MIND DE-CODER 87
To listen to the show just scroll to the bottom of the page
To listen to the show just scroll to the bottom of the page
To me, the psychedelic experience is the experience of trying to make
sense of reality.
Terrence McKenna
THE
TRANSPERSONALS GOING OUT
While this may not be their best track, it is,
indubitably, the best track to start the show with (I’ll play their best track
during the next show). In truth, I’ve only just discovered The Transpersonals
but they are the psychedelic business (although sometimes they sound like The
Pixies filtered through The Who’s SELL OUT). I believe they come from Bristol
and this track is taken from their debut album KISS GOODBYE TO FREE WILL (THE
PERILS OF CHEERLEADING), released in 2011. Singer Tim Hurford had his mind
blown and then took an interest in that sort of thing, developing a sound that’s
equally at home to Plato, Aleister Crowley, Noam Chomsky, David Icke, the odd
conspiracy theory, hallucinogenic drugs, UFOs and aliens as it is to
garage-tinged psychedelic finery. Fortunately, they manage to do this without
sounding like Kula Shaker. I am a fan.
A
trifle - the prologue to the album WHAT A BEAUTIFUL PLACE, the debut album by
Catherine Howe, one of the great unrecognized voices of British folk, who was
England’s Kate Bush before Kate Bush came along. She would go on to become only
the second female artist to win an Ivor Novello award, but it all began with
this 1971 release.
For
their 548th release (I’m joking, of course - I believe that this is actually
their 133rd album) the mighty Acid Mothers Temple and the Melting Paraiso
U.F.O. have re-booted the band with only two original members remaining.
Founding member Kawabata Makoto sees the first 20 years of the band’s existence
as merely chapter one of their pineal-gland stroking story, with the new
line-up representing chapter two of their journey into the sonic worm-holes of
your mind. On their last release of 2018, REVERSE OF REBIRTH IN UNIVERSE, Acid
Mothers Temple Next Generation set about re-recording some old classics from
their extended repertoire - fans of the band might recognize Dark Star Blues
from their 2004 release DOES THE COSMIC
SHEPHERD DREAM OF ELECTRIC TAPIRS, but the song is very much its own beast,
transformed far away from its original version. Jump on board the mothership
and enjoy the ride - it’s going to be one cosmic head-fuck of a journey.
MIGHTY BABY EGYPTIAN TOMB
Mighty
Baby grew from the ashes of The Action, North London mods who, despite an
electrifying live set, couldn’t get arrested by the record buying public. These
days, of course, they’re regarded as one of the great lost bands of the 60s
(Paul Weller was a fan and so, bizarrely, was Phil Collins, who performed with
a reunited version of the band in 2000). Might Baby were slightly more
successful and had a couple of albums in them - the first an eponymously titled
psychedelic soaked affair released in 1969. After this several of the band
members converted to Islam and they took on a Wishbone Ash/Grateful Dead
element which led to a number of freeform jamming sessions. Egyptian Tomb,
however, is a stone-cold classic single, released in 1969, a wonderful blend of
jazz, rock and melody that confused any mods left in their audience, but sent
the hippies off into patchouli-ridden raptures.
Purson
are the sort of psychedelic rock band that draws in the indie crowd alongside
seasoned heavy metal kids, each of whom find something to enjoy in the band’s lysergic tendencies, gothic horror tropes and sturdy
riffing. Their second album, 2016’s DESIRE’S MAGIC WINDOW (or DMT, which pretty
much tells you all you need to know about the contents therein) is less of a
band affair and more of a solo album in the way of Kevin Parker, with
guitarist/vocalist/songwriter Rosalie Cunningham pretty much writing and
playing everything save the drums and a few guitar solos. The band have said
that the album is a tribute of sorts to “our good friends Sarge Pepper and
Zig Stardust”, although The Window Cleaner has a sensuous, narcotic
vibe that puts me in mind of a 90s tribute band - Khruangbin covering a
late-period Lush b-side, perhaps. This, of course, is no bad thing at all.
Biff Bang Pow was the band formed by Alan McGee before
he came to realise that he was better at discovering new bands than he was as
being in one. Nevertheless, all the reference points that would come to define
a nascent Creation Records can be found in Biff Bang Pow - a jingly-jangly
guitar sound indebted to The Byrds, played by earnest white boys in stripey
tee-shirts. This, of course, is also no bad thing at all. Five Minutes In
The Life Of Greenwood Goulding, taken from their 1987 release THE GIRL WHO
RUNS THE BEAT HOTEL, shimmers beneath a shambling lysergic haze - all backwards
guitars, reverbed vocals and a neo-psychedelic sensibility that lacks the
ambition of the band’s reference points (Love, The Byrds, Buffalo Springfield)
but which nevertheless suggests a lovely way to spend an idle afternoon.
There’s a legend surrounding The Beau Brummels that
suggests that they chose to name their band after the Regency English dandy so
that their records would follow the Beatles in the LP racks; unfortunately, it’s
a story they all deny. Apparently, they just liked the sound of the name. Still
- never let the truth get in the way of a good story, that’s what I say. The
rather pulchritudinous Magic Hollow is taken from their fourth album
TRIANGLE, released in 1967, an album described by principle songwriter Ron
Elliot as a ‘mythological cartoon about love written from some
weird spaces’. The wispy and wistful single failed to chart but remains one
of the loveliest things the band ever did, capturing in its essence something
of a lysergically-enhanced stroll through a woodland glade, and is rightfully
considered as something of a psychedelic classic.
THE HONEY POT AWAIT YOU HERE
Bucolic loveliness
from The Honey Pot - a band that appears to be made of two solo artists, the engagingly monikered Icarus
Peel and Crystal Jacqueline, with various attendant musicians - with a track
from their latest release, the marvellously titled BEWILDERED JANE. Between the
two of them, this is a band well steeped in psyche history and the lush
harmonies in Await You Here owe much to a certain West Coast charm. The
album is a hugely enjoyable listen, combining pop melodies with understated
prog influences and occasional touches of surreal experimentation. It really is
quite gorgeous.
Although known these
days as a blues singer of some repute, Dana Gillespie’s career began in the
sixties as a folk singer where she flirted with pop/rock, folk-rock, and mildly
psychedelic baroque pop, all of which can be heard on her wildly obscure 1968
debut album, FOOLISH SEASONS which, for some reason or other, was only issued
in America, and not the U.K., despite featuring several key figures of the
British counter-cultural scene - Donovan, Jimmy Page and Billy Nicholls for
starters - on production and arrangements. Whilst not quite the
psychpop/Swinging London/Folk Rock masterpiece it's sometimes made out to be,
it is, nevertheless, an exhilarating slice of late-'60s Swinging London-tinged
sunshine pop, with Nicholls’ London Social Degree a particular
stand-out. Gillespie would go onto record with Bowie, work with Dylan and star
in the stage production of Tommy and Jesus Christ Superstar, but she would never be quite this groovy
again.
It’s not The Beatles, of course; it’s
George Martin conducting a 41-piece orchestra at Abbey Road for the soundtrack
to the YELLOW SUBMARINE. His contributions make up side two of the original
album, which some people got quite sniffy about at the time - John Lennon was
particularly unkind - but I’ve always enjoyed them and these days I find I’m
more inclined to play this side than the other, which features The Beatles’
last dalliances with psychedelia (and is not to be sniffed at by any means).
One of the more curious records I own (and
I hope that still means something) is FUNNYSAD MUSIC by The Wilson Malone Voice
Band, essentially Wilson Malone, in-house producer at the semi-legendary Morgan
Sound Recording Studios and one-time member of Mind De-Coder favourites Orange
Bicycle. The album, released in 1968, is a true oddity: a kind of strangely strange- but oddly-normal - collection of
spacey pop instrumentals which succeed in muddying the waters between MOR and
the avant-garde. What is one to make of this cover of Penny Lane? One is
meant to be simply grateful that it doesn’t last any longer than it actually
does. The rest of the album makes for a superb accompaniment for any swish,
psychedelic soirees you may be thinking of hosting.
Deep vibes from New
Zealand’s 40 Watt Banana, one of the more experimentally esoteric bands of the
country’s psychedelic period. Formed 1968 as a jazz combo playing in
restaurants, they underwent a period of soul searching and spiritual
experiences (a euphemism if ever I heard one) and soon began incorporating
elements of Indian and African music to their sound. The result was an
atmospheric, spacey, improvised sound which culminated in the release of their
only single in 1971, the sitar-drenched Nirvana, a psyched-out cool
mantra of a song, aimed straight at the third eye.
...as is this, taken
from the album PROPHETIC SPIRIT, recorded some 50 years ago but only released
earlier this year, by Moon Express, essentially a tripped-out project by Paul
Arnold, the mastermind - if that’s the right word - behind THE INNER SOUNDS OF
THE ID. Known only in legend from their appearance in ‘33 1/3 Revolutions Per
Monkee’, the Moon Express weave music that ebbs and flows with unusual time
signatures, sonic baths of wild, exotic percussion, echoey voices and weird
hypnotic sounds of the Eastern variety, all of which documents a period when
the hippie dream of West Coast America reached its very apex, and just before
it begun the slippery slope that would culminate very shortly with its nadir.
By turns spooky and groovy, this is very much a lost 60s treasure that should accompany
your next trip.
Beings as I just
name-checked the album, I thought I’d include the title track from The Id’s
only alum, 1967’s THE INNER SOUND OF THE ID, essentially a studio creation from
Paul Arnold and surf guitar hero, and session man, Jerry Cole, whose chops include
playing on The Byrd’s Mr. Tambourine Man when the band were too
inexperienced for the studio, and PET SOUNDS. Sadly, Cole’s hip credentials and
legendary skill in the studio couldn’t elevate this album beyond the
psychsploitation project it clearly was, designed more as a quick
cash-in on a fad rather than a sincerely ambitious musical endeavor. Some
strange guitar reverb and distortion, along with dashes of sitar and
pseudo-Eastern musical and mystical influences, can’t disguise the shortage of
good songs and ideas and the overall aura of a strained attempt to be freaky.
That being said - I don’t think any truly psychedelic radio show could really
refer to itself as such without including this track in a show, and under your
fully enhanced conditions (as it were) it is not without a certain
disorientating charm all of its own.
That was the
intro to the classic children’s TV adaptation of the classic children’s book
The Owl Service, back when children’s TV was more in touch with its avant-garde
side.
Gorgeous electronica
from krautrock supergroup Harmonia. Kekse features a charming piano
melody and possibly the psychedelic use of a duck pond to create a bucolic, ambient
vibe that provides a sedate closer to their 1975 release, DELUXE - an album
that pretty much does for a blissful stroll through the countryside what
Kraftwerk did for a quick day out on the motorway.
More than any other
band, Vanishing Twin provide the missing link between Stereolab and Broadcast,
which makes them all the more precious given Broadcast’s untimely demise
following the tragic death of Trish Keenan eight years ago, and the lack of any
new material from Stereolab since 2010 (their current welcome re-issue of a
brace of albums from their imperial phase notwithstanding). Drawn to many of
the same influences and hauntological reference points (outsider jazz, Italian library
music, ethnographic field recordings and things of that nature) the band
use
forgotten drum machines, home-made electronics, vibraphones, tablas, and harp
to invoke the esoteric psychedelia of lost soundtracks, radiophonic experiments
and minimal music orchestras. Their album, CHOOSE YOUR OWN ADVENTURE, released
in 2016, marries oblique English pop with a palette of arkestral sounds that
are both experimental and haunted by loss - founder Cathy Lucas named the group
after her vanishing twin, an identical sister absorbed in utero, when they were
both still a cluster of cells.
For his latest release,
Ian Hodgson’s Moon Wiring Club picks up on a latent oddness and hauntological
nostalgia associated with GHASTLY GARDEN CENTRES, released earlier this year, and
in doing so provides 70 minutes of clumpy, dubbed-out trip hop and wyrd soul
musick to soundtrack your next visit to Placemakers. Prim voices-in-your-head
and ghostly sales assistants trying to flog you shatterproof greenhouses
dominate the creepy Ballardian drowned world feel of Old
Water Garden World, elsewhere well-mulched ghostly-beat slammers from the top 40 c1993 Quagmire
Dimension abound.
FISHING FOR FISHIES is the fourteenth release from
King Gizzard And The Wizard Lizard since forming in 2012 and for this outing
the band explore a short-lived moment in rock history - namely boogie rock, a
genre dominated by the likes of Canned Heat, Status Quo and possibly Suzi
Quatro. What it lacks, then, in zany, mind-bending, sonic experimentation, it
more than makes up for in its chug-a-lug adherence to the groove and some
unabashed boogie-oogie-woogieing. Stand-out track Acarine takes a
slightly different route, imagining a world where Giorgio Moroder meets The Who’s Baba
O’Riley and takes it to the disco to give Donna Summer’s I Feel Love a good listen to. Marvellous.
Compared to their three earlier albums, Amon Düül’s
fourth album, CARNIVAL IN BABYLON,released in 1972, is a chilled-out gem, replacing
the wild side-long improvisations and sonic explorations of inner and outer
space of their previous recordings with, well, proper songs, with an emphasis on
song-craft and structure - at some point they even have a go at melody. The
acid freak-outs may be gone, but what you get instead is acid folk pastoralism
reminiscent of the flower-powered sixties. Hawknose Harlequin, edited
down from a 33-minute jam session to a mere 10 minutes, closes the album with
one toe in the improvized psych-explorations of former releases, with another in the
more progressive albums to come.
Martin Newell, former member of the glam-rock band Plod, enjoys the sort of
obscurity that befits an English psychedelic eccentric who crafts
perfect little toffee-sweets of pop and then willfully releases them on tape
cassette. His first vinyl release was the now semi-legendary THE GREATEST
LIVING ENGLISHMEN, recorded in 1993 and otherwise produced, engineered and
mastered by XTC’s Andy Partridge in his shed. It’s a bucolic collection of
whimsical pop that, as you might expect from the title, basks in the intrinsic
qualities of Englishness in a way that suggests a fondness for both Elgar and
The Kinks. The brilliant Green-Gold Girl Of Summer transforms
from a pastoral folk ballad into an electric shred-fest that evokes both Albion
pagan ritual and the aerial bombardments of World War II. It drifts away into
the following track, An English Man’s Home to close the album and, alas
the show.
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