MIND
DE-CODER 73
To listen to the show scroll to the bottom of the page
To listen to the show scroll to the bottom of the page
“Toy soldiers put funny little knick-knacks in your brain”
Drusilla
(Buffy the Vampire slayer)
HERMAN’S
HERMITS MUSEUM
As you might
expect, Herman’s Hermits were never able to make the leap from the loveable
popsters of the Something-Tells-Me-I’m-Into-Something-Good/No-Milk-Today-variety
to compete with the likes of Cream, Hendrix or The Beatles, and in truth, I
don’t think they even tried. Their focus was on the North American market, and
their 1967 release, BLAZE, wasn’t even released in England, as if their record
company were too embarrassed about it, but it’s actually not that bad. At the
very least there's a discernible whiff of marijuana-inspired pop about it - the
opener, a cover of Donovan’s Museum
comes with sitar and conjures up multi-coloured clothes, Indian drones and
London when the swinging stopped and the stoning got going, and the rest of the
album, produced by Mickie Most, is full of trippy, catchy little songs and is
something of an underappreciated psych-pop gem.
RADIOPHONIC
TUCKSHOP KENSINGTON GARDEN PIE
The
Radiophonic Tuckshop (great name, by the way) are a Glasgow based band who do a
fine line in melodic, psychedelic fancies that unashamedly channel the spirit
of 1967, leaving no trope unexplored. This is not a bad thing. Kensington Garden Pie is a glorious
pastiche (one hopes) of the tripped-out psychedelic underground of the Summer
of Love and is all the better for it. The brain-child of Joe Kane, of Dr Cosmos
Tape Lab fame, as a sort of side-project, Radiophonic Tuckshop are at home to lysergic
pop, wonky tunes and merry melodies, and they have an album out next year. You
can find this track, however, on the most welcome release from the Active Listener blogsite, which went on a sort of
self-imposed sabbatical earlier this year, but which nevertheless seems to have
returned with the rather fine THE NEW AND IMPROVED ACTIVE LISTENER SAMPLER,
which you can download from here.
THE APPLES
IN STEREO STRAWBERRY FIRE
The Apples
In Stereo are a band very much at home to psychedelic experimentation, usually
drawing something or other from the REVOLVER/MADCAP LAUGHS songbook for
inspiration. For their 1999 release, HER WALLPAPER REVERIE, they filled their
album with so many lysergic interludes that they ended up with more interludes
than actual songs, although the playfully kaleidoscopic Strawberry Fire shows that they know how to craft a tune full of
sugary, head-spinning goodness when they put their minds to it.
NATHAN HALL
AND THE SINISTER LOCALS STAINED GLASS
GIRL
The debut
album, ELEGIES, by Nathan Hall and the Sinister Locals, pretty much sounds like the cover looks. I was thinking of new ways to
include the words bucolic, affectionate and
Barrett-esque into a sentence to
underline just how much I enjoy this album,
when I realised that the cover perfectly captures its essence– a gorgeous
palette of sound that playfully ravishes the senses with synaesthetic washes of
shimmering colour and dazzling light. Have a good look at the cover – that is
what the album sounds like. Did I mention how much I enjoy it? Available now
from bandcamp.
BALDUIN MADRIGAL
For his
second album, BOHEMIAN GARDEN, Swiss multi-instrumentalist Balduin has gone all
harpsichord-tastic, or at the very least has found a button on his new-fangled
synthesiser with the word harpsichord
writ large upon it. This isn’t a bad thing, of course, and on it he creates a
soundscape that sits very nicely between shimmering 60s pop and kaleidoscopically
arranged psychedelia. If you buy only one baroque psych-pop-analogue -synth
album this year make sure it’s this one.
THE FOCUS
GROUP NEW TOYTOWN WALK
Julian
House’s stop starts melodies and woozy fragments of eccentric aged audio
memorabilia mine British psychedelia, Italian horror movies and eastern
European animation for inspiration, creating an exotic collage of sound that
lingers in the past. His new album STOP-MOTION HAPPENING WITH THE FOCUS GROOP
gives a sly nod to Stereolab in the title but otherwise takes their loops and
grooves and places them in the blender with a variety of Summerisle sounds that
range from natural landscape folk passages to fizzing electronic blips and
bloops through sampled jazz echoes to create a dreamlike web of ghostly echoes.
Marvellous.
THE
SEEDS FLOWER LADY AND HER ASSISTANT
Up until
1967 The Seeds were known for pioneering a raw proto-punk garage rock sound
that produced a couple of classic hit singles, but for their third album they
added orchestrations and classical instrumentation to the mix, resulting in the
trashy psychedelia of FUTURE. Critics at the time dismissed it as an attempt to
surf the wave of baroque/psychedelic/orchestral magic that followed in the wake
of the Beatles’ SGT. PEPPER’S, but, in fact, that album wasn’t released until
after The Seeds had finished recording the presciently entitled FUTURE. If
anything, Sky Saxon’s sneering howls owed more to Mick Jagger, and the album’s
sound to a particularly messed-up Rolling Stones. Flower Lady and her Assistant is as fine a piece of flower power
music you’ll ever hear, but it still manages to sound menacing; sneering
garage-rock disguised as psychedelic whimsy.
JEFF
WOOTTON THE WAY THE LIGHT BENDS
AROUND YOU
There’s a
gentle psychedelic wooziness to the title track of Wootton’s debut album.
Better known for his collaborations, his solo release showcases Wootton’s
ability to create his own sound utilizing dense atmospheric soundscapes and
sonic experimentation. He also has a deft way with melody - The Way The Light Bends Around You combines
acid folk loveliness with an ambient Eno-esque soundscape to produce something
quite tender and exquisite.
SPROATLY
SMITH MOONS (PART 1)
Moons (Part 1) is Sproatly Smith’s contribution to
the latest A YEAR IN THE COUNTRY release, ALL THE MERRY YEAR ROUND, an
exploration of an alternative or otherly calendar that considers how
traditional folklore and its tales now sit alongside and sometimes intertwine
with cultural or media based folklore now transmitted and passed down via
television, film and technology rather than through local history and the ritual
celebrations of the more longstanding folkloric calendar, giving the stories new
layers of meaning and myth. Sproatly Smith go quite dark with this one,
eschewing ethereal vocals for darkened synths which throb with unexpected
menace.
THE
CHOCOLATE WATCH BAND GOSSAMER WINGS
The
Chocolate Watch Band’s debut album, NO WAY OUT, released in 1967, had a
difficult gestation which saw many of the lead vocals replaced with those of a
session musician, producers tinkering with overdubs, and on two tracks, session
musicians replacing the band entirely. Despite this, the album is now lauded as
something of an essential garage band classic, featuring a raw urgent heaviness
combined with distorted guitar instrumentals that were early examples of
protopunk. Gossamer Wings is, in
fact, something of an anomaly on the album, a psychedelic digression that used
the band's basic track from the 1966 single b-side Loose Lip Sync Ship as its jumping-off point, but it’s a pleasant
digression, nonetheless.
THE
SÉANCE CHETWYND HAZE
This is the
second track taken from the album ALL THE MERRY YEAR ROUND, and finds The Séance
steeped in the same eerie hauntological territory that’s not very far removed
from the sort of sonic wormholes explored by The Children of Alice. This, of
course, is a good thing and moreover, the Byzantine structures and sparse
melodies they create perfectly match the A YEAR IN THE COUNTRY aesthetic, which
finds the label wanderings down the same interwoven pathways of phantom musings
and oddball electronic finery, travelling alongside straw bear and cathode ray
summonings alike.
LIAM
GALLAGHER CHINATOWN
I can’t
quite bring myself to like the album AS YOU WERE, as it sounds pretty much like
everything else he’s put his voice to this last 20 years or so, but that being
said, producer Andrew Wyatt brings a stark swirl to the second single, Chinatown, which, despite boasting lyrics so bad they just have to be parody, has some
gorgeous, gently finger-picked guitar to it, buttressed with slight rhythmic
loops and digital manipulations which combine to make it one of the absolute
stand-out tracks of his career.
DANTALIAN’S
CHARIOT THIS ISLAND
Dantalian’s
Chariot never got to release the album they recorded in 1967, because their
record company couldn’t be doing with band’s new psychedelic direction.
Previously known for his legendary Big Roll Band, a band known on the live
circuit for playing an
electrifying mixture of soul, jazz, and R&B, band leader Zoot Money caught
the psychedelic bug and renamed the band Dantalian’s Chariot and, by all
accounts, they rocked the London psychedelic scene with a spectacular light
show that made them the envy of Pink Floyd - to heighten the effect of the spectacular
light show being projected onto them, the band would all dress in white robes,
with their instruments and equipment also painted white. Despite releasing A Madman Running Through The Fields, now
regarded as a psychedelic classic, the record company rejected their album and
released instead an
album of previously recorded tracks, which they released in 1968 as TRANSITION,
crediting the album to Zoot Money as a solo artist, rather than Dantalian's
Chariot. In 1995 David Wells' Tenth
Planet label pieced together an album of ten tracks recorded in 1967 and
released them as a facsimile of what that rejected album may have sounded like
and called it CHARIOT RISING. The instrumental This Island enjoys an Exotica vibe that wouldn't have been out of place on an Arthur Lyman album.
THE WEST
COAST POP ART EXPERIMENTAL BAND WILL
YOU WALK WITH ME
The West
Coast Pop Art Experimental Band also come with a story. Originally The Laughing
Wind, the band were ‘acquired’ by aspiring musician and wealthy,
thirty-something attorney Bob Markley who promised to finance and secure a recording
contract for the band in exchange for his inclusion into the group. Markley envisioned
the group as a West Coast counterpart to the Velvet Underground, edgy and
experimental, and accordingly renamed the band – as well as securing rights to
the band’s name and publishing, a move that caused something of a fracture
within the band, what with Markley not being much of a musician or lyricist and
all. Will You Walk With Me is taken
from their third, and more or less final album (and thereby hangs another tale)
A CHILD’S GUIDE TO GOOD AND EVIL in 1967. This album is considered their most
overtly psychedelic work but it’s a bizarre fusion of innocence and malice
heavily affected by the spirit of the Summer of Love being swept away on a tide
of bad drugs, paranoia, and protest.
ROB
GOULD GRANNY’S LONGEST TRIP
A rather
fine cover of The Purple Gang’s Granny
Take’s A Trip, originally released, as you might expect, in 1967. As the
title suggests, Gould takes his version off into an extended detour through
time and space that imbues the track with a lysergic ambiance that the
original, in truth, didn’t have (despite getting itself banned by the BBC for
intending to corrupt the nation’s youth). You can find this on his soundcloud page.
TEMPLES UNCERTAINTY (GRUMBLING FUR MASCHINE REMIX)
Temples’
second album, VOLCANO, saw them expand their sonic palette to include pulsing,
prog, motorik beats and baroque chamber-psych. In 2016 they gave the lead
single, the squelchy, synth-driven Certainty
up for a good remix and psychedelic experimentalists Grumbling Fur took that, stripped
it down, and gave it a pastoral, hallucinatory make-over reminiscent of Brian
Eno’s post-glam, cinematic albums from the mid-’70s. It sounds great.
DELIA
DERBYSHIRE FUTURE GHOSTS
Earlier this
year the Radiophonic Workshop unveiled an unreleased highlight from their most
famous member, the late Delia Derbyshire. Titled Future Ghosts, the piece was made of various elements from
Derbyshire’s seemingly lost tape archive. The collection, containing over 300
tape reels, was found in the artist’s attic after her death and used to
construct the new piece. The dark, atmospheric piece has been composed from
original elements of music by Derbyshire that the Radiophonic Workshop have
worked together into a new piece. The elements are from tapes that Derbyshire
made beyond the BBC on some of her later film and theatre projects - the exact
details of which are lost to time. Check out this clip below, worked into a
promo for a recent panel discussion in which members of the Radiophonic
Workshop discussed their extraordinary history and working methods. Delia,
bless her, passed away in 2001.
CORNELIUS SURFING ON MIND WAVE PT. 2
It’s been 11
years since the last release by Cornelius (Keigo Oyamada, to his mother) and 20
years since the release of the brilliant FANTASMA. His latest release finds him
eschewing the neon-psychedelia of that album for something entirely more
meditative. As the title suggests, MELLOW WAVES is a different affair entirely
which finds Cornelius in a meditative state, the music representing a world
that constantly changes, with no structure, where various things just occur and
continue endlessly - it’s a soft and lovely collection of songs. Surfing on Mind Wave Pt. 2, something of
a minimalist interlude, was suggested by a piece he wrote for the soundtrack to
GHOST IN THE SHELL: ARISE (the original Anime movie, not the recent ravishing
but largely pointless remake), and owes much to the work of Terry Riley: a
buzzing and sun-drenched drone that surfs on ecstatic ambient waves.
BRIAN
ENO MATTA
…and
speaking of ambient, Brian Eno’s APOLLO: ATMOSPHERE’S AND SOUNDTRACKS, is a
near perfect example of the genre (at least the bits that don’t feature slide
guitar). There’s two versions of the album to choose from, and dark and
mysterious Matta, appears on the
first version originally recorded in 1983 for a feature-length documentary
movie called ‘Apollo’ later retitled ‘For All Mankind’, directed by Al Reinert.
The original version of the film had no narration, and simply featured 35mm
footage of the Apollo moon missions set to Eno's music as it appears on the
album – there’s a second version to accompany the 1989 re-release of the film
with a largely different soundtrack. Matta
has a dark, complicated texture, appropriately spacey and slow moving but empty
and disconnected – and surely that’s whale song? This could well be the piece
of music that invented The Orb.
ASTROBAL TROIS BEAUX OISEAUX DU PARADIS
This
gorgeous track can be found on the album AUSTRALASIE, a lucky find from last
year and currently one of my favourite albums. Astrobal is a project by Emmanuel
Mario, who I came across because of his work as producer and drummer with
Stereolab's Laetitia Sadier, who guests on this album. The thing I like about
it most is that it doesn’t sound like anything I’ve heard before – Mario has
created an aqueous universe of his own to swim around in, with each track an ethereal
ambient wash married to a wave of buzzing synths and symphonic strings that
build to a crescendo of sound and crashing drums. The hymnal warmth of Trois Beaux Oiseaux du Paradis, sung by
French actress Nina Savary, is
actually a cover, if that’s the right word in this instance, of a rare foray
into choral writing by Ravel, written in 1915 whilst waiting to be enlisted in
the army.
THE
RADIOPHONIC WORKSHOP SOME HOPE OF
LAND (excerpt)
This ambient
soundscape is just the first 12 minutes of an otherwise 25 minute piece called Some Hope Of Land taken from the album
BURIALS IN SEVERAL EARTHS, a brand new work by the legendary Radiophonic
Workshop. Nearly two decades after the Workshop was decommissioned by the BBC
(who don’t do weird stuff anymore), original members Peter Howell, Roger Limb,
Dr Dick Mills, Paddy Kingsland and long-time associate composer Mark Ayres returned
to the studio to create evocative and improvised bouts of musique concrete
loosely based upon Francis Bacon’s incomplete 1627 literary work New Atlantis, which
was used by the Radiophonic Workshop founder, Daphne Oram, as a manifesto for
the original sound sorcery they famously produced in room 13 of the BBC Maida
Vale studio complex in London. Some Hope
of Land is a set of experimental sounds that take the listener on bizarre
and unsettling adventures. The effects ebb and flow with the playful analog
sounds and the devastating electronica. Just beautifully weird, but you
wouldn’t want 25 minutes of it.
VANILLA
FUDGE ELEANOR RIGBY
Vanilla
Fudge were the covers band for the counter
culture in the late 60s. Their eponymous debut release in 1967 featured no less
than seven Hammond-heavy covers, each one a stoned-out, slowed-down version of
such then-recent classics as The Beatles’ Ticket
To Ride, The Zombies’ She’s Not There
and The Supremes’ classic You Keep Me
Hanging On, blown up to epic proportions and bathed in a trippy, distorted
haze. The band has been cited as one of the few American links between
psychedelia and what soon became heavy metal, and they certainly seem to have
invented Deep Purple, but each song still works as a time capsule of American
psychedelia. I particularly like their take on Eleanor Rigby, which is verily a
trip unto itself.