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Kamis, 24 Mei 2018


Paul Marcano & Lightdreams "10001 Dreams" 1982- 2016, 2LP & CD  by Got Kinda Lost Records Canada Psych Pop Folk Rock
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watch…Original Recordings by Paul R Marcano (and friends)

http://www.paulmarcano.com/music/aztech/index.html

watch review by psychedelic baby

http://www.psychedelicbabymag.com/2016/11/paul-marcano-and-lightdreams-10001.html


Originally issued solely on cassette.

A year after LightDreams’ 1981 debut private press LP Islands in Space came and went without a trace, Canadian songwriter Paul Marcano and his collaborating musicians quietly released an even more sprawling opus titled 10,001 Dreams. The album was only available on home-dubbed 90-minute cassettes; its 2016 reissue was credited to both Marcano and LightDreams. It continues with the previous album’s themes of deep introspection and space colonization, even returning to the phrase “islands in space” during the lyrics of the opening title track as well as the concluding “Building Islands in Space (Reprise).” Essentially, the sound hasn’t changed – the songs are still made up of multi-layered, occasionally backwards guitars, lush synthesizers, wizard-like vocals, and no drums. It’s still inspired by psychedelia and prog rock, but with an airy, weightless feeling akin to ambient and new age music. Even if it sounds similar, it’s more ambitious, stretching some of the compositions out into lengthy epics. Some of the selections on 10,001 Dreams were previously written and recorded by Marcano on a few of his many unreleased cassettes dating back to the early ‘70s (one of which, 1973’s Valley Flutes, was eventually released in 2015, and bears eerie similarities to Brian Eno’s Discreet Music, which appeared in 1975). Others, particularly on the second half, were co-written by fellow LightDreamers Andre Martin and Cory Rhyon (both of whom, sadly, did not live to see the album’s reissue). The album is actually at its best during the longer tracks, where the musicians ponder existence for extended periods of time. Mega-trippy, revelatory “Visual Breakfast” alternates between wayward drifting, sunny pop, and darker ruminations. Much of the album’s second half is taken up by a suite which begins with Martin’s isolated, trembling “Being Here,” which questions one’s singular place in the universe but reassures that “it happens to the best of us every now and then, and that’s OK!” From there, the group segue into several alien dreamscapes which are far more experimental and otherworldly than the usual LightDreams songs. Given that the suite lasted almost 37 minutes on the original cassette, it was split into two sides for the vinyl reissue, and edited down for the CD release. Following this is “Maj Moorhsum,” which couldn’t possibly be anything but a guitar improvisation played in reverse, so that’s exactly what it is. Islands in Space is definitely a more focused statement, but any fans of that album ready for a much deeper exploration will find 10,001 Dreams to be absolutely immersive….by Paul Simpson …..~


[10;001 Dreams is] a perfect distillation of [Paul Marcano’s] musical essence: thoughtful, psychedelic, pop-oriented music but with a deeply progressive ear for song structure and the intuitive glow of a well-crafted lyrical refrain.” (Jack D. Fleischer—10, 001 Dreams, Liner Notes) 

A thematic sequel of sorts to the sci-fi psych odyssey exploring cosmic ideology that was the British Columbians debut—LightDreams’ Islands In Space—10;001 Dreams from 1982 finds its leader, Paul Marcano, edging closer lyrically to the utopian outer space colonization he’d previously conjured while under the sway of physicist/space activist/author Gerard K. O’Neill. The ever-present percussive acoustic layers from Islands In Space remain, while the New Age-like keyboard washes are nearly totally supplanted by mellow, wickedly fuzzed, floating layers of dreamy, treated, atmospheric electric guitar. As scribe Jack D. Fleischer says, at the time of the recording the group had reached, “a certain kind of psychedelic revelation that had become completely frontal,” and that is emphasized by this increased use of soaring electric coloring. 

Originally issued solely on cassette, Marcano and Lightdreams’ home-recorded (yet hi-fi) lysergic creations give nod to the original British psychedelic and progressive eras, while maintaining a firm foot in hook-based, melodic folk’n’pop and are a guaranteed treasure for those searching for unheard and otherworldly joys……~


Picking up on this gem that slipped out in 2016, but still remains available in double LP glory. Paul Marcano and his band LightDreams had one full album (as simply LightDreams) in 1982. The Beatles-esque pop was undercut with proggy new age keys for an album that doused itself in sci-fi trappings and psychedelic indulgences. Sadly, the record would pass through rather unnoticed, except by collectors with a keen eye for psych. It stands to reason then that this private press cassette that the band home recorded as a follow-up in 1983 only fell on fewer ears, but its sprawling, syncopated prog-folk approach makes it a gem of a time when the band’s psych-pop was horribly out of fashion. 

The record is home-taped, though not scruffy, with a rather clear and present sound. Marcano, along with fellow guitarists John Walker and Cory Rhyon and keyboardist Andre Martin lay their rippling psych vision out without the aid of a rhythm section and the result brings this closer to a fuzz ball of psychedelic folk than the prog holdovers from the ‘70s they’re ostensibly looking to replicate. While they’re shooting for Pink Floyd, the band actually lands somewhere around Bobb Trimble fronting an expanded version of Fresh Maggots, which honestly makes for a dream idea in my book. 

The one thing that gets in the way of LightDreams might be their own ambition. The original version of 10,001 Dreams was laid down to a 90-minute tape and the band went for it in every respect. Self-editing was not their forte, though squeezing this onto 2xLP and CD gives a bit of trim to a massive centerpiece suite (originally 30 min) that would give Olivia Tremor Control a run for their money. They excel when the tracks spread out, but don’t tip the scales – sprawling, but not overstuffed – and rambling into introspective trip territory. If you’ve previously missed out on this one and need to bump up the private press psych section on your shelf then this comes quite recommended. …..~


It seems that having paid out more than enough to buy a decent sized car through the years on original and reissues of the psychedelic music of my youth, that in 1982 Canadian Paul Marcano made the album I’ve been searching for all these years to satisfy my craving for the British strain of pop-psych. And I missed it completely. 

There is quite a story behind ’10,001 Dreams’ which doesn’t need repeating here as it’s already out there, but basically Marcano as part of a band called LightDreams self-released an album, ‘Islands in Space’, in 1981, which has been described as cosmic folk and which reached only a very limited audience. A year later and with Marcano sharing billing with LightDreams a new set of songs was released as’10,001 Dreams’, a limited edition cassette only issue. Not surprisingly that too passed me by. Just the fact that it was cassette only would have prevented me from making a purchase as cassettes to me were good for one thing only - opening up the possibility of choosing your own music to play in the car. 

Now along with Spanish re-issue label Guerssen Records, the fantastically named Got Kinda Lost label has remastered ’10,001 Dreams’ and made it available on CD and double vinyl. These words are being written as the CD edition is playing. The vinyl adds the fourteen minute ‘Primordial Therapy’ to the nine songs on the CD, which is reason enough to put in an order for that as soon as time allows. 

Where can you start describing an album as complex yet as accessible as ’10,001 Dreams’? Since 2012 the UK’s most prolific yet under-rated musician/author/ filmmaker Chris Wade has been releasing albums of his own unique take on pysch/prog/folk under the Dodson & Fogg banner, which although having one eye firmly focused on the classic sounds of the past sounded totally contemporary. There are times when listening to ’10,001 Dreams’ that Wade comes to mind. Marcano explores 60’s pyschedelia more deeply than Wade has and on ’10,001 Dreams’ takes Wade-type guitar wig-outs a stage further. There’s less of Wade’s folk tendencies but both artists share the talent to make home-made yet strangely hi-fi sounding fascinating soundscapes; Wade has a tendency to reign in his creations and therefore makes shorter pieces. At times the listener feels that Wade fades some of his songs just at the point where they are taking off; that’s no criticism just an indication that you don’t want to leave the place he’s taken you just yet. Marcano lets his music flow on so the pieces of music are given chance to develop, and even though the opening title cut is nearly fourteen minutes long there’s not a second that’s wasted or where the listener thinks “next, please!” Like Wade’s music the songs are so well structured that they are irresistible. 

While ’10,001 Dreams’ is so obviously influenced by 60’s psychedelia and for those who heard it on its original release in 1982 it must have sounded so out of time, today it sounds totally contemporary. The title track opens with panned guitar, immediately finding a place in the heart of any 60’s psych-pop fan. Marcano’s vocals are floating somewhere deep in the mix while this wall of melodic guitars dart from channel to channel (‘10,001 Dreams’ is, like many psych albums, best appreciated on headphones and listened to alone where you can drink in all the sounds). The vocals eventually become clearer but not before the ears have been massaged by some of the most inspiring electric guitar we’ve heard since, well, the last Dodson & Fogg album actually. Fourteen minutes and the song doesn’t outstay its welcome, which is no mean feat. 

‘Steam 111’ is one of the songs that is shorn of Marcano’s vocals but when the guitar playing is as inventive as that displayed on this piece they are not really missed. At just under six minutes it’s one of the shorter songs on the album but the different layers that Marcano brings to the track again keep the listener interested for the duration. Panning again features heavily towards the end of the track, and it’s another of those soundscapes that take you to wherever you choose to go. 

‘Everyone Grows and Grows’ finds Marcano inject his psychedelia with more poppier leanings. It’s a dreamy little trip through ’67 and recalls Pink Floyd as much as it does the other pop-psych bands of the era. It would have been termed experimental way back then, but now it just sounds like a lost classic from those golden days. It really is a little classic. ‘Visual Breakfast’ follows and with its driving bass buried under shimmering guitars it again recalls Pink Floyd. It is maybe a couple of years down the line from the previous song but the influence is obvious. This particular soundscape twists and turns many times with its gentle, relaxing lead guitar lines before the vocals appear at around the four-minute mark when Marcano suddenly takes the song into another direction totally. It develops into a jaunty pop/rock song, the vocals to the fore in the mix for once before the panning returns with more shimmering guitar work. Then, without noticing the joins, a Floyd-like ballad emerges complete with what sounds like a bird fluttering between your ears. At almost eleven minutes again there’s not a second wasted and so much ground covered. 

Without wishing to cover the album song-by-song mention has to be made of ‘Who Is The One’, another dream set to music, Marcano’s vocals are again deep in the mix, those guitars both gentle and shimmering panning from ear to ear while that driving bass makes another appearance. 

‘In Memory of Being Here’ is at twenty-three minutes the longest song on ‘10,001 Dreams’ but is really a suite of six songs segued together; as most of the other tracks on the album go through so many changes and by now you’ve come to expect the unexpected from Paul Marcano it’s no great surprise that he’s created a piece of this length so he can expand even further on his vision. It could be argued that sections like the synth-filled ‘Subtle Arrival’ do notreally add much to the journey and are certainly less essential listening than most of the rest of the album, but as that piece segues into another instrumental section, ‘Something Out of Nothing’, it begins to make more sense. There are some beautiful sounds in there, not always conventional but all the more interesting for that. 

There will likely be long essays written about every track on this album, but it doesn’t really matter how deep each individual goes into each song or really what Paul Marcano’s original idea was. The simple fact is that in 1982 Marcano made one of the best psychedelic albums that has ever been produced. Its heart beats in the mid-sixties but it sounds so fresh and relevant today. Maybe even more so than it would have then; one can only guess what effect it would have had on the record-buying teenagers of 1982 had they heard it then. …by….Malcolm Carter …..~


In 1980, Paul Marcano had recorded together with various friends and acquaintances an album, which was published the same year in self-publishing in a small edition as LP. “Islands in Space” by Lightdreams (as Marcano had titled the project) was of course not a big seller, even if Marcano gradually got rid of all 1000 albums. One planned as a double LP successor could not afford under these conditions, so that the same finally appeared in 1982 as a tape cassette, albeit well-filled. 

“10001 Dreams” evidently originated in a slightly smaller lineup (the same is nowhere specified - but Martin and Rhyon appear behind some songs as composers), probably largely conceived by Marcano, so that on the cassette Paul Marcano & Light Dreams are to be found as interpreters , Musically there are no worlds between “Islands in Space” and “10001 Dreams”. A weird psychedelic folk program can be found on both albums, dominated by guitar sounds, occasionally backed by electronic and some vocals. 

Extensive songs are usually the most, determined by folky acoustic guitars and spacey-yelling e-guitar sounds, relaxed-airy, psychedelic, echo-like networked, emanating a certain cheerful, esoteric-new-age-like West Coast flair that after the 70s of last century sounded as after the 80s. Compared to “Islands in Space”, the instruments used have been slimmed down, so that “10001 Dreams” consistently knits out of the boxes in a similar way. At least you can not say that the first six pieces would be very different from each other. 

That changes with the long “In memory of being here”. Synthesizer sounds work their way forward and transform the piece into a pure, expansive, cosmic-sounding, Andre Martin-specific electronic number, which at times glides out of the speakers in a very free-form, almost experimental way. Only after a good 20 minutes do the guitars break through again and bring the suite to a psychedelic reverberation. 

In 2017 the material of Got Kinda Lost (a sublabel of Guerssen Records) was re-released on CD and 2xLP. Due to lack of space, the CD lacks the concluding part of “In memory of being here”, which consists of all sorts of echoing and resounding guitar scraps, a good 14 minutes long “Primordial therapy” (which in the LP version is a separate piece on another page is). However, there is a download code, using the same you can download all the material of the original cassette. 

A dense mixture of “Cosmic-psych / progressive-folk / new age” over the long term, but still a bit too uniform and brave, can be found on “10001 Dreams”, the lovers of oblique, electrified psych folk-program and electronic (at least the already mentioned “In memory of being here”) but should appeal…..by….Achim Breiling….babyblaue Prog…..~

Tracklist 
A1 10001 Dreams 13:47 
A2 Stream III 5:02 
A3 Everyone Grows And Grows 5:43 
B1 Visual Breakfast 10:49 
B2 Who Is The One 6:51 
B3 Follow The Stream 4:15 
C Being Here 22:18 
D1 Primordial Therapy 14:29 
D2 Maj Moorhsum 5:45 
D3 Buildings Islands In Space (Reprise) 3:43 

Senin, 21 Mei 2018


Rainbows  "Raibows/ Nobody But You" 1969 single 7" UK Psych Pop
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Rainbows …. short-lived collective from Coventry, formed in 1969, formerly called “The Sabres” (1963-65), then “The Peeps” (1965-69) .. all “Rainbows” released in 1969, two singles on “CBS”, broke up in the same year…~


The Peeps reinvented themselves as a progressive band in the mould of Traffic called Rainbows with sculptured hair, bizarre eye make up, multi-coloured flowing robes and moved their base to London. They just about scraped into the 70’s before becoming Still Life. They released a lot of stuff on CBS and spent a lot of time in Germany at the Star Club in Hamburg. Ozzy Osbourne (Pre-Sabbath) joined them on stage for a finale.“



Line up: Martin Cure (vocals), Roy Albrighton (guitar), Terry Leeman (organ), Graham Amos(bass), Gordon Reed (drums) ( Paul Wilkinson Drums + a keyboard player)



Tracklist 
Rainbows
Nobody But You 

Sabtu, 19 Mei 2018

Alceu Valença & Geraldo Azevedo “Alceu Valença & Geraldo Azevedo"1972 Brazil Psych Folk Pop,Rock MPB ...recommended...
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http://immub.org/album/quadrafonico-alceu-valenca-e-geraldo-azevedo

 Recorded in the hours left over in the dawn of Copacabana’s studios in 1972, the album "Quadrafônico” became one of the most important Brazilian records for revealing at the same time two figures of prow of MPB, such as: Alceu Valença and Geraldo Azevedo. 
Despite being known as Quadraphonic, the disc is originally called Alceu Valença & Geraldo Azevedo. The large, luminous Quadraphonic at the top of the cover concerned the sound technology that was new at the time and with which the record was made…..~



Alceu Valença, Geraldo Azevedo and the psychedelia of the Quadrafônico disc 
Of how Rogério Duprat went to the debut album of the Pernambuco duo that revealed great composers of Brazilian music 
I was in doubt if I started telling this story for the part in which the arrangements of the album “Alceu Valença & Geraldo Azevedo” (1972) would initially be made by Hermeto Pascoal but ended up in the hands of Rogério Duprat, one of the creators of Tropicalismo. Or that the recordings used the Quadraphonic system, a novelty at the time. Or that the production budget was so small that Alceu and Geraldo were sent by the record company Copacabana to São Paulo to record and stayed in the apartment of Cesare Bienvenuti, producer of the album. Or that the few hours of recording destined for the LP happened at dawn, when the studio was unoccupied. 

They would be interesting forms if we think of the curiosities behind a production, but they would not give the real dimension of this classic still unknown today of the great public that was the inspired debut of the pair in the disc “Alceu Valença & Geraldo Azevedo”.
It is contained in this little jewel that has only 34:02 minutes in duration the genesis of the fruitful work as great composers that Alceu and Geraldo individually developed already in that beginning of years 70. If this little, consider that it is not only a presentation of two unknown to the phonographic market but the convergence of these together with Rogério Duprat that resulted in a classic record of our music. 

A classic can be defined as a work that crosses the time with its characteristics and artistic qualities intact and it is in this question that the “Alceu Valença & Geraldo Azevedo” is inserted.
Quick tour: In the early 70’s, the British band Pink Floyd was excited about a new system called Quadrifónico or Stereo 4.0, corresponding to the current Surround, and recorded three discs in this format. The Quadrifonic used four channels of capture (the standard then used was two) arranged in different points of the studio capturing diverse shades of the sound. The reproduction of these LPs, however, required compatible sound equipment, that is: with four boxes of speakers distributed in the environment which gave the listener the feeling of being in the studio together with the band. The format was not avenged given the lack of definition of the market for the standard to be used commercially and the high value of the devices for reproduction. 
It derives from the confusion with the album title that, contrary to what is said, is not called ‘Quadraphonic’ because this denomination only identifies the technology used in opposition to the Stereo standard.
Some discs were designed to be heard from beginning to end in the order in which they were recorded, such as Pink Floyd’s “The Dark Side Of The Moon” (1973) - one of three in which the band used quadriphone technology in recording - and this is essential if the work is to be understood in all its complexity since the division between the tracks does not conform to the standard logic of a common disc of 'loose bands’. (It even seems that there is a law of the Martial Court that condemns the subversives of this order to be flogged in public square is the sacrilege committed) 

This is the case of “Alceu Valença & Geraldo Azevedo”, which was thought to be heard from beginning to end and so you can 'touch’ the textures, effects and colors that cross the border of music and tune it to the visual arts. 

The regionalism of the pair is there but it is not the determinant. It has ciranda, coconut, viola caipira, rock but it is the psicodelia that gives the league. The conversation between musicians and technicians during the recording sessions in the studio are also present on the disc, another novelty to increase in the listener the illusion of immersion in sound.
I highlight here as one of the highlights of this work the beauty in the interpretation of “Talisman”. It’s fine F.C.The importance of this quintessential album is such that the worshiped and very rare “Paêbirú”, psychedelic disc of Zé Ramalho and Lula Côrtes and which became the most expensive Brazilian vinyl costing R $ 4,000, would only be released in 1975 and in it Alceu also contributed. 
Also note that when it was released “Alceu Valença & Geraldo Azevedo” the heyday of psychedelic rock in the world had been lost in the ether of the 60’s and perhaps, therefore, I suppose, the album did not have the due importance. 
Forget the classics of Alceu and Geraldo that came to your head as you read this article. The songs produced are a third thing beyond the individual work of these two giants
It is with “Horrible”, the last track from the brilliant album “Alceu Valença & Geraldo Azevedo”, that Disco Risk invites you to do another trip through the universe of Brazilian music….medium….~




An overlooked piece of the tropicalia puzzle, Quadrafônico (as it's also known) falls somewhere between Os Novos Baianos and Os Mutantes. It's not as corny or twee as the former's stack of albums, but more cohesive and less ADD than anything by the much-loved latter. 

Lots of beautifully catchy pop tunes with hippie lyric concerns of the era, and lots of drop-out-and-form-a-collective sentiment. And social sarcasm to spare. 

Odd that this gets none of the fanfare that Mutantes get, maybe due to the fact it's their only joint recording (both went on to become well known solo recording artists), and there's no catchy band name to latch onto. But anyone into the warm pastels and flaming yellows of that time and place is bound to dig this much more than its lack of reputation would deceive you into expecting....by...leland ....~ 














Tracklist 
A1 Me Dá Um Beijo
A2 Virgem Virgínia
A3 Mister Mistério
A4 Novena
A5 Cordão Do Rio Preto
A6 Planetário
B1 Seis Horas
B2 Erosão
B3 78 Rotações
B4 Talismã
B5 Ciranda De Mãe Nina
B6 Horrível 

Kamis, 17 Mei 2018


The Holy Mackerel “The Holy Mackerel” 1968 US Psych Pop,Sunshine Pop
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https://open.spotify.com/album/2z5wnKsbDyM5MlnaEK6wdc


After singer/songwriter Paul Williams landed one of his songs on the flip side of Tiny Tim’s hit single “Tip-Toe Through the Tulips,” he was approached by record producer Richard Perry with an offer to cut his own album. It was a giant leap for Williams, who had just lost his job at the White Whale label a year earlier, an event that had left him distraught and sour on the music industry. Apprehensive about going it alone, he formed a band with ex-Jefferson Airplane bassist Bob Harvey, guitarist George Hiller, flutist Cynthia Fitzpatrick, ex-Turtle drummer Don Murray, and Williams’ brother Ralph on guitar. Dubbed the Holy Mackerel, the band recorded its psychedelic pop debut throughout the spring of 1968. Before the record’s completion, Harvey left and was replaced by future Elvis Presley bassist Jerry Scheff, and then drummer Don Murray was replaced by Michael Cannon. The record appeared in November of 1968 and despite being a Billboard magazine “Special Merit Pick,” it went nowhere and the Holy Mackerel called it quits soon after. Williams began his successful solo career a year later…by….by David Jeffries…~

Originally released in 1968, this was the sunshine pop band’s only album. Looks to be one of Paul William’s early works. With this CD reissue, you get the lp’s initial twelve songs + ten added bonus tracks for your listening pleasure. Most impressive cuts are “The Lady Is Waiting” (both versions), the inspiring “Somewhere In Arizona At 4:30 AM - Restaurant Song”, the country-like “The Wild Side Of Life”, “Love For Everyone” and the somewhat stunning “Listen To The Voice” (truly, great flute work). Line-up: Paul Williams - lead vocals, George Hiller - guitar, harmonica, organ, banjo & vocals, Jerry Scheff - bass & vocals, Mentor Williams - rhythm guitar, Cindy Fitzpatrick - flute & vocals and Mike Cannon - drums. Recommended for fans of the Beau Brummels, Mamas & The Papas, Dillard & Clark and the Lovin’ Spoonful….by Mike Reed…..~

“I was an out-of-work actor who started writing songs for his own amusement.” 
-Paul Williams, 2005…..~


Paul Williams first pop group was the LA based Holy Mackerel. While he would go on to greater success writing classic pop hits for Three Dog Night and the Carpenters, the music he recorded with the Holy Mackerel is more adventurous and psychedelic. The group’s only album was released by Warner Brothers in 1968. While it wasn’t a commercial success, the LP features some great material. 

The best tunes on The Holy Mackerel are on par with great Millennium and Sagittarus tracks. Sure, there’s two or three weak tracks throughout the album but much of The Holy Mackerel is given over to quality stuff. “Scorpio Red”, “Wildflowers”, “The Secret of Pleasure”, “10,000 Men” and “1984” are excellent dreamy soft psych tracks. “1984” is probably the album’s magical highlight although “Wildflowers” features interesting distorted vocals and plenty of swirling sitar. Many of the songs on the LP are psychedelic folk-rock but there’s a few country-rockers (“Somewhere in Arizona” and “The Golden Ghost of Love”), pure folk (“The Lady is Waiting”), and bouncy Nilsson-like pop (“Bitter Honey”) dispersed throughout ; these cuts are vintage late 60s LA pop. There’s a lot of ideas at work here but the group manages to pull it off, making The Holy Mackerel an artistic success. Highly recommended to those who appreciate intelligent sunshine pop/soft psych sounds. 

Now Sounds reissued The Holy Mackerel in 2010 with plenty of extras. Also worth checking out is Paul Williams 1970 collaboration with Roger Nichols titled We’ve Only Just Begun…….Rising Storm review…~


The Holy Mackerel’s sole album garnered little notice upon its initial release in 1968, and is mostly known today for including Paul Williams, who wrote most of the material (sometimes with Roger Nichols), taking the majority of the lead vocals. There were other noted figures involved in the LP as well, although the group’s lineup fluctuated during its recording: Richard Perry produced, brother Mentor Williams played rhythm guitar and took some lead vocals, original Jefferson Airplane bassist Bob Harvey (who left before the record was finished) wrote one song, and future Elvis Presley sideman Jerry Scheff plays bass on one track. The record might have some appeal beyond the circle of serious Williams fans, as both the material and production are more influenced by folk-rock and mild psychedelia than the ‘70s singer/songwriter fare for which he’s most famous for. It’s a largely likable album, if mild-mannered, erratic, and lacking the heavyweight hooks of Williams’ famous hits. The best tunes are those that play up the most haunting melodies and the Mamas and the Papas-ish folk-rock harmonies, such as “The Secret of Pleasure,” “Scorpio Red,” “The Golden Ghost of Love,” and “1984.” The most psychedelic song, “Wildflowers” – complete with raga-rock riffs, spaced-out lyrics, and distorted fishbowl vocals – is an unequivocal highlight, though somewhat atypical, as it’s the sole cut written by Harvey. There are less memorable stabs at country-rock (including a cover of “The Wild Side of Life”), and the cutesy theatrical “Prinderella,” co-penned by Perry and Michael Rubini, is one to skip over. [The 2010 U.K. deluxe expanded reissue on Now Sounds goes all-out with the packaging, adding ten bonus tracks and historical liner notes including comments by Paul Williams himself. Those bonus tracks include the non-LP single “Love for Everyone”/“To Put Up with You,” which are similar in quality and tone to much of the album, if perhaps a bit more pop-oriented; Williams would redo “To Put Up with You” for his 1970 solo debut LP. There are also mono 45 versions of three of tracks; the nice Simon & Garfunkel-like outtake “Listen to the Voice,” co-written by Harvey and lead guitarist George Hiller; a Williams-penned outtake, “On the Way,” and a demo of one of the LP’s songs, “Bitter Honey.” Capping the bonus material are largely instrumental work-in-progress session tapes for “Love for Everyone” and “And Now I Am Alone” that are mostly of scholarly interest.] ~ Richie Unterberger,…~


Paul Williams is rightly considered an American treasure; he has co-written some of the most well-known, well-loved, and commer­cially successful pop songs of the last century. Yet only a few years before he co-wrote his first big hit, “We’ve Only Just Begun,” Paul was a struggling singer, songwriter and actor. He had played bit parts in a few intriguing but low box-office films, and was one of hundreds turned down for a lead role in The Monkees. After Paul spent a less than lucrative three-month stint as a writer and artist for the L.A-based White Whale Records, the label’s president, Lee Lasseff, showed him the door, telling the crestfallen Williams, “We don’t think you have a future in the music business; we’re letting you go.” Paul reflects nearly forty years later, “I remember going home devastated…’What am I gonna do?’ I thought I was a songwriter". 

“I’ve always found that ‘no’ was a gift, if I didn’t get something I wanted,” muses Paul Hamilton Williams II today. And in 1967, hearing “no” from White Whale made Paul available to hear “yes” from future platinum record producer Richard Perry. 

Perry had produced Tiny Tim’s 1968 Reprise LP God Bless Tiny Tim, which contained the Billboard Number 17 pop hit, “Tip-Toe Thru’ the Tulips With Me.” The flip side of that 45 was “Fill Your Heart,” a song Paul co-wrote with offbeat songwriter Biff Rose. After working on this song, Perry saw talent worth mining in the then-unknown Williams, and made Paul the offer of a lifetime. Says Paul: “Richard decided that he wanted to cut an album with me. And I was offered a contract at Reprise. The idea of going in and recording an album was… there was no way in the world that I was gonna do that alone.” 

Armed with a batch of songs, Paul decided to put together a band with whom to record them. He recruited his brother, Mentor, on rhythm guitar, ex-Jefferson Airplane bassist Bob Harvey, guitarist George Hiller, flautist Cynthia Fitzpatrick, and ex-Turtle drummer Don Murray. With Paul handling lead vocals, this group of musicians became the Holy Mackerel. 

While Paul was working with the Mackerel, he was also beginning a writing partnership with Roger Nichols, who had just released his first and only LP for A&M, late 1967’s Roger Nichols and the Small Circle of Friends. Chuck Kaye, then A&M’s head of publishing, and coincidentally the roommate of White Whale’s Lee Lasseff, took a liking to Paul’s work with Biff Rose, and put Paul and Roger together. Paul recalls: “Biff was my first collaborator. He went and played A&M everything he’d ever written; they liked his songs, and the ones that I’d written as well. When he told them this guy Paul Williams had written the lyrics, they said, ‘We want to meet him.’ They were really looking for that lyricist for Roger.” 

The Holy Mackerel began recording their eponymous LP in March 1968 at L.A.’s leg­endary Sunset Sound Studios. The first two tracks cut were “The Golden Ghost of Love” and an early version of the Nichols/Williams song “To Put Up With You,” which Paul was to record again for his 1970 album Someday Man. Later that month, the band moved oper­ations over to United Studios, adding other musicians, including bassist Steve LeFevre. 

During the spring 1968 recording of the album, Perry schooled the newly formed Mackerel on the myriad possibilities of the recording studio. “One of my favorite things on the album was a serendipitous moment,” Paul remembers. “We were sitting in the stu­dio recording the strings on the ending of ‘1984.’ Either Richard Perry or the engineer reached over and accidentally punched out the drums, and it was a great accident. We pulled out all the other rhythm instruments and went, ‘Oh, my God.’ It was wonderful; all of the sudden it had this space odyssey kind of feel to it.” Paul continues, laughing, “There are times when (the album) almost sounds like a ‘family album,’ there’s such simplicity. I can almost hear (it) in my broth­er’s vocals… ‘Wow, we’re in the studio!”’
Recording continued through the spring and summer. An album jacket was designed picturing the Mackerel’s original lineup; however personnel problems necessitated that new cover photos be taken before the album’s release. Bassist Bob Harvey wrote only one song, one of the most overtly psy­chedelic cuts on the LP (the electric sitar-laden “Wildflowers”) then left the band before the album’s completion. The Mackerel soon replaced Harvey with studio whiz and future Elvis Presley bassist Jerry Scheff; then drummer Don Murray was replaced by Michael Cannon. George Hiller explains: “Don wanted to go play in nightclubs and we couldn’t imagine why. I guess he didn’t feel comfortable with the ease with which (the Mackerel’s album) all came together.” (Buffalo Springfield drummer Dewey Martin also played on The Holy Mackerel although it’s unclear on which cuts.) 
A confluence of styles is immediately apparent upon listening to the completed LP. There’s the Springfield-informed country rock of “The Somewhere In Arizona At 4:30 AM Restaurant Song (And Now I Am Alone)” and “The Wild Side of Life,” and the bluesy “Nothing Short of Misery,” all sung by Mentor. There’s the infectious sunshine pop of “Bitter Honey.” There’s the soft psych of “1984” and “Wildflowers.” There’s even the spoken-word, spoonerism-based cut “Prinderella,” an odd track featuring the voice of Bob Harvey and the piano and harp­sichord accompaniment of Michel Rubini. Musically, the album had something for everyone, but sadly, few of them would get a chance to hear it. 
Sandwiched in the Reprise catalogue between Hendrix’s Electric Ladyland (Reprise 6307) and Neil Young’s first solo LP (Reprise 6317), The Holy Mackerel (Reprise 6311) failed to make a big splash with record buyers. Perhaps it was because the album’s early November release date virtually assured that it would be lost in a sea of Reprise’s higher-priority Christmas ‘68 releases, or because without having per­formed any significant gigs, the Mackerel had no ready-made following eager to snap up a release from the band. In any case, nei­ther the LP nor any of their three singles managed to chart. About the album, Paul laments: “I’m not sure if even my family bought it.” Despite receiving a “Special Merit Pick” in Billboard, the eclectic LP was barely promoted by Reprise, and remained a virtual secret to the music world at large, which turned out not to be that big an issue, since by the time The Holy Mackerel was released, the band had actually already been split up for a few months. George explains: “Jerry (Scheff) got his job playing bass with Elvis. Each of us really had different goals and objectives… I think probably (the main reason for the breakup was) Paul’s feeling enough confidence (at that point) that since he put together this group of songs for our album, he could probably go out and do an album on his own. Paul really was the heart and soul of the (Mackerel). He’s just a genius, a pretty multi-talented person.” 
Today, Paul describes his experience with the Mackerel this way: “What hap­pened was we kinda wound up in the studio before we were really a band. We were a band trying to form. It’s me kind of looking for my musical voice. I was a huge Buffalo Springfield fan; you can hear that in some of the stuff. I was a big Beatles fan, and you can hear bits and pieces of that, too. My brother really loved country, and I ended up writing a couple of country songs, (but) I think they were written from the point of a dilettante. They’re not bad songs, but they’re not quite me being me yet. They’re indicative of the craftsman more than the artist.
Despite the LP’s shortcomings, there are tracks of which Paul remains particularly fond: “I find myself most drawn to ‘10,000 Men’ and ‘1984.’ There’s an underlying phi­losophy, a kind of old-souls thought that I think is older than my years at that point. You have to realize that it was 1968. 1984 meant Big Brother, George Orwell’s 1984, the oppo­site of what all of us hippies were dreaming about. And with 1984 being decades away,” he says, laughing, “it was never actually going to get there; it was so far in the future. The lyric expressed such hope for a simple world.” 
Mentor Williams, the successful writer and producer of “Drift Away” for Dobie Gray in 1973, closes with these comments about his talented brother and Holy Mackerel bandmate: “Paul’s dedicated his entire life to the arts: to writing poetry, to acting, and to music. I have nothing but admiration for my brother. He’s kind of been my mentor all these years. What an incredible example for me.”….Steve Stanley…..~

If ever an album was lost in the shuffle, it was the 1968 debut LP by The Holy Mackerel. The LP, assigned as Reprise 6311, fell smack in between Jimi Hendrix’s Electric Ladyland (Reprise 6307) and Neil Young’s eponymous solo debut (Reprise 6317). But adventurous listeners would find themselves rewarded if they picked up the album by the oddly-named group, with its cover sleeve of five gents and a lady smiling for the camera under three-dimensional comic book-style lettering proclaiming them “The Holy Mackerel.” Produced by an emerging Richard Perry, The Holy Mackerel might as well have been called Something for Everyone. 

Over the course of 12 tracks, the group traversed psychedelia, country rock and best of all, sunshine pop with the terrifically infectious “Bitter Honey,” co-written by Paul and Roger Nichols. Of course, the Nichols/Williams team would go on to become a Los Angeles-based hitmaking factory, turning out some of the most-loved songs of all time: “We’ve Only Just Begun,” “Rainy Days and Mondays,” “I Won’t Last a Day Without You.” They also wrote some tunes which are not-so-well-known but no less wonderful: “The Drifter,” “Someday Man,” “Trust.” Cherry Red and producer Steve Stanley on September 27 will give The Holy Mackerel the deluxe Now Sounds treatment with an expanded reissue, appending a whopping 10 bonus tracks to the original 12-track LP, including 9 songs new to CD and 5 previously unissued in any form. Click on the jump for more background on The Holy Mackerel, one of this author’s favorite lost LPs of the era, and the full track listing for the Now Sounds reissue with pre-order link! 

The Holy Mackerel originally consisted of Paul Williams, brother Mentor Williams (who would go on to write Dobie Gray’s much-covered smash “Drift Away”), Bob Harvey (late of Jefferson Airplane), guitarist George Hiller, flautist/vocalist Cynthia Fitzpatrick and Don Murray, formerly of the Turtles. Perhaps not boding well for the album, the lineup changed before the LP was ever released. Harvey was replaced by a name soon to be familiar to Elvis Presley’s fans, bassist Jerry Scheff; Don Murray was replaced by Michael Cannon. In the liner notes to Collector’s Choice’s 2005 CD reissue (CCM-543-2), Steve Stanley indicates that Buffalo Springfield’s Dewey Martin also contributed drums to the Mackerel’s LP; the Springfield influence was clear on country-flecked tracks like “The Somewhere In Arizona at 4:30 A.M. Restaurant Song (And Now I Am Alone).” The album’s eclectic nature may have hurt its initial reception, but it’s filled with the sounds of young artists at their hungriest and most imaginative. 

Despite the album’s commercial failure and the band’s dissolution, its reputation remained strong over the years. Lead singer and songwriter Paul Williams went on to create his underrated solo debut Someday Man, wholly written by the Nichols/Williams team and produced by Nichols, and then to even greater fame. Andrew Sandoval revisited two of the LP’s tracks, “Scorpio Red” and “Wildflowers,” for Come to the Sunshine: Soft Pop Nuggets from the WEA Vaults (Rhino Handmade RHM2 7818) and Hallucinations: Psychedelic Pop Nuggets from the WEA Vaults (Rhino Handmade RHM2 7821), respectively. Steve Stanley has more than done his part in keeping the Williams/Nichols partnership in the spotlight, spearheading Collector’s Choice’s reissues of The Holy Mackerel and Someday Man, and via Rev-Ola and Now Sounds, reissuing the complete output of Roger Nichols and the Small Circle of Friends as well. (If you’re still reading this far and don’t have both Roger Nichols albums, along with Someday Man, stop now and order immediately! You won’t regret it.) 

Now Sounds’ edition boasts non-LP single tracks “Love for Everyone” and “To Put Up With You,” one of the most delicious put-down songs ever, with Williams’ pointed lyrics directed at a heartbreaking if attractive lady: “Yes, I’d like to hang around/But I’ll have to let you down/I just haven’t got what it takes/To put up with you…” set to a breezy Nichols melody. “Scorpio Red” and “The Lady is Waiting” are heard in their mono 45 versions, joined by session outtakes and demos, including a demo of “Bitter Honey,” memorably covered by Jackie DeShannon on her Laurel Canyon LP. ….by Joe Marchese …..~


Musicians 
*Paul Williams - Vocals 
*Cynthia Fitzpatrick - Flute, Vocals 
*Alvin Dinkin - Viola 
*Jesse Ehrlich - Cello 
*David Frisina - Violin 
*Jim Gordon - Drums 
*Allan Harshman - Viola 
*Bob Harvey - Bass 
*George Hiller - Banjo, Dobro, Guitar, Harmonica, Organ, Vocals 
*Nathan Kaproff - Violin 
*Raymond Kelley - Cello 
*Raphael Kramer - Cello 
*Steve Lefever - Bass 
*Marvin Limonick - Violin 
*Charles Loper - Trombone 
*John Lowe - Flute 
*Lewis McCreary - Trombone 
*Oliver Mitchell - Trumpet 
*Alexander Murray - Violin 
*Don Murray - Drums 
*Richard Nash - Trombone 
*Erno Neufeld - Violin 
*Roger Nichols - Piano 
*Michael Rubini - Harpsichord 
*Jerry Scheff - Bass 
*Thomas Scott - Flute 
*Frederick Seykora - Cello 
*Clifford Shank - Flute 
*Kenny Shroyer - Trombone 
*Anthony Terran - Trumpet 
*Dave Timberley - Project Assistant 
*Ray Triscari - Trumpet 
*Mentor Williams - Rhythm Guitar , Vocals 
*John Audino - Trumpet 
*Michael Barone - Trombone 
*Larry Bunker - Tympani 
*Michael Cannon - Drums, Percussion, Vocals 
*Jules Chaikin - Trumpet 
*William Collette - Flute 
*Vincent DeRosa - French Horn


Tracklist 
The Secret Of Pleasure 3:35 
Scorpio Red 3:26 
The Lady Is Waiting 2:05 
Wildflowers 3:58 
The Somewhere In Arizona At 4:30 A.M. Restaurant Song (And Now I Am Alone) 2:25 
Prinderella 2:44 
Bitter Honey 2:22 
Nothin’ Short Of Misery 2:35 
The Golden Ghost Of Love 2:42 
The Wild Side Of Life 2:52 
10,000 Men 3:42 
1984 4:27