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Showing posts with label music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label music. Show all posts

Saturday, 28 December 2013

eops 2013LIST

eops Top Ten of 2013 

2013 was a vintage year for music full of unexpected returns and the inevitable shock of the new. I rather enjoyed the balance of new and old in this years list, feels like a rounded presentation but of course that is up to you - read on, dear reader, read on.

First things first - there were a lot of great records that didn't quite make the list this year, so it only seems fair to give some of the best of them a quick #HaikuReview ...





"Pirate radio,
Mix tapes, break-beats, warehouse raves.
That was our culture."


"Feel a little down?
Don't put this on for fucks sake!
*Sad face forever*"

"Blame it on sunshine?
I blame it on the Moogy.
Downbeat abstraction."

"The rebel is back,
Celebration of jungle!
Jah! Rasta-Far-I!"

"Major energy!
This is ridiculous fun,
Not for the poe-faced."

So much for the also rans, here are my favourite ten releases of the year:


10. My Bloody Valentine - MBV


Finding a new My Bloody Valentine album was a bit like running into an old friend in the street. "Yeah so ... you remember mad Kevin? With the band and the fringe? Saw him earlier - looks great! Still sounds a bit mad; mumbling and droning on - but he is proper lovely is Kev".  20 years on and My Bloody Valentine haven't changed a bit, they are still the too cool for school indie band they always were. The only real difference is that they are truly 'Indie' now. So much so that the Mercury Prize disqualified them from their award for not having a digital distribution deal with iTunes or Amazon, because that's what matters right? They wouldn't have won in any case. 'MBV' is a sugar coated beef jerky of an album that could easily make the list but would always prove too sinewy for the soft palette of the 'Barclaycard Mercury Prize'. Those who appreciate the controlled dissonance of old will be blissfully rewarded but the casual Barclaycard user, looking for drive-time fulfilment will probably never get it. Thats OK - My Bloody Valentine aren't exactly headline hungry 'slebs' looking for endorsement, I expect Kevin Shields and company will happily dissolve into obscurity knowing they have left us richer for the slight return.








9. Kurt Vile - Walking on a pretty daze

Kurt Vile comes across as a very laid back kind of guy. He has a very chilled agenda; he likes walking, has long hair, writes ten minute pop songs and has that lovely American drawl about his diction. He sounds like a stoner but professes that he never touches the stuff, which is good because if he got any more laid back he would be horizontal. Maybe it was this slacker attitude that kept him off the radar for so long but now I've wallowed in 'Walking on a pretty daze' I feel like raiding the big fridge of Americana and chowing down on those cheese flavoured 'Goldtones'. This is an album for those mornings when you just want to enjoy the ride, not get too caught up in life and drift through the malaise.





8. Fuck Buttons - Slow Focus


A band so obtuse that their very name cannot be mentioned on radio. Their sonic smithery constructs a monster truck of noise riveted together with steely beats and teflon coated with a glaze of critic proof progressive rock styling. Theirs is not the hipster-induced minimalism that strangled all the fun out of club culture over the last few years, they work on a grand scale. Danny Boyle thought them sufficiently grand to feature in the greatest show on earth and 'Olympians' became the Shazam moment of London 2012 for many stupefied sports fans. It's all rather wonderful that this led them into the mainstream and indeed gifted them the number one album they richly deserve. Slow Focus is music that teeters on the edge of control; it drags the listener around like an illegal dog breed on a long leash - all you can do is to hold on and hope it doesn't catch whatever it is that it's chasing. 



 

7. Charles Bradley - Victim of love


At this time of year we are encouraged to believe in all kinds of unlikely miracles but few can match the tear-jerking story behind Charles Bradley. Blessed with a rasping soul voice matured through years of hardship and grinding poverty, Bradley made ends meet as a James Brown impersonator. The likelihood of finding your own voice professionally in your mid 60s are very slim but a chance meeting with the Daptone label boss ushered in a minor Christmas miracle. Daptone are a 'retro' label but that's not to say they aren't pushing things forward in their own way. Like Amy Winehouse's 'Back to black' they use the familiar touchstones of classic soul but do so with a modern sensibility - forward looking lyrics and precision audio engineering. It's a throwback to quality rather than an attempt at retro kitsch. I mean ... Imagine finding out James Brown was back from the dead and ripping up trees again? Imagine no more, the understudy is stepping up and putting every ounce of his soul into these recordings. I cant stop listening to it.






6. Snow Ghosts - A small murmuration


Snow Ghosts are an anomaly in the genre obsessed world of 'dance music' (if indeed that is the world in which they belong). This is some seriously moody music. The sultry vocals sing of lost love, crows,  hangmen and the sort of unhealthy fascination with death usually associated with black metal. Fittingly, it's the darkness of dub-step that underpins every line, which, in the capable hands of Ross Tones (Throwing Snow) has a striking precision and musicality to it. In the summer I had the pleasure of seeing Snow Ghosts play live in a small gothic church; the perfect venue for their haunting sound. They appeared resplendent with a string section and gave a spirited performance worthy of those hallowed walls - it was damn near perfect. Gong winning 'label of the year'; Houndstooth, deserve a lot of credit for supporting such a left field project with a set of uniquely disturbing videos and a beautifully presented physical release that adds a Cthulhu like quality to the artefact. Despite the Fabric connection, Houndstooth have allowed their vision to flourish unsullied. It's a million miles away from the dance floor but remains squarely on target for all the label stands for: innovation and risk taking. 






5. King Krule - 6 feet beneath the moon


Sink estates, stale cigarettes and the endless grind of day-to-day survival in the capital provide the subject matter of King Krule. Gruff disappointment is evidenced in every line by a keen eye for the most mundane details of modern life. The delivery is equally rough edged and it's a voice that sounds wise well beyond it's years. The slight frame of the ginger haired Archie Marshall looks incapable of producing a sound so powerful - but it is definitely him. At just 19 years old, his competence as a songwriter suggests the birth certificate may have been dabbed at with Tipp-ex. The secret may lie in his schooling, he is 'a product' of the 'Brit School for Performing Arts' that brought us Amy and Adele; he has definitely honed his skills. Whatever you think of hot housing talent like this, you would have to admit that they did a marvellous job of not ironing out his personality. 6 feet from the moon contains poignant songs, barbed with melancholy and truth - the promise of another 20 years of development is tantalising.






4. Grumbling Fur - Glynnaestra


Music journalism is a dying art - gone are the days of 4-5 weekly publications vying for space on the shelves of WHSmith. Instead we now have 4-5 million bloggers (myself included) throwing opinions at the internet like so many monkeys having a dirty protest. Very little sticks to these virtual walls but there is hope for those of us looking for something a little off the beaten track. The Quietus run a distinctly uncommercial website where personal taste is celebrated and catch all genres are treated with the distain they deserve. So left field are they that when I initially saw their review of a band called 'Grumbling Fur' I presumed it was an in-joke for hipsters - far from it. Daniel O'Sullivan and Alexander Tucker have been making experimental music in a variety of guises for some time but the stars have truly aligned with the release of 'Glynnaestra' their 3rd album as Grumbling Fur. It offers a series of intriguing soundscapes and futuristic folk songs that defy categorisation. This album is best approached with no preconceptions but if you need something to get a foothold on then I recommend the lyrical repurposing of the Bladerunner script on the glorious 'Ballad of Roy Batty', it's a peerless reinvention that manages to sound as if it's always been there - much like the rest of the album.






3. Savages - Silence yourself


OK, lets get this out of the way as quickly as we can; the lead singer does sound a bit like Siouxsie Sioux - get over it! Theres only so much DNA in the world. They do share a female perspective and post punk sensibilities but the Savages have their own manifesto and sound. In the age of 'Indie-Landfill' it's been a long time since I heard a band sound this angry and articulate. Silence Yourself is a maze of sexual politics and cultural criticism. The music acts as the angry mob agitating for change, smashing windows and glass ceilings alike. The album itself is skilfully recorded, turn it up and you are right there with them - from the spoken word intro of 'Shut up' to the rodeo thrash of 'Hit me' Savages stampede across your stereo only to leave you considering the wonderfully detached lament of 'Marshall Dear'. Live they make even more sense, I expect a lot more to come as Savages continue their mission to make this clamorous society shut up and listen for a second.






2. Factory Floor - Factory Floor


From the outside, the synthetic ramblings of Factory Floor might seem mechanical, devoid of humanity even. I think that is just what comes from being so devoted to an idealised sound. They make no concessions and ask no favours. In an age when Ministry of Sound compilations regurgitate dance culture over supermarket shelves and America embraces EDMs garish post Ibiza trance-step honkery, Factory Floor bring a much needed punk attitude back to the dancefloor. This is warehouse music. It may sound empty to those raised on a high calorie diet of Tiesto and Guetta but stick it on a sound system and it will rattle your teeth out just as effectively. Less really CAN mean more. If Skynet made techno instead of Terminators, they would sound something like this. However that suggests that this sort of music is simply generated but there is, buried deep inside of it - a very human heart. The truth is synthesizers don't program themselves, it takes a very precise and disciplined imagination to create such rigurously structured music and still imbue it with life. Factory Floor strip everything back to basics and in doing so remind me why techno is still a vital and deeply primal sound.






1. David Bowie - The Next Day


Hello old friend, I started to worry you would never return. As a disclaimer I had better admit that I have always loved 'The Dame'. I've bought every album, (often more through hope than expectation). That said I am under no illusions - I may have bought them all, but that's not to say I've liked them all. Bowie fans accept the odd stinker because what we love most about Bowie is that we never know where he is going to take us next, so rest assured this isn't just a blinkered fanboy salutation. I was more than ready for crushing disappointment after a decade of silence ... in fact I was half expecting it. Well, I say I was expecting it but the jaw dropping thing was that *nobody* was expecting it - it just dropped like a star-man's meteor onto a velvet cushion. 'Where are we now?' was such a low-key first single that it wrong footed almost everyone. Some critics jumped to the conclusion that his rocking days were over, his voice had gone and by returning to Berlin he had possibly run out of ideas - oh boy did they get a crinkly mouth. Everything about it confounded expectation, the stripped back nature of the band, the jarringly simplistic cover, the total lack of promotion, the suite of excellent videos showcasing some of the best new artists and film makers alongside a stellar cast of cameos, but the real boon was in the songwriting. Tunes that burrow deep into the subconscious and lyrics that reveal layer after layer of surprisingly contemporary subtext. All of this set against a summer in which the 'David Bowie is ...' exhibition sold out the V&A all summer long. The Thin White Duke is back, all hail The Dame! Now David - lets have a tour and make 2014 a very happy new year indeed.






Gig of the year:

Loop - ATP End of an Era
The returning kings of noise destroyed All Tomorrows Parties last UK hurrah at Camber Sands and reminded all present of their searing psychedelic majesty.

Reissue of the year:

Aretha Franklin - I never loved a man like I love you
Repressed on 180 gram heavyweight vinyl and remastered with due care and attention this album captures all that is good about soul music and the vinyl format.

Compilation of the year:

V/A Trevor Jackson presents Metal Dance 2 
A celebration of EBM, Industrial and Post Punk Electronica, this left field compilation marks a period of invention often overlooked by clubland historians.

One to watch:

East India Youth 
Looking something like a dapper young Doctor Who, East India Youth writes mesmeric pop songs that beam in and out of existence like the TARDIS being bump started on a cold day. It's hard to put your finger on why this music resonates so much but all the signs are good with critical support from the likes of The Guardian's Alexis Petridis and The (aforementioned) Quietus. William Doyle (for he is the East India Youth), is now signed to Stolen Recordings and has a publishing deal with 4AD (the legendary indie label that brought us the Cocteau Twins and Bauhaus amongst many others). An album is expected in January and I have high hopes for the youth.





Any other business?

Look, if I've paid £20 for a gig ticket the least you can do is shut the fuck up when the headliners are on. I've done a bit of research and I reckon that the optimum price of a gig is about £8. Any less and people chat all over it because they haven't invested in the experience. Any more and they just don't give a fuck. In fact the worst gigs of all are the really sodding expensive ones full of day trippers who have no idea who they're going to see. I paid £70 (seven - zero), to see Kraftwerk at the Tate Modern only to have to listen to some woman asking pertinent questions all the way through such as: 'Oh was that the sound of a real car?' ... "Was that a Eurostar train?" ... "Sounds just like a bike now eh?" ... "Is Space Lab real?" and on and fucking on like a toddler at the zoo. As the Savages say - 'Silence yourself', or I will.

Ridiculous hype of the year

There is only one candidate for this award - Daft Punk. Much as I love Nile Rogers and reluctantly accept that 'Get Lucky' is a catchy bit of disco by numbers, I was utterly appalled by the hype-driven, cash in the envelope, 10/10 reviews this record received. A score of 10/10 suggests the record is *PERFECT*, that it deserves a place amongst the all-time greats and crucially that it pushes the genre forward. 'Random Access Memories' has none of these traits. How anyone can label this pompous pile of over produced 70s revivalism as the 'future of dance music' is simply beyond me. There is nothing new on this record. It's a 6/10 on a good day but the industry loves a big commercial hit and regrettably far too many erstwhile 'trusted reviewers' decided that sucking on corporate cock was more important than actually giving an honest appraisal in context. *Oh no's - now you has the sad face*? I know, I know ... you like it! It's fun! The robot voices are SO COOL! Well that's as may be but its certainly not a 'great' LP worthy of a perfect score, really, it just isn't. File it alongside all the other 'Ministry of Sound' compilations you buy to prove you are still 'down with the kids'. Then take a long hard look at yourself. In the interests of fairness I shall offer another #HaikuReview - 17 more syllables than it deserves really.


Daft Punk - Random access memories
"Coffee table dance,
Self indulgent retro kitsch,
Overrated? Meh ..."

No. YOU shut up.


I feel much better for getting that off my chest - go buy; Gold Panda, Faulty DL, Zed Bias or any number of far more impressive dance LPs released this year. 


Thank you for reading, please buy your music - and if you can, re-employ your record player (or buy a new one), and enjoy the feeling of music on a physical format again. 


Feedback/abuse welcome,


eops


Tuesday, 31 January 2012

eops Pick 'n' Mix for 2012

Having spent the last post reviewing the best of the year in 20/20 hindsight I thought I had better put my money where my mouth is and ‘pick & mix’ 3 acts I reckon will make big waves in the coming year. This cannot end well.

TIP 1. ROOF LIGHT


Roof Light - Palm

I have never been short of ideas musically, just low on actual skill. I used to stand behind my ‘studio bitch’ and ride their knowledge like a pony. Life seemed pretty easy in those days but that all changed when I moved to London and I found myself flying solo. 

I set about earning my production stripes by trawling the sarcastic but invaluable vault of production treasure that is 'Dubstep Forum'. Quite early on I had a demo which (unsurprisingly) absolutely no-one was interested in listening to. I was poised to give up when a curiously named producer took the time to give me a few pointers, his name? Roof Light.

In return I followed the 'Roof Light Soundcloud' page. Immediately it was obvious that I had flukily stumbled on to a mercurial talent. The music on this page came in flurries, sometimes dozens of tracks would disappear overnight only to be replaced with an entirely new selection the following day. 

It was hard to put my finger on what exactly made Roof Light stand out but there seemed to be an unconscious musical thread stringing everything together from the most skittish Garage cuts to the deepest, gloomiest ambient soundscapes (such as the glorious but short-lived posting seemingly created as a requiem for Amy Winehouse). I felt this was an artist steeped in musical history - a feeling validated later by his DJ mixes such as this glorious double helping of sunny Psychedelia posted recently.




I became a bit of a fanboy if Im honest, I felt like I’d found gold in the Soundcloud hills. 
Thankfully Roof Light’s profile began to snowball, releases on ‘Styrax’, support from the likes of Laurent Garnier and eventually a management deal with ‘Westbury Music’ has made him stable mates with the likes of Four Hero, Goldie and Actress his star is definitely on the rise. 

Roof Light make such a wide range of music its hard to know what to expect next but I know I’ll be listening. Mark my words one day there will be an album and it will be impossible to ignore.




TIP 2. SNOW GHOSTS/THROWING SNOW

My second tip for 2012 is Ross Tones an artist who has already started ripping up trees under the name Throwing Snow. I had tipped Throwing Snow as my wildcard for 2011 in my end of year blog in 2010 and he has steadily delivered the goods with a series of impressive 12” releases. 

I cant claim any sort of finders fee however, I stumbled across Mr. Tones via a chance follow on Twitter. He posted a Tweet saying something about ‘fulfilling a childhood dream’ and I couldn’t help but ask what that dream was. As it happened his dream had been to release a 12” vinyl record and I could definitely identify with that. I popped into 'Phonica' one lunchtime and was utterly blown away by the tune. 


Throwing Snow - Un vingt

‘Un Vingt’ was lumped into the Dubstep rack but this was no honking Bro-Step by numbers. Instead it offered a clean musical palette that sparkled with a feeling of improvisation so often missing from electronic music. Over the coming year a string of unique releases built up and when he wasn’t at the controls himself he was running the remarkable ‘left_blank’ imprint which took Dubstep into the uncharted waters of sparse, minimal percussion.

Warm up slots at the Phonica parties gave way to festival appearances in Ireland and finally a slot at the influential The Boiler Room web site. Throwing Snow had arrived like a well placed snowball on the face of 2011 and it seemed perfectly possible that Mr.Tones could just keep churning out the 12”s but that would be to underestimate the musician.

It seemed that there was another string to the Throwing Snow bow and that turned out to be the side project ‘Snow Ghosts’ on the Black Acre label. The project included a smokey voiced female singer and the sort of musical ambition that can produce ‘real songs’ the holy grail of the dance scene. 

Snow Ghosts - Lost at sea

The icy, gothic cool engendered by the first Snow Ghosts release ‘Lost at sea’ is the main reason why Ross Tones gets the nod again this year. Whilst I am still gagging for a full Throwing Snow album it seems this year is earmarked for the Snow Ghosts project and a debut LP is imminent. In a landscape blessed with the likes of Salem and SBTRKT I have a feeling Snow Ghosts will make a big noise in 2012.

TIP 3. ADDISON GROOVE (Juke & UK Bass)

Whilst both Roof Light and Snow Ghosts often revel in austere emotional journeys my final choice does exactly the opposite. Addison Groove is all about the dancing, its brash, bassy and built to rock a sound system. 


Addison Groove - Footcrab

In the 90’s I was resident at the Source in Oxford where I enjoyed a period of musical freedom that is hard to find in modern clubland. Whilst the drum and bass heavyweights threatened the buildings structural integrity upstairs I got a chance to play ‘freestyle’ in the cellar. I was always looking for an upbeat feeling and a friend turned me on to Dance Mania and DJ Funk in particular. It was block rocking party music steeped in lyrical idiocy and trouser flapping bass that seemed to mix right in. 

Its a fine line to walk when you start playing booty tracks, these are objectionable records whose casual misogyny is difficult to defend but the music is often so hype that it charms the listener like a hyperactive child swearing for a laugh. Sometimes it would be the high point of the night and sometimes people would quite justifiably take offense. 


DJ Funk - Pussyride (Parental discretion iz advised)

In many ways Juke is the natural successor to the X-rated house of Dance Mania et al. If you are going to get your head around the music then its important to see the lineage from traditional Chicago House through Booty Bass and Ghetto House. In the end these siblings share a musical heritage rooted in the grim reality of urban America, there is a deep seated truth to these uncompromising styles and *that* is what makes them so influential.


Juke & Footwork - Like 'The Black' Riverdance ... or something.

“Bangs n Works” on Planet Mu Records is a crash course in unrefined Juke. Incessant barking samples, ludicrous speed and brutal drum machines that ‘go in dry’ all combine to give a unique but slightly unpleasant sensation. Dubstep (in its fashion), started out with equally uncompromising militancy. By the time labels like ‘Planet Mu’ got the chance to go out to the states and see the Juke scene first hand the internet had already started to cross pollinate the two bass heavy styles. The UK needed its own treatment of the sound and a number of labels such as ‘Planet Mu’, ‘Swamp 81’ and ‘3024’ began to warp Juke to fit the UK palette, slowing it down and reducing the Tourette’s style sample abuse. 

Over the last year or two there has been a slow but steady groundswell of appreciation for this sound. 2012 will see this ungainly bird spread its wings and fly I reckon. Don’t get me wrong, I cant see anything in the way of a crossover hit coming soon, thats really not how it (bangs &) works. This UK-centric take on Juke will prove its success in a subtler fashion by changing the way house, electro and bass are used in a modern production. Already we see the likes of Pearson Sound (nee Ramadan Man) genetically modifying house in the UK with triplet swing and booming backbeats.


Pearson Sound Vs Hardrive - Deep Inside (UK Bass)

The new Addison Groove LP is imminent and I expect it to have a huge influence on the music makers in 2012, and by proxy the clubbers in 2013 ... some time in 2014 you might start to hear the reverberations in less niche music too. After all we have seen Dubstep wobble the likes of Britainy Spears, Cher Lloyd and even the humble 'Weet-A-Bix' advert. 

So do yourself a favour and get ahead of the curve ... its really only house music.


FOOTCRAB! FOOTCRAB! FOOTCRAB! FOOTCRAB! FOOTCRAB! FOOTCRAB! etc ...


CURIOUS? 
Try my latest mix featuring Addison Groove & Throwing Snow:





Enjoy,
eops













Thursday, 3 March 2011

Never trust a cliché…


A sound bite can mean a lot in politics but it can be utterly devastating in music.

A simple barbed couplet can sink an entire genre if it’s pointed enough.

I remember the first time that I watched “The Great Rock ‘n Roll Swindle” and that stickiest of all music critiques was spat out into my living room:

“Never trust a Hippy”

Now it’s a phrase that even Mr. Lydon has grown tired of explaining but it’s a perfect example of the power of words.  

That phrase annihilated all before it in the Post-Punk years. Suddenly the counter culture establishment looked naïve and faintly embarrassing.

Of course the irony is that whatever Punk claimed to have knocked down had already been pummeled on the ropes for a decade by the (now bloated), heavyweight champs of Psychedelia.

Hindsight allows us to see that the Punks were every bit as untrustworthy as their predecessors.

That derisory phrase labeled every long hair gutless, but in 20/20 hindsight? I'm not so sure. I would venture that it took a lot more chutzpah to wear a Kaftan at a peace rally in Lubbock Texas than it ever did to sport a Mohican on the commute into the 100 Club.




However the nuclear strength sound bite “Never trust a Hippy” meant that for years many of us actively ignored all but the headline acts of the 1960’s.

Personally, I thank my lucky stars for my days in the record shop, where I was exposed to a treasure trove of Psychedelia by a few ageing Hippies that I grew to trust.

I have an eclectic palette thanks to that shop and of all the genres I enjoy I think my favourite has to be 60’s Psychedelia.

You see Psychedelia is the only form of music that is defined solely by its ideas.

Think about it… every other form of music is defined by a musical mechanic, a sound or an accident of Geography.

Blues has its 12 bars, Reggae its offbeat, Jazz its compulsory improvisation and so on. You could argue that Post Punk offers an equally random platter but that label was predominantly a retrospective net, which caught many smaller fish that really had no idea how they came to be there.

Psychedelia was different – it was the zeitgeist that everyone knew about and yet there was no specific instrumentation, no musical mechanic and no geographical boundary to define it.

The only common denominator in Psychedelic music of the period was the imperative that the music should ‘blow your mind’.




Everyone knew they had to ‘go Psychedelic’ but very few people really had any clue as to what that really meant. It wasn’t just about the drugs (in all honesty only a few people had full access to such things), but the culture, the arts and the fashion.

As a result of this an amazing thing happened. Faced with being labeled uncool everyone felt compelled to ‘do their thing’.

This might not seem so revolutionary in the information age but the social norms of the time were infinitely more constricted then they are today and finding like-minded people was a geographical challenge. It’s a recurring theme of this blog that the dissemination of information via the Internet is the biggest change to music and culture that those of you under 20 will never really need to be aware of.

Back then you had to ring someone, to ring someone, to ring someone to get them to ring someone you wanted to ring in the states. Five minutes of communication could take hours to set up so when The Beatles sang “All you need is love” via the world’s first live satellite link up you saw the vaguest of ideas carry further and faster than any other idea in history.

Everybody had to have a take on this counter culture from Newcastle to New York. 

Can you dig it?

GO CRAZY!


JAM THAT SHIT OUT!


DO YOUR THING! ER... maybe?


OK… so inevitably it did also lead to a lot of shit being produced but the mantra of experimentation did make a difference. It released more ‘cats’ from their colloquial bags than Julian Assange on free broadband.


And don’t believe the hype, it wasn’t all peace and flowers – some of these cats were angry.





The fact was that you could be just as ‘Psychedelic’ as a solo singer songwriter as you could be with an army of freaks running rampage in the studio.

The legacy wasn’t just political daydreaming, badly dressed flunkies and the admitted self-indulgence the era encouraged. I contend that no other genre has ever been so inclusive; all you needed was your imagination.

I’m not saying the whole thing didn’t eventually spiral out of control (as every movement does), but for a time the grass really was greener.

Personally I was down with the peace and love thing too.



THE SEVEN GIFTS OF PSYCHEDELIA

Take off that uniform!
When The Beatles first showed up in their ‘Monkee’ suits it was their audacity to grow their hair that set the world aghast. By the time they split up even the Bank Manager was wearing flares. This outlandish fashion paved the way for Glam and in some cases naked people.

Take your time man!
Singles used to be utterly formulaic in their size. The tyranny of the 3 minute single was deposed when Brian Wilson produced the magnificent Beach Boys single ‘Good Vibrations’. At 6 minutes it was the longest number one single ever and I defy anyone to shave even a second off it without detracting from the pocket symphony that Wilson dared to create. Im sure you have heard that so instead I'll offer this amazing album track from the original 'Smile' sessions wherein Brian Wilson left his mind for 30 years.



Make an album man, express yourself!
In keeping with the growing attention span of the audience record companies began to back the long-playing record as their format of choice. The exec’s liked the profit margins, the artists liked the room to express themselves and the punters were grateful to have enough time to roll a joint and have a cup of tea before they had to reload the record player.  30-45 minutes is still the optimum length of time for an album to last. Any less and it’s hard to make a rounded statement, any more and your attention starts to wander. How many modern albums have been watered down and ruined by the urge to fill the space on a CD?

Art matters! Make an object to savour!
The gatefold - the sleeve notes - the complimentary artwork ... let me explain:

Here is your iTunes 'Beatles Ltd Ed Box Set':
[              ]

Nice eh? Here's mine:


 I fucking WIN! #tigerblood


The studio as an instrument!
Bands used to be ushered in and out of the recording booth like cattle. As the 1960’s matured however the dark arts of studio production became an open secret. As an example The Beatles and George Martin recorded the album Please, Please Me (1963) in 9 hours and 45 minutes, Abbey Road (recorded in 1969) took 6 months to complete.

Festivals!
You would have no Glastonbury, Donnington, Knebworth... dare I say it? ‘The Wireless Festival’ - without the wildebeast hordes that colonized the plains of Woodstock and the Isle of White. Live music was never the same once the scale was ramped up, and while the mobile phone companies try to emulate these happenings they will never get it, ironically they are just not tuned in.

Political rebellion!
At last pop music started to develop more challenging content and started singing *about* something. Maybe sitting in a hotel room ‘growing your hair for peace’ was a little outlandish but there was a charm in much of the rebellion that cynics will never understand.



Peace,

@eops

My latest Psychedelic mix:



And for those of you who thought it all begins and ends with The Beatles... heres 5 classic British eye openers:

The Pretty Things – SF Sorrow



The Zombies – Odyssey and Oracle



Skip Bifferty – Skip Bifferty



July – July



Family – Music in a dolls house  


And finally heres my Psychedelic Triptic for the music lover with time on their hands:






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