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Category — psychedelic

666 by Aphrodite’s Child

Aphrodite’s Child

Our Rating: Rating: 5

Thoughts/Words/Reviews:
45tunes.com Comments:
This record rocks! Don’t be scared by the 666 title, there’s no devil worshiping going on here … it’s just a concept album about some folks putting on a play based on Revelations while at the same time the apocalypse is unfolding in the real world … but the audience thinks that it is just part of the show. Put on your headphones and listen to it LOUD LOUD LOUD!

Check out the Wikipedia entry:
666 at Wikipedia

Product Description:
Deleted in the U.S., the landmark 1971 album by the Greek act led by Vangelis. A concept album about the Bible’s Book Of Revelations, it contains all 24 tracks from the original release on Vertigo, including the near hit ‘Break’. A Polygram International release. Double jewel case. The full title is ‘666 (The Apocalypse Of John 13/18)’.

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January 3, 2008   Comments Off

The Soft Bulletin by the Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

Our Rating: Rating: 5

Thoughts/Words/Reviews:
The Flaming Lips’ particular and peculiar genius comes to full fruition on the stupendous The Soft Bulletin. Anyone who had the gumption to actually listen to Zaireeka, a song cycle that could only be heard by playing four CDs at the exact same time on different stereos, knows that head Lip Wayne Coyne and his Oklahoma City brethren had it in them. That album, along with the Lips’ Parking Lot Experiments, offered proof that Coyne wasn’t playing by the same rules as everyone else. He was growing up and away from the splenetic psychedelic freak-outs of earlier albums and emerging as a first-rate composer–perhaps the first alt-rock star to earn such status.

The Soft Bulletin is absolutely colossal, a testament to their position as the vanguard of a movement that includes Spiritualized’s Ladies and Gentlemen We Are Floating in Space, Mercury Rev’s Deserter’s Songs, and Olivia Tremor Control’s Black Foliage. As with those albums, Bulletin shares a love of cosmic, vaguely psychedelic pop and a closet full of pet sounds. But the Flaming Lips only uses these as a launch pad for rocketing into ethereal sonic space. Although Bulletin steps back from Zaireeka’s over-the-top indulgence, it manages to be symphonic, bombastic, outrageous, and damned catchy–while still oozing the band’s unique weirdness. The sound is massive and complex; gongs, harps, grand piano, bells, pipe organ, strings, oboes, choral harmonies, and, strangely, very, very little guitar squall all merge into one wall–no, wall of sound doesn’t do it justice. It’s a cliff of sound, propelled by drummer Steven Drozd’s tremendous pounding. On top of it all, Coyne’s sweet but ravaged voice yields tender lyrics that tag a catalog of Lips stalwarts, such as insects, spirituality, and superheroes. One imagines Coyne in front of a full orchestra, urging them to keep up as he sings, “Ooh, those bugs / buzzing ’round…” on “Buggin.” But the Lips orchestrated the entire album in their studio, sometimes manipulating more than 200 separate tracks to achieve Bulletin’s vast symphonic excess. Each song is a rare gem. “A Spoonful Weighs a Ton” sounds like a collusion of Bach and Tricky. “The Spark That Bled” infuses a fey, Belle and Sebastian-esque ditty with Led Zeppelin-like funky swagger. “The Spiderbite Song” is a shotgun wedding between a tender piano ballad and the industrial noise of things falling apart. “The Gash” is just too singular to adequately describe.

It’ll be interesting to hear what the Lips do next. If The Soft Bulletin is any indication at all, they can do anything they please. And we can’t possibly imagine what it will sound like. –Tod Nelson

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January 2, 2008   Comments Off

Hendrix’s Axis: Bold As Love

The Jimi Hendrix Experience

Our Rating: Rating: 5

Thoughts/Words/Reviews:
In 45tunes.com’s all-time top five records. Here’s what David Stubbs has to say:

Jimi Hendrix’s second album doesn’t resonate through rock history the way its gate-crashing predecessor, Are You Experienced?, does. In places, it almost seems as if Hendrix is cruising, albeit sublimely. Yet it’s a vital album, containing some of rock’s molten milestones. There’s the fluid psychedelia of “Castles Made of Sand,” the viciously funky “Little Miss Lover,” and the so-beautiful-it-hurts “Little Wing.” Hendrix really hits altitude with “If 6 Was 9,” where he waves his “freak flag high” over a tidal wave of guitar and a cacophonous army of Moroccan flutes, and he ends with “Bold As Love,” based around Hendrix’s typically far-fetched hankering for the axis of the planet to be tilted, thereby transforming life on earth. It works up into a head-melting frenzy of distorted guitar, a precursor to the staggeringly expansive leap forward he would take with 1968’s Electric Ladyland. Hendrix dreamed the impossible and achieved it on his guitar. –David Stubbs

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January 1, 2008   Comments Off

Love’s Forever Changes

Love

Our Rating: Rating: 5

Thoughts/Words/Reviews:
Arthur Lee and Company’s masterwork. This is on a bazillion critics’ “all time best” lists but this record needs to be heard by everyone. Great psychedelic rock with quirky melodies and bizarre lyrics.

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January 1, 2008   Comments Off