22.3.12

Timothy Leary & Ash Ra Tempel - Seven Up


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Review from Progarchives.com:

Warthur
2 stars The first release from the Cosmic Couriers label - which would disintegrate a mere three years later in the wake of the Cosmic Jokers scandal - sees Ash Ra Tempel team up with Timothy Leary for some trippy freakout rock. To put things in context, in 1972 Leary was on the run from the American authorities, having escaped from a low security prison, so recording an album with him could be seen as a bit of a controversial move from Ash Ra Tempel - and, perhaps, was calculated as a publicity stunt on the part of R.U. Kaiser.Either way, Leary's presence seems to throw the album off-kilter. There are segments which are very much in line with the typical Ash Ra Tempel sound, during which you wouldn't know Leary was there; at other points, like in the rock and roll section of Space - yes, there's a rock and roll section, it's the segment entitled Right Hand Lover - Leary's personality takes over proceedings, and the album seems to sound like a less jazzy and less progressive version of early Gong. In short, the team-up is an experiment which didn't quite work, and this is one of the least interesting of the early Ash Ra Tempel albums.
Warthur | 2/5 | 

20.3.12

The Stone Roses - The Stone Roses


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Top 10 all-time British Albums from NME
  1. The Stone Roses ‘The Stone Roses'
  2. The Smiths ‘The Queen Is Dead’
  3. Oasis ‘Definitely Maybe’
  4. Sex Pistols ‘Never Mind The Bollocks’
  5. Arctic Monkeys ‘Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not’
  6. Blur ‘Modern Life Is Rubbish’
  7. Pulp ‘Different Class’
  8. The Clash ‘London Calling’
  9. The Beatles ‘Revolver’
  10. The Libertines ‘Up The Bracket’  

I Wanna Be Adored

get jangle with it

Freedom




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Tubby Hayes - 200% Proof



A BBC broadcast from July 25, 1969.

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Tubby (Edward Brian) Hayes was one of Britain's finest tenor sax players, Jazz musicians and composers. He co-led the successful Jazz Couriers with Ronnie Scott from 1957 to 1959. He led several distinguished quartets and was the first British contemporary to appear at regular intervals in the USA. One of his most distinguished quartets came in the late 1950's, a group which included Terry Shannon, Jeff Clyne, Phil Seaman or Bill Eyden. Another in the 1960's included Ron Mathewson, Tony Levin and Mike Pyne. 
Hayes who was arguably the most prodigiously talented jazz multi-instrumentalist the British Isles has ever produced. (read more)



The Inner Splurge (live, 1969)