Mike Absalom was a genuine oddity on the late-'60s/early-'70s U.K. scene, a singer/songwriter with a bent sense of humor that seemed to be driven as much by a heavy load of illicit pharmaceuticals as by a skewed worldview. Unlike the contemporary Syd Barrett, however, Absalom did not become an acid casualty. He recorded one album for Saydisc in 1969, a disc that escaped under the title of Save the Last Gherkin for Me, and he set out on a career of busking and living hand to mouth. Producer/A&R man Patrick Lyons (of Nirvana [U.K.] fame) found his attention engaged by Absalom's music when the singer/songwriter was playing for small change in a London Underground station, subsequently signing him to Vertigo Records.
Absalom toured throughout the U.K., playing the college circuit and small clubs throughout the early '70s. The Vertigo contract yielded a pair of albums, of which Mike Absalom (1971) seems hardly to have been noticed, despite a Roger Dean sleeve that doubled as a poster guide to Notting Hill Gate. 1973's Hector and Other Peccadillos garnered a little more attention, but not enough to prevent Absalom from vanishing from sight for some time.
Absalom eventually resurfaced in Canada, and currently lives in Maple Ridge, British Columbia. Over the years he has expanded his repertoire considerably, performing Celtic music under the name of Mike Absalom & the Squid Jiggers, as well as a variety of harp music. He has become popular in western Canada for both the variety of his music and his continuing strange humor.
Tracks Title Composer Time 1 Saga of John the Bog Absalom 4:04 2 Don't Tell It on the Telephone Absalom 2:13 3 Let Me Give You Roses, Rose Absalom 2:42 4 Old Woman in the Moon Absalom 4:35 5 Saga of Ernie Plugg's Bust Absalom 3:33 6 Saga of Suzie Grapevine and Pusher Joe Absalom 5:01 7 Frightened of the Dark Absalom 3:25 8 Gaza Striptease Absalom 2:19 9 It Must Be Spring Absalom 4:25 10 Saga of Peaches Melba and the Hash Officer
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