a case of Any Colour You Like as long as it's black. To any of my friends who haven't yet discovered this amazing site, I say Wish You Were Here with me to enjoy it. I can hear the Delicate Sound of Thunder outside and the rain's pounding against The Wall. I'm a lover of all Animals, and I often wonder how Pigs, Sheep and Dogs cope when they're On the Run outside in the middle of a thunderstorm. I love to watch a thunderstorm at nighttime and I'll often open the curtains in order to Let There Be More Light coming in from the distant flashes of lightning, which are never Obscured by Clouds. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Edited by Psychedelic Paul - October 26 2023 at 03:50 |
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Psychedelic Paul ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 45236 |
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Psych Britannia Six: A-Z Album Links
ONE IN A MILLION A short-lived tartan army of psychedelic rockers from Glasgow who more than lived up to their name. After all, how many Scottish Psychedelic Rock bands do YOU know of?
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Psychedelic Paul ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 45236 |
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Psych Britannia Six: A-Z Album Links
MANFRED MANN Hey, it's the Manfreds, so come all without, come all within, you'll not see nothing like the mighty Manfreds again - if you'll excuse the double negative. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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Psychedelic Paul ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 45236 |
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Psych Britannia Six: A-Z Album Links
LOVE AFFAIR Bringing on Back the Good Times with Steve Ellis and the Love Affair, a Blue-Eyed Soul band from London who I've had an Everlasting Love Affair with ever since first hearing them on the radio back in the late 1960's, and where every joyful song is like a bright ray of sunshine on a New Day down in the Rainbow Valley. ![]() ![]() ![]() Edited by Psychedelic Paul - October 20 2023 at 03:51 |
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Psychedelic Paul ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 45236 |
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Psych Britannia Six: A-Z Album Links
The Time is Near for the Keef Hartley Band - a consistently good Funk Rock band from Preston in Lancashire. It may be Not Foolish Not Wise of me to say this, but the Keef Hartley band are like the British version of Blood, Sweat & Tears., only better! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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Psychedelic Paul ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 45236 |
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Psych Britannia Six: A-Z Album Links
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Achtung! JANUS were another British band based in Germany (just like Nektar), so they could almost be considered a Krautrock band, especially in regard to their spaced-out psychedelic music. Janus were formed in the German town of Krefeld way back in 1969 by guitarist and keyboard player Colin Orr. The band were named after the mythological Roman God with two faces who looks to the future and to the past at the same time, and we're looking back almost half a century into the proggy past now at the rare Janus "Gravedigger" album from 1972. It's quite literally an underground rock album that was never likely to be played on the radio in 1972, and even less likely to be played on the radio now in the Chinese Virus year of 2020. It was to be their only album from the golden era of prog until Janus looked to the future and reformed many years later with a whole string of ten album releases between 1990 and 2017. Their classic "Gravedigger" album is also quite literally an album of two faces, with Side One occupied by four far-out psychedelic excursions and Side Two containing the trippy 20- minute-long "Gravedigger" suite. It's time now to unearth this long-lost album treasure from the archives because we're about to go Star-Trekkin' back in time with the six-man skeleton crew of Janus.
"Beam me up, Scotty", back to the golden year of 1972 on Planet Prog, because we're travelling in a fried-out Kombi, on the hippie trail, head full of zombie for our opening number, "Red Sun". Yes, it's all aboard the brightly-painted Magic Bus now for this 9-minute-long glowing red giant of a song that shines as brightly as Betelgeuse, the largest known star in the Milky Way. This is a song designed to trance-port the listener on a hallucinatory journey beyond the 13th floor of psychedelic elevation to a higher state of consciousness, only without the aid of any illegal substances. This psychedelic phantasmagoria is more tripped out than a plateful of magic mushrooms at a flower-power hippie commune. The song features a deceptively laid- back and dreamy opening, but be prepared to be taken on a Roller Coaster ride of Levitation and Reverberation in the style of The Thirteenth Floor Elevators as "Red Sun" suddenly explodes into life with fire and fury like a supernova, or like a 3-year-old toddler noisily throwing his toys out of the pram in a temper tantrum. It's not hip to be square, so if you're looking for fun and Feelin' Groovy, dare to wear some flowers in your hair and don those brightly-coloured bell-bottomed flares for a psychedelic pleasure trip back in time to the Haight Ashbury district of San Francisco in the Summer of Love year of 1967. There ain't No Way you'll have the Bell Bottom Blues from listening to this joyously exuberant Purple Haze of late-1960's nostalgia. It's time to pop the champagne cork now for "Bubbles", a sparklingly effervescent blend of fuzzy acid guitar riffing, heavenly harmonies, and featuring swirling echoey vocals constantly phasing in and out of the mix. One can almost smell the Incense and Peppermint. Is it a Dream of Innersense, or a Twilight Zone nightmare!?? One thing's for sure, the stoned-out-of-his-mind singer sounds like he's in an altered state of reality where The Doors of perception are constantly blurred (like Riders on the Storm in an Aldous Huxley or H.P. Lovecraft novel). If you listen to this spaced-out music very intently, you might just Break on Through to the Other Side. It could be that the singer just had Too Much to Dream Last Night after eating too many Electric Prunes and he forgot to set his Strawberry Alarm Clock for his appointment to Sit with the Guru. Either way, he sounds like he's flying on a Jefferson Airplane where he's seeing an hallucinatory White Rabbit moving around the chessboard, or maybe he just needs Somebody to Love, a bit like this prog reviewer. Come on Baby, Light My Fire! You can forgive the bad spelling of the next song "Watcha' Tryin' to Do" and even the mildly irritating repetition of the song title by the singer, because this fairly run-of the-mill bluesy number still sounds better than most of what passes for music on the radio today, where it seems any soap opera star can become a wannabe pop star, if they should be so Lucky, lucky, lucky (Kylie & Jason, anyone?). "Watcha' Tryin' to Do" might not have the far-out freakiness of the first two songs on this album, but the manic singer still sounds like he's on the verge of having the men in white coats coming to take him away in a straitjacket at any moment. There are some fiery outbursts of pounding machine-gun percussion too from the always impressive drummer, who could have given Bonham, Powell & Moonie a good drum run for their money. Prepare to batten down the hatches and take cover now for the pounding percussive artillery barrage of "I Wanna Scream". This proto-Heavy Metal number is a storming salvo that's locked and loaded with so much pulsating sonic intensity that it sounds *almost* as thunderously raw as Black Sabbath's "Paranoid". There's even a recently-made YouTube video to go with the song, featuring the band themselves in all of their glorious sonic splendour, proving that Janus are still able to raise the rooftops with their stupendously manic energy after all these years. The video comes with a warning to beware of flashing images. It should also come with a warning to beware of the singer, who sounds so angry he could SCREAM the house down!! And now we come to the fifth and final song on the album, the 20-minute-long title track, "Gravedigger". This song has definite shades of the Moody Blues with its dreamy Mellotron sound and gloriously lush sweeping harmonies. It may not quite reach the magnificent majestic heights of Nights in White Satin, but this is still a marvellous piece of music, and makes a very pleasant contrast to the manic intensity of the sonorous songs on Side One of the album. In fact, this epic masterpiece is in such stark contrast to the four previous songs, that one could almost believe it's by a different band entirely. There's even a brief classical guitar interlude featuring Grieg's Hall of the Mountain King. The peaceful soothing music of the "Gravedigger" suite is overall very calming and relaxing, accompanied as it is by the sound of gently lapping waves in the background. The restful music conjures up tranquil images of bathing in warm, tropical blue seas in an exotic Pacific island paradise, only without the risk of being stung by a jellyfish, or accidentally standing on a stonefish, where there'll be so many people offering to wee on you to help ease the dreadful stinging agony, it'll feel like you're starring in a German porn film. And besides which, it's not the kind of thing you'd want on a romantic honeymoon for two anyway, when what you *really* need is vinegar to ease the searing pain of a jellyfish or stonefish sting, even though you'll end up smelling like a fish & chip shop. If you want to follow the hippie trail to Kathmandu without the danger of being attacked by the Taliban in Afghanistan, or meeting an Abominable Snowman in the Himalayas along the way, then you could do a lot worse than unearthing the "Gravedigger" album by Janus for a late-1960's/early 1970's nostalgia trip of sonic nirvana for the mind, body and soul. This album is a bountiful musical paradise and it's far safer than travelling to a tropical island paradise of calm turquoise seas and swaying palm trees where you can find out what it's actually like to be half-eaten by a shark. Yes, this album is a virtual reality backpacker trip back in time through the land of the Ayatollah and the lower tollahs without the need of a brightly- painted Volkswagen Kombi, so don those flared trousers, put on that old Afghan coat and light a joss-stick for the musical journey of a lunchtime! Edited by Psychedelic Paul - October 19 2023 at 12:17 |
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Psychedelic Paul ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 45236 |
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Psych Britannia Six: A-Z Album Links
THE IN CROWD After dropping out of The Syndicats, Steve Howe was in with The In Crowd in 1965, at least until Tomorrow, and then Bodast beckoned in 1968 before Steve's fateful meeting with Jon Anderson and Chris Squire in 1970, and YES, the rest was history. ![]() ![]() |
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Psychedelic Paul ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 45236 |
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Psych Britannia Six: A-Z Album Links
HUMBLE PIE Winston Churchill once said of Prime Minister Clement Attlee that he's a humble man who has much to be humble about. Well, Humble Pie didn't have much to be modest or humble about as this bluesy Hard Rock outfit featured two of the world's premier guitarists. Namely, Peter Frampton and Steve Marriott (1947-1991), and where it's their way or the highway, baby, I love their way. Rock On! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Edited by Psychedelic Paul - October 25 2023 at 12:59 |
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Psychedelic Paul ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 45236 |
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My Top 40 Psychedelic Rock Albums from 1967
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Edited by Psychedelic Paul - May 13 2023 at 03:32 |
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Psychedelic Paul ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 45236 |
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Psych Britannia Six: A-Z Album Links The Gods aren't exactly a household name, even in the progosphere, but four of their members later went on to become prog gods, including two future members of Uriah Heep, namely:- Ken Hensley (keyboards); Lee Kerslake (drums); Mick Taylor (guitars); & Greg Lake (bass). Following a change of record label, The Gods also changed their band-name and released their final album under the name "Head Machine" in 1970. ![]() ![]() ![]() THE GODS featured an impressive line-up of musicians. First and foremost, there was keyboard wizard Ken Hensley, the powerhouse and driving force behind Uriah Heep. And then there was legendary guitarist Mick Taylor, a member of John Mayall's Bluesbreakers (1967-69) and the Rolling Stones (1969-1974). Lee Kerslake played on drums, who later went on to achieve success in Uriah Heep with Ken Hensley. Greg Lake, of Emerson, Lake & Palmer fame, was also a member of THE GODS for a brief time. The line-up for this first album "Genesis" consisted of:- John Glascock (bass, vocals); Ken Hensley (keyboards, guitar, percussion, vocals); Joe Konas (guitar, vocals) & Lee Kerslake (drums). THE GODS released a second album in 1970 "To Samuel a Son" before disbanding. As might be expected from a band led by keyboard maestro Ken Hensley, the "Genesis" album is a keyboard driven Heavy Prog album of impressive driving power, very much in the style of early Uriah Heep. If this was a Uriah Heep album, then it would surely rank as one of their finest albums. There were four bonus tracks included in the 1994 CD reissue of the album. This album ROCKS!! "Genesis" is an album that's meant to be played LOUD and proud, so fasten your seatbelts, lock up your daughters, and prepare to hear some impressive, rip-roaring keyboard histrionics from Mr. Ken Hensley! Music maestro please! The album opens in powerful take-no-prisoners style with "Towards the Skies", with the heavy keyboard sound of Ken Hensley very much at the forefront. The singer has a powerful emotional urgency to his voice and there's some wild guitar riffs thrown in to the mix too, All in all, it's a magnificently powerful album opener which really means business and hits you for six with its raw power, The listener is given a bit of a breather with the slower-paced "Candles Getting Shorter", although the song still maintains the band's heavy rock credentials. Just when you thought it was safe to lie back and relax though, "You're My Life" hits you with its pounding drum rhythm and freaky guitar breaks with the vocalist going hell-for-leather and giving the song everything he's got and more besides, very much in the style of David Byron of Uriah Heep. And if you thought that was good, you ain't heard nothing yet (to paraphrase Mr. Bachman, Mr. Turner & Mr. Overdrive), because along comes "Looking Glass", a real highlight of the album with soaring vocals and the keyboard-heavy sound that Uriah Heep fans have grown to know and love. The impressive singer really reaches those HIGH notes on this song, without the aid of helium, and you really have to hear it to believe it! Next up is "Misleading Colours", a heavy bluesy number of impressive power. Side Two opens with "Radio Show", an all-out rocker to get the feet tapping and set the heart pumping. If you heard this for the first time in the late 1960's, you might even have been inclined to do some head-banging before head-banging had even been invented. "Plastic Horizon" is Song No. 8 which sounds like one of Uriah Heep's slower-paced numbers, although no less impressive, especially for Uriah Heep fans who will surely love it. Next up comes "Farthing Man" a bright and breezy upbeat Pop song, which is undoubtedly the least-heavy song on the album. It's the kind of catchy late 1960's Pop song that might have done well in the charts, had it been released as a single. The penultimate song "I Never Know" is the longest song on the album at over 5 minutes long. It's a moody and atmospheric number where Ken Hensley and guitar player Joe Konas are given the chance to stretch their musical muscles with some truly outstanding keyboard and guitar motifs, not to mention the singer, who always puts all of his emotion into every song on this outstanding album. As might be expected from an album of such impressive majestic power, the closing song of the album "Time and Eternity" is another powerhouse performance from the combined might of four very accomplished musicians at the top of their game. This impressively powerful and awe-inspiring keyboard-driven album will appeal especially to fans of early Uriah Heep. The "Genesis" album gives a superb foretaste of the powerhouse keyboard-driven sound still to come from Ken Hensley, who would go on to delight fans during his legendary Uriah Heep years. If you're looking for the Best of British late-1960's Proto-Prog, then look no further. "Genesis" is an outstanding album for Heavy Prog fans everywhere! Edited by Psychedelic Paul - December 07 2022 at 09:57 |
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Psychedelic Paul ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 45236 |
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Psych Britannia Six: A-Z Album Links
Fat Mattress were a short-lived, bluesy Psychedelic Pop band led by Noel Redding (1945-2003), best-known as the frizzy-haired bassist with the Jimi Hendrix Experience. The first Fat Mattress album was a modest success, but the second album was cast away like an old mattress with rusty springs by the record-buying public and the band decided to go their separate ways in late 1970. ![]() ![]() |
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Psychedelic Paul ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 45236 |
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Psych Britannia Six: A-Z Album Links
The Elastic Band had a brief career that only stretched as far as one album, but they're best-remembered now for having guitarist Andy Scott of the Sweet in their line-up. ![]() |
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Psychedelic Paul ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 45236 |
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Psych Britannia Six: A-Z Album Links
Brian "Blinky" Davison (1942-2008) is best-remembered as the drummer with The Nice before cutting loose to form his own soulful band, Brian Davison's Every Which Way in 1970. You also may remember him as one third of the Refugee power trio in 1974 alongside Lee Jackson and Patrick Moraz. Abiding by the theory that you can't keep a good drummer down, "Blinky" re-joined Keith Emerson for a reformation of The Nice and their live album "Vivacitas" released in 2003. ![]() Edited by Psychedelic Paul - December 07 2022 at 09:05 |
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Psychedelic Paul ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 45236 |
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Psych Britannia Six: A-Z Album Links
Consortium (Aka: West Coast Consortium) were a British Psychedelic Pop band active between 1967 & 1970, best-known now for the single, "All the Love in the World". Consortium's most recent album, released at the 13th Hour, features the band in far heavier guise. Hard Rock Hallelujah! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Edited by Psychedelic Paul - December 05 2022 at 04:34 |
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Psychedelic Paul ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 45236 |
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Psych Britannia Six: A-Z Album Links
Blonde on Blonde: a Psychedelic Rock band from South Wales, named after an album by Bob Dylan. ![]() ![]() ![]() Edited by Psychedelic Paul - December 05 2022 at 04:29 |
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Psychedelic Paul ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 45236 |
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Psych Britannia Six: A-Z Album Links
![]() "Breathe Awhile" (1969) is another re-discovered rare album treasure from the archives. The British band Arcadium released this one amazing album before going their separate ways and disappearing without trace, in common with many other one- album bands of the late 1960's psychedelic era. The album is filled with the powerful resonating sound of the Hammond organ, twinned with some masterly way-out acid guitar leads for fans of Psychedelic Rock. The album features two epic, stand-out songs, running at over 10 minutes long, the first track "I'm on My Way" and the final track "Birth, Life & Death". There are no album-fillers on this album. Every song stands up well on its own merits and blends in perfectly with the album as a whole. The CD album also includes two bonus tracks featuring the two singles released the same year as the album.
The epic album opener "I'm on My Way" is the highlight of the album. It's a hauntingly atmospheric song with a deliciously slow build-up after a deceptively quiet beginning. The spacey song features a delicately-played Hammond organ, laid-back acid guitar riffs, steady drumming, haunting ethereal voices and some atmospheric sound effects. The memorable song explodes into a full bore psychedelic jam of dramatic intensity around about the 9-minute mark, which should delight fans of way-out Acid Rock. Track 2 "Poor Lady" is a pure out-and-out rocker which maintains the fast pace from the previous song. Track 3 "Walk on the Bad Side" starts quietly with a gentle melody before bursting into life with some heavy guitar riffing and fast and wild Hammond organ-playing. Track 4 "Woman of a Thousand Years" is another up-tempo number with the ever-present Hammond organ blending nicely with acid guitar riffs and powerful drumming. Track 5 "Change Me" is one of those powerful and dramatically memorable songs that could have gone on to become a classic if it had received some radio airplay. Track 6 "It Takes a Woman" is another fast-paced Hard Rock song with a change of pace at the end to keep things interesting. Finally, this brings us to the second epic song "Birth, Life & Death" to play out the album. Everything is thrown into the mix for this song, including frantic Hammond organ-playing, wild psychedelic guitar riffs and a pounding drum beat, and the song also features a dramatic change of pace midway through, before concluding with a tremendous crescendo of sound. It's a perfect ending to a classic album. This memorable album grows on you with repeated listening and it should appeal to any fans of British Psychedelic Rock. Edited by Psychedelic Paul - December 05 2022 at 04:25 |
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Psychedelic Paul ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Offline Points: 45236 |
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A preview of who's coming up next month in Psych Britannia Six:-
Arcadium Blonde on Blonde Consortium Brian Davison's Every Which Way The Elastic Band Fat Mattress The Gods Humble Pie The In Crowd Janus Keef Hartley Band Love Affair Manfred Mann One in a Million PINK FLOYD Quatermass Roger Cook Spooky Tooth Timebox World of Oz
Edited by Psychedelic Paul - October 25 2023 at 14:21 |
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David_D ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: October 26 2010 Location: Copenhagen Status: Offline Points: 15781 |
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just making a bit of fun ![]() |
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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: 45236 |
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A "red heart" just means I love their songs, that's all.
![]() Edited by Psychedelic Paul - October 01 2022 at 06:12 |
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David_D ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: October 26 2010 Location: Copenhagen Status: Offline Points: 15781 |
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Now I get a bit confused with this use of
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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