Monday, March 25, 2013

The Day After The Sabbath 86: Master of My Fate (roadburn2)

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pass:  tdats



TDATS 86 is another collaboration with fellow vintage rock aficionado Walter, organiser of the annual Roadburn festival in Tilburg, Netherlands. Being one of the best events in the world for seeing current bands that are keeping the memory of the good old sounds alive, plus a few of the actual good old bands themselves (The Pretty Things are playing this year), It's really cool for TDATS to be associated with the fest. Take it away Walter!

Walter (arm raised) partying with the
crowds on the Roadburn dance floor
"We at Roadburn Festival are avid followers of The Day After The Sabbath! It's great to relive the heavy 70s through Rich's collections of obscure rock, and we're glad the festival inspires him as much as his comps inspire us in our work. Last year, Rich did the first TDATS Roadburn compilations with his volumes 63 and 64, and we're truly honored that he has come up with another compilation for this year's festival. What Rich has done here is collect a bunch of tracks by contemporary bands that have played at Roadburn, using their covers of 70s songs. On top of that he's added another selection of cool Dutch 60s/70s obscurities. We're currently swamped in the organisational affairs, and 'Master of My Fate' will help us to keep on track, otherwise we'd be losing it!"  -- Walter / Roadburn.


Tracklist:

01. Jan Hollestelle - Creepy [Intro] (1973)
       single
02. The Atomic Bitchwax - Play The Game [live Atomic Rooster cover] (2001)
       live at roadburn festival 2001
03. Temple - Triple Guitar (1971)
       single
04. Josiah - Got This Thing On The Move [Grand Funk Railroad cover] (2003)
       single, and fan album 'rare cuts'
05. Big Wheel - Upside Down (1970)
       single
06. Gorilla - Limb From Limb [Motörhead cover] (2006)
       compilation 'wild sound from the past dimension'
07. The Playboys - I'm The Looser (1971)
       single
08. The Tower - Slow Motion Mind (1968)
       single
09. Danava - The Last Goodbye [Slowbone cover] (2011)
       album 'hemisphere of shadows'
10. Warehouse - Wild One (1972)
       album 'powerhouse'
11. Admiral Sir Cloudesley Shovell - Bean Stew [Buffalo cover] (2012)
       album 'don't hear it...fear it'
12. Kraaijeveld - Hound is on the Run (1971)
       studio jam
13. Firebird - Four Day Creep [Humble Pie cover] (2009)
       album 'grand union'
14. Opus - Master of My Fate (1969)
       single
15. Jan Hollestelle - Creepy [outro] (1973)
       single



Jan Hollestelle
The comp opens with a single from Jan Hollestelle, who cut his teeth as a bass player in Hilversum's beat combo "The Torero's" with his guitarist brother Hans Hollestelle. The brothers both played on the Dutch production of the musical Hair. They were in a few other groups together, including The Tower, which appears on here later, and fusion band Spin. Jan recorded an instrumental single called 'Creepy' in 1973 and here it is. I have cut it into two parts to use as the intro and outro for the set. From 1971 he became a highly-demanded session musician and also works on classical compositions.


The Atomic Bitchwax (live 2001)
Next up is The Atomic Bitchwax. They are a well-known stoner rock band which originated as a side-project of Monster Magnet lead guitarist Ed Mundell, ex-Godspeed bassist/vocalist Chris Kosnik, and drummer Keith Ackerman. Ed Mundell's place has now been taken by Finn Ryan (ex-Core). They first played on one of the early editions of Roadburn in 2001 with the founding lineup. I found a mini-review here at rockezine.com (link) and only 3 bands were on the bill, a number that is slightly smaller than the 60+ that have been billed over the 3 day event in recent years! This track is from that performance, during which they played 'Play The Game', which first appeared on a 1970 Atomic Rooster single.

"Perhaps some people showed up here for Monster Magnet’s guitar player Ed Mundell but I think they got a little disappointed here. Atomic Bitchwax delivers some other goods than Monster Magnet. 
The sound was very heavy and very loud so just what one wants for a band like this. They also played songs from their 2 albums like “Red Hot”, “Crazee Fandango”, “Pest” and the Atomic Rooster cover “Play the Game”. All this was accompanied with psychedelic and outerspace footage (by VJ Xander77).

Atomic Bitchwax played tight and with enthusiasm, best showed by drummer Keith Ackerman who must have been Animal from the Muppets in a previous live. The guys showed their true spirit by selling their own merchandise and taking all the time to talk to the fans and autograph stuff. Very nice thing to do and rarely seen these days. Respect!"

Track 3 is from Amsterdam's Temple, which was a small project by members of other bands. They only made two singles, the most interesting track by far was the b-side, 'Triple Guitar", from the second one. Aad van de Kreeft was in Blue Planet and the George Cash band, Ron Meyjes was in Livin' Blues and The Knack, Cees Meerman was previously in Bismarc and John "Johnny" Frederiksz was also in Livin' Blues. 'Triple Guitar' is awesome, it has a really metallic feel. A third single was released under the name 'Johnny Fredericks & Temple'.

Josiah
We move on to Josiah, who were an English stoner rock/hard rock band from Leicester that played at Roadburn in 2005 and 2007. They went their separate ways in 2010 and in their ten-year existence they made four albums and three EPs. Originally comprising Mathew Bethancourt (vocals, guitar) now with Cherry Choke, Sie Beasley (bass, vocals) and Keith Beacom (drums), Bill Darlington took to the drums for a single in 2003 which had a b-side cover of Grand Funk Railroad, which is the track I have included here. It was also available on a gig-handout CD called 'Rare Cuts'.  Bill is in two other bands that appear in this volume of TDATS, so he'll be mentioned again soon... Josiah also recorded another wicked cover, of Bufallo's Dead Forever. It was included on their last album, 'Procession'.

Next up is The Hague's Big Wheel, founded by producer Hans van Hemmert, and Peter Vink, who was the bass player in classic Dutch garage group Q65 (see Vol63). They released five singles between 69 and 71, and they had a great, catchy but heavy glam sound like this. I have used a b-side called 'Upside Down' which is pretty simple and short, it's a spontaneous jam with a basic verse, but it has the raw and joyful feeling of a great moment caught in time, never to repeated. They definitely had the skills to make a good album so it's a shame they did not. Hans produced and co-wrote songs for many bands, including others I have used before, like Q65, The Motions and Group 1850. The rest of Big Wheel was Cyril Havermans (vocals), Rob van der Zwan (guitar), Shell Schellekens (drums) and Peter Seilberger. Havermans and Schellekens were both in Brainbox (see Vol20) just after.

Gorilla 2010
Track 6 is from Gorilla, a UK band that made three albums last decade. They have been on recording-hiatus since other bands have been taking up the member's time, but they still play live now and again and they played Roadburn fest in 2006. They are due to get out the heavy equipment again this year for Maximum Festival 2013 in Italy. John 'Johnny Gorilla' Redfern (gtr,vox) and Sarah Jane Russel (bass,vox) have been the constant members since the 90s and at various times Richard Guppy, Malt Jones, Sammy Forway and Bill Darlington have been on drums. John has been rocking since the 80s, including Brighton heavy psych bands The Morticians and Cherokee Mist. I found some Morticians info online here:  "The Redfern Bros. began to play in the mid-80s as The Giant Sunhorse; at the beginning of 1986 they found bassist Ben Jackson and changed name to The Morticians, releasing this delicious sweet at the end of next year ["Freak Out With The Morticians"]. An explosive punk side (those who don't know one original at least, lift up their own hand) and a visionary psych-side made few lucky owners happy... the first pressing of 500 ran out very soon and so did the second one of little more than a thousand, but Ben's leaving caused dissolution. At the end of 1988 a compilation of early recordings (demos and live sets) titled "She's Like Heroin" came out on Distortion Records.

The Morticians LP (1987)
Part of the 80's wave of UK Neo Psych and Garage Punk, The Morticians made one of the best lost UK psych-punk albums of that era. It's a combination of '60s styled garage punk and West Coast/Pink Fairies like acid guitar rock. Heavy distorted fuzzed out guitar solos, swirling keyboards and a really stoned atmosphere pervade this little gem that's long gone on vinyl. Includes uniquely heavy versions of "Action Woman" & "Song Of A Baker", "Blackout Of Gretely" and a totally over the top lysergic version of the Country Joe & The Fish classic "Section 43". Dave Goodman's production is raw , drenched in reverb and somehow (only God knows) he managed to hold this monstrous creation together."

In 2006 Gorilla recorded a nice fuzzed-up cover of Motorhead's 'Limb from Limb' (from 'Overkill' LP, 1979) which is what I have used in this comp. Bill D. played briefly in Josiah (as mentioned earlier), currently he and Johnny are playing in the Admiral Sir Cloudesley Shovell, who appear on this volume later so there's some more Gorilla/Josiah/ASCS info coming up soon...

Hilversum's The Playboys seem to have mainly been a working showband, but they did record two singles. Their song 'Snoopy' was recently used in the movie 'Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist' and back in it's time it was used as the theme music on radio VARA's 'Sport Show' and 'Hollands Glorie' . The band was Paul Natte (keys,trumpet), Peter van den Meulenn (sax, vox), Frans de Wit (gtr, vox), Reinout Weidema (bass) and Ted de Jong (drums). I have used the b-side of their second single here, "I'm The Looser" is a great little pop song that could have been a hit world-wide. Later, Paul Natte, along with Rein van Den Broek of symphonic prog band Ekseption, made the theme tune for the Dutch coverage of the Tour de France, which was used for years. Peter van der Meulen later became a owner of The Smugglers nightclub in the town of Bussum.

The Tower - 'In Your Life' (1968)
We reach the half-way point with The Tower, who recorded two studio-only singles and have many band members listed on RYM: but I am not sure exactly who or how many of them are playing on the track I am using here: 'Slow Motion Mind'. They included Boudewijn de Groot on guitars and vox, who appears to have had a successful solo career and became a producer of some bands that I have already used before, including Kraayeveld who are coming up. Other names were gutarist Eelco Gelling who was also in Cuby + Blizards (see Vol35) and later Golden Earing, Jan Hollestelle who I mentioned previously, Jay Baar (drums), Herman Deinum (keyboards), John Schuursma (guitar), Willem Schoone (bass), Hans Jansen (Hammond organ, piano) and Kees Kraanenburg (drums). They had a keys-heavy sound that is reminiscent of Procol Harum.

Danava on stage
Danava are from Portland, Oregon. I have used a Slowbone (see Vol40) cover that appears on their 2011 album 'Hemisphere Of Shadows'. They have been around since the early 2000's and they played at Roadburn in 2008 and 2012. There have been three Danava albums to date, revelling in a mix of stoner rock, space rock, glam and all things good about heavy 70s metal. I have seem them twice and can confirm they are the real deal live; a full-on guitar bombast attack band. Tempered with the occasional moog-out, they're as close as you're going to get to going back in time to the days of the best stuff. Their current line-up is Gregory Meleney (voxs, guitar, synth), Zachariah Dellorto Blackwell (bass), Matt Oliver (drums) and Andrew Forgash (guitar).

Here's a few questions I fired at Gregory, founder of the band, for this comp:

Q1. Hi Greg. Can you give us a brief account of the early formation of Danava, and which member(s) lead the way at the beginning?

Gregory
"The original core of the group relocated from various parts of Illinois to Portland in 2002 in hopes to begin playing together, which we did by way of a Goblin cover group for a Devil's Night party. Enter Rosy Cross the Portland addition. From there we did the usual thing and it became Danava. And as a concept, musically, I'm afraid I'm the one to blame."

Q2. Where does the name Danava come from? It's sounds familiar yet original at the same time.

"Danava for brevity's sake is a demon. A race of demons to be exact in ancient Hindu mythology. Rosy Cross named us and I'm really grateful he gave us this name because of it's absolutely fantastic nature within vs the all to quick, unfamiliar and easily overlooked quality it has. Donovan? no Danava! Haha! it immediately goes in one ear and out the other. Everyone looks to Christianity for names of an evil nature. I think it ran it's course long ago and I'm glad we got the chance to embrace something far more ancient and magical, in my opinion, than your typical archetypes of the dark side. Danavas were fascinating beings. We actually don't deserve the name but I'm proud of how it's led us about for these last ten years."

Q3. You merge a more diverse range of styles than most bands. Do you treat this as a priority when you write? Or is it just what happens to come from the band's chemistry when playing together?

"Honestly a little of both. I write the music with a sense of where I come from, under the influence of what I grew up listening to. All those great fucking bands man. The real turning point is whether or not it has our own imprint within. Our voice is firmly intact. That and the fact that we love so many different musics I suppose."

Q4. Regarding the last question, are there any band members who are particularly responsible for encouraging particular elements in your sound? If so who and how?

"Yeah, like I said before it's me. I'm the instigator and I put it all together with the help of my brothers."

Q5. I have visited Portland myself, it seems to have a strong scene with a lot of great like-minded bands. What unique influence do you think Portland has had on Danava, compared to say if you had got together in Seattle instead?

"That's a tough question. Honestly Portland absolutely didn't play any role in our sound beyond just living here. If anything, the small town nature of Portland allowed time and space to keep doing what we do. Seattle would have killed us. Not our kind of town. No offense of course."

Q6. Have any other Portland bands, old or current, had a strong influence on Danava? Could you recommend some to check out?

"Oh sure one name comes to mind and that's Fred Cole (of Zipper, see Vol44). That man deserves so much more, yet I love him right where he is. I don't have the space to tell you how I feel about that guy really. Absolutely inspiring fella that one. Beyond Fred there's Stepson, XINR....the underdogs. We carry this torch for the underdogs."

Q7 & 8. Clearly you guys appreciate the lesser-known bands, having performed two covers of great bands I have used in TDATS comps so far, namely Stray and Slowbone. Could you also tell us why you chose Stray and Slowbone and if it's just a coincidence that they are both British? Can you name 3 more similarly unknown bands that you dig and why, maybe ones you would also like to cover?

"Now that's an undertaking. We've covered lots of shit live over the years. We've done The Deviants, Broughton, T2, Aeroblus, Pink Fairies and classics like Sabbath, etc. There are, as you obviously know, way too many great songs from the underground over the years. I know, for me personally, I've always wanted to do No Witch At All or Mr Longevity by Hard Stuff, Irving by Three Man Army and Just A Game by Dirk Steffens but not sure if it'll ever happen. Ah there's just too many man.

Our shining moment was performing Bullets by Zipper with Fred singing and Greg Shadoan on bass. It's on youtube, THAT was fucking incredible for me. We chose Slowbone and Stray for the fact that it's great, underground and fits our style. Another lesser known reason would a man called Steve Harris."

Q9. What does the foreseeable future hold for Danava?

"New record and more touring as usual. Never stops but we definitely like to slow down and allow the space to get our head around the music rather than keep up with the business of it all."

Thanks Gregory!
------------------------------
Warehouse - Powerhouse LP (1972)
The next track is from an album which I have only just found out about, and was pleasantly surprised by, as it's a horn rock album with some quite rocking moments, a real rarity to come from Holland. It's by a mysterious band called Warehouse from Friesland, and there is very little information available. I am indebted to Marc Joseph, guitarist in band Vitamin X, for alerting me to this album and finding extra information for me. It was produced by Tim Griek who was previously the drummer in the symphonic prog band Ekseption.


The Crash
The players are listed as Harry Zijlstra (gtr, vox), Quido Hereman (vox, percussion, gtr), Jan De Jong (Bass), Jan De Lang (percussion), Klaas Bootsma (keys), Jaap Van Der Veer (sax) and Andries Zijlstra (trumpet, vox). The album sounds quite commercial but it has some good tracks like 'It's life', and 'Wild one' sounds like a baby Deep Purple with the addition of spritely brass. Most of Warehouse were in a 60s beat band called The Relays, who later formed The Crash. The Crash made a 7'' called ''Last Week / One Rainy Day'' in 1969 which sold more than a 1000 copies within 3 months of release.

Warehouse
Warehouse developed from The Crash in 1969, partly as a reaction to Dizzy Man's Band (from Volendam) which was a band to also feature a brassy soul-rock vibe. Warehouse made one album, from which I have used the track 'Wild One'. The record company (Imperial) wanted them to go commercial/professional but they refused and didn't get a contract. Around 1972 John Eskes joined who was previously in Art461/Canyon. In 1974 some members had to commit to their family lives and Warehouse split, but 3 of them (Jan de Lang, Quido Hereman, John Eskes) started Zig Zag Trio, later called Zig Zag Band. John Eskes is still active and the leader of Big Band Leeuwarden 73.

       Louis             Johnny          Bill
The Admiral Sir Cloudesley Shovell played at Roadburn last year (2012). They are a favourite live act of mine to watch here in London and I wrote an intro for them already on another site so I will use that here as it describes them as well as I think I am able to; "All right, Tinkerbell. You're nicked!”. Welcome back to a time when Jack Regan had the scum on the run, and gaggles of disgruntled half-naked clothing assistants had Benny Hill on the run. Luckily for us running isn’t so easy in flares and platform shoes, and sideburns cause even more drag, so this debauched admiral of the fleet will not be escaping the crowds hungry for groovin’ power-trio rock perfection.


Don't Hear It...Fear It LP (2012)
Hastings’ own Admiral Sir Cloudlesley Shovell (try saying that after 9 pints of Double Diamond) have been belting out their honest, no-nonsense swagger-filled rock ‘n‘ roll for a few years now and the world is taking notice. They played a storming set at Roadburn last year, which this devout scribe was more than happy to suffer ‘Sleep’ deprivation to experience, and their debut album “Don't Hear it... Fear it!!” is just out on Rise Above Records. ASCS are Louis Comfort -Wiggett, Bill Darlington and Johnny Gorilla. Many of you will know Bill and Johnny’s other band Gorilla, who have been pumping out their Blue Cheerful vibes since the late nineties.

If 70’s proto-metal is your thing; Sir Lord Baltimore, Budgie and Buffalo get you all hot under your giant pointy collar, and you can handle a big psychedelic dose of garage punk into the bargain, then make sure you dig the Shovell!"

For the comp I have used a brilliant Buffalo cover which is the final track on Cloudesley Shovell's recent debut album "Don't Hear It...Fear It" (Rise Above Records). I have taken this opportunity to ask Bill Darlington a few exclusive questions, as he has drummed for all three of the UK bands I have used in this volume, it seemed a good idea:

Q1. Hi Bill. Could you tell us how, why and where you got into being a rock musician?

Bill
"I started playing the drums when I was 18 and from the off I was in a psych band called 'Vibraphone' with Louis (now in Admiral Sir Cloudesley Shovell) funnily enough! I like all styles of music but rock was where I wanted to be. I always wanted to be a drummer so I would get inspiration from the rock greats such as...Bonham, Moon, [Mitch] Mitchell."

Q2. Why did you choose drums? Have you played other instruments?

"Drums are my main instrument although, I do play a bit of guitar and bass. Like I said, I always wanted to be a drummer from an early age. I can remember at school I was pissed off that the music teacher chose a popular kid in my class to play the drums in a school play instead of me. I left home at 17 and lived with my then girlfriend in London. I've always been a tapper and she used to get so fucked off with it she threatened to get me a drum kit which she did for my 18th birthday. My neighbors hated me!"

Q3. What bands were you learning from back then?

"When I picked up the sicks for the first time I was trying to play along with The Who and Sabbath. I would have to say that Bill Ward's drumming was a massive help to me as it was easier to play along with than Moonie, as Bill is more direct and not all over the place. Two very different drummers but equally as cool!"

Q4. What UK bands were you watching live early on that influenced you?

"I have two older brothers that are musicians. My oldest brother Jay plays keyboards and my other brother Spud plays the bass. From about the age of 13 I used to go watch them rehearse or play live in London. They both played in a 60s garage band called Tilt-a-Whirl. That band was another influence on me to play the drums. When I started to play I was older and living in London and seeing a lot of bands that were actually very shit so it was hard to be influenced by anything live. 

One band that had a big impact on my drumming was The Morticians (both John and Louis from The Shovell). They were super heavy and loud!! John's brother Simon played a double kit and he produced a huge sound that reminded me an engine with the throttle jammed on!"

Q5. For each one, could you tell us a little about how you came to play with these three bands:

a) Josiah
"I played with Josiah first out of all three bands but only for a short while as they were based in Leicester and I am all the way down in Hastings and that's a long walk! I guess it came about as they needed a drummer at short-notice so they contacted me. I did a bunch of gigs with them and recorded a single."

b) Gorilla

"I ended up in Gorilla as they were having trouble with drummers at the time (exploding incidents, alien abduction, bizarre gardening accidents, pre opp, post opp etc...) and I had been friends with both John and Sarah for a while. It just seemed like the done thing as we all had the same musical interests and I loved Gorilla's sound. Heavy, loud and dirty!"

c) Admiral Sir Cloudesly Shovell

"ASCS came about by Louis, John and myself having a few beers one night and talking about putting a band together for something to do other than drinking beer and talking about putting a band together so that's what we did!! We started off playing a few covers like The James Gang - Walk Away and Mountain - Mississippi Queen. It sounded good and right so we decided to write our own and here we are."

Q6. What do you see as some of the notable musical differences between those three?

Bill & Tony McPhee
 of Groundhogs
"Josiah and Gorilla were tarred with the term "Stoner Rock" but I think that's a shit way of explaining this type of music as it's a bit lose. The term should probably be "Sabbath Rock" as that's what people are really referring to me thinks?!!

Josiah and Gorilla were similar in their direction but were quite different in sound as Josiah reminded me of Sabbath but Gorilla reminded me of Sabbath with the higher octane feel of The Who or The MC5. Gorilla are more Sabbath Rock - on speed!! I used to think that playing in Gorilla was like running a marathon and having to carry your drum kit home after!! Fuckin' knackering.

ASCS to me are like no other band I've been in. We are more into the likes of Sir Lord Baltimore, Dust, Bang etc than just Sabbath or MC5. It has a mixture of everything I have done in the past with the other two bands, but tighter. It has the thick riffs of Sabbath and the messy rawk n roll of The Stooges, MC5 with a huge dollop of the craziness of Sir Lord Baltimore. I guess I learnt a lot with the other two bands, but with ASCS I can put it all (and then some!) into practice."

Q7. The Shovell have made one excellent album so far, and had a lot of great support slots with the likes  of The Groundhogs, Orange Goblin and Uncle Acid & the Deadbeats. What's the plan for ASCS from here?

"Yeah, it's been a great couple of years with The Shovell! We've had a single and LP out that has had a lot of thumbs up from people across the globe, made us proud! We've also had the pleasure of some ace shows supporting some top bands. We never set out to do all of this wonderful shit but I'm mighty glad we have!

We're currently rehearsing new material for our 2nd LP which we hope to have out in the Autumn. It's sounding meaty as hell and I can't wait to get it down while it's still fresh. We have a few shows in Spain coming up next month and some locally. Also, we're playing at The Desert Fest (I'm going as Spotted Dick and Custard!!) Checkout our Facebook for more gig info."

Thanks Bill!
------------------------------
Kraayeveld were a spin-off from a long-running band called The Bintangs who sounded a little like The Netherlands' answer to The Rolling Stones. After initial success with some singles, founding members Frank Kraaijeveld (bass, vocals) and Arti Kraaijeveld (guitar, vocals) left Bintangs to form their own band Kraayeveld, and the track I have used here is a live studio recording of them jamming a Bintangs track 'Hound is on the Run'. I think this version is far superior to the Bintangs one, it's rawer and heavier, which is also how the main difference between Bintags and Kraayeveld in general is usually described. Later, Kraayeveld changed it's name back to The Bintangs, to confuse matters, and now-days the only original member left in The Bintangs is Frank Kraaijeveld. Apologies for the not so great sound quality. I had to use the youtube audio, I have asked the contributer for the file but no luck as yet... but thanks to him anyway, and thanks to Walter himself for showing me this wicked track.

Smok Smoczkiewicz -  Bill Steer - Ludwig Witt
Firebird (final album lineup)
Track 13 is another cover, this time from the UK's Firebird. The band was masterminded by Bill Steer in 1999, who's career started out whilst a teenager in the 80s, in the extremely influential metal bands Napalm Death and Carcass. He remained the only constant member of Firebird, which has had a rotating lineup of musicians from similarly-minded bands like Cathedral, The Quill, Spiritual Beggars and Blind Dog. Carcass still plays and is recording new material right now, but Bill's time in recent years has been equally taken up in classic/retro bands like Firebird, Gentleman's Pistols and a recently re-formed Angel Witch. Firebird split in 2011 but during their 10 years plus they played Roadburn thrice, in 2003, 2009 and 2010. For this comp I have chosen a storming cover of a Humble Pie classic, Four Day Creep, which was on Firebird's fifth album, 'Grand Union' (2009). The term 'Four day creep' derives from the phrase 'fore day creep, which was a line in the blues standard 'Outside Woman Blues' originally recorded by Blind Joe Reynolds in 1929. 'fore day meaning at night (before day), and the creep being an untrustworthy lover up to no good, creeping around at night. 'Outside Woman Blues' was covered by Cream on their second album Disraeli Gears.

For the final track, which gives this comp it's title, I have used something I heard on a fantastic compilation of rare Dutch psych 45s called 'Fantasio Daze', which I totally recommend. Opus made this cover of The American Breed (link) in 1969. It was released on Vinyl in 2000 and has since had a CD edition too. I have adapted the liner notes from the LP/CD and found a little more info via RYM: "Opus, not to be confused with the Nijmegan group of the same name, spent the years '66 to '69 on the verge of breaking through nationally, along with another Maastricht band called The Sharons with which they shared members Pierre Beckers, Jo Robeers and Frans Theunisz. Much of the Opus appeal was due to the composing and singing talent of [Englishman] Tom Winters and successful singles included 'Gotta Get High' and 'Baby, Come On'. Other members included Chrit Mandigers (keys), Rob Schaade (bass) and Frans Theunisz (drums). Following the departure of Winter, the band unfortunately did not succeed any longer. Members of both The Sharons and Opus re-appeared soon after as 'Windmill' and released a few singles on the Limburg-based Killroy label. In the late 70s Tom Winters made some solo singles, and another band appeared with Pierre Beckers and Erwin Musper of Windmill, called Partner".

'Master of My Fate' is a great song, with a lot of Beatles-ish pop sensibility and it has great guitar lines I think would sound awesome in a heavier cover, if anybody is up for it...

Thanks for listening, Rich.

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Thursday, March 21, 2013

The Electric Lounge of Aural Ecstasy - Flute Players Are Hot!

Download from: [mf] or [mg]
Unzip pass:  tdats
On Saturday 9th of March 2012, Scott Sroka (aka DJ Cheesus) and co-host Star Gazer dedicated an 'Electric Lounge of Aural Ecstasy' show on Core of Destruction Radio to rock music involving the flute. During the show he interviewed flautist Ian Andeson from Jethro Tull, and played only cool 70s tracks with lots of rocking flute. Included among his picks were all the tracks I used on a previous TDATS comp: Vol78: I Was Only Dreaming. As usual, he and Star Gazer have shed some more light on them, like the fact the Fashion Pink's "I'm a Man" is a cover of a Stevie Winwood/Spencer Davis Group classic. In this download I have included the entire show, in three parts. The third part is the Ian Anderson interview spot, during which Scott also played some Anderson/Tull classics and newies. Ian gives a great interview about all things Tull, along with news of his current world tour.

Star Gazer, Scott & and
one of their pesky groupies... 
Scott, currently living in São Paulo, Brazil, has been presenting on Core of Destruction for over a year. He was a contributor to the excellent stoner rock community blog 'Sludge Swamp', that sadly closed its doors a while ago. Sludge Swamp helped me out in making a name for TDATS back when I started doing this, and also hosted demos for a few of the New Zealand bands that are joined up on the forum I started up when I was over there: www.stonerdoom.co.nz.

Scott broadcasts his show on a weekly basis, full details of which can be found here. He covers all eras of rock and metal with a different theme each week. He also maintains his own blog where he posts all his previous shows as podcasts, and has a Facebook group here.

The next TDATS comp is well under way, and will be another Dutch-flavoured set with a few surprises, including a couple of interviews with current bands that keep the torch burning for the sounds we love...

Thanks for listening, and thanks Scott!
Rich

Part 1
Osanna - Introduzione
Gravy Train - Can Anybody Hear Me?
Genesis - Get 'em Out By Friday
The California Earthquake - Friday: 3 P.M.
The Purple Soul Brothers - Zero O'Clock
Hubert Laws - Let Her Go
Rahsaan Roland Kirk - Ain't No Sunshine
Traffic - Rainmaker
Shag - Gypsies In The Forest
Jade Warrior - A Prenormal Day at Brighton
The Moody Blues - Don't You Feel Small
Camel - Song Within A Song
The Hunt - I Was Only Dreaming
Heat Exchange - Reminiscence
Herbie Mann (w/Duane Allman) - Man's Hope
Fashion Pink - I'm a Man
Quintessence - Notting Hill Gate

Part 2
Goliath - Maajun (A Taste Of Tangier)
Rufus Zuphall - Prickel Pit
Gong - Flute Salad
Gong - Oily Way
Gryphon - Estampie
Tako - Minijatura
Progresiv TM - Rusinea Soarelui
Tomorrow's Gift - Tenakel Gnag
Dug Dug's - Smog [english version]
Janko Nilović - Drug Song
Plum Nelly - The Demon
De De Lind - Fuga e Morte
Steel Mill - A Forgotten Future/a Future Past
Railroad Gin - The End
Leo Wright - The Wiggler *Bonus Track

Part 3 - Local Spotlight with Ian Anderson
Thick As A Brick (Madison Square Garden 1978) - Jethro Tull
Old School Song - Ian Anderson
A Change Of Horses - Ian Anderson
Adrift And Dumbfounded - Ian Anderson
Last Train to San Fernando - Johnny Duncan & Bluegrass Boys *Local Spotlight Only Exclusive
What-Ifs, Maybes And Might-Have-Beens - Ian Anderson


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Saturday, March 9, 2013

The DooM That Time [Remembered]

After many requests, I have re-upped all ten of the DooM That Time Forgot comps. They were made by LibertyCaps a few years ago, a co-member of the defunct site Stonerrock.com. If you don't have them all yet then what are you waiting for? They feature plenty of the best and heaviest doom-mongers of the 60s and 70s. I've also made some TDATS follow-ups to these with 62: 'The DooM That Time Reprised' and 95: 'A Shrine To DooM Foregone'. Downloads here:
Vol 1 | Vol 2 | Vol 3 | Vol 4 | Vol 5 | Vol 6
Vol 7 | Vol 8 | Vol 9 | Vol 10 | Vol 62 | Vol 95
Password is:  tdats




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Saturday, March 2, 2013

The Day After The Sabbath 84: Liberdade Espacial (Brazil)


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pass:  tdats


I first dug in to Latin American bands back on Vol43: 'Transfusión de Luz'.

There are now 8 Latin American themed volumes:  43: General | 84: Brazil 1 | 89: Mexico 1 | 104: Peru 1 | 136: Argentina 1 | 144: Venezuela 1 | 151: Bolivia | 118: Chicano Rock

That one ended up using mostly Argentinian bands, a country that certainly had more than it's fair share of heavies! This new volume is the result of my searches for Brazilian bands, and it's been a lot of fun doing it. I had a few left over from 43, and it was TDATS reader Diego de Almeida who recently encouraged me to finish it by sending a few more band names. What I've found is that there were not a lot of Brazilians at any time in the 70s that set out to make the heavier kind of stuff I usually look for. The country did apparently have more than it's fair share of beat & mersey-sound copy cats in the 60s, and lots of great psychedelic singles were produced, and the prevailing sounds of the 70s were the Tropicália and MPB (Música Popular Brasileira) acts rather than anglo/euro/US influenced rock and prog.

I guess you could say that Brazil's Tropicália scene was comparable to Germany's 'Krautrock', being that it was intertwined with the emergent avant-garde counterculture of the young generation. It reminds me of Norway's 'Trønderrock' (see Vol81) and Sweden's 'Progg' (see Vol75) movements, with it's frequent use of traditional and folk music. It also faced Brazil's socio-political turmoil and like Franco's Spain, was up against a dictatorship's attempts at censorship. Two of it's leaders, Caetano Veloso and Gilberto Gil, were arrested by Brazil's military regime and forced into exile in London. According to RYM, the record 'Tropicália ou Panis et Circencis' represented an important coming-together of musicians in 1968 that helped establish the scene.

Tracks:

01. Naná Vasconcelos - No Norte do Polo Sul (1975)
       from album 'africadeus-n.angelo-novelli'
02. O Terço - Deus (1972)
       from 2nd album 'o terço'
03. Casa das Máquinas - Liberdade Espacial (1975)
       from album 'lar de maravilhas'
04. Kris Kringle - Sarabande (1971)
       from album 'sodom'
05. Som Imaginário - Ué (1971)
       from 2nd album 'som imaginário'
06. O Bando - ...É assim falava Mefistófeles (1969)
       from album 'o bando'
07. A Bolha - Sem Nada (1971)
       single
08. Beatniks - Alligator Hat (1968)
       single
09. Perfume Azul do Sol - 20000 Raios de Sol (1974)
       from album 'nascimento'
10. Rock da Mortalha - Satânico Estripador (1976)
       live bootleg
11. Loyce e Os Gnomes - Que é Isso? (1969)
       single
12. Novos Baianos - Barra Lúcifer (1976)
       from album 'caia na estrada e perigas ver'
13. Som Nosso de Cada Dia - Bicho do Mato (1974)
       from album 'snegs'
14. Blow Up - Tá Cozendo o Tempo (1971)
       from 2nd album 'blow up'
15. Módulo 1000 - Salve-se Quem Puder (1972)
       from album 'não fale com paredes'
16. Joelho de Porco - Aeroporto de Congonhas (1976)
       from album 'são paulo - 1554 / hoje'
17. O Peso - Eu Não Sei de Nada (1975)
       from album 'em busca do tempo perdido'
18. Rita Lee & Tutti Frutti - ...Tem uma Cidade (1974)
       from album 'atrás do porto tem uma cidade'

Essential References 

Naná Vasconcelos
As I often like to do, I have book-ended this collection with a couple of novelties. Track one, 'No Norte do Polo Sul' (1972), sets the mood with some traditional Brazilian sounds from a percussionist called Naná Vasconcelos who was born in Pernambuco. It also includes the guitar skills of Nelson Angelo. Naná spent a lot of time in New York where he worked with many names including Brian Eno. He specialised in the traditional Brazilian berimbau and he has been frequently honoured for his work; named as Percussionist Of The Year by Down Beat jazz magazine many times.

Rio de Janeiro's O Terço (trans:'The Rosery') formed in 1968 and became one of the first Brazilian progressive rock groups. By their second album, the record of theirs which is most interesting to to me, they were veering from folk to heavier sounds and the track I used, 'Deus', is a great piece of doomy psych with a mellon collie atmosphere. Flavio Venturini (keyboards, vocals) and Sergio Magrão (bass, vocals) left in 1976 and joined '14 Bis', who I checked out but was not so impressed by.

O Terço
Going off on a bit of a tangent here, there were actually two 70s Brazilian bands called '14 Bis'. The other was an apparently unrelated band that only recorded one single, a few years before the formation of the O Terço spin-off. The name seems to have been taken from the name of an early bi-plane invented by Brazilian Alberto Santos-Dumont, which you can read about here.

Lar de Maravilha
São Paulo's Casa das Máquinas was started by Luiz Franco Thomaz, aka 'Netinho' of the 60s band Os Incríveis, the act that also contributed a member to Som Nosso de Cada Dia (coming up soon). They made a few hard-ish tracks like this comp's namesake, 'Liberdade Espacial' which has a nice'n groovy riff. Over-all they were not a particularly heavy or consistent band, and they tended to change their sound over their three albums with almost every song. I found the second album to be the most interesting of their three, and it's where we find our track, which for them, is an unusually straight-forward rocker. The rest of 'Lar de Maravilhas' is quite experimental and atmospheric, swathed in moog. It is regarded as a classic originator in Brazilian prog, thought it is not doing anything new for 1975, it's one of the better examples from the country.

The Kris Kringle LP 'Sodom' has some of the earliest examples of hard rock from the country. It was apparently recorded by a Sao Paulo band that was originally called Memphis, which consisted of José Eduardo França Pontes (aka Dudu França or Eduardo França), Marco Antonio F. "Nescau" Cardoso (bass), Cláudio Callia keyboardist), Alberto Niccoli Jr. (drums) and Juvir M. "Xilo" Moretti (guitar). França seems to have been involved in a lot of music and he has his own wiki page here, which says that Memphis also recorded under the names ‘Joe Bridges’, ‘Beach Band‘ and ‘Baby Joe’, so they could be seen as something of an exploitation band. Sarabande is a cover of the first single from Beggars Opera.

Dudu França 
The track I used here, 'Sarabande' (a dance that uses a specific type of rhythm), is one of about four heavy cuts from the Kris Kringle record, another good one being 'What You Want'. Yet another name Memphis played under was 'The Clocks', who's 1973 s/t album is not as exciting as Kris Kringle. It's better-produced, but mainly predictable, pedestrian pop and rock'n roll. The final cut 'Rock and roll' (Velvet Underground cover) is quite good, with some harder moments.

Som Imaginário
Rio de Janeiro's Som Imaginário (Translation: 'Imaginary Sound') achieved good success in Brazil and made three varied and musically excellent albums between 1970 and 1973. They originally got together as the backing band for MPB star Milton Nascimento, and a particular show he put on called "Milton Nascimento, ah, e o Som Imaginário" which is where they took their name from afterwards. Milton was a singer/song writer who is still making music now. They consisted of Wagner Tiso (keyboards), Zé Rodrix (organ/percussion/vocals, flute), Robertinho Silva (drums), Tavito (12-string guitar), Luís Alves (bass), Laudir de Oliveira (percussion), Toninho Horta (guitar) and Nivaldo Ornelas (saxophone). I have used a track called 'Ué' (trans:'Huh') from their second album, 1971's self-titled, not to be mistaken for their 1970 debut, which was confusingly also self-titled. I love the way it starts out in a joyous, celebratory manner which is juxtaposed by the grinding fuzzy riffage that it ends in, brilliant.

Gal Costa
According to AllBrazilMusic they participated in a 1971 short film called 'Nova Estrela' (trans:'New Star') which also included Gal Costa, a famous Salvador pop star who's music crossed over into Tropicália, and on tracks like 'Cultura e Civilizacao', into psychedelia. Thanks to TDATS reader Thalita Santos, firstly for sending me some bands to check out, also for helping me out with some of the translations for this article, and for sending me a link to André José Adler; the director's blog that has a long account in Portuguese regarding Nova Estrala, and the early history of Som Imaginário. Here is an article from it, kindly translated by Thalita Santos, about his thinking behind the film: "One night I was watching a concert by Gal Costa at Theatre Opinião. She was accompanied by the Som Imaginário group, who worked a lot with Milton Nascimento, and was composed by awesome musicians: Wagner Tiso, who accompanied Milton Nascimento since the beginning of his career, drummer Robby Silva, bassist Luiz Alves, guitarist Frederyko (also vocalist), Tavito and his 12-string guitar, Naná Vasconcelos on the percussion, and Zé Rodrix on the organ and vocals.

After the concert I talked to Zé Rodrix, who I already knew since he was part of 'Momento Quatro', when he sang on the 'Fahrenheit 2000' tv show, hosted by Taiguara and Eliana Pitman, which I wrote some texts for, on TV Tupi . Moreover Zé was my confessed fan from the times I worked at 'Falção Negro' and he always enjoyed pronouncing my name in Hungarian.

Conversation goes, conversation comes! And then the short film I wanted hit me! A film with Som Imaginário!! In times when nobody even imagined that one day there would be video clips, it was a snap of an idea. There was a beautiful song by Wagner, with different climates, in a progression that went from the romantic to the mystic. A big trip. I traveled in it. I had a text from Fredera (Frederyko) that said it was 'time for the new star' and so on.

My idea was to start with images of the group accompanying Gal (she accepted to participate in a take, that was all I needed) and then explode in the progression of the song for free outdoor shots. In the beautiful places where I was going with Luiz Fernando and Luli. The Cinematography, of course, had to be Luiz’s. Everybody agreed with the idea, including Milton Nascimento. I listened to the song countless times, with the Fredera’s text, At one point it needed a beautiful woman, a magical figure to give it a 'Iemanjá’s mood', because there was going to be a lot of sea in the scenes. She would make the offer (which was neatly armed by my brother Jorge) would vanish into the sea itself. And it had to be a child who would be the proper expression of a new star. Easy, Tania Scher and her daughter Claudia who was 2 years old and had a magical sweetness.

And then the news! The Federal Censorship banned Fredera’s text. Subversive. Star must mean communist! My script had been thought up over the song and the text. What should I do? Well, let's go ahead anyway.

We had already filmed in black and white, 16 mm to be expanded and grainy, taken at Theatre Opinião(...) and we went to Filgueiras. Luli, who would later be acclaimed as a songwriter, was my direction assistant , taking care of the continuity of that visual trip.

Who had a girlfriend brought a girlfriend, who had a wife brougth a wife! A wonderful Astral!!! Lizzie Bravo, at the time married to Zé Rodrix, became pregnant with her daughter Marya in this trip. Tavito and Zé Rodrix began to have ideas to write 'Casa no Campo' in this trip. But the French woman appeared!

One of the locations was a small island which we found out and when we were ready to shoot, a French lady who was the owner of the island (we did not even know that it had an owner) appeared, saw a lot of bearded men (almost all of us were wearing facial hair ornaments), some girls enjoying a naturist bath and did not want we to shoot in her island. At first I tried to be gentle as if she was Madame Vincent from the G. Maugier book herself, used at the Alliance Française. It did not work. I asked her if she liked 'Travessia' from Milton Nascimento, something that she certainly knew from the TV festival – 'Look at him here with us!' The French woman did not take easier. I know I had just mistreated Mata Hari that threatened to call the DOPS(Department of Political and Social Order). I suggested she followed the example of Villegaignon in 1558 and returned to France. I remember that she took my picture to 'file' it but I gave her a lovely smile for the camera making a 'V' of peace with my hand.

Anyway, there were wonderful locations in Mangaratiba, including a beach where the seagulls flew over and landed on the guys from the group at the right time. It was a quiet operation to arm the camera away and take the guys by boat to the edge of the beach.

The last shot of the film was made in traveling (not easy to ride on the sand) and that was the end of the negative. We could not repeat it. But the material was great, and we were already combining with Egberto Gismonti to make a short film with him. It would be beautiful. But there was no MTV. Let alone Canal Brasil. 'A Nova Estrela' then had its debut to the public. It was an invited-only event at Cine Jóia, one of the smallest movie theatres that ever existed in Rio, (...) There was no law requirement for short films, and Brazilian exhibitors practically aired national productions only when required by law. Still, I signed the film and the INC (National Institute of Cinema) chose it to represent Brazil at the Berlin International Film Festival. Nothing happened, but the film made a nice trip back and forth to Europe!

The other international exhibition of the film was at Public Theatre’s cinema in New York, in the 80’s. I had an old 35mm copy and I was missing the film. It was a 'ultra prive' session... just me and Fabiano Canosa. Fabiano was the cinema programmer. Unfortunately the copy was scratched, with jumped frames and filled with oil. It could not be displayed.

Across the years, Lizzie Bravo always pushed me to get a copy of the short film. Once when we had lunch with Bituca in New York, he told me that he never got to see it. Gee, Milton Nascimento had to watch it! This was still in the 80's.

A couple of days after I arrived in Budapest last year, a surprise in the mail box! Paulo Mendonça sent me a DVD of 'A Velha Estrela' (The Old Star), discolored by the years, but bringing the evocation of an important era. Too bad the sound was distorted (Did it have to be the sound?). But I felt a very special happiness, and later I laughed a lot. I didn’t remember the reason of some things.

But then comes into scene - or should I say into Skype - Lizzie. She sent me the original Mp3 track… with Frederyko’s text. I synchronized on the computer and I finally remembered my film. I uploaded it on Youtube. Paulinho and Lizze were one of the first 1737 people who watched it before I blocked it for a while.

Why the blockage? Because finally, three and a half decades later, on Monday, March 12th, 2007, Canal Brasil, at 7pm... 'A Nova Estrela' ( The New Star) comes to television! Less than 9 minutes had never taken so long to be shown to so many. And I think this trip will be a gift for many people. For me, it certainly is. I was 26 years old. I am 62 years old."


A Bolha - Sem Nada EP (1971)
Track 6's O Bando, from São Paulo, made one album of progressive psychedelic pop with a horn section and a female singer; Marisa Fossa. The opening instrumental included here, 'É assim falava Mefistófeles' (trans:'Thus spoke Mephistopheles') sounds like crazy chase scene music and it's a lot of fun! A Bolha (Trans: 'The Bubble'), another band from Rio de Janeiro, made two albums from '73-'77, but the track I have used is from a 1971 3-track EP. They must have been taking more robust dietary supplements when they made it as it's the heaviest, most lysergic record they made, before falling foul to the later-70s trend for a more commercial, cleaner sound on their two albums.

São Paulo's Beatniks made a 4-track Ep in 1968 (one is tempted to ask if there were any countries that didn't have a freak-beat band with that name!) which included the obligatory Hendrix cover, this time being Fire. I have used the final track from it, Beatniks original (or so I thought) 'Alligator Hat'. It's a rip-roaring, mad performance full of silly singing and all the better for it. They have caught that raw, in-your-face fuzz sound (maybe mono recording helps this?) that perfectly exemplifies the naive, reckless abandon of the late 60s. There is a good account of The Beatniks here. In 2025 I happened upon the song 'Waiting For You' performed by Belgian organist André Brasseur, which is clearly the exact same composition, released a year previous (link). 

Perfume Azul do Sol - Nascimento (1974)
Half way and time for a chill-out. São Paulo's Perfume Azul do Sol (trans:'Blue Perfume Of The Sun') made one album in 1974, and they introduce some great plaintive vocals and (in some other tracks) piano, from songstress Ana Maria. It's a nice song and the album 'Nascimento' (trans:'Birth') is a good listen, it's like west coast psych with a latin feel. They included guitarist/bassist Pedro "Pedrão" Baldanza who was also in 'Som Nosso de Cada Dia', appearing later in this comp. The band was completed by Benvindo (acoustic guitar, vocals), Jean (electric guitar, backing vocals) and Gil (drums). It is very hard to find any more information on this rarity other than that which is given on this excellent blog, 'Brazilian Nuggets', which is where I came across it.


Rock da Mortalha
A rare departure from the fuzz and prog; we reach track 10 and it's time for some Heavy Metal! So far this is the only Brazilian band I have come across playing this heavy in the 70s. According to Encyclopaedia Metallum, a handful of metal bands did form in the late 70s but none recorded until the 80s. Rock da Mortalha has been revealed on a few blogs in recent years, though it took me a while to source the mp3s as all the links are dead. From the Ipiranga district of São Paulo, Orlando Lui (Bass and Vocals) and Mark Baccas (Guitar and Vocals) first called themselves 'The Bizimbetas'. They evolved into a metallic band and found a drummer named Julinho. Wearing the requisite metal garb of black robes, audiences recount their strong theatrical stage presence. Their only available recording thus-far is a bootleg of a show reportedly made around 1976. I have had trouble extracting and translating useful/reliable information from what I have found so I will leave you to read more on three sites, here, here and here. There is even a facebook group for the band, here. Although the track I included, ‘Satânico Estripador’ (trans:'Satanic Ripper'), is a very basic recording, it’s easy to hear the potential they had and how different they are to anything else on this comp. Mick Mullen has done another awesome job of remastering this track for me, after having helped out on Vol75 and Vol81. If you'd like to hear the improvements he has made, have a listen to the original, and his studio services contact details can be found here.

Loyce e Os Gnomes
The Loyce e Os Gnomes track is available on a compilation called 'Brazilian Fuzz Bananas' which describes the band as coming from Ribeirão Preto, São Paulo. The performers names are listed as Loyce, Massaro, Fael, Raphael (guitar), Nile and Padulla. The track was originally included on a 4-track EP called 'O Despertar dos Mágicos'. Translated, that is 'The Dawn of Magic', which was a cult 60s book by two french journalists that was popular in hippie culture. I found an account of it which seems to have been written by someone who's first language is not English, so here it is in entirety, make of it what you can: "From Von Daniken to Dan Brown, they have all used this book as a source.Wittingly or unwittingly, The Dawn of Magic was the cult book of the 60s. Bergier and Pauwels were two French Journalists who practically invented the genre of Aliens visiting earth, to the legend The Holy Grail. The Priory of Sion. 


Rosicrusions and The Bavarian Illuminati. Its all came from this book. Bergier and Pauwels were two right wing French journos who some how managed to get access to the French National Archives. They forged documents in relation the Priory of Sion to support their political agenda , which was to undermine the left and the communists in post war France by alleging that Mary Magdalene came to France in the 1st century AD bringing with her the child of christ.That the Merovingians protected her descendants and the Royal Family of France was related by blood to the Royal family of Davis through Christ! I know it sounds strange so please read the book". There is also more information here and here. As Dusted Magazine's review describes the track 'Que é Isso?' (trans:'What is That?'),  it is a very early example of nihilistic Brazilian fuzz and I love the dragging, shuffling pace. This is what good psych is all about, stretching out time... another particularly good track on that comp is 'God Save The Queen', by a very obscure one-single-only band called '14 Bis', which I will use at some point in the future. As mentioned previously, one of two Brazilian bands with that name.

Os Novos Baianos
We take another departure from the fuzz for a band called Os Novos Baianos. They were a classic 'MPB' band (short for 'Música Popular Brasileira'), a genre that was initially approved of by Brazil's military government because they saw it as a patriotic alternative to the the influence of the rock and pop music invasion from abroad; it stuck to Portuguese lyrics and retained a lot of traditional identity. The track I have used is very cool, and something of a departure from their usual sound. After forming in Bahia they moved to Rio de Janeiro and after their successful second album, 'Acabou Chorare', the whole band moved to live communally on a farm. They usually played with acoustic and traditional instruments, but from time to time would use electric guitars. What I like is that on the electrics it becomes apparent, even to my hard rock-battered ears, what talented and tight musicians they were. You can hear it with this track I used from their 1976 album, 'Caia na Estrada e Perigas Ver' (rough trans: 'Hit The Road and Face the Peril').

Som Nosso de Cada Dia
Formed in 1970 in São Paulo, Som Nosso de Cada Dia (trans:'Our Daily Sound') aimed for progressive rock with elements of psychedelia. They had many members; Manito (keyboards, horns), Pedrão (guitar, bass), Pedrinho (drums), Egídio Conde (guitar), Marcinha, Dino Vicente Rangel, but played as a trio most of the time. Saxophonist Manito, was in the 'Os Incríveis' (trans:'The Incredibles') in the 60s, one of the most popular beat groups. The album 'Snegs' (1975), is considered one of the classics of Brazilian rock and they once opened a show for Alice Cooper in Maracanãzinho. 'Bicho do Mato' opens with a some strong hammond organ which gives way to moog.

Blow Up's 2nd album (1971)
São Paulo's Blow Up were originally known as The Black Cats. They made two albums as 'Blow Up' (both self-titled), named after Michelangelo Antonioni's cult 60s movie, which have become highly collectible. From what I can gather they went through the usual problems of a struggling band. They had some success with a couple of singles, one of which was a soft ballad called 'Rainbow' in 1976. Included on this compilation, it was used on a TV series called 'Anjo Mau' (Bad Angel). They did not capitalize on this for various reasons and the band has existed as a live covers act since then. The track I have used, from the 2nd album, is by far the stand-out on what is otherwise a very soft pop album (as is the first) which does have some fuzz guitar here and there. 'Tá Cozendo o Tempo' (trans:'Time to Bake') is a nice example of some psychedelia influenced pop with samba flavour. Thanks again to Brazilian Nuggets for this information and if you can read Portuguese I'm sure you will be able to decipher a lot more useful information from here.

Módulo 1000
Módulo 1000 are one of the better-known bands here. Even though they only made one record it is definitely one of the best from that time in the country. Considering that Brazilian prog rock was rare in 1972, and this is the band's first album, it is impressively rich and it’s clear the band were listening to and taking notice of what was happening in experimental progressive/heavy rock around the world. There is a comprehensive interview with guitarist Daniel Cardona Romani and Luiz Paulo Simas (organ, piano, vocals) here. In that interview he explains, what is also very clear from listening to the album, that they were directly influenced by Pink Floyd and Black Sabbath. This may not be such an unusual choice of influences, but I can safely say that it was unique for a Brazilian band in that year and the album is consistently good. As such, it's definitely one of the first in this comp that you should investigate further and it's a great shame the band did not exist long enough to release any more albums. They did however record a single under the name 'Love Machine', called 'The Cancer Stick / Waitin' for Tomorrow'.

Joelho de Porco
São Paulo's Joelho de Porco (trans:'Pork Knee' or 'Pig's Knee') is regarded as one of the first Brazilian bands with an overtly 'punk' attitude. While the music was not particularly so on the debut LP I have used here, the lyrics are said to have been in the socio-politically conscious vein of other proto punk attitude bands like Australia's Sky Hooks (Vol80) or the UK's Third World War (Vol42). The band broke up after a 2nd album but founder Tico Terpins reformed it in 1983 with the addition of Zé Rodrix, mentioned earlier as an original member of Som Imaginário. Argentine rocker-come-punk Billy Bond moved to Brazil and also worked with Tico in the late 70s. Apparently Tico joined 'Billy Bond and the Jets', but I am unable to translate well enough to tell how much involvement Billy had in Joelho de Porco. Though he is listed as a member on RYM, this may have been later on in the 80s. The track I used here, 'Aeroporto de Congonhas', brings some welcome glam quirkiness, with it's unusual dynamics and dramatic shifts in rhythm.

O Peso - Em Busca Do Tempo Perdido LP
Rio de Janeiro's O Peso (trans: 'The Weight') made one album in 1975. It's a very anglo american-worshiping rock'n roll/blues based record called 'Em Busca do Tempo Perdido' (trans:'In Search of Lost Time'). They were Luiz Carlos Porto (vocals), Gabriel O'Meara (guitar), Constant Papineau (piano), Carlos Scart (bass) and Carlos Graça (drums). It's not very heavy so I'd hesitate to call it hard rock, though a couple of tracks are almost there, these are of course my faves. 'Não Sei de Nada' (included here, trans:'I do not know anything') has a great riff all the way through with Robert Plant-like vox, and 'Lucifer' has some agreeably Lynyrd Skynyrdian guitar. The playing is good, and the vocal performance is impassioned through-out but the record's lack of identity is given away by the fact it has all the cliches ticked-off; the ballad, the slow blues/harmonica one (called 'Blues'!), the acoustic one, the heavy one etc...these guys could have been much better with more direction and focus as the musical chops on display are more than good enough.

Rita Lee & Tutti Frutti
The closer is from a band that was fronted by Brazilian star Rita Lee, who made a few albums with a glam rock backing band called Tutti Frutti. '...Tem uma Cidade' (trans:'...There is a city') is the fade-out final track from Rita Lee & Tutti Frutti's 1974 album 'Atrás Do Porto Tem Uma Cidade' (trans:'Behind the port there is a city') and a nice way to end in some moody fuzz, although it is not indicative of the rest of the album which doesn't really fall in to TDATS territory. Tutti Frutti made a Rita-less album in 1980, which is nothing to write home about. Rita came to fame as a singer in São Paulo's 'Os Mutatntes', one of Brazil's most famous and influential bands. They were not a heavy band in general but they mixed things up a lot, often employing fuzz. They came out with a few heavy nuggets like the track 'A Hora E a Vez Do Cabelo Nascer', which Brazilian thrash metal titans Sepultura covered! After Rita split in 1973 to strike out on her own, they became 'Mutantes' and updated their sound with some heavier prog like 'Cidadão Da Terra'.

Os Mutantes
'Os Mutantes' started very young in the mid-60s and had an eclectic approach which was fostered by respect for The Beatles, in particular. They'd plenty of native flavour; they are regarded as part of the 'Tropicália' movement, mixing Brazilian culture with foreign arts, poetry and music (especially African), avant-garde and populist alike. This came about after they met Gilberto Gil (mentioned earlier), a musician and spokesman for the movement who was for a period exiled by Brazil's military government, but would later serve as Brazil's Minister of Culture from 2003 to 2008.

An interesting coincidence that I have noticed in the bunch of bands I used here is that no less than three of them chose to make both of their first two albums self-titled, thus they had the same names; O Terço, Som Imaginário and Blow Up. Of course, I've noticed bands have done this before, but three within this collection is strange! As bands must be aware that this is bound to cause problems and mistakes for people trying to order/buy or differentiate between their records, especially back in the pre-information age, it makes you wonder why they (or maybe their labels) did it.

This ties in with another thing I noticed about a lot of the Brazilian bands I listened to while choosing for this volume; despite them all being technically very good musicians, they tended to be unsure of what over-all sound they were aiming for, they lacked direction over an album, or over their range of albums. The result being that the style a band chose from song to song could vary wildly, to the point where they sounded like different bands playing them; often it was clear to me that a band might for instance have been thinking, "right, this one will be our Deep Purple rocker, this one will be our blues song, this one will be our soft pop hit-maker, and this one will be our wah wah-filled Hendrixy one etc....you get my drift. I can offer no explanation why this has been more apparent with the Brazilain bands I studied, maybe there's just an eclectic, restless nature to Brazilians!

To get back to my first point, it seems to back up the idea that they were consciously re-inventing themselves from song to song or album to album, and so they called their second album by the same name as the first, as though the first album had never happened. Please feel free to comment on this, and please let me know if you do not agree with me here too! Eclectic or not, I love all the tracks I have chosen here so enjoy, and adeus for now!

Some time after reading this I received a new opinion on Tropicália from Pedro Carvalho; "Just one historical correction to a mistake that many foreign writers make when writing about Brazilian music of this period: MPB was not "initially approved of by Brazil's military government because they saw it as a patriotic alternative to the the influence of the rock and pop music invasion from abroad". What happened was that the regime approved of any style of music as long as it wasn't perceived as politically or culturally provocative. They had absolutely no problem with romantic pop singers that played Anglo-American styles as long as they were bland. The country's biggest pop/rock star at the time, Roberto Carlos, always had a good relationship with the government. 

Don't forget that the military government was decidedly Pro-American, never mind the flag waving. 
The people who were actually opposed to foreign influences in music were actually leftists. The majority of the left in Brazil at the time followed a nationalist/anti-imperialist agenda and saw rock as a tool for cultural colonialism. Thus, the main anti-rock faction came from the more political side of the MPB scene. They even organized a parade against electric guitars in 1967. Ironically some participants, such as Gilberto Gil would change their minds and start having rock bands as sidemen very soon after. Also in 1967, Caetano Veloso was the first MPB singer to play in front of a rock band in a festival, which generated a reaction identical to the one Bob Dylan had in Newport in 1965. This is actually a good analogy. The anti-rock reaction in Brazil were not the government, they were the local equivalent to Pete Seeger and the purist folkies who booed Dylan. 

However, starting in 1967, the MPB/rock crossover started by Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil and Os Mutantes (and followed a bit later by Os Novos Baianos) became the soundtrack to the Brazilian version of the summer of love. And even though these were definitely not political artists in the mainstream traditional leftist sense (as many acoustic MPB stars were), they were a cultural and behavioral threat to the status quo, because their attitudes, directly or indirectly, promoted free love, conscience alterations, long hair, free thinking and other "anarchic" values that were considered subversive by the authorities. 

I hope I made myself clear, in brief, the government didn't really care about "foreign influences", they were only against leftist politics or crazy hippie stuff."



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