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Minggu, 27 Mei 2018


Friar Tuck ‎ “Friar Tuck And His Psychedelic Guitar” 1967 US Psych Pop Rock,Experimental
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full spotify

https://open.spotify.com/album/4ZClGEUiv18eYUvKREzziD


An oft-overlooked piece of the LA pop-psych jigsaw, this 1967 oddity combines typically complex vocal arrangements by the legendary Curt Boettcher with virtuoso guitar interludes from LA session legend Mike Deasy, and features backing from the team responsible for the landmark Millennium and Sagittarius LPs. A truly deranged mixture of cover versions and originals, it’s presented here complete with four ultra-rare bonus tracks from non-album 45s, making it an essential purchase for fans of sunshine pop and psychedelia…~


It would be all too easy to simply write this off as a mere exploitation knock-off designed to catch naive hippies. It certainly is that, but it also has the hand (and voice) of Curt Boettcher all over it, and it features Mike Deasy, heavy L.A. session cat and sometime-member of Phil Spector’s Wrecking Crew on guitar, musical arrangements and producing. Consisting of about half covers and half originals, the album could hardly be considered truly psychedelic (mostly thanks to the Boettcher vocals) but it is quite interesting in its own way. Deasy’s arrangements are strange and wonderful with some hot guitar playing and liberal use of the echoplex. He gives “Louie Louie,” the quintessential simple rock & roll tune, a wildly elaborate arrangement, virtually re-creating the tune entirely. He gives Nat Adderly and Oscar Brown, Jr.’s “Work Song” an echoplex and guitar intro, inserts a bit of twang then goes into a classical sounding passage and back. Oddly enough, it also sounds reminiscent of the Count Five’s “Psychotic Reaction”! Deasy’s ultra-stoned sounding vocals on “Alley Oop” are hilarious. The originals can’t be called instrumentals due to Boettcher and company’s ever present wordless vocals, which get really bizarre on “Fendabenda Ha Ha Ha” and “Where Did Your Mind Go?.” [These tracks are a really odd combination of gonzo guitar soloing and the Living Voices on acid. The bonus tracks by the Flower Pot have actual lyrics and are less elaborately arranged than the Friar Tuck album, and have quite a different feel to them. “Black Moto” and “Wantin’ Ain’t Gettin” even have some sitar. Originally issued as 45 rpms, they’re a nice addition and it makes sense to gather Deasy’s originals all in one place. All in all, Friar Tuck & His Psychedelic Guitar is a thoroughly entertaining curiosity. [This album was reissued in 2007 with four bonus tracks from the Flower Pot.]… by Sean Westergaard….~


At first listen via Pandora this caught my ear as a goofy outing by some amateurs. However, after a few listens I noticed that the arrangements were pretty thick with musical quotes from many of the other groups of that time. The vocals are weird blends of choral harmonies matched with very casual lead vocals. My favorite is Alley Oop. The singer only sings a few lines in the song, and actually makes the song sound less contrived than the original. The Louie Louie arrangement is very very distant from the Kingsmen version. Also there’s alot of sound effect fun at the tail end of many of the songs. The lead guitar solos are not very interesting but I like this recording for the adventurous disregard of the original arrangements of the cover tunes. The musicians actually include some session players from the era. If you are saturated with the many similarities of the other “psychedelic” groups from that era, give this a listen to cleanse your palette…alternates between tongue-in-cheek and serious playing….by…TBo…~


What can I say about this wonderful record ? Once you go Friar tuck you’ll never go back , that is , if super psychedelic fuzz infused reverb dripping endless dreamy Ethereal Phil Spector like Pet sounds acid trips with Charles Manson at the psychedelic dance party is your thing ,the ultimate and essential cornerstone to any space age pop Psychedelia LSD exotica groove lounge collection ,Once I heard this LP I’ve spent years after trying to find something else that comes close to this , but with no avail , this is far too advanced , you could listen to this album a hundred times and still here new sounds and ideas within the layers upon layers of ethereal wordless vocal harmonies and raga reverb tremelo space echo guitar bliss , a precursor to My Bloody Valentine ? 

Mike Deasy, Famous session guitarist who is still available to play on YOUR album today !!! Master of the sixties’ West Coast Sound , He worked closely with Phil Spector and Brian Wilson , among thousands of others ,you’ll find he played sitar on countless albums( such as Jackie Gleason’s Now Sound for Today’s Lovers) rivaled only by Bill Plummer ,Deasy teamed up with Gary Paxton , Ben Benay , and Kurt Boettcher many times , the vocal arrangements on this album are hands down the best I’ve ever heard from Curt Boettcher , and Ben Benay ’s own album “ Goldenrod” is actually the backing tracks from this album and the “ Millenium” album , the story goes that Deasy took acid with Charles Manson and the family back when Manson was hanging around the Beach Boys , somehow Mike blew his mind and had to be recovered after days of hiding in the woods , henceforth he became Friar Tuck , and the back of this LP reflects these disturbing times in his life with Manson-esque poetry Deasy played in Tommy Roe’s backup band and helped write Sweet Pea , and once they went to play the song at Disneyland whilst Deasy was fully clad in Friar Tuck garb , Disney would not allow him to enter the park other than to play with the band , he really was Friar Tuck during that phase thats the revelation , 

Mike Deasy also worked with Ry Cooder on ’ Tanyet ’ by the Ceyleib People. There are two types of people in this world , the pre- Friar Tuck who don’t know about this gem , and the post Friar Tuck , who have never been the same musically since hearing it ,(and perhaps a small third group who thinks I’m goofy?)…~


Credits 
Bass – Jerry Scheff 
Drums – Jim Troxel 
Guitar – Ben Benay, Jim Helms, Mike Deasy 
Organ – Mike Henderson (3) 
Piano – Butch Parker 
Vibraphone – Toxie French* 
Vocals – Alicia Vigil, Bob Turner (2), Dottie Holmberg, Dyann King, Jim Bell (3), Michele O'Malley, Sandy Salisbury, Sharon Olsen 
Vocals, Arranged By [Vocals] – Curt Boettcher 


Tracklist 
Sweet Pea 3:11 
Louis Louis 4:56 
Work Song 4:48 
Alley-Oop 5:09 
All Monked Up 2:47 
Ode To Mother Tuck 1:50 
A Record Hi 2:32 
Fendabenda Ha Ha Ha 2:30 
A Bit Of Grey Lost 2:37 
Where Did Your Mind Go? 3:35

Hashish  ’‘A Product Of’’ 2016 Swedish Psych,Electronic Minimal Synth
full vk
https://vk.com/wall312142499_10763

full spotify

https://open.spotify.com/album/1vxXinR8FdJHYUiZ3E5Qzd

full bandcamp

https://hashishmusic.bandcamp.com/album/a-product-of-hashish

watch review by psychedelic baby

http://www.psychedelicbabymag.com/2016/07/hashish-product-of-2016-review.html

facebook

https://www.facebook.com/hashishsounds/


Swedish psych outfit Hashish, headed by Subliminal Sounds honcho Stefan Kéry, bring us their debut full-length A Product Of. If the clever combination of album title and band name doesn’t imply a kaleidoscopic experience, then fear-not; from start to finish the record provides, or perhaps provokes, a dream-funk out-of-body journey. 
Opener ‘Bliss’ begins with the calming pulsing of ocean waves, feeding slowly into modulating synths and doing so sounds like the beginning of some New Age meditative retreat. Indeed, this effect remains throughout but thankfully is explored through less ambient avenues. Repetition is one of the key trance-inducing effects employed by the band, as with the looping of funk-infused bassline and yodelling flutes that hark back to late-Sixties experimental jazz on ‘Fly Away’. This track continues the therapeutic energy of the opener, with a soft vocal lead assuring us to ‘Touch the sky, you’re beautiful’. 
Things aren’t angelic for long however, and take a dark and abstract turn as the muddy, Kraut synths of tracks like ‘The Light’, ‘Revel’ and ‘Outer Spaced’ come into play. 
But interestingly, whilst the up-beat drive of funk has been often been used as an energetic counterpart to the stupefying chaos of psychedelia, Hashish layer elements of lounge-jazz to weird effect. Indeed the biggest but welcomed surprise of the record is its closer ‘The Light pt. 2’, which is reminiscent of Bonobo with its jazzy snare rolls and soundtrack-esque emotive chord progressions. 
A Product Of treads the line between music and musak very finely, and perhaps borders too close to the latter at times, but this is of course done consciously given that the record seems to have a dissociative agenda….By JOHN BELL…~


The label says: “The long awaited debut album from Hashish This is top notch psychedelia that both challenges the genre and takes it to a whole new level. Inspired by the 60s and 70s psychedelic scene and by creating the perfect combination of retro baselines and kraut drums layered with an all over crisp electronic lounge sound, Hashish has managed to create a record that is both genre crossing, experimental and top modern. Hashish is the finest kind of occult Scandinavian psychfunk, a project that by some has been said to pick up what GOAT started. “A Product Of Hashish” could go hand in hand with Salvador Dalís dream sequence in Spellbound. It could be a sibling to Bulgakows The Master And Margarita or Stanley Kubricks 2001 Space Odyssey. The album is a dream inspired way of expressing and expanding the mind. Call it psychedelic, call it conceptual or arty. When everyone is throwing todays reality back in it’s face, or stripping off social problems and injustice in our society, Hashish is a dream to escape into. Hashish is the answer. 

”Hashish sound like the lovechild between a 70s soft porn soundtrack composer and a wide-eyed teen experiencing hallucinogens for the first time” ”Get ready to feel like dropping some acid and going bowling” – Noisey/Vice/UK
”. Welcome to tomorrow. The sounds transport you into a forgotten world where the future looked different from what it became. On his soft subtle island capped with clouds of cool fire, Pan weaves his teachings with the wind and the sun. Raining sacred melodies on the hearts and minds of man, driving him with desperate loves and yearnings by songs of Sainthood and madness. Transient temples of the flesh, laughing at death, clothes our lives in fire. On rippling altars of skin we sensual magicians worship bright burning desire…..Subliminal Sounds …..~


After last years 7" the Swedish Prog-Rock-Band HASHISH are finally releasing their debutalbum now. “A Product Of” is a thrilling trip into the depth of the 60/70s. It comes on CD (COLLINE NOIRE) and LP (WOAH DAD!). Psychedelia and Progressice, mixed with a fairly touch of Afrofunk and a lot of Groove. This ingrediants form the base for this awesome release from sweden. Supported by full synthsizer soundscapes and vocoder effects the band manages to create a sureal appearing album with a great retro-charm. HASHISH mastermind Stefan Kery, who is known as the labelowner of the swedish psych label SUBLIMINAL SOUNDS, held his hands firmly over this project. Altogehter (lyrics, sounds, videos) an experimental, krautrock-like, occult album emerged. This one is definetely “outer space”. HASHISH easily combined all this so genuine that they can hardly be distinguished from the originals 40 years ago…..~



The long awaited debut album from Hashish. Top class psychedelia that definitely takes the genre to a new level with a sophisticated approach to an afro-funk groove accompanied by dreamy and playful melodies that goes by a spectrum from Scandinavian Occult Psychedelia to Minimal Synth and Surreal Electronic Soul Disco with rare groove. Hashish is a project that has been described by some to pick up what Goat started, this is not the time to sleep kiddies! Welcome to tomorrow. The sounds transport you into a forgotten world where the future looked different from what it became. On his soft subtle island capped with clouds of cool fire, Pan weaves his teachings with the wind and the sun. Raining sacred melodies on the hearts and minds of man, driving him with desperate loves and yearnings by songs of Sainthood and madness. Transient temples of the flesh, laughing at death, clothes our lives in fire. On rippling altars of skin we sensual magicians worship bright burning desire….~





Credits 

Stefan Kery - guitar, vocals, vocoder, keyboard 
Moussa Fadera - Drums, Percussion 
Lisa Maria Isaksson - Lead Vocals, Harp 
Erik Lundin - Flute 
Anna Emilia Nilsson - Vocals 
Fredrik Swahn - Bass, Keyboards 
Mattias Uneback - Vibraphone 
Jason Urick - Voice


Tracklist 
A1 Bliss
A2 Fly Away
A3 The Light
B1 Revel
B2 Outer Spaced
B3 Make It
B4 Miracles
B5 The Light Pt. II 

Jean-Bernard Raiteux “Les Demons” 1973 France Soundrack,Psych,Avant Garde,Folk,Pop
full vk
https://vk.com/wall312142499_10753

full mixcloud

https://www.mixcloud.com/Sequencesonore/s%C3%A9quence-sonore-e19-les-d%C3%A9mons-jean-bernard-raiteux-1973/

full youtube

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eOhZSCTNCu0


In 1973, legendary Spanish independent filmmaker Jess Franco made an X-rated version of The Devils meets The Witchfinder General, spawning this as-yet-unreleased masterpiece of funked up, wah-driven pornadelica. Ominous piano chords and funereal organs (The Inquisition) give way to wig-out jazz funk of the title and then it’s into the fluid groove of Kathleen Writhing. Taking in psychedelia, folk and pop on the way, Les Demons is the motherlode of vintage Euro-porn soundtracks. ….~


If that creepy cover image alone isn’t more than enough to make you want this record, the magical music within will certainly tip the balance! Jean-Bernard Raiteux may be best known for his French funk sounds in the Harlem Pop Trotters, but he’s even more weird and wonderful here – turning in a wickedly groovy score for Jess Franco’s film Les Demons (aka The Devils), with trippy sounds that are every bat as great as the music used in Franco’s classic Vampyros Lesbos! The music has currents of jazz, funk, and psych – often all operating at once, with cool keyboards, fuzzy guitar, and lots of these fluttering flute lines that almost sound like Harold McNair or Roland Kirk on acid – blowing their minds, as they blow their minds out through their reed instruments too….Dusty Groove…~


The unreleased Euro pysch score to the French/Portuguese X-rated version of The Devils meets The Witchfinder General! Synchronised by Spanish anti-establishmentarian, sexual liberator, die-hard independent filmmaker and unrepentant voyeur Jess Franco (Vampyros Lesbos/De Sade). Composed entirely by French composer Jean-Bernard Raiteux aka Jean-Michel Lorgere (Sinner/Harlem Pop Trotters) and presented here in full soundtrack form for the first time. 

Proudly claiming the dubious accolade of the Spanish sexploitation version of The Devils as the distributor’s most bankable asset, this previously banned 1973 European witch flick would rip the art house facade from Ken Russell’s well polished box office smash and push the envelope way beyond the closet titillation of the gentrified new wave controversy seekers. 

Delivered on a comparable shoestring budget as the 55th feature in Jess Franco’s filmography of approximately 203 completed movies, The Demons (Les Démons), directed under the Anglicised pseudonym Clifford Brown, took many of the Franco’s sexually stylistic watermarks (epitomised in his Vampyros Lesbos trilogy) adding witchcraft, possession and nunsploitation against a rural Mediterranean backdrop before disappearing into the woods. 

Whilst clearly taking inspirational plot cues from Michael Reeve’s The Witchfinder General (UK 1968) and drawing comparisons with scenes from Eiichi Yamamoto’s Belladonna Of Sadness (Japan 1973) this B-Movie reduction of Franco’s wide palette of colourful ingredients has in recent years provided enthusiasts/champions/defenders of the workaholic horrotica bastion with a rare and treasured addition. 

Future-proofed by an essential component, omnipresent in Franco’s films, it is the mysterious commercially unobtainable soundtrack music that cements the unwaning interest in his risqué brand of unconventional shock/schlock sinema (not hindered my the enigmatic title card misinformation that often surrounds the original composers) and the music herein that has given Franco’s harshest critics a second chance/reason to reevaluate this man’s unapologetic art. 

Following on from Finders Keepers previous expanded release of Bruno Nicolai’s score for Franco’s 1970 adaptation of De Sade (FKR069) this record stands as another tribute to Franco’s life which he lived through the mechanisms of a camera with relentless zeal and a passion to challenge every aspect of movie making along the way. 

UNDERground, OVERambitious, RIGHT on, LEFTfield, BELOW the radar but ABOVE criticism. INdulgent and OUTrageous, but never middle of the road, Jess Franco was many things but he wasn’t pretentious and never delivered art for art’s sake and I feel honoured to have spent time with him. Franco was in fact a realist, he kept both feet firmly on the ground and a keen eye behind the right side of the lens and if Jess did have any demons his films were his exorcisms, the critics were the bloody judges and his legacy (through the medium of X-rated cinema of variable quality) is immortal……~


Following on from Finders Keepers previous expanded release of Bruno Nicolai’s score for Franco’s 1970 adaptation of ‘De Sade’, this record stands as another tribute to Franco’s life which he lived through the mechanisms of a camera with relentless zeal and a passion to challenge every aspect of movie making along the way. 
“Proudly claiming the dubious accolade of the Spanish sexploitation version of The Devils as the distributor’s most bankable asset, this previously banned 1973 European witch flick would rip the art house facade from Ken Russell’s well polished box office smash and push the envelope way beyond the closet titillation of the gentrified new wave controversy seekers. Delivered on a comparable shoestring budget as the 55th feature in Jess Franco’s filmography of approximately 203 completed movies, The Demons (Les Démons), directed under the Anglicised pseudonym Clifford Brown, took many of the Franco’s sexually stylistic watermarks (epitomised in his Vampyros Lesbos trilogy) adding witchcraft, possession and nunsploitation against a rural Mediterranean backdrop before disappearing into the woods. 
Whilst clearly taking inspirational plot cues from Michael Reeve’s The Witchfinder General (UK 1968) and drawing comparisons with scenes from Eiichi Yamamoto’s Belladonna Of Sadness (Japan 1973) this B-Movie reduction of Franco’s wide palette of colourful ingredients has in recent years provided enthusiasts/champions/defenders of the workaholic horrotica bastion with a rare and treasured addition. Future-proofed by an essential component, omnipresent in Franco’s films, it is the mysterious commercially unobtainable soundtrack music that cements the unwaning interest in his risqué brand of unconventional shock/schlock sinema (not hindered my the enigmatic title card misinformation that often surrounds the original composers) and the music herein that has given Franco’s harshest critics a second chance/reason to reevaluate this man’s unapologetic art.”



Tracklist 
A1 The Inquisition
A2 Les Démons
A3 Kathleen Writhing “Kathleen”
A4 The Weakness Of Rosalinda “Melodious Modulation”
A5 The Visit / Margaret’s Hallucination
A6 Three Serpents To Karen’s Dwelling
B1 The Second Inquisition
B2 A Witch’s Daughter?
B3 The Seduction Of Winter “The Last Frolic”
B4 Kathleen & The Horses
B5 The Stake
B6 Kathleen & The Serpents