Saturday, June 7, 2014

Thundertree - Thundertree (1970 us, magnificent groovy psych prog rock, Radioactive issue)



I've always been amazed at how many great (and often unknown) bands spring from Minnesota. Must have something to do with the long, cold winters that force folks into indoor activities ... That said, this is an album where the isolated reviews I'd read really didn't say much of note - the effort was described as likeable, but extremely rare. Not much to go on ...

In terms of biographical information I know very little about this outfit.  Drummer Rick LiaBraaten and keyboardist John Meisen had been members of the St.Paul-based The Good Idea (who survived long enough to record one obscure 1968 single - 'Inside, Outside' b/w 'Patterns In Life' (Good Idea catalog number 2889).  When the band called it quits in 1969, LiaBratten and Meisen formed The Final Assembly with guitarist Bill Halliquist.  The trio began reworking some Good Idea material, with one of their demos catching the attention of Roulette Records which promptly signed them to a recording contract.  The trio promptly added bass player Terry Tilley and vocalist Dervin Wallin to the line up.  I also know the album was recorded at UA Studios in Minneapolis, Minnesota and was produced by Meisen. 

Musically 1970's "Thundertree" was pretty impressive. Featuring all original material (several tracks co-written by former Good Idea singer Bob Blank), tracks such as 'Head Embers', 'Summertime Children' and 'In the Morning' (the latter including a great fuzz guitar solo), offered up an attractive mix of psych and more rock oriented moves. Admittedly it wasn't exactly an earth shattering set and Wallin wasn't any great shakes as lead singer, but his occasionally screechy voice was well suited to the band's guitar and keyboard propelled repertoire. 

It's also one of those records that grows on you with each spin.  Highlights included 'Dusty Road' (always liked the stabbing organ and church chorus) and the side long suite '1225' which powered by Hallquist's solo, started out like a ton of bricks before eventually settling down into an interesting concept piece with a religious theme (look at the title as a date 12/25). (By the way, it is a pretty rare LP. I've seen two copies in 20 years.)
Tracks
1. Head Embers  (Thundertree, John Meisen) - 3:29
2. At the Top of the Stairs  (Thundertree, John Meisen) - 3:24
3. Summertime Children  (John Meisen) - 4:18
4. In the Morning  (Thundertree, John Meisen) - 2:45
5. Dusty Road  (Thundertree, John Meisen) - 4:10
6. 1225 Alone I Am  (John Meisen, Bob Blank) - 2:52
...i. Softly  (John Meisen, Bob Blank) - 3:31
...ii. I Travel Alone  (John Meisen, Bob Blank) - 3:23
...iii. Not Well Liked  (John Meisen, Bob Blank) - 1:52
...iv. With a Tailored Image  (John Meisen, Bob Blank) - 1:59
...v. The Sun Is Shinin' for Me  (John Meisen, Bob Blank) - 3:10

Personnel
*Bill Hallquist - Vocals, Guitar
*Rick Liabraaten - Drums
*John Meisen - Keyboards
*Terry Tilley - Bass
*Dervin Wallin - Vocals

Related Act
1972-73  Billy Hallquist - Persephone (2009 korean remaster)

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Thursday, June 5, 2014

The Glitterhouse - The Almost Complete Recordings (1966-74 us, beautiful mix of orchestrated psych, blue eyed soul and folk)



Glitterhouse was one of the most promising and ambitious psychedelic bands to come out of the New York area, a locale never really regarded as a spawning ground for great acts in that musical realm -- in fact, their failure to succeed only reinforces the New York area's hard-luck image in the psychedelic era, as opposed to the flourishing fields of psychedelic and psych-pop acts that were spawned in Los Angeles and San Francisco. The group originated in Great Neck, a distinctly upper-middle-class/upper-class enclave outside the New York City line, in Nassau County.

Mike Gayle was an African-American singer, guitarist, and composer raised in that environment, who had some serious music aspirations in 1965, when he met Hank Aberle (harmonica, guitar, violin) and Al Lax (vocals, bass), then members of a group called the Outsiders (no relation to the Cleveland band of that name), at a party. They ended up jamming together, liked what they heard, and formed an outfit called the Justice League, with Tommy Weiner on drums -- they initially rehearsed in the Greenwich Village apartment that Gayle shared with his roommate, then-aspiring photographer Bob Gruen. But their real base of operations was Great Neck, where all of their families came from and this afforded them lots of basement space in which to practice; it was also where the Justice League got most of their gigs. 

They were reasonably successful, and in 1966 -- with Gary Reems as their drummer -- they were signed to Epic Records, for which they cut their first single, "Rumpelstiltskin" b/w "Ode to an Unknown Girl"; strangely enough, that platter wasn't credited to the Justice League but, at the insistence of their manager, came out as the work of the "Pop Art" (it was 1966, after all, and they were trying to stay ahead of a musical wave that was breaking in all kinds of unexpected directions) -- a little later, they added keyboard player Moogy Klingman to the lineup, but not too long after that Gayle quit, and for the group's second record, in early 1967, they were called the "Dave Heenan Set," after their new lead singer. And then the group more or less disbanded, sort of -- what basically happened was that Aberle, Lax, Klingman, and Gayle got back together in the second half of the year, adding a friend of Klingman's, drummer Joel O'Brien -- late of a New York-based outfit called the Flying Machine -- to their lineup. And the Glitterhouse was born.

This group's sound, in keeping with the times and their name, did indeed glitter in bright, poppy psychedelic colors, interweaving equal elements of folk, pop, blues, soul, and jazz into a kind of spacy mix that was accessible yet deceptively complex. Based on the recorded evidence and accounts of the time, they were of a piece with the likes of both the Lovin' Spoonful and the Blues Project, and other hybrid bands, freely rewriting the book on composition and arrangements, and making a compelling sound in the process. In fact, they were going into some of the same experimental directions that the Rascals were headed in their progressive period, but without the same ponderous heaviness of the latter group's efforts; but they also had a lean, roots rock element to their sound, similar to the Band. 

Ideally, a group like that might have been tailor-made for a label like Elektra Records -- which was even based in New York, and had already started signing up outfits like Love and the Doors (and would soon be recording U.K. progressive bands like Methuselah and Renaissance) -- but somehow they never did get Elektra's attention, despite being based very close to home, and eliciting some interest from producer Paul A. Rothchild.

But their music was enough, coming out of a book publication party gig (arranged by Klingman's father) to attract the attention of Bob Crewe, the renowned East Coast producer, whose work had helped put the Four Seasons, after years of struggling, on the international map, and had done great things for Mitch Ryder & the Detroit Wheels as well. He heard them at the party and approached them, and the result was a contract with Crewe as producer and manager. All five were placed on a salary ($100 a week each, which was decent money in 1968, for musicians in their late teens and early twenties still trying to achieve success), to keep them fed and housed, and essentially paid not to play in public, as Crewe worked out how he would record them and present them, as a fully formed band, when the moment was right. They had a room at his studio to rehearse in, enough pay to keep them all happy, and eventually not one, but two recording projects emanated from their efforts with Crewe.

The more visible of the two efforts was the soundtrack to the Roger Vadim-directed science fiction parody Barbarella, for which they sang on several tracks, but didn't play, leaving that to Crewe's select studio musicians. But amid the publicity surrounding the movie's star, Vadim's then wife Jane Fonda, in her various states of undress in the film, and the offbeat, Gallic tone of the resulting film, relatively little notice was paid to the music -- the soundtrack album never sold in the numbers anticipated, and languished in dollar bins and cut-out lots for many years after its release, and did the group singularly little good. The less visible result was Color Blind, the official Glitterhouse debut LP on Crewe's Dynovoice label, which was released and disappeared without a trace in 1968. The single "Tinkerbell's Mind" charted briefly in New York, but was otherwise similarly neglected.

The group's fortunes turned downward at this point, as Crewe canceled their salaries soon after and essentially cut them loose from his operation. They'd lost almost a year from their association with him, and felt they had little to show for it, apart from being a year older. Crewe had effectively kept them under wraps, so they'd hardly been seen or talked about until the abortive album and single release -- additionally, the album was really as much Crewe's sound as their own, reflecting his own re-arrangements of their music and sound in many instances often in what they regarded as predictable, already hackneyed takes on psychedelic sound; often done on the fly, in the middle of the sessions, there'd been little time to discuss, develop, or evolve his ideas into something of their own, and now -- because of the collapse of their deal -- this was the way their sound was represented on the only album to carry their name. 

But those considerations became academic, owing to another key issue threatening the group's future -- in the course of that year, Gayle became interested in pursuing other sounds, in different contexts, and the result was the breakup of the band. O'Brien rejoined James Taylor and passed through Jo Mama, through which he became part of Carole King's backing band, and spent some time as a session drummer before moving to Woodstock, and becoming an artist, struggling at various times with heroin addiction before succumbing to liver cancer in 2007. Lax left the music business, while Aberle became a producer, and Klingman, after entering the orbit of Todd Rundgren, went on to a decades-long career in music, and even reunited most of the Glitterhouse members for a short time in 1974. And a 2002 reunion of the original members yielded a remake of their album and their Barbarella sides, all of them sounding far better and a good deal fresher than such re-enactments normally yield.
by Bruce Eder
Tracks
1. Tinkerbell's Mind - 4:46
2. Princess Of The Gingerland - 4:23
3. Sassafrass And Cinnamon - 4:12
4. Child Of Darkness - 4:23
5. I Lost Me A Friend - 4:17
6. Times Are Getting Hard - 3:50
7. Where Have You Been Hiding? - 2:53
8. Hey Woman - 4:01
9. Happy To Have You Here Again - 3:33
10.Barbarella (Bob Crewe, Charles Fox) - 2:46
11.Love Drags Me Down (Bob Crewe, Charles Fox) - 3:46
12.I Love All The Love In You (Bob Crewe, Charles Fox) - 3:54
13.Rumpelstiltskin (P. Cowap) - 2:28
14.Ode To An Unknown Girl - 2:07
15.Alice In Wonderland - 2:35
16.New York Blues - 3:40
17.Born To Blues.2:13
18.It's Going To Take Some Time - 1:51
19.Grandma, Why Do You Live In Harlem? - 4:10
20.Going Home - 5:00
21.Rainbow Child - 3:30
22.For Ann, Liz And Harvee - 3:11
All compositions by Mike Gayle except where noted

The Glitterhouse
*Mike Gayle - Lead Guitar, Lead Vocals,
*Hank Aberle - Harmony Vocals, Guitar, Violin
*Al Lax - Hi Harmonies,  Bass,
*Moogy Klingman - Keyboards, Vocals
*Joel "Bishop" O'Brien – Drums, Vocals

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Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Lyle Swedeen - Sunshine Inside (1974 us, magnificent classic soulful rock with folk traces, 2009 korean remaster and expanded)



 Lyle Swedeen has been a natural talent with music since the age of five. By the age of twenty he set out to LA, California to pursue a Music Career and landed a job for the Language Of Sound Music Publishing Company as a Professional Staff Writer. From his time there, over 2 years and 90 songs later, the experience lead him to his first solo effort towards an album release known as "Sunshine Inside". With over 15 of the top studio musicians in Los Angeles at the time, yhis 1974 Release was not an instant classic but ended up being lost for almost 40 years to become one of the Best Singer-Songwriter Albums of the 1970's and known as a "Lost Treasure of the 70's".

Originally Lyle Swedeen was signed to Fantasy Records, a Label started by Credence Clearwater Revival, which was a subsidiary of Prestige Milestone Records that was strictly a Jazz Label at the time. But after some shady music industry take over, Credence Clearwater Revival sued Prestige Milestone Records to release Fantasy Records from their grip.. and won! But this dropped Lyle Swedeen’s “Sunshine Inside” smack in the middle of a Jazz Record Label and was lost for years!

With such a continued growing response from the music community and fans around the world, this album has been Digitally Re-Mastered and Re-Released for the first time since its original vinyl production by Fantasy Records in 1974, with distribution in South Korea and United States.
Tracks
1. Can't Dance Without Music - 3:27
2. Meadowbird - 3:23
3. It's All Over Now - 4:14
4. I'm Never Gonna Be Lonely Again - 3:04
5. Sunshine Inside - 5:29
6. Of Your Precious Time - 3:12
7. Easily (Sean London) - 2:30
8. If I Were A Rainbow - 3:38
9. Horace Greeley (Collaer, Lloyf) - 3:28
10.It Takes A Lot To Laugh, It Take A Train To Cry (Bob Dylan) - 5:18
11.Lover's Fool, Strings - 7:43
12.No More Lies - 2:16
13.California - 2:33
All songs by Lyle Swedeen unless as else stated

Musicians
*Lyle Swedeen - Guitar, Vocals
*Bad Henry Davis - Bass
*Joe Osborn - Bass
*Lee Sklar - Bass
*Dave Kemper - Drums
*Jefferson Kewley - Guitar
*Mike Stewart - Guitar
*Tony Peluso - Guitar
*Larry Knechtel - Keyboards

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Monday, June 2, 2014

Instant Orange - Instant Orange (1968-74 us, awesome low fi folk psych country rock)



The eternal mania for reissues of obscurities turns up all sorts of trumps but sometimes the results are a cut above not simply with the music but with how it's all presented. Such is the case with the self-titled collection by Instant Orange, which compiles the entirety of the recorded work of this San Bernardino band that thrived, via a sporadic series of self-released items, including a full album, from 1968 through the mid-'70s. 

Speaking of the music, Instant Orange, at their core a trio of Terry Walters, Randy Lanier, and Lynn McCurdy, were solid but not lost revolutionaries, musical or otherwise; their open Byrds/Buffalo Springfield jones holds sway in a series of performances that are often enjoyable, as with songs like "The Visionary (Reactive)" and "Coming of the Day," not to mention the outright quirk of the banjo-and-kazoo romp of "Cycle 2." Walters and Lanier's guitar work is easygoing and approachable, though, as is their reflective singing, finding a balance between tenderness and electric charge that would get a new life in later years following R.E.M.'s hot-wiring of influences and all that came in its wake. 

The album itself is a careful creation, well recorded and with a variety of small interstitial moments of backwards tape and odd elements -- up through and including burping -- while the mastered-from-vinyl rarities, covering two singles and two EPs, include the original 1968 take on "Reflecting Emotions." In ways, though, the loving band history courtesy of Walters (a thorough biography in miniature), his extended introduction explaining how he was tracked down courtesy of an obsessive vinyl collector via former colleagues in police work, and the pleasant surprise of the resultant comprehensive reissue make this just as much of a treasure, providing a detailed story of a band that never "made it" but forged ahead for years in its own right and left more behind it than most. 
by Ned Raggett 
Tracks
1. Introduction - 0:18
2. The Visionary (Reactive) (Walters, Lanier) - 3:29
3. Whole Lot Better Part 1 (Walters, Lanier) - 0:17
4. Whole Lot Better Part 2 (Walters, Lanier) - 3:23
5. Silent Green (Walters, Lanier) - 2:43
6. Seems Like Everything Part 1 (Walters) - 0:37
7. Seems Like Everything Part 1 (Walters) - 1:58
8. Cycle 2 Part 1 (Walters, Lanier) - 0:48
9. Cycle 2 Part 2 (Walters, Lanier) - 1:48
10.Reflecting Emotions (Walters, Lanier) - 3:35
11.Genesis II (Walters) - 2:51
12.Cactus Gardens (Lanier) - 3:10
13.Ballad Of The RTD Part 1 (Walters, Lanier) - 0:15
14.Ballad Of The RTD Part 2 (Walters, Lanier) - 2:39
15.Prairie To The Sea Part 1 (Walters, Lanier) - 0:11
16.Prairie To The Sea Part 2 (Walters, Lanier) - 3:14
17.Coming Of The Day Part 1 (Walters, Lanier) - 0:15
18.Coming Of The Day Part 2 (Walters, Lanier) - 1:38
19.You I'll Be Following (Walters, Lanier, Prud Homme) - 2:09
20.Reflecting Emotions (Walters, Lanier) - 2:41
21.Suburban Pictorial Abstract (Walters) - 2:39
22.20 To 6 Bianchi Boogie (Bianchi) - 1:27
23.Theme From Beat Whistle (Bianchi) - 8:35
24.View From Ghiradelli Square (Walters) - 2:11
25.Paper Lay (Lanier) - 3:28
26.Skyline (Bianchi) - 3:36
27.Plight Of The Mary Celeste (Lanier) - 4:01
28.Genesis II (Non LP Version) (Walters, Lanier, Brown) - 2:50
29.Same Old Thing (Walters, Lanier, Brown) - 2:03

Musicians
*Randy Lanier - Vocals, Guitar, Bass Guitar, Percussion
*Terry Walters - Vocals, Guitars, Banjo, Harmonica, Kazoo, Bass, Drums, Percussion
*Lynn McCurdy - Various Instruments, Percussion
*Bryon Prud Homme - Bass
*Steve Brown - Drums
*Jim Brown - Guitars
*Jon Svarc - Drums
*Tim Powers - Guitar
*Joe Bianchi - Organ
*Dennis Baxter - Drums
*Mike Loucas - Bass
*Steve Sullivan - Drums
*Dennis Hoff - Guitar, Vocals
*Brian McDonough - Vocals, Harmonica

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Sunday, June 1, 2014

Ferris - Ferris (1971 suomi, splendid heavy blues rock with prog shades)



Finnish guitarist and singer-songwriter Dave Lindholm, who has made a career under his own name, recorded with several bands over 35 albums. Lindholm's first recordings were made with his band Ferris recorded in 1971 for Love Records (same label as Charlies and Wigwam). His unique Fender Strat guitar style and great arrangements your hear on the Ferris album are just outstanding.

His solo album "Sirkus" from 1973 is considered to be one of the most important Finnish rock albums. Pure bluesy underground, all English vocals, hammond organ and great rhythms section. An original Ferris album is next to impossible to find.

Amazing and solid Cream influenced bluesy underground rock with first class guitar and vocals. One of the best and rarest Finnish albums.
Tracks
1. Mama (Lindholm) 2:41
2. Vagabond (Lindholm, Itavaara)  3:31
3. You Could Tell Me (Hiekkada, Lindholm) 3:04
4. Chrystal Angel (Lindholm, Saxelin) 2:54
5. Mr. America (Lindholm) 2:36
6. Basically Pure (Hiekkala) 5:26
7. Stirling (Hiekkala, Lindholm) 1:25
8. Black Friday (Hiekkala, Lindholm) 1:39
9. Shugga Pog (Lindholm) 2:11
10.Women Are Allright (Lindholm) 2:19

Ferris
*Dave Lindholm - Vocals, Guitar
*Heikki Hiekkala - Organ, Guitar, Vocal
*Matti Saxelin - Drums, percussion
With
*Jaakko Itavaara - Bass

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The New Tweedy Brothers - The New Tweedy Brothers (1968 us, rough folk rock, experimental psych, 2010 remaster and expanded)



The New Tweedy Bros! formed in Portland, Oregon, in early 1966. Lackaff sang and played guitar, his brother Danny was the drummer, Dennis Fagaly was the bassist, and Steve Ekman was lead guitarist. The Northwest sound at that time was mostly known for frenetic R&B bands like the Sonics and the Wailers. The Tweedy Bros! were far removed from that world, incorporating elements from jug bands and folk acts as well as jangly guitars, fuzzy basslines, and distinctive vocal harmonies. They wasted no time finding more fertile creative soil and ended up in San Francisco later that spring, right when the city's acid-rock scene was reaching its creative zenith. One of the Tweedy Bros' first shows was opening for the Grateful Dead at the Avalon, where they later shared the stage with Big Brother, who were debuting a new singer named Janis Joplin.

Take a listen to the Tweedy Bros' ultra-rare 1966 single ("Good Time Car" b/w "Terms Of"), recorded for the DOT label. You can hear a kinship with the great early San Francisco psych-rock groups: the Charlatans, the Mystery Trend, the Great Society, Sopwith Camel. They share a sound devoid of pretension, but there's a cutting-edge wink in the music hinting that the band is in on something bigger.

The New Tweedy Bros! had a busy six-month run before returning to Portland for the holidays in 1967. But times weren't easy: Authorities in both cities were growing suspicious of late-night dances with rock music. Soon promoters were having trouble getting the required licenses to hold such events. For a band like the Tweedy Bros., who didn't want to play bars, jobs dried up. Fagaly was first to leave and start a family. "None of us had any day jobs for the two years I was in the band," says Fagaly, who currently lives in the Bay Area. "We made our living out of this."

By the end of 1968, The New Tweedy Bros! had called it quits. Yet before they faded into history, they recorded for Portland's tiny Ridon label their self-titled debut, which would keep their name around much longer than anyone expected.

Once The New Tweedy Bros! was completed (the covers were hand-assembled by the band members), the albums were sold at shows and distributed to local stores. But here's the rub: When record clerks took this masterpiece out of the box, they realized it wouldn't fit on the shelves. Those six corners were in the way, and ended up getting bent. The album was almost impossible to store, so it was kept behind the counter, out of eyesight from curious buyers. With no major label to promote it, sales were low. Tragically, when the band ordered another run of the album art later in 1968, the pressing plant had a fire, and all future covers were lost. (That fact alone heightens the record's collectability.)

Psych-rock advocates have been seeking out The New Tweedy Bros! throughout the years. It's been bootlegged a number of times, and alternate covers have been used to package the music, but no one has gone to the lengths of Shadoks, the German reissue imprint. In the late '90s, Shadoks owner Thomas Hartlage decided he wanted to create the preeminent reissue of the album. He discovered the band members owned a stack of unplayed vinyl copies as well as the master plates for the cover, a coup in the reissue world. Around the same time, the band finally came into possession of a digital copy of its master tapes. Yet Hartlage was impatient: One insider tells me the label owner pressed his vinyl reissue using a mint-condition copy of the record — what collectors call a "needle drop."

On the upside, Shadoks' CD version of The New Tweedy Bros!, is almost as good as the original because Hartlage held out for the authentic source material. The label also created an exact miniature replica of the original cover, right down to the printing on the spine ... and it doesn't fit into the shelves, either. Showing the true absurdity of the reissue world, though, the Shadoks vinyl version is now also out of print.

So, collectors, which version of The New Tweedy Bros! do you want: the real deal or an almost exact copy? Your decision will depend on how much you want to shell out. Shadoks' releases, containing honest-to-God vinyl from 1968, are priced anywhere from $100 to $175, when they become available. To own the 40-year-old original LP with a hand-assembled cover, however, is a Holy Grail in music collecting: A copy will set you back anywhere from $300 to $4,000 (depending on condition, of course). The New Tweedy Bros! is a piece of San Francisco history as well as a piece of art. Best of all, you can still dance to it.
by Andrew Lau
Tracks
1. Somebody's Peepin (Steve Ekman) - 4:30
2. I Can See It (Steve Ekman) - 4:05
3. I'd Go Anywhere (Dan, Fred Lackaff) - 2:28
4. Danny's Song (Dan Lackaff) - 2:51
5. Wheels Of Fortune (Dan Lackaff) - 4:25
6. I See You're Looking Fine (Steve Ekman) - 2:32
7. What's Wrong With That (Fred Lackaff) - 3:23
8. Someone Just Passed By (Steve Ekman) - 3:28
9. Her Darkness In December (Drone Song) (Fred Lackaff) - 6:04
10.Lazy Livin' (Dennis  Phang) - 1:21
11.Her Darkness In December (Alt Version) (Fred Lackaff) - 6:09
12.Good Time Car (Dan, Fred Lackaff) - 2:07
13.Terms Of, You Love Me (Fred Lackaff, Steve Ekman) - 2:01

The New Tweedy Brothers
*Steve Ekman - Lead Guitar, Vocals
*Dennis  Phang  Fagaly - Bass
*Danny Lackaff - Drums, Vocals
*Fred Lackaff - Rhythm Guitar, Vocals
*Dave McClure - Bass

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Saturday, May 31, 2014

Marc Mundy - Marc Mundy (1971 cyprus, stark acid psych folk with mediterranean aura)



Anthony Hassini, Marc Mundy's brother and this album's producer, offers the  facts plainly, "We were naive...we knew nothing about the music business."  The two did all they could to push this collection of tragic love songs onto the  airwaves and pop charts, sending copies to label heads and radio jocks but  their hard work garnered no response whatsoever. What they might not have realized at the time was that Mundy's music was quite literally too "foreign"  for U.S. pop audiences. 

This was a major blow to Marc, then twenty years of age. He never recorded again and, while granting us permission for this reissue, declined any active involvement. Everything we know about Marc comes second-hand through his brother. 

In talking with Anthony, it became clear that Marc had a complete emotional investment in this album. He believed in what he was doing and felt he had something to offer. He wanted recognition and he wanted to be heard. It didn't turn out this way. 

Marc Mundy was born into an eclectic show business family in Cyprus, an  island at the eastern edge of the Mediterranean. His birth name is Emin but,  in standing with a family tradition, he and his brother took stage names. Marc adopted his Mundy surname from a clarinetist uncle while Anthony, a budding  magician, took Hassini, a play on the name Houdini. 

Marc's early musical  influences were derived almost exclusively from Mediterranean radio: Cairo,  Istanbul, Tel Aviv, Athens, and local Cyprian stations broadcasted a rich blend  of Near and Middle Eastern traditional music providing the soundtrack to  Mundy's childhood. 

In 1965, seventeen-year-old Marc Mundy joined Anthony in New York City in  search of better opportunities and a new life. He left Cyprus on the heels of  an ill-fated love affair, an event that  fueled the songwriting on this album.  In New York he was exposed to  Western music for the first time and  former idols like Turkish vocalists  Zeki Muren and Boris Manco were  joined by new ones including Elvis  Presley, Roy Orbison, the Beatles and Jimi Hendrix. Marc enrolled in a  philosophy program at NYU and  immersed himself in the Greenwich  Village coffeehouse music scene. 

At age nineteen he fell in love again and  married Hulya Aziz, a young Turkish  emigree. During this period he  gathered a loose-knit group of  musicians who provided the backing  on this album, which they recorded in late 1970. With Marc on vocals and  lead guitar, Hulya on backing vocals, and a now anonymous band of friends  behind him, the group locked into a unique East/West groove that stands out  from the myriad of psychedelic-era rock and pop LPs. 500 copies were  pressed and the album promptly vanished into obscurity. 

Marc Mundy stayed in New York until the end of the 70s, finishing school,  working with his brother, and traveling abroad. Eventually he returned to his  hometown Nicosia in Cyprus as a teacher in math and music to high school kids. 
Tracks
1. The Hidden Meaning Of Your Love - 3:06
2. Our Love Can Never Be - 3:22
3. How Can I Marry This Language - 2:57
4. Love Me All The Time - 2:24
5. The Nights We Spend Together - 3:09
6. Don't Love Me Anymore - 3:15
7. The Tragic House - 3:11
8. I Know Not Where - 2:38
9. Give Up Your Pride - 3:04
10.I'm Crying Your Name - 2:11

*Marc Mundy - Guitars, Vocals

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Friday, May 30, 2014

Earth Opera - The Great American Eagle Tragedy (1969 uk, wonderful melt of country folk and jazzy psycedelia)



If Earth Opera's self-titled debut album reflected the eclectic, ambitious pop styles of the Flower Power, Sgt. Pepper era of 1967, the group's follow-up, The Great American Eagle Tragedy, took into consideration the changed musical climate of 1968, when arrangements became more stripped down and hard rocking, with country-rock beginning to make inroads. 

The departure of bandmember Bill Stevenson, along with his harpsichord and vibraphone, may have hastened the group's transition to a simpler sound, too. But from the first note, the second album was very different from the first. Earth Opera sounded like it had been made by a studio band that had never played out, but the country-rock opener of The Great American Eagle Tragedy, "Home to You," paced by the pedal steel guitar of guest Bill Keith, was a road song in subject matter and feel, played by a band that sounded like it had spent some time before paying customers. 

"Mad Lydia's Waltz," the second track, sounded more like the group that had made Earth Opera, but the sound was still more rooted in stringed instruments and steady beats than it had been before, and following the throwaway written by the drummer came a real rocker, "Sanctuary From the Law." But the album's big number, the ten-and-a-half-minute title song, brought the earlier and later parts of Earth Opera together, combining a driving rock chorus, complete with screaming electric guitar solo, with slow, contemplative verse sections in which singer/songwriter Peter Rowan wove a transparent allegory about a royal court in crisis that was really about the state of the U.S. in the late '60s, particularly the quagmire of the Vietnam War. The track attracted the attention of free-form FM radio, and the album made the charts for several weeks. But Earth Opera folded soon after.
by William Ruhlmann
Tracks
1. Home To You -4:27
2. Mad Lydia's Waltz -3:47
3. Alfie Finney (Dillon) -2:35
4. Sanctuary From The Law - 2:54
5. All Winter Long - 5:56
6. The American Eagle Tragedy - 10:36
7. Roast Beef Love - 3:16
8. It's Love - 4:05
All compositions by Peter Rowan, unless as else noted

Earth Opera 
*Peter Rowan - Vocals, Guitar, Saxophone
*David Grisman - Mandolin, Mandocello, Keyboards, Saxophone, Vocals
*Paul Dillon - Guitar, Drums, Vocals
*Billy Mundi - Percussion, Drums
*John Nagy - Bass, Violoncello, Mandocello
With
*Jack Bonus - Flute, Sax, Wind
*Herb Bushler - Bass
*John Cale - Guitar, Viola, Vocals
*Richard Grando - Saxophone
*David Horowitz - Organ, Piano, Keyboards
*Bill Keith - Pedal Steel, Steel Guitar
*Bob Zachary - Percussion, Triangle

1968  Earth Opera
Related Act
1968  Rhinoceros - Rhinoceros
1969-70  Rhinoceros - Satin Chickens / Better Times Are Coming

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Thursday, May 29, 2014

Earth Opera - Earth Opera (1968 us, delicate baroque folk psych)



For a time in the mid- to late '60s, it seemed as though Boston might become the East Coast's answer to San Francisco -- it never happened, but if it had, Earth Opera had as good a shot as any of being the East Coast answer to the Grateful Dead. Spawned out of the early- to mid-'60s folk boom, Earth Opera's core was comprised of Peter Rowan, a former bluegrass player (and Bill Monroe alumnus) whose proficiency on guitar and mandolin was soon matched by his songwriting; and David Grisman, a mandolin virtuoso of no small talent who had played with a various younger ensembles, including Siegel, Grisman, Rose & Lewinger. 

By the mid-'60s, even the most serious and dedicated of urban folk players, attuned and attached to younger collegiate audiences, were getting caught up in the changes being wrought in music from across the Atlantic and the West Coast, which had yielded such efforts as the ineptly named bluegrass Beatles effort Beatle Country by the Charles River Valley Boys, and Wheatstraw Suite by the Dillards. In late 1967, Rowan and Grisman made the jump across the psychedelic chasm opened by the Beatles et. al from their folk perch, in the guise of Earth Opera. They were joined by John Nagy on bass, Paul Dillon, and Bill Stevenson on keyboards and vibraphone, and began generating music that was closer in spirit to the spacier parts of Anthem of the Sun than to Bill Monroe, though they didn't leave bluegrass behind entirely. 

The group was signed to Elektra Records which, at the time, was enjoying success with its first two rock signings, the Doors and Love and rapidly expanding into the more advanced forms of rock music. Their self-titled debut album, produced by Grisman's ex-bandmate Peter Siegel, and including veteran drummer (and Mothers of Invention alumnus) Billy Mundi on drums, was as spaced-out a record as Elektra had issued up to that time and, in its mix of folk and psychedelic influences, was reminiscent of the music emanating from San Francisco in the same era. 
by Bruce Eder
Tracks
1. The Red Sox Are Winning - 3:34
2. As It Is Before - 7:25
3. Dreamless - 2:52
4. To Care At All - 3:35
5. Home Of The Brave - 4:51
6. The Child Bride - 4:43
7. Close Your Eyes And Shut The Door - 2:46
8. Time And Again (Grisman, Rowan) - 5:47
9. When You Were Full Of Wonder - 4:00
10.Death By Fire - 6:08
All compositions by Peter Rowan except where stated

Earth Opera
*Peter Rowan - Vocals, Guitar, Saxophone
*David Grisman - Mandolin, Mandocello, Keyboards, Saxophone, Vocals
*Bill Stevenson - Piano, Harpsichord, Organ, Vibraphone
*Paul Dillon - Guitar, Drums, Vocals
*Billy Mundi - Percussion, Drums
*John Nagy - Bass

Related Act
1968  Rhinoceros - Rhinoceros
1969-70  Rhinoceros - Satin Chickens / Better Times Are Coming 

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Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Fludd - Fludd (1971 canada, wonderful blend of smart folk, classic rock and glam tinges, 2010 edition)



After toiling away in various local bands in the Toronto area, brothers Brian and Ed Pilling packed their bags and headed to England where they formed Wages Of Sin in 1969. Less than a year later they'd caught the eye of Cat Stevens who took them under his paw, renaming them Zeus and using them as his back-up band. But at odds with Stevens over music direction, the 2 brothers quit and returned to Canada before the end of the year. They recruited bassist Greg Godovitz, who they played with a few years earlier in a band called The Pretty Ones. Add drummer Jorn Andersen and guitarist Mick Walsh, and the first incarnation of Fludd was born.

They became mainstays of the Toronto club scene and soon landed a contract with Warner Bros. Adam Mitchell, most noteable for his stint with The Paupers was brought in to the recording studios in California to help produce the band's debut. Released in '71, the self-titled album featured the Canadian top 20 hit "Turned 21". Work on the second record began the next spring in Toronto, with Mitchell returning as producer. By this time however, Walsh had left and was replaced by fellow Wages Of Sin alumni Mick Hopkins.

While still working on the final touches of the album, they released the single "Get Up, Get Out, Move On" that April. However dissension with their label led Hopkins to return to England, where he formed the group Quartz. After being dropped by Warner Brothers, and sensing a change was in need, Fludd continued on their next project but with a different direction in mind. This led to the hiring of keyboardist Peter Csanky.

Fludd was perhaps better known for the list of musicians who played with the band at one time or another, rather than for the music itself. But it definitely has to be noted that the Pilling brothers, and whoever else was in the band at the time, never bowed to pressure from the executives. Always pushing the envelope, they always did things their way, while recording some of Canada's most under-rated and ground-breaking rock in the process. 
by Frank Davies and Greg Godovitz
Tracks
1. Turned 21 - 2:26
2. Sailing On - 1:42
3. David Copperfield - 3:10
4. The Egg - 3:02
5. Come Back Home - 2:07
6. A Man Like You - 2:33
7. Birmingham - 2:37
8. Mama's Boy (Greg Godovitz) - 2:59
9. Easy Being No One - 2:03
10.Make It Better - 2:51
11.You See Me - 2:17
12.Tuesday Blue - 3:21
All songs by Brian Pilling and Ed Pilling except where noted.

Fludd
*Mick Walsh - Guitar
*Edmund "Ed" Pilling - Vocals
*Brian Pilling - Guitar
*Greg Godovitz - Bass
*Jorn JJ Andersen (John Andersen) - Drums

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