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Daevid Allen - Daevid Allen, Gilli Smyth & Harry Williamson: ‎Stroking The Tail Of The Bird CD (album) cover

DAEVID ALLEN, GILLI SMYTH & HARRY WILLIAMSON: ‎STROKING THE TAIL OF THE BIRD

Daevid Allen

 

Canterbury Scene

3.13 | 16 ratings

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patrickq
Prog Reviewer
2 stars Promotional material for Stroking the Tail of the Bird claims that it sounds like walking through a rainforest. That's probably as accurate a description as could fit in six or seven words. It's an exceedingly ambient recording - - most of the music here is rhythmless, and there's rarely anything approaching a lead instrument.

As is the case with many ambient works, this album is also an example of minimalism. Much of what we hear seems to be Williamson's synthesizers; minutes go by in which Allen's guitar and Smyth's "space whispers" are indiscernible amid the ambience, which is probably the goal. But this isn't a "headphones" album; repeated listens don't reveal many Easter eggs. It's more like Brian Eno's idea of "ignorable art." But there's a little more art here than on Eno's seminal Ambient 1: Music for Airports, for example, and I wouldn't call it ignorable.

Tracks like "Stroking the Tail of the Bird part 2," where the rainforest vibes are strongest, remind me of Wendy Carlos's 1972 album Sonic Seasonings, which is a good thing. But there's less to Stroking the Tail than to that Carlos classic. Appearing as it did in 1990, Stroking the Tail was surely tarred with the dreaded "new age" label. And rightly so in a few places, such as when the opening of "Moonpeople Bliss" features what sounds like a harp!

So who might enjoy this album? All three of the performers here are connected with Gong. I only know two songs by Gong, both of which are on compilations I own: "Perfect Mystery" and "Om Riff." Let me just say that Stroking the Tail of the Bird sounds nothing whatsoever like either of those, nor anything like "The House is Not the Same," a Mother Gong song led by Smyth and Williamson. So Stroking the Tail doesn't seem like a long-lost Gong album. Based on the classification scheme on Prog Archives, Stroking the Tail is listed under the Canterbury Scene subgenre. But as long as Canterbury is exemplified by albums like In the Land of Grey and Pink, Stroking the Tail is no Canterbury Scene album either.

To be fair, Stroking the Tail of the Bird is an inoffensive new-age album that you might chill out to after listening to Kitaro. But if you're looking for atmospheric, synth-based prog, I'll suggest Klaus Schulze's early work (although his first two albums weren't actually synth-based). And if you want serious minimalist electronic music, you can't go wrong with Sonic Seasonings.

patrickq | 2/5 |

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