do you know any other worth to discover reissue ?
Please e-mail me



GO TO NEXT REVIEW PAGE->
or go back to the psych folk index page
go to the general index page


Guerssen/Restless Rec.  Penny Davies & Roger Ilott : Restless (AUS,1983)****

Penny Davies is of English/Welsh origin but in 1966 she moved with her family to Australia, singing British folk material at that time. Australian born Roger Ilott played first folk/country with The Rusty Dusty Bros, played with The Southern Road Band, and since 1976 with Penny in The Oak Road String Band, beside he was demanded session guitarist. The last band emerged to a trio and then a duo. Penny and Roger married in 1980, and started to develop their playing together and building up a repertoire of what should be songs with an inspiration in Australia and Australian folk music. Not only because modern Australian folk has roots in English folk, but also thanks to Penny’s gifted voice developing inspiration often in some troubadour kind of style, the songs have easy rhythmic folk-like melodies destined to be remembered well, are in a typical English fashion and these also have a certain sad beauty because of this. The home studio recording, which was a recording session process, before they ever tried anything out live, with use of multi tracking in the vocal parts, accidentally, because of the close harmony work on them; often reveal something common or reminiscent of Mellow Candle, while certain other tracks, through Penny's voice colour qualities, and the music it's folk associations, sound something like a simplified folkrock version of Trees, as like expressed into a full-range-duo format. The guitar arrangements as well as the voice have a perfectly balanced feedback that creates a very warm atmosphere, in combination with a spacey-timeless effect on the vocals (again I refer here to Mellow Candle). Just here and there you can hear how Roger learned guitar from listening to the Byrds (besides Lovin’Spoonful and Buffalo Springfield), even bringing in, just here and there, that slightly eastern tinged “8 miles High” Byrds touch. Some of the harmony vocals differ a bit more, especially when sporadically Roger sings, it has slightly different vocal arrangements, sounding more like something going towards other folkpsych inspirations from late ‘60’s. One track, the cynical song “To Many Fish” should make people blush now, because at the times of inspiration or insight, of realization of some changes move into false directions, it seems that for our future, which is now, not enough is done about it, so that such a song like this was destined to become prophetic, because nowadays fish became rare and poisonous in Sydney bay.

The duo started their own label in 1982 and printed 500 copies of their studio album. They never thought about re-releasing their debut album, but collector’s interest and interest from Guerssen Records luckily made them decide to do so. And this truly is a wonderful album, which I can recommended especially to fans of Trees and Mellow Candle and the likes. Think about that this is mostly self-penned (and not traditional) material.

The extra additional material of five demo version songs gives an idea of the duo’s creative process, something which is still revealed in these more roughly recorded versions.

Audio : "down on the bay", "rebyrth", "silences of space"
Info on duo : http://www.palersproject.com/shadow/angler_ilott.htm
& http://www.mp3.com.au/artist.asp?id=6674
& http://users.tpg.com.au/folkrag/profiles/pen&rog.htm
& http://www.telusplanet.net/public/budda/aussongs/RESTLESS
Label info : http://www.guerssen.com/productes.html?prod=8046
Homepage Restless Music : http://www.home.gil.com.au/~restlessmusic/

Review of a more recent release : http://www.psychedelicfolk.com/folkrock.html#anchor_64
more Folk, Folkrock, Progfolk & Acid Folk reissues page 6 :

Penny Davis & Roger Ilott (AUS); Loudest Whisper (IR); Ougenweide -3x- (D); Silmaril, 11.59,
The Seventh Dawn (US); Jean Yves Tourbin, Dandelion (F); COB, Dr.Strangely Strange (UK)
Sunbeam Rec.  C.O.B. :
Moyshe McStiff and the Tartan Lancers Of the Secred Heart (UK,1972)****°

Clive Palmer was known from his work on the first Incredible String Band album, then went off travelling to Indian and Afghanistan. When he came back he joined Wizz Jones and formed the Famous Jug Band (review and some background in next review). Some time later as a trio, they started to squat an abandoned caravan for a while, and completely dedicated themselves to music, surviving on potatoes for months. During that time, John Bidwell changed a dulcimer and widened its bridge to form an instrument which they called a “dulcitar”, the instrument which is a bit sitar-like which you can hear on several tracks. Jo Lustig, their manager got them a contract, which resulted in two albums. “Spirit of Love” was focused on their live material, adding various studio ideas. The album didn’t sell but the band continued, and made a commercial single. They were asked to do a second album, on Polydor, and because the recording sessions were very short were even more focused on the direct live act. Also that album never sold well, but it became known with the ‘70s revival appreciation started by collectors firstly, and soon both C.O.B. albums got a legendary status amongst folk & acid/psychfolk music lovers. It had some bootleg reissues but it is incredible how it took over 30 years to get their first proper reissue. What annoys me is that now suddenly people write about it as if it’s hip. These magazines who write that now, never cared so much about music as they do for the hip factor, and just repeat what has been sown, but finally it deserved its harvest time. For some strange reasons, they repeat the saying it is middle eastern ! as if they never heard anything else outside the dense sort of British folk tradition.

For some reasons this music has all the honesty of a poor man’s voice having only music to live, and still it is so rich in ideas and arrangements at the same time. Clive Palmer’s voice is extremely melancholic in the most beautiful sense. The group created a unique mix and moment, built from the purest innocent dedication, and talent, with songs becoming like troubadour songs directly from and as food for the soul. It is fantastic to hear them in a remastered sound. The album is a MUST for each kind of folk collector with a heart for inspiration.

BUT this is not all. The recorded is completed with rehearsal recordings, a bit more simply arranged (banjo, violin, guitar,..), very charming. Also the single is included. The A-side with reggae rhythm ("Blue Morning"), even when it was their only commercial commitment wasn't really that bad. The "hippie" happy folk flavours make it almost like a rhythmic alternative as if going back in history from reggae to more free from boundaries inspirations.

Audio : "Eleven Willows","Oh Bright Eyed One", "Sheba's Return - Lion Of Judah", "Let It Be You", "Eleven Willows"
Label info : http://www.sunbeamrecords.com/cob.htm
& http://www.soundlinkmusic.com/catalog/index.php?act=viewCat&catId=7
Info on group : http://www.geocities.com/SunsetStrip/Underground/2507/c_o_b_.html
Japanese info on release : http://thrak.cafe24.com/html/cob_moyshe.htm
Review from second release : http://www.blastitude.com/2/pg4.htm

Clive Palmer's Banjoland (also 1969) is reviewed on next page, the latest Famous Jug Band on next page.
John Bidwell later formed with Wizz Jones Lazy Farmer. Review on next page.
Sunbeam Rec.Loudest whisper : The Children Of Lir (UK,1974;bonus:1973-1976)****°

The name does not refer to the movie from the same days, but referred to the taking of the whispery side of folk, and the loudest influence from late ‘60s style change direction to a harder edge stimulated by groups like Hendrix & Cream. The title of the album refers to the legend of Irish king Lir and his doomed children to live as swans. The story inspired to make it a musical, with its show and a musical concept. The album was produced by Leo O’Kelly from Tir Na Nog.

The music can be regarded as basically a folk-opera, but with a great style range. The album starts with a string quartet arrangement (with the band, partly electric) and has various other fine moments with it, very English in style. Elsewhere mostly acoustic guitars lead (with the orchestra) and soft lead vocals. Especially on “Septimus” and a few times elsewhere, John Sebastian here comes to mind. A children choir enriches many moments. Here often we can mention a certain Mama’s & Papas influence in the harmony vocals but it sounds a bit more like religious rock hippies singing or having arranged this, or with some “spiritual” feeling. Elsewhere the harmony vocals are a mixture of English and some American traditions. The “rock” influence more than once makes the style harder, and with stronger and more electric guitar passages on some tracks. The result of all this sounds great and highly original, and this could have become big in its time. But when UK Polydor wasn’t interested in promoting the album to an international market, the Irish based label didn’t add much more effort. According to the liner notes, additionally to this fact, a 20 minute track of “Perseus” was lost, and another track called “William B” was refused permission to quote from ‘the stolen child” from Yeats, so had to be rewritten before it became “false prophets”, the lead track for the debut single of the band. All these things made a difficult start for the album. Only 500 copies were pressed. It took until the nineties, when the album had already gained a legendary status, before Kissing Spell reissued the album, something which was taken over with another edition by Si-Wan in Korea. Kissing Spell also released a 1975 self-recorded live recording of the group with a different, female vocalist. Also in the ‘90s, another more traditional version of this album was self-released on Fiona Records, with the appearance of Donovan. A larger folk-opera version still lives on until today.

From the bonus tracks, "False Prophets" is in hard rock style ! "Wrong and Right" with female vocalist, also is in a more progressive rock style. One of the two demo tracks, in a similar style (recalling “Heart”,..), are also with the same vocalist. Last (over 10 minutes) bonus track is the soundtrack to the work's original TV broadcast of "Children of Lir". It is mixed with spoken word, and comes in sphere closer to groups like Bread, Love & Dreams and Shide & Acorn, Magna Carta,..). These tracks are another surprise, -and in very good quality,- to the already classical album. Another must from the already impressive Sunbeam catalogue.

Audio : "Children Of The Dawn", "Silent O’movle (Demo)"
Homepage : http://www.loudestwhisper.com/
Info : http://www.soundlinkmusic.com/catalog/sunbeam/loudest-whisper-children-of-lir/prod_31.html
Intro : http://www.irishbandslive.co.uk/celticworks/whisper/whisper.htm
First reissue : http://www.kissingspell.com/main/KissCat/Cat4/LouWhi
with cover : http://ec1.images-amazon.com/images/P/B0000645GI.01._SS500_SCLZZZZZZZ_.jpg
Label : http://www.sunbeamrecords.com
Previously descriptions : http://psychedelicfolk.homestead.com/KISSINGSPELL.html

Other albums still on CD/LP :  Maiden Of Sorrow (1975), Loudest Whisper II ('80s) on Kissing Spell Records.
Locust MusicSilmaril : The Voyage Of Icarus (US,1973-1974)****°

I have heard many Christian (hippie) albums but nothing as rewarding as Silmaril’s work. The liner notes say about this Milwaukee band : “These sons and daughters of the Midwest were creating an Eden of their own; a place where their medieval raiment, Tolkien infatuations, and catholic fealty could comfortably co-exist. Silmaril took cues from the mystic-leaning, collective spirit of British psychedelic folk. Although a true working unit, the band’s incontrovertible leader was Matthew Peregrine…(born Jim Boulet)”. The initial music inspiration comes from elements enjoyed from records by the like of The Incredible String Band. They first started as a trio called Dark Star (named after Grateful Dead’s song) with William Pint and vocalist Mary Ann Filo, with simple improvisations performed in churches and coffee houses. When Sharon Clarke replaced Filo the group renamed themselves Silmaril (referring to Tolkien’s power stones). Mike Krukowski joined in too. They had regular gigs using a few exotic sounding and looking instruments like the sitar, a light-flashing synthesizer, a moon guitar, various kazoos, a pump organ as well as various flutes, banjo and guitars. In 1973 they released 300 copies of their only LP “Given Time or the Several Roads” on their private label, called Ettinmore, to sell at gigs. One of the persons they worked with in the studio and live was Jim Spencer (known for his LP ‘Second Look’ and his band ‘Major Arcana’, reviewed on next page). With Jim Spencer they recorded together, a children’s music LP called “The most beautiful song in the forest”. Silmaril also recorded a second LP called “No Mirrored Temple” with traditional and original material but it was never released, just like much more studio material, but the original recordings from this album and more is featured on this compilation, making a very complete inner and musical process with all aspects that musically worked perfectly. This second album embraced much more Christian Pentecostalism, a controversial movement with some variations, referring to Matthew’s writings about the Holy Spirit and about the speaking in tongues, leading often to evoking more direct religious inspirations. It gives also a few variations on Biblical themes. In time the group took more and more a distance from the strict religious inspiration, until it dissolved in the late ‘70s. The marriage ended with it, while Matthew this time no longer neglected his gay nature; he even started a gay cowboy band called Blue Wave, but unfortunately died of aids in the mid nineties at age 41.

Most songs are very beautiful pastoral contemplations, each with a story on its own, making 19 treasures, with beautiful male/female voice and lyrics, played by guitar and a few other instruments. In one or two tracks (like the opener) the female vocalist has flavours of trembling sounds in her voice, a quality that reminds me of the singer of another beauty, These Trails (Hawaii). Some songs could be troubadour songs, strong like love songs, while others are like a closed eyes meditation in song (like “Holy, Holy”) or inspired contemplations. “October Road/Sleeping Magnificat” is a delicate guitar instrumental. “Plymouth Bay” is the only track, with banjo’s or bouzoukis and guitars, that sounds a bit more like a folk traditional, with its own delicacy. “Velvet And Gold The Dancer” and perhaps also “Babylon” sounds darker, and louder, more bewitched by its inner spell. Track 18, “Revelation 13:11:18” includes a reading with weird electronic sounds, before concluding with a last, more heavy song vision on apocalyptic days*. A fantastic compilation of songs, and a MUST for each acid/psych folk collector.

Audio : "Windbridge", "Vespers", "Poustinia", "Voyage of the Icarus", "Not Enough", "Lamb Of God" (WMFU),
"Living Stone" (WMFU), "Plymouth Bay" (link shows audio in flash)
& on http://www.rhino.com/...
Review with 3 audio tracks : http://www.boomkat.com/item.cfm?id=32496
Other reviews : http://www.dustedmagazine.com/reviews/3397
& http://meditations.jp/shop/detail.php?seq=2036&&kw=
Label info : http://www.locustmusic.com/...

Info pages on Pentecostalism : http://mb-soft.com/believe/txc/pentecos.htm
& http://www.rapidnet.com/~jbeard/bdm/Psychology/char/abrief.htm
& http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentecostal
& http://credo.stormloader.com/Doctrine/pentecon.htm
& http://religiousmovements.lib.virginia.edu/nrms/penta.html
Underground MastersJean Yves Tourbin : Gayan (F,rec.1980)***°

One of the rarest French acid folk song albums was released only in Danmark. It has delicate often double layered finger picking guitars, flute, some bongo (played like tabla), and occasional violin and beautiful harp, with beautiful serene or evocative, slightly protesting, contemplative songs. Jean Yves Tourbin introduces the album : “Today, humanity has reached its highest degree of ignorance on all levels, in all spheres, political, economical, social, religious, artistic, ..We are at the foot of the wall. What we are doing right now, is just a last mending before the wall is going to break down. In the very near future, we are going to experience the biggest revolution of all time, the end of an illusion. Let us be in harmony with ourselves and the universe, and our actions will be music.” The album listens like an expression of one big thought, in acoustic, often rhythmically-hypnotic music.

The album is listed as a maximum star rarity of stone acid folk/progressive psyche-folk in Philleas Folk collector 2005 listing French acid folk collectors.

Audio : "Une Lettre Pour Alpha Diallo" (or here), "La Revolution", "L'amococadis"
Bear Family RecordsOugenweide : Ougenweide / Al die weil ich mag (D,1973/1974,re.2006)****°
Bear Family RecordsOugenweide : Ohrenschmaus / Eulenspiegel (D,1976,re.2006)****°


reviews of these medieval folkrock items moved to
http://www.psychedelicfolk.com/germany.html

Guerssen RecordsDandelion (F,1979,re.2007)**°

This late ‘70s album has a great style fundament with some 60s garage and acid folky influences, a great melancholic mix which I have not heard with many groups, except for a few exceptional 60s tracks from here and there. Something likewise was started by Green On Red in the early ‘80s (with some of the same elements, but in a later style) : a psychedelic organ making almost psychedelic the melancholic sadness in the songs. Dandelion plays garage-like drums, slow psych electric guitar, both played rather primitively and inspired from the beauty of the songs. The guitars (pedal-electric and acoustic) are mixed a bit amateur-like, a bit too much to the fore ; all in all this creates a very charming effect, while the vocals are mixed more to the background, confirming in this mix very well the beautiful sadness of the songs.  Just one, more acoustic track is sung, in Spanish, by a female vocalist. A recommended album.

The album was pressed originally as a 300 edition, on a small label called Le Kiosque D'Orphée, and is worth much now. The group did a limited second album in pop wave style in 1981 and quit as a band in 1983. Over the next ten years Jean Christophe Graf continued to work and make demos under the bands name.

Audio : "La Farfalla", "Winter Tale", "Sometimes"(or here), "Let It Know"
Info : http://www.guerssen.com/productes.html?prod=8219
More links will be added later
Hux Rec./Belle Antique Dr.Strangely Strange : Halcyon Days (UK,1969-1970,re.2007)**°°

I also would like to mention this reissue. The booklet alone is worth check out. It tells the story of Dr.Strangely Strange, a group who was heavily influenced by The Incredible String Band. I found it sad that their first album was only once reissued properly on LP. The CD reissue had some flaws and changed the cover a little. This first album was pretty close to ISB. The second album was equally interesting, had more church-like organ, and had something of a religious feeling, just for fun I guess. If I remember well, the third, unreleased album reissued later was much more simple music. But this album with rare well recorded studio tracks contains many tracks that still date from their "magic" period. 2 new but fitting tracks are also added looking back to those days. The singers voices just sound a bit older now.

Audio : http://www.myspace.com/drstrangelystrange
Release info : http://www.huxrecords.com/cdsales92.htm
& http://eil.com/shop/moreinfo.asp?catalogid=410038
Group info : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dr._Strangely_Strange
& http://www.timgoulding.com/music/dr_strangely_strange.shtml
& http://www.artistdirect.com/nad/music/artist/bio/0,,424073,00.html#bio
& http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:09fuxqy5ld6e

& http://www.acerecords.co.uk/content.php?page_id=59&release=1478
Other review : http://www.ireland.com/theticket/articles/2007/0713/1184196303737.html
Fatcat Rec. Vashti Bunyan : Some Things Hust Stick In Your Mind (UK,1964-1966,pub.2007)***°


review moved to
http://singersong.homestead.com/reissue4.html#anchor_167

Riverman Music / The Seventh Dawn : Sunrise + 4 (US,rec.1970-1976,re.2007)***°
distr.: Bella Terra Rec.

The Seventh Dawn is nothing like any other American albums I know of, but has much more something comparable to the British folk-psych scene (Trader Horne, Ithaca/Agincourt,..). The reason for this style is that all 4 members of Seventh Dawn had written these songs when they were between 11 and 17. Ann & Heff were taking classes in electronic music, which gave them access to the labs with two synthesizers, two stereo records and one four track recorder. This protected opportunity was unspoiled by any style-pushed fashions, and had a comparable sweetness, innocence and almost pastoral purity to the best moments of the UK album of Sallyangie (with Mike Oldfield, also then only 15). The same reason why Ithaca was compared to Moody Blues (a reference which always is more symbolic, because MB never had that much of its own style-reference uniqueness in many songs), can be given here as a reference too. Just listen to the nice sweet-fuzzed guitars which flow softly like keyboards on “Such a lonely”. Another reference which is also relevant on one track, “Latecoming”. is Emtidi for its piano arrangements in combinations with the song. The female singer holds the middle of several possible references, like Vashti Bunyan (at times, like on “Sunrise”), and Trader Horn’s singer. Some people refer also to Trees’ singer Celia Humphries (which I understand, but that last comparison can be confusing). At first, the songs are sung by a female and then male vocalist, and are worked out well. Then more and more songs of Heff appear, sometimes a bit too sparsely arranged, and with tiny 60s psychpop flavours in its inspirations. It is wonderful that the album now is completed with these 4 extra surprisingly beautiful tracks, which have a welcome reappearance of the female singer, as exactly what the album needed to feel like a more perfectly finished musical concept.

PS. The album was 24-bit remastered by Jae-Soo Yi ; it is reissued in a limited edition on a mini-LP format. The original album was published as only 200 copies (Fantasy Worlds Unlimited) ; a re-edition of 275 copies was done by Project Aquarius in 1995.

Audio of all tracks : http://psychic.tistory.com/285
Homepage : http://www.heffmunson.com/ ;  Track listing on http://www.nasotec.co.kr/...
Info : http://lost-in-tyme.blogspot.com/2006/09/seventh-dawn-sunrise-1976-heres-some.html
Japanese info : http://www.thirdear.co.jp/ArtFile/AtAFmz.html#Anchor2000853
Other review of LP on http://www.lysergia.com/AcidArchives/lamaArchiveS.htm
Other description : http://clear-spot.nl/catalog/view.php?item_id=291582
World Psychedelia 11.59 : This is our Sacrifice of Praise (UK,1974,re.2007)**°

11.59 was a (holy-)7-piece Christian group of singers, guitarists, a percussionist and keyboard player. The influences of singing in church (kind of soft and airy harmony vocals) and trying to win other souls for baptism are clear influences but there’s more variety than that. The foundation of instrumentation mostly is a combination of various acoustic, often strummed, or a slide guitars with a bit of amplification, and electric bass guitar. Other arrangements are provided by flute, glockenspiel, vibes-keyboards, organ, drums or softer percussion. Additional textures are provided by mellotron here and there. The feeling is light, the female lead vocalist is soft and sweet, heavenly, with additional fragile harmony vocals, but there’s also a lead male vocalist on other songs. My favourite track is “By the waters of Babylon”. A bit different is the lighter, happy rhythmic “praise the lord”, which is overly happy, almost like a slapstick. Also noticeable is that the last few chords ends with the Kinks theme of “all day & all of the night”, perhaps a deliberate funny note. I am not sure if all the tracks are really existing psalm interpretations or not (as it seems to be). The album has its charm, and beauties, but it is rather light, and the happiness in some tracks makes it rather light without beaming me up yet.

The original label of 11.59, Dovetail, was specialised in Christian albums. Note that the later Ozric Tentacles related Dovetail Records label is in no way related to this first label.

Audio of all tracks on http://psychic.tistory.com/308
LP on http://page12.auctions.yahoo.co.jp/jp/auction/p68925979
Other review : http://www.forcedexposure.com/artists/1159.html
& on http://www.dustygroove.com/...