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Showing posts with label 1967 – Year in PSYCHEDELIC ROCK – The Bands And Sounds Of The Summer of Love by KEVIN FURBANK (2021 UK Paperback by Sonicbond Publishing). Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1967 – Year in PSYCHEDELIC ROCK – The Bands And Sounds Of The Summer of Love by KEVIN FURBANK (2021 UK Paperback by Sonicbond Publishing). Show all posts

Friday 14 January 2022

1967 – A Year in PSYCHEDELIC ROCK – The Bands And Sounds Of The Summer of Love by KEVIN FURBANK (2021 Paperback Book from SonicBond)

 


 
 
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"...Semolina Pilchard Climbing up The Eiffel Tower..."

 

As the author of Genre and Year books on CD Reissues and Remasters (see my 'Sounds Good Music Book Series' of 24 e-Book titles) - this clever wee paperback caught my eye as it concentrates on a year I didn't do – "1967" – aka The Summer of Love (yeah baby).

 
Author KEVIN FURBANK is the Managing Editor of the Irish Daily Mirror and has been a journalist/music enthusiast for over 40 years. This is his third paperback release for Sonicbond Publishing – the other two being in their On Track Series of books - Steve Hillage's Gong and those legends of English Folk Rock – Fairport Convention. Furbank is a musician himself and with a lean towards nutters like 70ts space cowboys Gong, he digs Prog Rock, Avant Garde, Symphonic Rock, and of course from whence they all arguably came – 60ts Psychedelic Rock.
 
UK-released by Sonicbond Publishing 26 November 2021 (31 December 2021 for the USA) - "1967 – A Year in PSYCHEDELIC ROCK – The Bands And The Sounds Of The Summer Of Love" gives us 155 A5 paperback pages – the bands dealt with in release-date order for that pivotal year (priced at £14.99 but available for about ten or eleven).
 
Furbank quite rightly acknowledges The Byrds and their soundscape milestone "Eight Miles High" issued as a 45-single by Columbia in the USA in March 1966. He also smartly gives a nod to the big precursor daddy as far as most English fans were concerned, "Tomorrow Never Knows" that tail-ended The Beatles August 1966 masterpiece "Revolver" - Ringo's stunning drumming, all those swirling tape-loops and guitars and John (stunned on something else) telling all of us to "...relax and float downstream... "
 
After a few paragraphs that set the scene, we get the key bands of that mercurial year – The Beatles with "Sgt. Peppers", "Penny Lane" b/w "Strawberry Fields Forever" and the "Magical Mystery Tour" US LP, British EPs, Movie, The Doors and their extraordinary debut on Elektra Records, Jimi Hendrix and his first singles plus the "Are You Experienced" LP on Track, Jefferson Airplane with both "Surrealistic Pillow" and "After Bathing At Baxter's" on RCA Victor, Love and their dynamite "Forever Changes" and for many – the true monster of the season to be a witch – Pink Floyd's Syd Barrett influenced debut "The Piper At The Dates Of Dawn" (Interstellar Overdrive y'all). 
 
The examinations continue with Cream (both "Fresh Cream" and "Disraeli Gears"), The Byrds and their "Younger Than Yesterday" period, The Who doing "Sell Out" (baked beans ahoy), the whole Beach Boys unreleased 'Smile' album fiasco that produced "Wild Honey" and "Smiley Smile" instead of a proper follow-up to "Pet Sounds", The Rolling Stones with "Between The Buttons" and "Their Satanic Majesties Request". 
 
1967 then touches on to the most influential album of the period for me (and of all time actually IMO) – "The Velvet Underground & Nico" Debut on Verve with its iconic Andy Warhol Banana-Peel sleeve. This staggeringly desirable album was/is the only LP we ever kept multiple reissue copies of when I worked as Reckless Records in Berwick Street (originals from 1967 are impossible to find and the 70s reissues on MGM also difficult). Not all of "The Velvet Underground And Nico" is strictly Pysch, more Rock Avant Garde or Experimental or just early Punk even, but then so many LPs of that year and period crossed over into other areas. It's a smart inclusion in a smart book.
 
There are others genre big-hitters too of course in here – Donovan, Frank Zappa and The Mothers Of Invention, Moby Grape, The Moody Blues and The Grateful Dead – an impress array of artists and discussions of their releases (each entry provides release dates UK and US, Chart Positions, Tracks etc).
 
Psych in all of its glories and horrors is a path well-trodden by both CD and Book - yet using quotes from those who were there, illuminating interviews and his own funny, in-depth and intelligent observations - he makes a damn good stab at all the bands featured here (the text touches on the highs and lows too). The only slightly jarring thing is that my copy has 20 pages of colour plates – all those gorgeous LP covers we covet so much, but the last 4 pages for Procol Harum, Country Joe & The Fish and Traffic unceremoniously go to black and white print instead of colour – a printing error perhaps – but a jarring one nonetheless.
 
I enjoyed this read and even dragged out my Universal Remastered CD of Traffic's December 1967 debut album "Mr. Fantasy" again because of it and gave Coloured Rain by Steve Winwood & Co. a whirl. Traffic sang "...Until you came along, there was nothing but an empty space..." Now that's a recommendation for "1967 - A Year In PSYCHEDELIC ROCK..." if ever there was one...

INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order