MIND DE-CODER 74
To listen to the show just scroll t othe bottom of the page
‘Mind – how you go’
Roger McGough (Poem for
National LSD Week)
THE
IDLE RACE ON WITH THE SHOW
The
big thing about The Idle Race, of course, was that were formed by Jeff Lynne,
who would later go on to find fame with The Move and ELO. His first album, THE
BIRTHDAY PARTY, released in 1968, was a quasi-concept album composed almost
entirely by Lynne himself, and was critically lauded at the time but, rather
unjustly, unembraced by the listening public, which is a pity because it has
much to recommend it. It’s a cheerfully trippy affair and, given Lynne’s
presence, the music enjoys a Beatles-like playfulness with many psychedelic
flourishes. The original LP came in a gatefold sleeve, the first of its kind
since the Beatles' SGT. PEPPER and the Rolling Stones' THEIR SATANIC MAJESTIES
REQUEST albums, and included a mock birthday feast attended by many British celebrities,
including most of the Radio 1 disc jockeys (you can clearly see a largely
reluctant Jon Peel lurking in the corner, oh, and look, there’s Jimmy Saville –
not lurking at all), the Beatles, the Duke of Windsor, actor Warren Mitchell in
his role as Alf Garnett, and Lynne himself as an eight-year-old schoolboy. It
was re-issued in 2014 for Record Store Day, in a limited edition on gold vinyl
and was worth every penny.
THE
CHEMISTRY SET LEGEND OF A MIND
While
I was putting the show together I came across the sad news that Ray Thomas,
flautist, vocalist and founding member of the Moody Blues, died recently at the
age of 76 (so he had a good innings). Among many very fine tracks, he was also
responsible for Legend of a Mind,
recorded here by The Chemistry Set for a three-track 7" for the wonderful Fruitsde Mer record label called A LOVELY CUPPA TEA, released last year. It’s super cool,
and do check out the video – it doesn’t disappoint.
NOEL
GALLAGHER’S HIGH FLYING BIRDS
INTERLUDE (WEDNESDAY, PART 1)
What
I’m choosing to call ‘the good one’ from
last years WHO BUILT THE MOON, although in fairness this David Holmes produced
album has a little more going for it than his normal coke-addled trad-dad
updates of MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR. Interlude
is all moody and cinematic; the sort of thing Paul Weller was doing with
his Noonday Underground collaborator Simon Dine.
GRUMBLING
FUR MOLTEN FAMILIAR
Grumbling
Fur's fourth album FUNFOUR, released 2016, is a recording rich in musical
experimentation and sonic enquiry, that sounds pretty much like a world unto
itself – there’s really not much of a precedent for this type of noise but somehow it still remains a pop
album. In fact, it’s pretty much a masterclass in modern psychedelia, taking
the exploratory spirit of 1967 as a starting point and not slavishly trying to
recreate the noise in Syd Barrett’s head. Molten
Familiar has a trippy psychedelic hip-hop rhythm that wouldn't feel out of
place on a Madlib release, but overall but it distils a multitude of influences
into a singular brand of musical mysticism.
KING
GIZZARD AND THE LIZARD WIZARD THE
CASTLE IN THE AIR
This
track is taken from the fourth of no less than five album releases by the ‘Gizzard’s’
last year, and the one which was made available for an entirely free download
from their website. In fact, POLYGONDWANALAND came with a note encouraging fans
to “Make tapes, make CD’s, make records…We
do not own this record. You do. Go forth, share, enjoy”, which was very
nice of them, I’m sure you’ll agree. As for releasing 5 albums in one year – I
just wish more bands had this kind of boundless enthusiasm for making music
instead of having us wait five years between releases while they release every
track from the album as a single in a venal attempt to wrestle every last penny
from their listening public. I mean, The Beatles released six albums between
1963 and 1965, as did the Stones between 1964 and 1967, so it’s not outside the
realms of possibility, is it? Clearly, however, King Gizzard and the Lizard
Wizard are emitting, packing this
album with intricate, overlapping grooves, unfamiliar time signatures, tranced-out
flutes, blazing metal riffs, raga-drone organs, and ominous vintage-synth tones
– at some point they even attempt Gregorian chants. They’ve probably released
two more albums in the length of time it took me to write this.
BRIAN
JONES TRACK 8
Often
painted as a drug-addled dilettante by 1967, Brian Jones actually enjoyed quite
a prolific year, despite unwelcome attention from the press and their servants,
the London constabulary. As well as providing THEIR SATANIC MAJESTIES REQUEST
with much of its otherworldly vibe with his use of the mellotron and
experimental sound effects, he also composed the soundtrack to the cult German film,
‘A Degree of Murder’, starring his then
girlfriend Anita Pallenberg as a young woman who accidentally kills her
ex-lover during a fight and she decides to conceal the body (comic capers ensue
when she falls for both the men she hires to take it away). Bizarrely, no
soundtrack has ever been released –an absurd state of affairs considering that it
also featured the likes of Jimmy Page on guitar, Nicky Hopkins on piano, and
Kenny Jones on drums. Its release would be considered something of a cultural
artefact in and of itself, regardless of the fact that this would be the only
time that Jones recorded outside of the Stones, which would also make it a
fascinating insight into just what he could have brought to the table had
Jagger and Richards not had the song-writing credits pretty much sewn up. In
the meantime, the only way you can hear the soundtrack is to watch the movie,
which is why this track has no title and sounds a little muffled. I thought
perhaps you’d be interested, nevertheless.
MOON
WIRING CLUB SMUDGED CONFECTIONIERS
The
first of several tracks taken from two new albums by Ian Hodgson’s Moon Wiring
Club, although one is the disorientating
limited edition vinyl version to the other. Smudged
Confectioniers is taken from the album CATEARED CHOCOLATIERS, a thoroughly
elusive sequence of eldritch sound, using the PS1’s FX to emulate melted
shellac, gaggles of ghosts and the imagined environmental sounds of an eerie
parallel dimension that lies just behind our own reality. It accompanies a the
2-CD release TANTALISING MEWS, released last year, more of which later.
AVEY
TARE CORAL LORDS
EUCAPLYPTUS,
released last year by Avey Tare (Animal Collective’s Dave Portner), is an
unsettling listen, sonically rich with a sound palette that disconnects and
reconnects in playfully weird patterns. Odd noises haunt Coral Lords, a treatise on marine ecology (of course) about how the
death of coral reefs are the first sign that “our ouroboros is almost complete.”; elsewhere the album’s woozy
transcendental soundscapes make for a disorientating listen – acid-folk
acoustic-ness, sonic weirdness and neo-psychedelic loveliness abound.
SERPENT
POWER GOLDEN DAWN
Serpent
Power are the combined efforts of the Coral's Ian Skelly and Paul Molloy, who
used to play guitar for the Zutons as well. Their second album, last year’s
ELECTRIC LOONYLAND, is a swirling, whirling delight, that places them somewhere
between Temples, early Tame Impala and current Mind De-Coder favourites King
Gizzard and the Wizard Lizard, bringing an infectious sound of overstuffed
arrangements, snaking melodies and slick harmonies to the mix. The album is a
joy to behold, despite the daft title, that puts one in mind of the psychedelic
excesses of 1968, when music fused with cosmic awareness, and the resulting
universe was just a fab place to exist. (n.b This album is the winner of the 'least promising' cover award)
(A bit of a hauntological happening I put together)
HERON OBLIVION
YOUR HOLLOWS
In 2016 Meg Baird, formerly of acid-folk collective
Espers, teamed up noise rock band Comets On Fire to form Heron Oblivion, an
often cosmic meeting of the two forms that manages to sound for all the world
like Steeleye Span’s Maddy Prior fronting a doom metal band from the 1990s and
is all the more astonishing for it. Their eponymously titled album combines the
hushed and the pastoral with monolithic slabs of unhinged guitar driven
catharsis that is mind-blowingly psychedelic whilst slipping seamlessly from
the earthly into the supernatural.
SCAFFOLD
POEM FOR NATIONAL LSD WEEK
As Your
Hollows fades away into a cloud of reverb, I include a 3 second poem from
Roger McGough, recorded live at the Queen Elizabeth Hall with Scaffold and
released on the album of the same name in 1968.
ROLLING STONES
CITADEL
Having been bought a copy of the The Rolling
Stones’ 50th Anniversary Edition of THEIR SATANIC MAJESTIES REQUEST to revel in, I thought the very least I
could do was attempt a reassessment of an album I’d always considered to be a
largely disappointing drug-addled dirge. Having done so, I’ve come to the
conclusion that if you remove the virtually unlistenable Sing This All Together (See What Happens) and the second
‘experimental’ half of Gomper, and
throw in We Love You and its b-side Dandelion in their place, you’ve got
yourself a rather fine psychedelic album that, in She’s A Rainbow and 2,000
Thousand Light Years From Home, adds two classic songs to the psychedelic canon (as it were). Recent listens have also
revealed Citadel’s previously hidden
pleasures, notable for being one of the few songs on the album driven by a
vintage Richards riff.
KALEIDOSCOPE
MUSIC
The English band Kaleidoscope were unjustly
neglected by the 60s, and yet produced two great albums under that name which
at the very least should be as well known as the likes of The Pretty Things SF
SORROW and The Small Faces OGDEN’S NUT GONE FLAKE. This mind-blowing track - a
psychedelic cacophony with the chorus fading in and out, and a quick choral
burst of Hark the Herald Angels Sing
- can be found on Kaleidoscope’s second album FAINTLY BLOWING, released in
1969.
THE DANDELION
HERE COMES LOVE
The Dandelion's debut album, THE STRANGE CASE OF
THE DANDELION, released in 2013, contains 13 musical spells of folk, psychedelia
and multi-dimensional channellings. The side project of Dolly Rocker Movement
frontman Daniel Poulter, this album scratches a particular itch, one imagines, celebrating
flower power and the first summer of love incorporating groovy
patchouli-scented organ work, dexterous flute play, exotic eastern ripples and
the occasional Bolan boogie style guitar riff that oozes with tripped out
dreaminess.
BIBIO IVY
CHARCOAL
I essentially use this track as a bit of filler,
but it’s a gorgeously haunted piece nevertheless. It’s taken from PHANTOM
BRICKWORKS, released last year, an album of spectral ambient soundscapes which
present the listener with less of an album of music and more of a series of
spaces. Bibio himself (Stephen Wilkinson to his mum) notes that these pieces “have provided me with a mental portal into
places and times - some real, some imaginary, some a combination of both.” The
emotions created by these places are nostalgic, curious and intense. PHANTOM
BRICKWORKS often sounds like a time lapse recording of the disintegration of these
places over time.
BEAUTIFY JUNKYARDS AQUARIUS
Lisbon’s Beautify Junkyards have recently added
Esper’s Helena Espvall to the band and set about recording an album for the
Ghost Box record label, which should be enough to have everyone reaching for
their piggy bank. Aquarius is the
first track from the album, THE INVISIBLE WORLD OF BEAUTIFY JUNKYARDS (to be
released this coming March) and it’s a lush, lysergic slice of psych-pop
loveliness with Espvall casting an entrancing spell over the recording.
Gorgeous.
JULY SKIES
HOLIDAYS TO WALES (FEGLA FAWR VERSION)
"The
Weather Clock is inspired by a lost post-war Mid-20thC Britain and a fixation
with the design and architecture of the period," says Anthony Harding, which more or less
puts him hauntological territory, with an emphasis on the cultural and
emotional geography of post-war Britain, whose disappearing traces are woven
into The Weather Clock's aural tapestry like an absent presence. Holiday To Wales (Fegla Fawr Version) can
be found on the 2008 release THE WEATHER CLOCK EP, an eight track release that
accompanies THE WEATHER CLOCK album proper. Both releases contain slow motion,
atmospheric pieces that offer fading, blurry sound-postcards from a largely
imagined past. These are sepia-tinted soundscapes featuring the wireless,
static, dew, leaves, playing fields, paving stones, hopscotch, afternoon tea
and things of that nature generally. Obviously, I’m a fan.
MOON WIRING CLUB
SMOKY JIGSAW/SEVENTEEN DREAMING STATUES
Two small pieces from the new double CD by the Moon
Wiring Club who, on his new release TANTALISING MEWS, re-enters a world of
sinister whimsy and oneiric eccentricity that unfolds as part of a snakes &
ladders-like board game based on a dream by the artist involving decayed
discount carpet shops and missed trains. The typically surreal sounds on the
two discs are intended as a background musicke for the game, with 2hr 11mins of
smeared ambient inference and twilight tones that directly correspond to the
mysterious Mews of the title - “one of
those streets or lanes that you pass every day… the architecture doesn’t quite
fit in and it probably looks a bit too swanky for the postcode” - with
track numberings designed as integral to the game, whilst also adding a lot of
psychedelic complication.
I pretty much use the two tracks as filler for
another hauntological happening I prepared, which features, amongst other
morsels, an excerpt from the song All
Through The Night by Barbara Lea and Bucky Pizzarelli, from the album YOU’RE
THE TOP: COLE PORTER IN THE 1930s, a defiant record crackle, the talking clock, and the recording
of Malaysian nightlife as I walked back to my hotel one recent Friday night in
Kuala Lumpur, which in themselves fade away into Holidays To Wales in reverse.
LINDA PERHACS
YOU WASH MY SOUL IN SOUND
I’M A HARMONY is Linda Perhacs second album in 3
years and her third in 47 years, so at 74 years of age she appears to be on a
bit of a roll. Belatedly lauded for her diaphanously lovely debut album
PARALLELOGRAMS, Perhacs has found a new audience (well, in 1970 she didn’t have
any sort of audience at all) and new collaborators, including avant garde
performer Julia Holter and producer/remixer Mark Pritchard to expand her sound,
whilst still creating music that can only be referred to as spectral and
prismatic. You Wash My Soul In Sound
is so exquisite it trembles like a petal in a shower, or something as equally
tremulous and simile like.
BJORK PARADISE
You wouldn’t normally expect to find Bjork on a
Mind De-Coder, but her new album, UTOPIA, is filled with choral vocals, flutes
and birdsong and a captivating lush otherworldliness. The birdsong comes from
original field recordings by Björk herself but were also sampled from David
Toop's 1980 album, HEKURA; its orchestration is carried by a small flute
ensemble, the all-female Icelandic Hamrahlid Choir, and both give way to bright splashes of
electronics, beatific-sounding harp chords and cascading beats. It really
sounds like nothing I’ve ever heard before. I understand that she plans to
re-release the album later this year with added flutes.
CARAVAN
WITH AN EAR TO THE GROUND/YOU CAN MAKE IT
This tremendous track, known as the Ear To The Ground Suite, is taken from
the band’s second album, the enticingly entitled IF I COULD DO IT AGAIN, I’D DO
IT ALL OVER YOU, released in 1970 during that period in which underground
psychedelia was morphing into prog. As part of the Canterbury scene Caravan
were already ahead of the game in this regard with extended instrumental
passages weaving in and out of each other, creating a hypnotic and otherwise
psychedelic soundscape that would become a trademark of the Canterbury sound.
It’s highly melodic, easy to listen, but also very ambitious and highly
progressive, featuring several extended pieces which never sound bloated or
unnecessary but instead dedicate themselves to a beautiful celebration of youth
and innocence.
KEVIN AYERS
GIRL ON A SWING
Kevin Ayers' debut album, JOY OF A TOY, released in
1969 following his departure from fellow Canterbury scenesters Soft Machine,
offers a clear indication of how Soft Machine might have progressed under
Ayers' tenure, especially as he’s accompanied on much of the LP by the group
itself. It’s a delightfully whimsical affair featuring Ayer’s lazy charm, avant-garde
song construction, an affection for bizarre instrumentation and songs that seemingly
belong to a long-gone era featuring girls on swings, cannibal cakes, castles
and careening trains. Everyone mentions Syd Barrett when they talk about Julian
Cope’s early solo material, but I think there’s more than a touch of Kevin
Ayers there too.
TAGES OLD
MAN WAFWER
I have no idea who or what a wafwer is. Is it a name?
Is it a Swedish name? Is it even Swedish? Who knows? Tages are Swedish, however, and in 1967 released the marvellously freaky
STUDIO, an album both indebted to SGT. PEPPER’S and traditional Swedish folk
music. The resulting sound finds it sitting rather closer to ODYSSEY &
ORACLE than SGT. PEPPER’S, and because of their innovative use of tape cuts,
orchestration, harmonies, and studio tricks, it even sounds like they got their
hands on a copy of Brian Wilson’s unreleased SMILE tapes.
STRAWBERRY ALARM CLOCK STRAWBERRIES MEAN LOVE
You can almost smell the joss-sticks and the musky
scent of patchoulli drenched paisley pillows on this one. The blissful Strawberries Mean Love can be found on
INCENSE AND PEPPERMINTS, the debut album by Strawberry Alarm Clock, a band
whose image practically defined both the musical as well as peripheral aspects
of the psychedelic counterculture. Released in towards the end of 1967, this
was an album aimed straight at the Flower Children who lapped it up, but over
time Strawberry Alarm Clock have become generally regarded as one hit wonders,
never being able to match the gorgeously trippy title track, a song that which
today is virtually the tonal equivalent of a Summer of Love flashback.
THE CITRADELS
MILK AND HONEY
The Citradels are an anti-psych industrial wimp rock band from Melbourne. Their new
album, GOD BLESS, their eighth, was self-released earlier this year and
explores, in an abstract fashion, explores themes of influence, religion and
morality through characters from a small town gradually falling out of touch
with its surrounds. It does this in a
fashion that takes in doo-wop to dream pop, krautrock to country and Gregorian
chant to shoegaze circulated through layers of shimmering reverb. The term psych-pop harmonies may have been
invented for it.
KEVIN AYERS
JOY OF A TOY CONTINUED
And to conclude, a return to Kevin Ayer’s evocatively
indolent JOY OF A TOY, because I enjoy it so much.
FORTYONE
WHAT IS THIS THING CALLED?
Cut-n-paste derring-do from Fortyone, a man who
clearly needs to get out more. This is from the album A PACKAGE FROM WAYNE BUTANE,
released in 2006, but in truth all his albums sound like this. It’s like
listening to cartoons on the radio. Check out his entire back catalogue and download it all for free.
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