MIND DE-CODER CHRISTMAS SPECIAL
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JOSIE BRECHNER INTRO/12
DAYS/SIMPLIFIED
What better way to kick off the show than with a rousing chorus of The 12 Days Of Christmas, severely truncated in this instance, by sound designer Josie Brechner on the 2012 release COAL: AN EXPERIMENTAL CHRISTMAS, an album which, as the title suggests, is full of arch experimentation. It’s free to download from Bandcamp, but it’s probably not the sort of thing you want playing while roasting chestnuts on an open fire, with Jack Frost nipping at your nose.
RAW THRILLS IT’S BEGINNING TO
LOOK A LOT LIKE CHRISTMAS
A fuzzed-up, lysergic cover of Michael Bublé’s Christmas classic by Zak Mering, from his playfully kaleidoscopic album ALL GOOD WISHES: A PSYCHEDELIC CHRISTMAS, released under the nom de plume Raw Thrills in 2011. It’s one of those albums which appears in lists of obscure Christmas albums but about which very little is known - Mering is the sort of fellow who’s recorded under so many pseudonyms, and been in so many bands, this album seems to have got lost and can’t even be found in his voluminous discography.
GREEN SEAGULL GOD REST YE MERRY
GENTLEMEN
An authentically tripped-out organ-drenched interpretation of God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen by London-based psychedelicists Green Seagull, who bring their harmony-laden baroque/freakbeat sound to this traditional English carol (dated back to the 16th Century and perhaps earlier). This was released in 2018 by the Dutch label Snowflakes Christmas Singles, founded in 2013 to celebrate the Christmas 7" single. Every year, the label releases new Christmas singles (usually 3 or 4) by current artists, that feature an original song on side A and an interpretation of a classic or obscure Christmas song by this artist on side B. The singles are released on snow-white vinyl and are an eminently collectible addition to your Christmas stocking.
UNCLE CHARLIE WHOSE BIRTHDAY?
It takes a special sort of Christian to ruin Christmas for everyone, and here's Uncle Charlie. This heart-warming tale of selflessness and delusion is to be found on the album A CHRISTMAS CAROUSEL, released in 1975 by the good folk behind The Children’s Bible Hour - a syndicated radio show presented by Uncle Charlie (who has since gone to meet his maker to explain himself). Amidst the music and fun, Uncle Charlie asks just what kind of birthday is it when the person whose birthday it is doesn't get any presents? Whose Birthday answers that question, and in doing so emphasizes to young and old alike the importance of "keeping Christ in Christmas", and furthermore provides an explanation, perhaps, for the growth in the number of people worshiping at the Church of Satan these days. Betty’s parents sound like they should be reported to the social services.
HE 5 JINGLE BELLS/IN-A-GADDA-DA-VIDA
Raw psychedelic sounds from Korea’s HE 5. I think MERRY CHRISTMAS
PSYCHEDELIC SOUND, released in 1969, was actually their debut album, on which
they unleashed fuzzed-up garage-style instrumental covers of Christmas classics
to a bemused record-buying public. Their interpretation of Jingle Bells
is astonishing, morphing into a ten-minute freak-out which not only covers Iron
Butterfly’s In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida but also manages to take in The Rolling
Stones’ Paint It Black before returning to Jingle Bells again. I
enjoyed it so much I played around outrageously with the fade-out.
SATURDAYS CHILDREN DECK FIVE
Is this the first mash-up? A quick Google search suggests that, yes, it might just be. Chicago’s Saturdays Children released this little Christmas cracker, singing the carol Deck The Halls with a tune suggested largely by Dave Brubeck’s jazz standard Take 5, back in 1966 on an eponymously titled EP that’s more at home to The Beatles than this groovy novelty track might suggest, but nevertheless, this is a cool addition to anyone’s Christmas list.
THE MONKEES RIU CHIU
Michael Nesmith, the coolest Monkee, sadly passed away last week so in his memory here are The Monkees singing Riu Chiu, a Spanish villancico (a common poetic and musical form of the Iberian Peninsula and Latin America popular from the late 15th to 18th centuries, that has attained some contemporary fame as a Christmas carol, for those of you with an interest in this sort of thing) which appears to have evolved into a Christmas carol over the past few centuries. The Monkees performed the song live on a Christmas episode of their show in 1967, although this is the studio version which was released on subsequent compilation albums and on the 2018 album CHRISTMAS PARTY, which is where I came across it. The complex vocal harmonies are a quiet thing of wonder and ought to put paid to the idea that the group were little more than a prefab four (which was The Rutles, of course).
YOKO ONO LISTEN, THE SNOW IS FALLING
TINTERN ABBEY SNOWMAN (MASTER 2)
Formed in 1966/7, at the height of the Kings Road scene (it kills me that I was 2 at the time and not the Earl’s Court dandy I was so clearly always meant to be), Tintern Abbey were the quintessential psychedelic band who, I believe, split up before they even managed to play a gig. They released one single, the excellent Beeside/Vacuum Cleaner, and recorded an acetate for the fantastically tripped-out Snowman but it got lost in a line-up change and, before long, the group had disbanded, becoming little more than a footnote to London’s psychedelic scene. How I wish they had managed to record an album - Snowman is an astonishing slice of psychedelia, a disorientating mélange of sinister Mellotron, disembodied voices, and backward tapes that shows just how good they could have been. That being said, the very fine Cherry Red label, who specialize in this sort of thing, have just gathered everything they recorded between the summer of 1967 (when they spent a month in a Cornwall cottage, rehearsing and taping their performances prior to their London launch) and the end of 1968 and released it as a two-disc set called TINTERN ABBEY: THE COMPLETE RECORDINGS.
TOMITA SNOWFLAKES ARE DANCING
In 1965 Paul McCartney put together a mixtape for his fellow Beatles as a Christmas present. Of course, having access to Abbey Road, these were turned into three acetates which over the years have taken on the status of legendary totems. There are no new Beatles tunes or anything - it’s pretty much McCartney introducing his favourite tracks of the year in the style of a late-night dee-jay, and if you’re interested you can now find a recording on Youtube. What I have here is the opening few minutes, for your listening pleasure and all.
THE TARA EXPERIMENT EVERYWHERE
IT’S CHRISTMAS
This is a deeply psychedelic track from The Tara Experiment, proponents of the sort of Radiophonic psychedelia which reprogrammes your mind with sound hypnosis - when put like that, they sound great, don’t they? Actually, not a lot is known about them because their trip is to remain quasi-anonymous, make Avant-Garde Electronic & Musique Concrete recordings, and live quietly beneath the blue suburban skies. This is the B-side to their single Christmas In The Observatory, recorded late Summer 2013 at the Office of Experimental Music and Film.
THE
TRANSPERSONALS HAPPY HOLIDAYS
THE
SIX MILLION DOLLAR MAN XMAS RECORD
THE ELVES REVOLT
DAVID SANTO JINGLE DOWN A HILL
David Santo was a folkie and songwriter from New
York City in full-on Mark- Fry-gypsy-troubadour-DREAMING-WITH-ALICE-mode for
this whimsical Christmas song which closes his 1967 album SILVER CURRENTS. The
rest of the album is a bit fey, but I think this track enjoys an understated
charm.
THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE SNOW QUEEN
The Byzantine Empire were a band formed by University of Michigan
students in 1965, initially as The Five Bucks, who made guitar pop with
delicious vocal harmonies—a style that became hugely popular in the 1960s
thanks to the likes of the Beach Boys, the Mamas & the Papas, and the Left
Banke—but they never made it as far as releasing an album, much less attracting
the audience they deserved. Snow Queen, released in 1968, is a cover of
a Carole King song that jingles along quite nicely but sadly flopped. Despite
opening for the likes of The Animals, The Turtles, Iron Butterfly, and The Doors
they were let down by a recording contract that saw them as a light and breezy
sunshine act rather than the harder, fuzzier sound they produced on stage -
after finishing at University the band split and no doubt went on to pursue
rich and rewarding lives outside of the recording industry. I expect.
CRICKETBOWS AMANITA HOLIDAY
Cricketbows do a fine line in psychedelically tinged old-school rhythm-n-blues, gospel, blues, funk, and country, although the highly suggestive Amanita Holiday, taken from their 2011 release AMANITA HOLIDAY (CHRISTMASTIME SURE LOOKS WEIRD THIS YEAR) has the menacing vibe of a particularly messed-up garage band playing it as they see it.
KHRUANGBIN CHRISTMAS TIME IS
HERE
CAN LITTLE STAR OF BETHLEHEM
PARENTHETICAL GIRLS CAROL OF THE SEASON
SHANE MORRIS THE GHOST OF
CHRISTMAS FUTURE
THE MOOG MACHINE
CAROL OF THE BELLS
SHAWN LEE’S PING PONG ORCHESTRA LITTLE DRUMMER BOY
Downtempo trip-hop beats and groovy low-key grooves
permeate electronica artist Shawn Lee’s A VERY PING PONG CHRISTMAS: FUNKY
TREATS FROM SANTA’S BAG, released in 2007. Featuring mostly trippy
instrumentals, this is, in fact, one of the funkiest Christmas albums ever - a
sitar-laden Little Drummer Boy, in particular, has been scratched-up and
funked-out to rule the yule (as, I’ve no doubt, some people might say) although
this is, in effect, a joyous, category-defying sound. Pour the eggnog and
enjoy.
GERALDO CHIMERA
INTERMISSION: SIX MINUTES, FIVE GOLDEN RINGS
As the title suggests, it goes on like this for six
minutes - I think I allow just the two. This closing track is also taken from
the 2012 release COAL: AN EXPERIMENTAL CHRISTMAS. Geraldo Chimera, if he or she can truly
be said to exist at all, must remain part of the essential mystery of
Christmas.
And that was the Mind De-Coder 2021 Christmas Special. Please enjoy a
happy new year.
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