VA - Up All Night: 20 Heavy Nuggets From The Golden Age Of Hard Psych (1969-73)
Tracklist:
01 - Liquid Smoke - Warm Touch 02 - Tin House - Be Good And Be Kind 03 - The Litter - Journeys 04 - The Finchley Boys - Outcast 05 - Highway Robbery - Fifteen 06 - Euclid - Gimme Some Lovin' 07 - Damnation Of Adam Blessing - Driver 08 - Src - Up All Night 09 - Bang - The Queen 10 - Dragonfly - Enjoy Yourself 11 - Granicius - You're In America 12 - Steeplechase - Wrought Iron Man 13 - Sir Lord Baltimore - Kingdom Come 14 - Jamul - All You Have Left Is Me 15 - Power Of Zeus - In The Night 16 - Haystack Balboa - The Children Of Heaven 17 - Third Power - Gettin' Together 18 - Yesterday's Children - Providence Bummer 19 - Head Over Heels - Road Runner 20 - Landslide - Sad And Lonely
Digitalindustries.com, Henry Smith: “If rocking's your schtick, and you prefer an atypically sleazy form of it a la a 70s bellbottom, cocaine sniffing sort of way then boy is this for you. If not, well, go the fuck back out west and take it easy I suppose. This collection, put out by the capable hands of bin diggers over at Past & Present, pulls twenty psych greats that essentially fall somewhere in between the hypnotic stoned levels of the Doors and the dark slaying of Black Sabbath. None of them seem to have done much, but from the evidence herein there seems little reason other than pure bad luck. Of course any questions as to their whereabouts are swiftly resolved in the extensive liner notes, which provide mini biographies of each act.
So where do the highlights lie? Well it really depends on your steez I suppose—Highway Robbery's “Fifteen,” torn apart by Rolling Stone in 1972, sounds like a crossbreed between King Crimson and the Sex Pistols, sliding between styles within seconds with propulsive energy and snotty attitude. The Damnation of Adam Blessing, who opened for the Stooges and the Faces, present the loping groove of “Driver,” a pummeling number that keeps it garage-y and epic all at once. Dragonfly's “Enjoy Yourself” presents some serious guitar twang intermixed with a proto metal violence. Wild stuff. Especially Haystacks Balboa's “The Children of Heaven,” a totally schizophrenic proggy number that's like little else to my ear.
Totally a certain thing, but if you're into the thing you could do worse. Especially well suited to cruises around the street on summer nights, beer in hand.”
My only complaint about this comp is that a lot of the songs here are from bands well known in the genre, and they've had their albums re-issued. That’s a very minor complaint, and if you haven’t heard it before the Haystack Balboa track alone is good enough to get this one.
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