This 45 is another complete unknown. It is presumed that this is the same band that also went by The Daggs (same label), and is sought after due to being anthologized many years ago. This is a fine psychedelic 45. The a) side is a trippy folk psych number, as the title suggests. Not as dreamy as The Manchester Bridge Band, but very pleasant all the same. The b) side is a cover of the old chestnut most associated with Jay and The Americans and The Lettermen. There's some mid-60s Beatles in their sound as well. The a) side is a slow grower, and makes it a keeper. I'd guess 1966 or 67 as a date.
Sunday, May 16, 2021
The Dags - Watching the Clouds Roll By / She Cried. 196? USA-Chicago
This 45 is another complete unknown. It is presumed that this is the same band that also went by The Daggs (same label), and is sought after due to being anthologized many years ago. This is a fine psychedelic 45. The a) side is a trippy folk psych number, as the title suggests. Not as dreamy as The Manchester Bridge Band, but very pleasant all the same. The b) side is a cover of the old chestnut most associated with Jay and The Americans and The Lettermen. There's some mid-60s Beatles in their sound as well. The a) side is a slow grower, and makes it a keeper. I'd guess 1966 or 67 as a date.
Patti Parker - Bobby McGee / If I Were Your Woman. USA
The a) side is the same song that Janis Joplin covered (with an adjusted title), and is just as annoying. Country blues. Not for me. The flip is more geared toward Diana Ross. Soul pop during the psychedelic era. Probably my least favorite 45 spec buy from last year. Can't win 'em all. But I'll hold on to it for now, since the b) side is nice enough.
Ownership: SP: 19?? Marco. Online acquisition (2020)
The Mogul Band - Backdoor Romance / Whatcha Doin' To Me. 1977 USA-San Francisco Bay Area
So... they reversed the labels, and it's very apparent that 'Whatcha Doin' To Me' is the a) side. An excellent example of southern rock with a phased guitar riff, and some fine solos. The songwriting is pretty good as well. The other side is much more hickified, but with a good mid-song solo. It would seem The Outlaws were the primary influence for The Mogul Band. The area code on the 45 suggests this to be from San Francisco, an odd sound for the region. Guessing it's from the late 1970s. Worth keeping.
Ownership: 1977 Arest. Online acquisition (2020).
Heavy Blow - All Across the Nation / What You Got You Got. 1976 USA
Yet another complete unknown, this one clearly is influenced by Funkadelic and Parliament. A) starts with some humorous bits, then launches into a killer wah wah guitar and Hammond organ rhythm, with active percussion. And then it closes with a (way too short) monster fuzz guitar solo. B) picks up the pace with some thumpin' bass and similar lyrical themes, and some great organ. When word gets out about this, look out baby.
Ownership: SP: 1976 Fast Buck. Found this at a local b&m (2020) for a whopping 80 cents.
Harmon, Pelot, Prichard & Bear / Joe Prichard - Loneliness / Advantage, Miss Evert. 1977 USA-Missouri
Sounding more like a law firm, Harmon, Pelot, Prichard & Bear get right down to proggy business straight from the get. This is the archetypal Midwest prog sound. Mixes hard rock, AOR, and complex progressions with ease. Apparently Joe Prichard is the keyboard player, as the b) side starts off more like an electronic track, but with saxophone layered on top. And a little boogie/honky tonk piano as well. An odd instrumental song honestly. The a) side is what you're after here. Desoto is a small town south of St. Louis. Before men played women sports, cutie Chris Evert dominated tennis in the mid to late 70s. Given that, I'd put 1976 or 1977 as the date of this interesting release (and that was confirmed later).
Ownership: SP: 1977 Cadde. Online acquisition (2020)
Royal Teens - Tears In My Eyes / Chicanery. 1967 USA-Los Angeles
Odd discovery here. Royal Teens were like many southern Californian bands from the late 60s. There was music to be made, and off they went for a go. It's psychedelic but not overtly so. The songwriting is a bit disorienting. The b) side blends in a trippy sequence from The Beach Boys, as an example. I'm not sure of the date to be honest. The last 2 digits of the catalog number on some of the Rev 45s seem to indicate the year, but it could be coincidence. 1967 is about right, though 1966 seems even more realistic. There's some residue from the garage still left in here. Overall, a good one worth seeking out.
Ownership: SP: 1967 Rev. Online acquisition (2020)
Blue Mudd - Natural High / Lay it On the Line. USA
At 10 minutes, you really get your money's worth here. That's EP length. The a) side just flat out kicks ass. Killer dual guitars with some serious fuzz action. Ostensibly this falls into the southern rock genre, but at its most psychedelic. Like the best of The Allman Brothers. The b) side is more traditional southern rock and checks many of the boxes. I was already sold, so I'm enjoying this track as well. Great discovery. No idea where these guys are from, but it's safe to assume the southeast. As for a date, and the psychedelic nature of the guitars on the first side, I'd go with 1972 to 1974.
Southern Savanna - Hear Me / Devil In My Life. 197? USA-Dallas
I had a lot of personal great discoveries last year. Storm, Manchester Bridge Band, Red Machine, Buffoon, Luxus, Heavy Blow, Highway, Dream'r, the list goes on. But Southern Savanna takes the #2 spot. What a guitar tone this guy gets! Starting off with a killer riff and then right into the rhythm, this has the right groove. Then the vocalist comes in, and he actually knows how to sing. A real dude too. Then there's break after break, progressive in nature. Love the pounding drums. This is just awesome hard rock. All killer, no filler. And the b) side is no less awesome. More ass kicking with crankin' solos. Picking up some Blue Cheer on this one. Essential.
Ownership: SP: 19?? Sevens International. Online acquisition (2020).
Gandharvas - Dandelion Wine / K'Vei. USA
Here it is - my #1 personal SP discovery from 2020. And what a monster it is. I've been sitting on this for months, just haven't had the opportunity to catch up.
The a) side is a strong example of hard psychedelia with amplified/megaphone vocals sung into the lost void. Background piano, distorted jangly guitars, and a messy rhythm section creating a racket in the background. Some saxophone solos as well. By itself, the track doesn't surpass either of those from Southern Savanna as a comparison. Then we come to the seven and a half minute (!) instrumental 'K'Vei'. Oh... my... goodness. Yes, it's an Eastern jam cycle with soaring flute, a buzzing organ, tortured jazz sax, running bass lines, pounding percussion recalling Pink Floyd at its most trippy with a dash of 'The World's on Fire' from Strawberry Alarm Clock's debut. Overall what it most reminds me of is '?!' from Group 1850's Paradise Now. No guitar oddly enough, but it's not missed.
No clue where this is from. I bought it from a guy in Minnesota, so it's possible it's from there. As for a date, I'd guess 1968 or 1969.
Ownership: SP: 19?? private. Online acquisition (2020).
Monday, April 19, 2021
The Beautiful Daze - City Jungle Prt. 1 / City Jungle Prt. 2. 1967 USA-Los Angeles
From Los Angeles, The Beautiful Daze gives us exactly the sound every collector wants from a psych single. A good tune wrapped in massive amounts of fuzz. It's one song stretched to two sides. I have a bunch of heavy psych comps, and these tracks missed them all.
4/19/21
The New Life - Backwoods Annie / Ha Lese (Le Di Khanna). 1969 USA-California
The New Life were from Fresno, California. The A side sounds like you would imagine, that of country rock. It's OK. The B side is somewhat legendary and was used in a biker flick. Mostly screaming fuzz psych with hyperactive drumming, though not overly memorable.
4/19/21
Sunday, March 7, 2021
Keystones - I See the Face of a Lady / Here's My Heart. 1972 USA-Chicago
This obscure 45 from the Chicago area is mostly spacey pop psych with dreamy vocals. The a) side features harpsichord and organ over a drifty love song. The b) side opens with a fuzz chord that is repeated elsewhere, and has more of an organ presence. Similar song styles on each. Pity the guitarist never ripped off a solo, as the sound is delicious. Overall it sounds more like something from 1968 than '72, which might explain its total disappearance from the landscape.
Ownership: SP: 1972 Herbie. Online acquisition (2020).
The Union - Love?? / Good Things. 1967 USA-Houston
One more completely obscure 45, this time from Houston, that proves the 60s were loaded with great talent, and not enough outlets for them all. 'Love??' is really great and has that tranced out psychedelic sound with doomy fuzz organ. Think of a post-Animals song mixed with the Group 1850 singles. Awesome. 'Good Things' is more groovy, also featuring organ (not fuzzed though) and jangly guitars with a great hummable tune. Definitely these guys should have made it past the minor leagues.
Ownership: SP: 1967 Radel. Online acquisition (2020).
Crawdaddy - Traveling Down The Road / Lovers At Night, Strangers By Day. 1978 USA-North Carolina
I think with a name like Crawdaddy, and coming from North Carolina, you can guess what this might sound like. And you would be right. The a) side is the winner here. Starting off with electric piano, it has a late era Doors meets Allman Brothers vibe. Some fine slide guitar as well. The b) side is a bit too honky-tonk for me. Not that it's country music - it's still rock - but it's that element of the genre I don't enjoy.
Ownership: SP: 1978 New Hope. Online acquisition (2020).
Wells and Fargo - Mother Goose Sonata / Winter Wind. 1968 USA-Detroit
There was an obsession among the psychedelic crowd with nursery rhymes during the late 60s. Fortunately the a) side is not one of them - but references the literature. It's a great track with psychedelic guitars way out front, and nice harmonic breezy vocals. There's a weird piano part at the end. Overall sounds more British, though I'm sure this is American (after some research, looks like Detroit). 'Winter Wind' has a similar vibe, but is more towards folk rock and gone are the acid guitars. Still an excellent piece. There's also a piano bit about 2/3's through. Maybe it was their little brother? ("let Timmy play a few notes too.."). The a) side is something you'd expect to find on a comp somewhere.
Ownership: SP: 1968 GVS. Online acquisition (2020)
Storm - Break it Down / Back Off. 1977 USA-Chicago
Now this is my kind of hard rock! One of the best of my SP purchases last year. Heavy guitars and crunchy Hammond on side a), with Moog synthesizer and screaming guitar solos on the flip. Vocalist is screaming on top throughout. Not even 6 minutes of material here, and I'm still completely satisfied. I want to hear much more from these guys - maybe they have more in a can somewhere. Interesting they are on the same obscure label as the also excellent Damrod I spoke about last year on this blog. I presume, because of this, they are from Chicago as well.
Ownership: SP: 1977 Ruby promo. Online acquisition (2020).
Sunday, February 28, 2021
Monarch - All I Wanted Was You / Love of Yesterday. 1982 USA-Washington DC
When I first stumbled onto this at a thrift shop, I thought it was an unknown soul 45. Just look at the song titles. Never would have thought heavy metal! Now this isn't super heavy by any means, it's on the melodic side, more typical of the early 80s American metal scene. Think Quiet Riot. But the lead guitar is excellent throughout, and the songs are well written - enough so, I'm keeping it! After some lengthy research I discovered the band were from the DC area.
Ownership: SP: 1982 National. Thrift shop find (2020). There is a picture sleeve for this, but unfortunately the copy we found didn't have it. These photos are my copy - and added to Discogs many months ago.
Dream'r - What the Hell / Stranger. 1981 USA
'What the Hell' starts off with some harmonica and that gets into a southern hard rock riff, while chorusing the namesake track. Not bad, but rather typical hard rock for the era. It's the b side that you're after here. 'Stranger' is completely different - and completely out of time. Sounding like Uriah Heep circa 1972, this is a killer heavy prog track with searing guitar leads and beautiful crunchy Hammond organ. Dig the breezy vocals too. I'm really hoping these guys put more to tape here than this. What a great archival release it would be.
Bobby Saunders Xplosion - Chain Reaction / Angel. 1980 USA-Baltimore
'Chain Reaction' is a solid late 70s styled hard rocker with a heavy guitar riff and features both Moog and Hammond Organ. Good stuff, and definitely cutting edge for 1980. 'Angel' is definitely more rooted in the 1980s sound with cheap synthesizer and a more ballad like approach. All the same, the guitar has some muscle. This isn't metal, definitely hard rock. The a) side makes it a keeper.
Monday, February 8, 2021
Cucumber - Don't Make Me Cry / Under. 1968 USA-Brooklyn
From Brooklyn. Well right from the very first note, you know this is going to be a psychedelic monster. Way fuzzed out guitars, with background Hammond organ, pounding rhythms, and spaced out vocals. The flip is an instrumental - just as acid drenched as 'Don't Make Me Cry', except it's a dirge. This is as good as it gets for underground psychedelic singles. Major leagues.
Ownership: SP: 1968 Cobblestone promo. Recent online acquisition (2021).