Monday, April 9, 2018

Trail's debut album Spaces is a perfect album, period!

100/100
The moment I first saw the cover art for Trail's debut album Spaces while scrolling through the January edition of Doom Charts I knew I had to give this record a spin.  Yes, I'm guilty of the old adage of judging a book, or in this case an album, by its cover.  The cover art looked as if Ralph Steadman was drawing his interpretation of Alice In Wonderland, or at least that was what I took away from it.  It looked amazing!

The first thing I noticed upon actually getting a copy of the album was there were only five songs, but the record had a run time of around 45 minutes.  That intimated to me the fact that these were all extended jams, a definite plus as far as I'm concerned.  The second thing that struck me as kind of odd was how the band, which hails from Darmstadt, Germany, named their songs, more on that upcoming.

The first song, titled simply "No. 2," is intense and builds with swirling, circling guitars, getting right to the action.

          "Start the action, inhale the world, we love the smell of motherfuckin' burning fuel"

Singer Jan Henning Curtze, also one of the band's two guitarists along with Hergen Breitzke, paints a vivid picture of a psychedelic freak out taken on the road.  They even invoke Saint Jimi in one particular passage:

          "Feel the breath, purple haze, we love the smell of motherfuckin' burning weed
          Psychedelic pills gonna blow my mind, fly down south amonst the dunes..."

This song is a call to adventure, a call to action, a call to psychedelic freak out, and Trail is inviting the listener along for the ride.  And they're going to blow your mind.

          "And with its burning wheels, miles and tons of material, we're gonna blow up
          your mind. Nobody knows the fuckin' emission rate."

See?  They they come right out and tell you.

The second tune, titled "No. 8," (are you starting to picking up the theme to the odd titles yet?) begins with a gentle rain storm and then leads in with an easy-going riff, laid back and mellow.  It slowly builds for about about five minutes, leading to a gentle crescendo, then a chiming guitar, rings out,  then the tune layers back in on top.  With about two minutes left in the song, the main riff reasserts itself and draws everything back around to a close nicely with a smooth, clean finish. relaxed and sedate.  Instrumental all the way.  I didn't realize it until it had ended.  While Henning Curtze has a fine enough voice, and could have fronted any number of the 90s grunge acts solidly, I didn't miss his vocals in this track.  The song was that silky without his voice.

The third track, "No. 9," starts with a drum slap and kick and we're off.   Over a minute and half in  the bass of Jan Götze has a groovy little solo that leads the direction of the song as it thumps its way along until about the 3:50 mark, when the tempo slows and the lead guitar settles in for a scintillating, slow crawling jam that satisfies as Götze and drummer Nils Curtze work the bottom end to perfection.  I LOVE this bit.  I just want to sit back with my special mood lighting going and melt into my recliner, if you get my meaning.  The solo actually closes the song out about five minutes later.  Again, a completely instrumental track.

Band photos supplied courtesy of Trail.
A strumming guitar jangle and Götze's smooth bass commence the next song, the 10-plus minute epic "No. 1."  High hats and cymbals ring out, then the bass drum, and it all draws together.  You're four minutes into the song before you even realize it has begun.  By the time the soloing begins the song is almost half over, but that doesn't matter.  Everything this band does is so complex and smooth in execution you just want to sit back and let the tunes wash over you like, dare I compare it to the perfect blowjob, where you just lay back, relax and she does all the work?  Is that too sexist?  Well, that's what this album does to me, it invokes those kinds of feelings.  It stirs those emotions.  It's THAT GOOD.

By the time the final song rolls around, "No. 4," I'm a sloppy mess.  I'm completely up for whatever by this time.  I'm along for any ride Trail wants to take me on.  Surprise, it's another instrumental, the fourth on the album.  Ten minutes and 45 seconds later when the album draws to a close I'm ready for a nap.  This album has taken me, turned me upside down, sideways, inside out, every which way, and I'm glad to have been there.  I've been doing this site since shortly after the death of Lemmy Kilmister in 2015.  I just converted it over to all stoner/doom rock this month, but I've handed out a number of reviews in the past, granted those have been deleted as I switch content, but I've never issued a perfect score before.  This is my first, 100/100.  Trail, Spaces is a perfect album.


Selected from the band's biography:

TRAIL - This bluesy, melancholic and explicit sound is based on fat, unshaved and unwashed guitars, heavy and groovy bases and electrifying drums.  This reminds of the birthplace of grunge, Seattle.  Thereby, the deep desert sound waves forces the audience into other dimensions.  Directly travelling from stage into the eardrum of each individual person.  The music speaks like a trip placed on your tongue.  Oppressively guitar fragments, vibrating basses and still this psychedelic devotion drifts the blues in the dedicated direction of stoner rock.

The quartet exists since 2015 - the main constellation is originated based on different constellations such that every member has professional musical experience collected over the last 15 years.










Friday, April 6, 2018

Best Of Bang to be released on April 20 by Ripple Music

90/100
Often referred to as America's answer to Black Sabbath, Bang is one of the most unsung bands in the history of US hard rock.  Toting the heaviness of Birmingham's finest, Led Zeppelin and the dirty groove of Grand Funk Railroad, Bang released three critically acclaimed albums on Capital Records in the early 70s, inadvertently going on to establish the heavy genre that is now universally known as proto-metal.

Busting out of the turmoil of the post-psychedelic '60s, Bang's 1971 self-titled debut is considered an important forerunner of the early Doom Metal genre with Decibel Magazine once hailing it as a, "landmark album in the badass pantheon of metal," and inducting it in the Decibel Metal Hall of Fame.  Yet as richly deserved as that honour is, Bang were no one-trick pony.  Undoubtedly one of America's heaviest proto-metal bands they also had a strong sense of melodic power, versatility and their song writing skills were second to none.

In the summer of 1971, Frank Ferrara, Tony Diorio and Frankie Gilcken hit the road, driving from their natve Philadelphia area to Florida to try their luck.  While buying rolling papers in a record store, they learned of a Small Faces and Deep Purple  concert nearby in Orlando.  Brazenly, they showed up at the venue and declared they were ready to go on stage.  The concert organizer asked them to set up and play for him and after a handful of songs, the band found themselves opening for Rod Stewart and Small Faces.  Before they knew it, Bang was playing with Bachman Turner
Overdrive, Deep Purple, Three Dog Night, Fleetwood Mac, Ike and Tina Turner, The Doobie Brothers and even Black Sabbath.  Capital Records signed them and three LPs were subsequently released.

Highly regarded as a cult act by many for years, it's now time for this truly amazing rock band to be enjoyed by a new audience worldwide.  On the heels on the publication of the complete band history book, The Bang Story, Ripple Music is thrilled to announce the first ever Best Of... compilation from this historically heavy and fascinating band.  The Best of Bang, featuring eighteen o the band's best-loved and heaviest songs from their Capital Year, personally curated by Ripple Music and the band themselves.

For all those who've longed to dig into the band's history, there is no better place to start than the Best of Bang.  Available worldwide on double vinyl LP with gorgeous gatefold, featuring rare photos, a cover featuring the original Bang girl and linear notes by esteemed music journalist, Sleezegriner, Best of Bang is also available on digipack CD and all digital music formats.

Best of Bang by Bang is released world by Riplle Music on April 20 2018. Pre-order now at www.ripple-music.com.

Stream and share 'Keep On' by Bang here:
https://soundcloud.com/ripple- music/bang-best-of-bang-11-hum ble


Death Of A Country                                                                                              10:07
No Trespassing                                                                                                      5:10
My Window                                                                                                           4:48
Lions...Christians                                                                                                   3:59
The Queen                                                                                                              5:24
Questions                                                                                                                3:47
Redman                                                                                                                   4:52
Our Home                                                                                                               3:27
Mother                                                                                                                    4:23
Keep On                                                                                                                  3:38
Humble                                                                                                                   4:43
Idealist Realist                                                                                                        4:31
Feel the Hurt                                                                                                           5:19
Windfair                                                                                                                  3:08
Exactly Who I Am                                                                                                  3:39
Don't Need Nobody                                                                                                3:03
Feels Nice                                                                                                               2:58
Slow Down                                                                                                             2:39

Tuesday, April 3, 2018

Black Heaven is a slice of the divine served up in a suprising fashion by Earthless


90/100
Earthless is known for their fuzzed out, epic long instrumental space jams, which often take up one, even two sides of a record, and live their improvisational skills are legendary so four albums and nearly 15 years into their career I don't think anybody was expecting the curveball the band threw at them when Black Heaven dropped on March 16th.  The entire album is just 40 minutes long.  In the past Earthless has been known to play one song that length.  I mean seriously, the longest jam on Black Heaven checks in at measly 8:51.  Two songs are under six minutes long, and one, the break-neck burner "Volt Rush," is just a paltry 1:53 long.  The rad video featuring skateboard legend Taylor Smith tearing it up on the streets of San Diego at least adds 49 seconds to that time.

But here's the big kick in the pants.  The band known for 20-minute long plus space jam instrumentals, has not only reigned in the length of their songs, there are vocals on two thirds of the tracks on Black Heaven.  That's right, four of the six tunes, have lyrics, and one of the instrumentals is the brief interlude "Volt Rush," meaning MOST of the album has vocals this time around.  The other instrumental is the title track, "Black Heaven."

But do not be dissuaded zone trooper, no do not despair, for all hope is not lost.  Hear me out.

Lets break the album down a track at a time.  First up is "Gifted By the Wind," a classic 70s style rocker in the vain of ZZ Top or maybe the James Gang, with some killer guitar effects.  And the vocals, well, Isaiah Mitchell can carry a tune pretty damn well.  And Earthless fans really shouldn't be surprised at that fact anyway.  Those that purchased the CD version of Rhythms from a Cosmic Sky heard Mitchell sing on the bonus track, a cover of the Groundhogs' "Cherry Red."  Also, Earthless submitted a cover of "Come On (Let the Good Times Roll)" for Magnet Eye's 2015 Electric Ladyland (Redux) Jimi Hendrix tribute project, so Earthless has produced recordings with vocals in the past.  It just has been an oddity, something the band hasn't focused upon.  Drummer Mario Rubalcaba explained to Nuclear Blast in a recent interview posted on their web site, "we've never tried to focus on writing a few songs with vocals on them."  Well, this time they did, to pretty amazing results.

Track two is "End to End," which comes in with an eerie intro, then the marathon of retro guitars kicks in.  A nice solo brings the whole affair to a satisfying conclusion.  In my mind, this is one of the weak tracks, and it's good.

"Electric Flame" had me feeling the blues, Blue Oyster Cult and Blue Cheer influences that is, but with a distinct desert flavor, possibly because Earthless took this recording to ground zero where such acts as Kyuss and Queens of the Stone Age have recorded at Rancho De La Luna studios, Joshua Tree, California, to track.

Side two of the vinyl gives long-time fans a small dose of what they've come to expect from Earthless, about 10 minutes or so worth of uninterrupted instrumental jams in the way of the next two songs, the aforementioned slam, bam thank you ma'am "Volt Rush" and the Zepplin riff fueled title track "Black Heaven."

In the final soulful tune "Sudden End" I swear I believe Mitchell is channeling Joe Walsh, as it brings to mind some of his great vocal tracks, "Rocky Mountain Way," "Take It To the Limit," and "In The City."  It took me a few minutes to figure out who it was Mitchell sounded like, and I wasn't certain of myself when I figured it out even then.

This album shows a great deal of growth and evolution for Earthless, which is a great thing.  If you become stagnant you die, and nobody wants death for this killer band.  We want them making great records for years to come.  This is one of the band's best album's to date. 90/100.



Monday, April 2, 2018

Mindfucker is a thought-provoking piece of mind-fuckery

95/100
This is I Talk To Planets' first album review since declaring we're changing up our format and going full time stoner rock and psychedelic, so I figured we'd better make this a good one.  To that effect we're leading off with a review of the latest release from my favorite active band - Monster Magnet.  I say "active" because my favorite band is Motorhead, which is inactive since the death of founder and leading man Lemmy Kilmister in 2015, promoting Dave Wyndorf and Monster Magnet to the top of my favorites list.  I have loved both bands for years and avidly collected vinyl for each since I rekindled my vinyl passion in 2014.  By the time Lemmy passed just after Christmas a little more than two years ago I had nearly completed my Motorhead and Monster Magnet vinyl collections, needing only a few rare pieces to flesh out each set.  I completed my collection of Mototrhead studio albums during the summer of 2017.  My Monster Magnet collection, however, is my pride and joy.  It contains several rare pieces, while I still search for several other rare items to flesh it out.  I was thrilled to add a red vinyl copy of the latest Monster Magnet release Mindfucker to my vinyl collection recently, and a CD digipack to my growing Magnet CD stack.   But none of that really matters to you guys I'm sure, so I'll shut up about my shit and get to the review already.

Dave Wyndorf promised a throwback to the days when Detroit was music central for the likes of the Stooges, the MC5, Alice Cooper even, and said he wanted to drive his car 100 miles an hour and howl at, well, whatever...  The first single "Mindfucker" dropped and I thought to myself, well, he's on the right track.  The song is a ruse, and a clever one at that.  The Mindfucker Wyndorf is singing about is not some chick that has spurned him, cock-teased him, or jilted him in some way, not a psycho bitch at all.  It's this crazy, fucked-up upside down cuckoo-land world we're living in these days with a reality show president, every one screaming "fake news" and "libtards" at what we traditionally think of as the good guys, cops gunning down innocents and unarmed people in the streets, BREXIT is a reality, and global warming is actually deemed debatable even though the science is rock solid.  Am I on a soap box right now?  Maybe, but I'm just trying to get you into the frame of mind to comprehend Mindfucker the album, "Mindfucker" the song and Mindfucker the concept right now, this is where Dave is coming from and he's pissed off about it, which makes for great music.  The last time Dave was this pissed off we got Powertrip.

The video was a bit of a let down.  I half expected footage of protests from around the world, police clashing with protesters, newscasters in front of tear-gassed scenes, some tanks, our president speaking, but instead we got a green screen band video.  Oh well.

The second single was the old Robert Calvert tune "Ejection" originally performed by Captain Lockheed and the Starfighters in 1974.  I had not heard the original until I sat down to pen this review.  I looked it up and listened to it on YouTube.  I quite enjoyed it.  I think Monster Magnet really did a faithful rendering of the subject matter.  I like both versions.  The original is unique because it has vocal parts where a pilot breaks in over his mic before ejection.  Monster Magnet didn't copy that and I believe that was a smart choice.  Don't make your remake exactly like the original.  The Monster Magnet version has a harder edge, and that I like.  Again, I was disappointed with the video.  We have a poor-man's "Negasonic Teenage Warhead" video.  Shot in front of a green screen, we have the band hurtling through outer space on a disc, whoopee!  A swing and a miss on the video, at least it sounds good.

Then a few days later on Marsh 23rd the album dropped.   Let's take it one track at a time, shall we?

"Rocket Freak."  We jump right in with a standard straight-up rocker, and it's very much what Dave was shooting for in the vain of the Stooges, MC5, etc. but with a touch of Hawkwind in subject matter.  A smoking track, and among my favorites on the record.  "Soul" is up next, riff packed and energetic, but not a stand-out in my mind.  We slide into the sweet title track next, which I've already gone over to some degree.  I'm a huge fan of "Mindfucker," the song, it's well crafted, on target message-wise and a lot of fun.  Bringing Side A to a close is the enigmatic tune that has Dave making a bold declaration - "I'm God"... The song is pared down to the bones, but it still has a classic 70s guitar rock fusion going on and when Dave Wyndorf sings "I'm God," dammit I believe him.  This may be my favorite tune on the record.

Let's flip this sucker over and check out the B side.  First up is the mellowed out "Drowning."  I relate to this song in ways I really don't want to admit.  Many of my Monster Magnet loving friends have messaged me that this is their favorite track and I think it's because they relate to it too.  The guitars swirl in this mellow melodrama, making for another Monster Magnet instant classic.  The Robert Calvert cover fills the next groove on the record and we'll briefly touch on it again.  Love "Ejection."  It's a great rocker, with an amazing solo at the end.  "Want Some."  Not one of Dave's more moving titles, but the song's not bad.  It's not a standout track either.  "Brainwashed," on the other hand, will stick with you, either good or bad.  The first couple times I heard it I couldn't stand it.  But about the third time I heard it, it clicked.  I got the joke.  I was admitted to the club, so to speak.  Dave is having a laugh with this rockabilly jam session with a sense of humor, just listen to the way he delivers the chorus, "I'VE BEEN BRAINWASHED!!!"  It's over the top intentionally.  It's bad acting from the school of William Shatner and it's hilarious.  And, is that Tim Cronin I hear screaming in the background?

On to Side C.  "All Day Midnight."  I LOVE the bass at the onset.  The song settles into a nice groove right from the get-go.  This tune is a breath of fresh air.  Not that the album is filled with gloom and doom, or anything, but this song is kind of refreshing in some way, it's hard to describe, but it's almost an uplifting punk rocker.  The CD (and download) ends with the next track, the six-minute epic "When the Hammer Comes Down."  It's a great closing track, passing judgment on the entire world, and we're all FUCKED!  Stellar!!!  Supernovas! The end of the world, death, gloom and doom, and there's guitars.

BUT WAIT, if you have the vinyl, there's more.

The first bonus track on the vinyl is the quirky "You Can't Be Trusted."  It's a trippy, upbeat little number with a jangly guitar and a killer solo at the finish amongst Dave's howling.  Finally we come to "Utopia."  And isn't that what we're all looking for?  This is far and away the song with the most in common to what Monster Magnet had done on its previous three releases dating back to Last Patrol.  It is the lone psychedelic number on the album and it's refreshing to end the album with a revisit to what Monster Magnet has been doing the past few years with this track, considering how much the rest of the record was in touch with Dave's punk roots.  Initially I thought this song was out of place, but the more I listen to the album as a complete animal I think it serves as the perfect overall closer, even though "When the Hammer Comes Down" was intended to be the closer, I think this bonus track is better suited for the job.

It's not a perfect album, it has a couple of blemishes here and there, but damn it's a hell of a lot of fun and the vinyl has a lovely, thought provoking closer.  95/100

Thursday, February 22, 2018

Pearl Jam: something sticky this way comes

It's no secret that Peal Jam lead singer Eddie Vedder was an avid surfer before he landed his day job.  In fact, it's been told time and time again in publications such as Rolling Stone and Time how he utilized surfing while creating the lyrics for Stone Gossard and Jeff Ament's demo tape, coming up with the words to "Alive," "Once" and "Footsteps," his mini opera Mother-Son, while riding the waves, before he'd become a member of Pearl Jam.

He once shared an intense conversation with world famous wave rider Laird Hamilton on the show Iconoclasts about Post Big-Wave syndrome.  In 1995 while surfing in New Zealand with Tim Finn he drifted 250 yards off the coast and had to be brought in by lifeguards.  It got worse for Vedder ten years later in 2005 when he attempted to paddle from Moloka'i to Oahu and had to be rescued.

But still, Eddie Vedder has a deep connection to the ocean, as is apparent in his lyrics, especially in songs like "Oceans" and "Big Wave."  He is a regular contributor to the Surfrider Foundation, a self-described "non-profit environmental group dedicated to the protection and e
njoyment of the world's oceans, waves and beaches through conservation, activism, research and education."

It's also no secret that bassist Jeff Ament is no stranger to skate parks.  Back in the day you were as likely to catch him with a board as his bass and of late Ament has been using his Pearl Jam proceeds to go around the Midwest, especially Montana and South Dakota, building skateparks, like a modern day Johnny Apple Seed but instead of traveling by foot and planting seeds, he's riding an Alien Workshop  across the country, creating bowls, kidney bowls, egg bowls, draining pools, all the while bringing skaters out of the woodworks.  And if he wakes up dead tomorrow, "Throw my ashes in some pool block and put me in parks all over the state," Ament told Vice's Chris Nirtatko in 2015 speaking of a series of parks he'd built in Montana, many on Reservations.

Ament, like my brother and I, got his start on a Grentech, in 1975 or '76.  Jason and I shared a mustard yellow hand-me-down Coyote II. (Ament didn't specify which Grentech model he skated, or any details about his deck.)  Jason's talent level grew and he asked for a better board and got a Schmitt Stix and the Grentech became singularly mine.

Jason had to give up his board, however, after an accident threatened his baseball career.  Jason stood to have a real chance to play big time high school baseball for a state championship team, and move on to play major college ball, and possibly beyond, but a severe ankle injury riding his Schmitt Stix while skating down a simple sidewalk at my Great Aunt Lucy's house threatened that future and he put the skateboard in the closet - for good.

I, without a riding partner, digressed in my abilities, and eventually parked mine as well.  The board was sadly lost in an arson house fire in 1992.


But I'm not just writing today about Eddie Vedder's surfing abilities, or Jeff Ament's philanthropic doings or my brother and I's misadventures.  What I want to write about today is the board flare, skate and/or surf, that bears Pearl Jam's name, the sheer volume of it produced its collectability, its variety and its availability.


I want to discuss whether or not it is official Pearl Jam licensed product, or "bootleg" ephemera, or both.  And, I want to talk about alternative uses of the stickers themselves - trains, planes, automobiles?

The first rock and roll stickers of kids' favorite rock and roll acts certainly quickly followed the introduction of the first rock and roll acts.  And we have KISS to thank for making rock and roll music and merchandising synonymous.  But there's more to it than that.

Pearl Jam eagerly embraces the production of stickers, certainly their stickers are of high enough quality to grace boards and in fact do.  I've seen them.  Pearl Jam can't be blamed for making a buck here and there, literally, because that's typically what most of these stickers run in the Pearl Jam Web store - a buck. 

Bands don't make nearly as much on the their music as they once did and labels nowadays insist on taking a cut of the band's merch tables, so, what do bands do, they have to push more merch.

Pearl Jam's stickers through the years have become some of the most sought after and collectible pop art.  A scroll through the pages of eBay bears out that statement. 

Some of the more common ones that are readily available, such as the famous Jeff Ament designed stick figure man that former Pearl Jam drummer Dave Abbruzzese has tattooed on his left shoulder goes for around $7.99 USD.  Then there's the 2013 Charlottesville gig sticker that commands a price tag of $20 USD.

Others such as the Pearl Jam Liberty Bell, retired, or the Big Day Out, Pert, WA Feb. 2, 2014, are asking for $49.99 USD.  WOW!  For something you peel off the back of and slap on to another surface.  I could purchase a brand new copy of No Code for that price and have change left over for a sandwich.

The rare Brad Klausen tiger sticker recently fetched $18 on eBay.  Klausen's concert posters draw astronomical figures on the various pay and auction sites on the internet and his artwork is stellar.  For example, a signed print of the Chicago Wrigley Field commemorative Pearl Jam show poster has a hefty price tag of $574 on it, while an Eddie Vedder 2009 framed silkscreen by Klausen has its current owner asking $139.50, or you can Make An Offer if you feel lucky.

Above and below: fan created
"Pearl Jam" stickers
solicited on eBay.
Meanwhile, you can score the Chicago Wrigley Field sticker set for just $15 here.  Do it Now!

On the other end of the sticker spectrum you have the "Pearl Jam quality vinyl fan made" stickers, which, while typically of decent quality, are NOT the real deal and thus don't measure up.  They usually are bundled in groups of three, four or five pieces and bring $4.95 or $5.95 a set on eBay or wherever.

I cannot speak to the quality of any of these knock-off stickers as I do not own any, but as to the originals, most of the photographs with this article are of stickers from my collection, including a Klausen tiger, though I did NOT pay $18 or mine, LOL.

Of course, skateboard or surfboard flare is not the only uses for these stickers.  I personally use them to jazz up  the wooden crates I keep my beloved vinyl collection in.  These type stickers also end up on the rear window on my automobile inevitably, though I must admit there is NOT a Pearl Jam sticker there presently, rather a Manowar and a Sasquatch conservation sticker.  I've seen them on boats, refrigerators, stereo deck lids, guitars, guitar cases, and the list goes on.

The eight Pearl Jam LPs I own on vinyl to date, ( l to r): Ten Redux, Vs., Vitalogy,
Binaural, Riot Act, Peal Jam, Backspacer and Lightning Bolt.



Tuesday, January 30, 2018

My inheritance

A few of the psychedelic records from the 60s to make it into my
growing record collection to date.  I only started collecting
vinyl March, 2016.
My father didn't leave me much when he departed this world - a well-worn first edition of Ernest Hemingway's  For Whom The Bell Tolls, a stack of worthless comics, and a deep love for the psychedelic music of the late 60s, and early 70s.  It's no wonder I love that music so.  Thanks to a chemical imbalance that wasn't diagnosed properly until well into
my adulthood, I hallucinate, and even though I'm on a healthy dose of anti psychotics these days, I still see things that aren't there - did you see that mockingbird fly down the hallway?  Or that dragonfly in the shower stall? No?  Well, there you have it.

On the one-year anniversary of my father's death I sat  down with my iTunes and started building a modest play list containing the best psych tunes and garage rock I could muster from my sprawling collection of 60s and early 70s rock 'n' roll, ranging from The Amboy Dukes ("Baby Please Don't Go," "Journey to the Center of the Mind") to The Zombies ("Time of the Season," "Tell Her No") and everything in between.  When it was done it contained 466 songs and said it would last 1.3 days.

Plenty of Strawberry Alarm Clock, a personal favorite, particularly the deep cuts off of the second album Wake Up... It's Tomorrow, made the grade.  Songs like "They Saw the Fat One Coming," "Curse of the Witches," "Nightmare of Percussion," "Sit with the Guru," "Pretty Song From Psych-Out," "Tomorrow," and "Sitting on a Star" were shoe-ins. Dad gave me "Incense and Peppermint," I discovered Wake Up... It's Tomorrow on my own.

Dad was good for that.  He'd dole out the hits and leave it up to me to root out the deep cuts for myself.  Sure, "Roadhouse Blues" rocks, it absolutely gets the blood pumping, but "Peace Frog" is my jam off that album.  In the case of Strawberry Alarm Clock, the title track "Incense and Peppermint" was the chart topper for that band, but a track that didn't even make the cut, a Japanese bonus track, is among my favorite songs the SAC has ever recorded - "Birdman of Alkatrash."  Yeah, I had to dig deep for that one.

When I was a pre-teen/early teen, and after dad had re-married, we lived in the country in a quiet little place pleasantly named Forest City in the  foothills of North Carolina.  In the summer time dad would put the radio on some oldies station out of South Carolina or maybe Charlotte in the evening, poor himself a big ole glass of sweet tea and go out and sit in a rocking chair on the front porch, listening to those oldies, and the occasional buzz and KA-zap of the bug zapper, while my brother Jason, our neighbor Dingo (yes, our neighbor was named after an Australian wild dog), and I rode our bikes around the yard.  We got an education in the era of garage rock and psychedelia.  "Good Vibrations," "Set Your Controls For the Heart of the Sun," "Silver Machine," "Eight Miles High," "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds," "We Gotta Get Out of This Place," "White Rabbit," "I Had To Much To Dream (Last Night)," "Are You Experienced?," "The WASP (Texas Radio and the Big Beat)," "Supernatural Fairy Tale," "Sister Morphine," we're starting to get into the deep cuts now...

I remember one particular evening we were listening to a top 100 oldies countdown and I had glommed onto to the Raspberries minor hit "I Wanna Be With You" for some reason.  IT, I declared, would be the number one oldie.  Hell, IT was from 1972 and I don't know if IT even qualified as an oldie or not.  Dad humored me, "It's possible I guess, son."  If I recall correctly, "Hey Jude" was named number one at the end of that particular countdown.

At one point during said countdown a fox came rushing out of the overgrown Civil War gravesite that was fenced off in a field just beyond our yard.  It was strange.  The fox must have been bedded down in the overgrowth of blackberry vines and brambles that was thriving in the unkempt burial site and been spooked when dad turned up the volume for Paul Revere and the Raiders' hit "Indian Reservation (The Lament of the Cherokee Reservation Indian)."  The fox ran out into the middle of the gravel road leading to our landlord's home, looked at us for a few seconds, tongue lolling out in the summer night heat, then ran off into the nearby copse of trees across the road to never be seen again.  Nothing more than a memory I have with dad and that specific song - "Indian Reservation" - now.

In dad's feeble, infirm years I often found myself taking him to the doctor.  I would reset my play lists on my iPhone the night before each appointment, ensuring I had plenty of good old fashioned psych and garage rock loaded so we'd have something good we both could enjoy listening to while on the road.  (I'm a metal head by nature, and he is decidedly not.  But I have plenty of fond memories of growing up psych.)  It was on one of those outings that the tune "Time of the Season" by the Zombies came on.  A smile crept across dad's face.  "That was your mom and I's song," he said, as the song drew to an end.  "I enjoyed that.  Let's have that one again."  I'm so glad he shared that with me.  I love being able to listen to that song now and know there was a time, of the season if you will, that it gave my mom and dad some pleasure and comfort in their lives, even if my mom says she doesn't remember.

Dad didn't get into the more esoteric of the psychedelic bands such as Pink Floyd, the Pink Fairies, or Hawkwind so it was left to me to discover those groups on my own.  As one would expect, the first of those bands I came across was Pink Floyd.  I first encountered Pink Floyd's The Wall while in grade school still.  Granted, this was later day psychedelic, created in 1979, but most definitely a psych experience.  It was during a marijuana trip and I thought we were under attack by giant hammers. Yeah, I guess you could say it was a bad trip.   Dingo didn't help matters.  He pissed himself and sat in the corner with his hands around his knees gently rocking back and forth and crying about how he was going to get his ass beat for doing his dad's pot.  Like I gave a rat's ass, I was too busy dealing with Hitler's hammer's.  German's invading our sovereign nation took precedence over Dingo's hide.

Floyd and The Wall led me to Hawkwind which led me to the German band Amon Duul II, which led me to mind-expanding group Brainticket.

As I write this I dip back into that stream of consciousness that is the psychedelic iTunes play list I made with dad in mind. What does it have for me... "Kicks," "Tomorrow Never Knows," "19th Nervous Breakdown," "Hurry On Sundown," "We Could Be So Good Together," "Dogs," "Can't You Hear Me Knocking," "The House of the Rising Sun," "Pass Time With the SAC," "California Dreamin'," "1983... (A Merman I Should Turn to Be)"...

I miss my dad.  Where was I?

Dad, in the eternal Stones vs. Beatles argument, he was a Beatles man.  In high school he was in a band.  They played a lot of the Beatles' early stuff, "I Want to Hold Your Hand," "Love Me Do," "Ticket To Ride," stuff like that.  I would have loved for there to have been pictures to have survived, but to date nothing has turned up.  And recordings, but that's a pipe dream.  We are talking about the 60s here.  Personal recording devices were uncommon, hell down right rare back then.

Let's dip back into the stream one more time before I go... "Southern Cross," "L.S.D." "Tales of Brave Ulysses," "Horse Latitudes," "Burning of the Midnight Lamp," "Earschplittenloudenboomer," "Interstellar Overdrive," "Hey Jude," "Sympathy For the Devil,"  "My Sweet Lord" "Time"...

That's a good one to go out on...

"Every year is getting shorter never seems to find the time
Plans that either come to naught or half a page of scribbled lines
Hanging on in quiet desperation is the English way
The time is gone, the song is over
Thought I'd something more to say."



Tuesday, January 23, 2018

12 Records that Changed My Life



1. The Doors
This is the first album I ever received when I asked for a cassette player for my birthday.  I had expressed an interest in Jim Morrison and the song Light My Fire.  I fell in love with that album, Soul Kitchen, Alabama Song, Take It As It Comes, I Looked At You, and of course the stand out tracks, The Crystal Ship, Break On Through (To the Other Side) and The End.  I became a life-long Doors fan, even wrote my senior paper in high school on Jim Morrison, the poet in Mr. Watkins' English class.  Got an A+, and dropped the F-bomb multiple times.

2. Queen Greatest Hits
I was introduced to Queen via the single Another Bites the Dust off The Game album, and also when I saw the incredible Flash Gordon movie.  HBO and MTV often played Queen videos.  When my mom noticed my brother and I singing along to all the Queen songs she got us each a copy of Queen's Greatest Hits on cassette.  Ironically, this lead me to my next artist, David Bowie.

3. David Bowie Low
I came to David Bowie through Queen via the Greatest Hits cassette that in our region contained the duet Under Pressure.  I sought out further music by Mr. Bowie.  The first album I happened upon was this bright orange deal, with the simple title Low.  When the tape got to side two I was mesmerized.  These ambient sounds were all new to me.  I didn't know what to make of this.  I was fascinated.  Of course, at the time I didn't know the word "ambient."  In later life I would attempt to collect all of Bowie's studio albums on vinyl.

4. Stevie Nicks Bella Donna
I arrived at Stevie Nicks via an HBO recording of her Bella Donna tour.  I just happened to catch that one afternoon and was spellbound.  This witchy woman had her hooks in me BAD!  Her spell had been cast and I was hers for life.  I grabbed up the HBO guide for the month and made note of each subsequent airing of the concert during the summer and made it a point not to miss a single viewing.  I asked mom for the album, and received it, and learned of her band Fleetwood Mac and albums Rumors and the self-titled album.  Yes indeed, Stevie had a fan for life.

5. Iron Maiden Piece of Mind
I was in a hotel room in Washington, D.C. when my friend Robbie Lyrle first blasted the opening wail of The Trooper over his boom box one Saturday morning while everyone was getting ready to go down and eat breakfast.  'What the hell is that?" I exclaimed, excited, thrilled, blown away, all at once.  "That's Iron Maiden!" he coolly replied.  He rewound the song and started it again.  Wow!  This was what I needed in my life!  Heavy Metal!

6.  Van Halen 1984
The second Heavy Metal band I was exposed to in earnest was Van Halen.  The first time I heard the song I'll Wait, and it was I'll Wait, not Jump or Panama or Hot For Teacher, that I first heard over the radio, I was amazed by the combination of heavy metal guitar and synthesizer.  I had never heard that before.  Surely this was some new discovery I had made and nobody else was privy to this band yet.  Nope!  Been around since 1978.  Still, even though I was late to the party, I was hole-hog on board the heavy metal train now.  Until...

7. Prince Purple Rain
Everybody, even some of the die-hard heavy metal crowd, had to give Prince props.  I mean that guitar in Let's Go Crazy was smoking hot.  Purple Rain was the summer hit of 1984, both musically and theatrically, and I ate it up.  Of course, when my step-mother caught wind of the lyrics to Darling Nikki I was so grounded.  And my tape collection met with a cleansing when I was in North Carolina with my dad and her.  Mom was more lax, thank god.

8. Cinderella Long Cold Winter
I had already bit down on the band Cinderella with the release of Night Songs, but when Long Cold Winter dropped and the band showed off its blues and southern rock roots, all bets were off.  I had to see this band live in concert immediately, no matter who I had to kill.  I saw the band live on that tour three times, once as an opener for AC/DC and twice as headliners with Winger and the Bulletboys.  Still one of my all-time favorite live acts.

9. Extreme Pornograffitti
This album is aptly named.  The four ballads on this record ensured that I got laid in 1990.  That's really all I can say about this record. That, and if you don't like what you see here, get the funk out!

10.  Motorhead 1916
I had first been exposed to Motorhead in the 80s when the song Killed By Death was released.  I was a fan.  But I had never actually spent money on the band.  I heard Going to Brazil and purchased 1916.  Then I heard the title track and wept like a baby.  How moving?  That has to be the most stirring song about WWI I've ever heard and it came from Lemmy.  Motorhead would go on to become my favorite band until Lemmy's death in 2015.

11. Pantera Cowboys From Hell
I was driving home from work one afternoon when the DJ announced, "Here's the latest from Pantera, Cemetery Gates."  And he played the long version, the album version of the song.  Oh my god!  I had to have that album post haste.  I drove to my girlfriend's house, picked her up and we went immediately to the record store another hour's drive away just so I could purchase that album that night.  I played the HELL out of that album, as well as the next one from Pantera.  I wept like a little child with a burst balloon when Darrell was murdered.

12. Monster Magnet Dopes to Infinity
The final entry came purely by accident.  I was in a tape store in Morristown browsing and bumbled across a cool looking album cover with an interesting sounding band name and title.  Well, I judged a book by its cover and plunked down my $10 and went out to my car and popped in a stoner rock masterpiece.  With Lemmy passed and Motorhead no more, Monster Magnet has assumed the mantle as my favorite band.  I'm working diligently to collect every piece of vinyl they have ever released.