Tag Archive: Psychedelic Rock


Happenings 52 Years Time Ago

1966 – The Year The Decade Exploded by Jon Savage (Faber & Faber, 2015)

1966“It’s pretty obvious that contemporary music reflects contemporary life. And vice versa” wrote Tony Hall in Record Mirror in 1966. What is taken for granted now needed to be spelled out then.

Nevertheless, there are still precious few writers who able to contextualize music as expertly as Jon Savage.

When writing about Punk in 2004’s ‘England’s Dreaming’, Savage was able to draw directly from his own experiences but, as he was just 13 years old in the Summer of 1966, he is not able to rely solely on first-hand knowledge for this book. The 55 pages of source references illustrate the substantial research that lies behind this authoritative and illuminating study.

I was just 8 years old in that year so I remember even less than he does but I do recall the impact of some TV shows (e.g. Batman, The Monkees, Time Tunnel etc.) and music like The Beatles, the Motown acts and Dusty Springfield. But as far as historical events go, only England winning the soccer world cup sticks in the memory.

Most articles about the sixties paint a superficial and idealised portrait of swinging London, sexual liberation and the birth of the Woodstock generation. Savage goes deeper and reveals the darker aspects of this era and shows that it has definite parallels with the world we inhabit today.

Far from being a time of hedonism and freedom, this was a year lived under the shadow of the atom bomb and the cold war. In addition, the black civil rights movement, growing opposition to the Vietnam war, the demand for women’s liberation and the struggle for gay rights were just some of the causes that led to politicization of the youth both in America and in the UK. Add LSD to this heady cocktail and it’s easy to understand why this year was so musically explosive and accounts for how “1966 began in pop and ended with rock”. Continue reading

BLUES CONTROL

Noise rock, as with punk, is as much about attitude as it is musical ability. The support bands at this small club venue (an ex-slaughterhouse!) each make a racket that looks more fun to create than it is to listen to.  Belzebu Katmandu are three young have-a-go Italians while Tropa Macaca are a male-female duo from Portugal. They lend publicity to the DIY cause but with both you get the impression that they are novices for whom finding a transporting groove is still more a matter more of luck than judgement.

Headliners, Blues Control from Queens NYC, are in another league entirely. Anyone fooled by the name into imagining a White Stripes type duo would have had to adjust their expectations rapidly.

Lea Cho is a classically trained pianist whose tutors would doubtless be horrified to see her playing for long stretches with a bottle of beer in one hand. Her partner, Russ Waterhouse, is no slouch on the guitar and combines these skills with some razor sharp tape effects.

The two met and served their apprenticeship with little known instrumentalists ‘Watersports’. This is where they stumbled upon the happy accident of their contaminated New Age sound. They use psychedelic films as a backdrop like Prog-rockers but rude blasts of grungey fuzz guitar and pumping piano rhythms wake you from any delusions that this just another dreamy head trip.

Their sonic interpretations of these abstract images of light and colour are neither conventional nor contrived; there’s a movie out there somewhere just waiting to have their music on the soundtrack.

They play approximations of tracks from their records with Cho laying the foundations for Waterhouse to build upon and the contrast and volume this gives makes for a more dynamic sound than you hear on disc.

“Un po pesante”(a bit heavy) commented one guy as I left; he meant it as a criticism but I took it as a compliment.

A Small Label In A Virtual World

a-603411-1243407514.jpegTime-Lag , based in Portland, Maine, is a record label worth celebrating.

It is essentially a one man operation and Nemo Bidstrup has built an impressive catalogue of mainly vinyl releases since he started out in 2001.

While Time-Lag music is an essential entry point to what has been dubbed the New Weird America, Bidstrup wisely rejects links to any music scene or attempts to tie him to one genre. He prefers to call the artists as a “vague community” as a reference to the healthy cross fertilisation of ideas and shared philosophies. Continue reading