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Before I go any further, I just want to quickly point out a new addition to the site; check out the email alert subscription box on the right of the page if you'd like to receive an email each time a new post is made here.
Welcome to volume 136! Although this site exists to celebrate music from times long-gone, the inspirational, free thinking spirit of past-decades' heavy rock lives on in the many bands playing right now, who also appreciate those times. When it comes to live music, these are mostly the kind of bands I watch, and great festivals like Freak Valley in Germany, Roadburn in Holland, Psycho Las Vegas and the various Desertfests in Europe are a few of the excellent events to see them.
For this volume I had the idea of inviting some of the current bands that have shown interest in TDATS to suggest a few vintage picks of their own, and to contribute a track of their own in the spirit of the music. One of those bands is
The Neptune Power Federation from New South Wales, Australia. The band's guitarist and artist Mike Foxall kindly volunteered to paint some awesome original cover art for this volume. Thanks Mike, and check out more of his stuff at
theartoffox.com.
So the result is three parts, part 1 is the old tracks while parts 2 & 3 are the new bands. A diverse mix of rock from different countries and different decades results! Some of the old bands have appeared in the blog before, so in this set are songs from them that have not, but there's a healthy dose of new appearances too, like those suggested by
Wucan,
Stubb,
Purson and
Admiral Cloudesley Shovell. Parts two and three host contemporary bands including Brooklyn's grooving
The Golden Grass, Germany's jamming
Samsara Blues Experiment and Finland's space-rockin'
Deep Space Destructors. Also making contributions are more scene-favourites like
Elder, La Chinga, and
Radio Moscow.
One thing's clear from this volume, although some people lament the passing of the classic, formative years of heavy rock and prog, there's still plenty of new talent to carry the torch and it's easier than ever to find it!
Part 1 - old picks
01. Pussy - Pig Mansion (1972)
from archival LP 'Invasion'
02. Parish Hall - How Can You Win (1970)
from LP 'Parish Hall'
03. Renft - Zwischen Liebe Und Zorn (1972)
Single
04. Freshwater - Satan's Woman (1970)
Single
05. Doug Jerebine - Reddened Eyes (1969)
from LP 'Doug Jerebine Is Jesse Harper'
06. Night Sun - Plastic Shotgun (1972)
from LP 'Mournin'
07. Quartz - Satan's Serenade (1980)
Single
08. Josefus - Country Boy (1970)
from LP 'Dead Man'
09. Osamu Kitajima - Tengu - A Long-Nosed Goblin (1976)
from LP 'Benzaiten'
10. Essjay - Twins Of Evil (1971)
Single
11. Glory - High School Letter (1973)
Single
12. Woodoo - Woodoo-Teema (1971)
from LP 'Taikakulkunen'
13. Ancient Grease - Mother Grease The Cat (1970)
from LP 'Women And Children First'
14. Group 1850 - Little Fly (1968)
from LP 'Agemo's Trip To Mother Earth'
15. Lord Sutch - Wailing Sounds (1970)
from LP 'Lord Sutch And Heavy Friends'
16. Hot Soup - You Took Me By Surprise (1969)
from LP 'Openers'
Part 2 - new tracks
01. La Chinga - White Witchy Black Magic (2016)
from LP 'Frewheelin'
02. The Neptune Power Federation - Mothership (2015)
from LP 'Lucifer's Universe'
03. Purson - The Bitter Suite (2016)
from LP 'Desire's Magic Theatre'
04. Brule - The Devil's Decay (2016)
pre-release track
05. Wucan - Wandersmann (2015)
from LP 'Sow the Wind'
06. Admiral Sir Cloudesley Shovell - Bulletproof (2014)
from LP 'Check 'Em Before You Wreck 'Em'
07. Amulet - Glint Of The Knife (2014)
from LP 'The First'
08. Deep Space Destructors - Journey To The Space Mountain (2015)
from EP 'Spring Break From Space'
Part 3 - more new tracks
01. Pushy - Salem Man (2016)
from split with Ragged Barracudas
02. The Golden Grass - Get It Together (2016)
from LP 'Coming Back Again'
03. Elder - Compendium (2015)
from Lp 'Lore'
04. Radio Moscow - Before It Burns (2014)
from LP 'Magical Dirt'
05. Supersonic Blues - Supersonic Blues Theme (2016)
pre-release exclusive
06. Stubb - The Wingmakers (2015)
from EP 'The Theory of Light & Matter'
07. Samsara Blues Experiment - Midnight Boogie [UFO cover] (2012)
Single
08. Danava - The Last Goodbye [Slowbone cover live] (2012)
on LP 'Hemisphere Of Shadows'
Part 1 - The Vintage Picks
01. Pussy - "Pig Mansion"
Johnny from
Admiral Sir Cloudesley Shovell has suggested a track by Pussy, which was a very short-lived band that came after
Jerusalem. In fact, it basically was Jerusalem minus Bill Hinde and Lynden Williams, but Pussy took a noticeably different direction into glam rock. Johnny comments that Pig Mansion "gives
Crushed Butler a run for their money!". Unfortunately their output never saw it on to an album but they did release Pig Mansion as a single, which is the version appearing here. In 2011 Rockadrome issued Pussy's archives on 'Invasion', which included the original, and an extended remixed version of Pig Mansion.
02. Parish Hall - "How Can You Win"
Adam Burke, guitarist of Portland Oregon's
Pushy, drew a great cover for TDATS
Vol 120. He and his band have proffered a Parish Hall track and Adam says "We love the laid-back, almost lazy pacing, bludgeoning, simple drumming and completely burning main riff. It’s strangely difficult to make blues rock that isn't douchey, but these fellas did it right."
03. Renft - "Zwischen Liebe und Zorn"
This track was recommended by Dresden's "Kraut-fueled heavy flute rockers"
Wucan, who started in 2012 and have made two LPs so far. Singer and bandleader Fran explains her choice. "I wish more people were able to understand the lyrics and put it into socio-historical context. Renft were a GDR based band (fabulous musicians!), back when Germany was divided between the Russians and the Allied forces. The socialist GDR government was very strict about which music and what lyrical content bands were allowed to perform.
Renft, being the blues rock voice of the GDR's young generation, didn't let the government dictate to them how to write songs, which in return got them in serious trouble in the early '70s. The band was eventually forced by the government to split in 1975 after they released this track (among others) with very regime-critical lyrics. Even after 40 years the song and its lyrics have not lost any of their aggression or anger, and retain their beautifully intellectual, revolutionary vibes. All Renft songs have been highly influential on Wucan's work."
04. Freshwater - "Satan's Woman"
Neptune Power Federation's recommendation is an obscure single. Guitarist Troy explains their choice: "Releasing a groovy occult rock 7" means not dealing in half measures. That's why when Australian blues/prog rockers Freshwater released their 1970 single 'Satan' they backed it up on the flip side with 'Satan’s Woman'.
Conservative radio stations of the day ran a mile from this dark offering exploring the grim recent events in a Los Angeles mansion. Decades later The Neptune Power Federation have accepted the torch passed on by Freshwater, vowing to continue dabbling in the black arts, and being ignored by radio"
05. Doug Jerebine - "Reddened Eyes"
Boston's
Elder have been around for ten years now (time flies!) and have rightly earned a great reputation in underground heavy rock. Guitarist Nick DiSalvo has suggested a track from New Zealander Doug Jerebine, the real name of 'Jesse Harper', who's archival collection 'Guitar Absolution In The Shade Of A Midnight Sun' has featured in TDATS before (
Vol34). Since that record, some more of his vintage recordings have surfaced on the Drag City release 'Doug Jerebine Is Jesse Harper; and that's where 'Reddened Eyes' is from.
06. Night Sun - "Plastic Shotgun"
London's
Brule has selected a TDATS favourite, Night Sun. Guitarist Alastair Riddell explains "At the start of the '90s I used to trade tapes with Jus Oborne (of Electric Wizard). There were only a handful of doom bands back then so we would trade rehearsal tapes of Mourn and Thy Grief Eternal amongst other things. In '92 or so he sent me a compilation tape with things like
Buffalo,
May Blitz,
Bang and so on. One track was Plastic Shotgun by Night Sun.
In those pre-internet days I couldn't find anything else by them until 2003, I was crewing for Firebird on a European tour with Fu Manchu, during a few days in Berlin I discovered a shop called Pandora's Box that had Second Battle's CD reissue of
Mournin'. Plastic Shotgun sounds like Uriah Heap on amphetamines!"
07. Quartz - "Satan's Serenade"
NWOBHM pioneers Quartz were chosen by London metallurgists
Amulet. Guitarist Marek Steven explains. "In the early days of Amulet after forming in 2010, Quartz were a band we all loved and naturally felt kinship with through the decades. Quartz deliver post-Sabbath Heavy Metal with good songs, simple but tasteful structures and evil atmospheric themes with a positive overall vibe.
Having formed in the early-mid '70s they have the individual mentality of that era before the New Wave of Heavy Metal settled into certain patterns from 79-ish. Quartz were ahead of their time with balls deep riffs that should put them in the same bracket at Pentagram and other just-after-Sabbath bands. The fact that Tony Iommi loved them enough to produce and play on the debut album also tells you something.
Quartz did pretty well at the time and recently have reformed and surprised some people with how bloody good they still are... but not us! Amulet have been lucky enough to play some shows with them and it's a always a treat for us to see them play such heavy and brilliant songs so effortlessly. They even have a great all-new album 'Fear No Evil' just out. Amulet aspires to their longevity and attitude, and we'll have a second album in 2017 too so watch out!"
08. Josefus - "Country Boy"
Berlin's psychedelic jam band
Samsara Blues Experiment threw a Josufus track in to the mix. Founding member Christian Peters remembers: "I chose this because they were basically one, if not the, first rather obscure band I discovered, years ago when most younger people wouldn't even care for Black Sabbath that much...the track 'Country Boy' just seems to suit me fine, since I grew up in a village of ten houses and even now living in Berlin, I'm still sort of a loner, maybe a dreamer too ;) Well, those were the days... Josefus is one of the bands everybody should know anyway."
09. Osamu Kitajima - "Tengu - A Long-Nosed Goblin"
London's heavy psych trio
Stubb have recommended something a little different. This is some chilled Japanese prog by Osamu Kitajima. Quite mesmerising stuff! It comes from his third LP, 1976's "Benzaiten".
Osamu himself was previously in classic Japanese 1960s 'Group Sounds' band,
The Launchers. In fact, Launchers bass player and TV personality Yuzo Kayama originally coined the term 'Group Sounds', which became the byword for the popular fusion of kayōkyoku music and Western rock music at the time. Read more at Julian Cope's Japrock Sampler (
link).
10. Essjay - "Twins Of Evil"
London's 'psych face-melters'
Purson suggested a rare 45 from 1971 called 'Twins of Evil'. Bandleader Rosalie Cunningham has this to say about it: "I could listen to this sinister slice all day, it’s so groovy!
It's a rearrangement of the orchestral theme for the Hammer Horror film of the same name. It was released as a single by ‘Essjay’, a pseudonym for composer Mike Batt who also wrote the Wombles TV theme!"
11. Glory - "High School Letter"
Chris Read, bassist with Vancouver hard rockers
La Chinga, has also thumbed-up an obscure 45. He discovered this on 'Ultimate Bonehead Volume 3' and this is what that comp has to say about it: "Glory was a San Diego band with two members who were in
Iron Butterfly, but too young to follow the band when they moved to LA. This was their only record, the A side is a fine specimen of West Coast raunchiness.
The B side Peaches is also ace, mid-tempo and damn catchy". Chris offers his own opinions on the song...."Glory - High School Letter 1973 Speemo records is a ripping slab of So-Cal righteousness. The raw riff, crunches and punches, the drummer rides the bell, the bass gets busy, the singer wails on about some hottie in a tight knit sweater and getting it on in the old wood barn! And there is even a backwards guitar solo! The moment it fires up I feel like I'm rolling down the street in a boogie van. Perfect."
Glory have appeared in the blog before, back in volume 5 with a track from their only collection of recordings, "On The Air" (Rockadrome)
12. Woodoo - "Woodoo-Teema"
All the way to Oulu, Finland now, for a selection by
Deep Space Desructors. Thus speaks singer and bass-player, Jani Pitkänen. "Woodoo was a relatively short-lived band in the beginning of the 70's. They recorded only one LP for a Finnlevy sub-label called UFO.
The LP is called Taikakulkunen (roughly translated Magic Jingle Bell). Lyrically they wrote about death, and mystical aspects of life and the world. We chose this Woodoo track because it's pretty obscure to have a band in Finland playing "world music", specifically at that point in time, and the track is very rocking and deceivingly simple, but has many beautiful musical nuances hidden in it, which we can relate to."
13. Ancient Grease - "Mother Grease The Cat"
San Diego heavy psych blues dealers
Radio Moscow offered up Mother Grease The Cat from TDATS favourite Welshmen, Ancient Grease.
This is what band founder Parker Griggs has to say: "This track has one of the coolest heavy psych riffs ever, along with one of the coolest and most bizarre titles. We always loved the Ancient Grease album, and this is my favorite track on it. The guitarist really shines, with some Ritchie Blackmore, aggressive sounding leads. Bang your head!"
If you are collecting the best early obscure heavy LPs, I'd say Ancient Grease's "Women And Children First" is one of the absolute essentials. It's as good as anything fellow-countrymen Budgie did, and it's a shame they didn't last long.
14. Group 1850 - "Little Fly"
The Netherlands'
Supersonic Blues have joined-in with a track from Group 1850. Guitarist Tim Aarbodem said: "Like us, these guys are from The Hague, which is one of the reasons we chose them. Group 1850 are a brilliant psychedelic act from the late '60s, easily one of our favourite bands from The Hague's 60s beat era.
You could say they were the (Syd Barrett era) Pink Floyd of The Hague, but they definitely had their own vibe. Unfortunately their singer and bandleader Peter Sjardin passed away recently. We've played Group 1850 tunes in the past. They're not a direct influence on our music but we hold them high in regard!
Once we were shooting some band photos at the Catholic graveyard here in The Hague. We were walking around for a while and one grave grabbed our attention. It had a statue of a dog on it, which we thought was a nice detail. But when we looked closer it turned out to be the grave of Daniël 'Dean' van Bergen, the original guitarist of Group 1850! We didn’t know he was buried there at all, was it a sign perhaps? A confirmation from above of us doing well?! “…and Daniël van Bergen saw that is was good.”
15. Lord Sutch & Heavy Friends - "Wailing Sounds"
One of the new tracks that Portland's
Danava submitted was a Lord Sutch cover, so I have taken the liberty of using a Lord Sutch original as their old pick, I don't think they'll mind...
David Sutch (aka Screaming Lord Sutch) was a musician and 'Monster Raving Loony Party' political satirist/activist who had many friends, enough in fact, to get Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck, Noel Redding, John Bonham, Ritchie Blackmore and Kieth Moon (among others) to play on various records of his! 'Wailing Sounds' is the opener from 1970's 'Lord Sutch And Heavy Friends', it was co-written by Jimmy Page and features Page & John Bonham doing their thang.
16. Hot Soup
- "You Took Me By Surprise"
Adam Kriney, singing drummer of Brooklyn's "free-wheelin, good-time rock & roll band"
The Golden Grass, has suggested a track from Hot Soup.
This was an obscure band that had notable guitarist
Frank Carillo, who made a few records in different acts including the boogie-rocking
Doc Holliday in 1973 and '
Carillo' in 1979. Hot soup was a soul rock act that was quite tame, except for 'You Took Me By Surprise', which rocked things up a few notches with its solid hammond and funky rhythms!
Part 2 - The New School
01. La Chinga - "White Witchy Black Magic"
Taken from "Frewheelin" LP on Small Stone Records (2016)
Vancouver's hard rock power trio La Chinga are another band that are into this blog and have helped out on occasion with some opinions and recommendations. If you dig the selection of obscure crunching bonehead US singles that have appeared on many TDATS volumes thus far then you'll get what La Chinga are all about in no time; getting in your car, going out and having a good time while you can, as we could all be dead tomorrow, what have you got to lose? According to bassist/singer Chis Read, 'White Witchy Black Magic' is a true story, so I'd be wary of the female company this band keeps if I were you...
02. The Neptune Power Federation - "Mothership"
Taken from "Lucifer's Universe" LP on Bandcamp (link)
Guitarist Troy describes his band: "Hailing from Sydney Australia, The Neptune Power Federation are a grandiose grime-encrusted heavy rock machine, powered by hellfire, beaten fuzz pedals and space hallucinogens. The track 'Mothership' was forged after consultation with extraterrestrial beings the band came across in a pub car park, after admiring their panel van's original Frank Frazetta paint job."
03. Purson - "The Bitter Suite"
Taken from "Desire's Magic Theatre" LP on Spinefarm Records (2016)
Soon after making it into this comp, Purson unfortunately announced the end of their time together, but they still wanted to contribute.
Founder
Rosalie Cunningham said: "This is the final song on the final Purson album. A three-part ode to sex, drugs and rock and roll (not in that particular order). This song gives an idea of the direction my writing is going at the moment."
04. Brule - "The Devil's Decay"
Find Brule's initial recordings on Bandcamp (link)
London's
Brule come self-described as "Heavy Metal Rock ‘n’ Roll, four guys with a background in hardcore, doom and death metal, rocking to the classics like Pentagram, Skynyrd, The Who and Deep Purple".
Guitarist
Alastair Riddell says this about the track appearing here. "The Devil's Decay started off sounding like Saint Vitus. It wasn't even a consciously written riff. I was just warming up hitting notes but Rob [Wilson - Drums] started playing along. Somehow between Johnny [Ogle - Vocals] joining and Rob speeding it up a bit, it ended up sounding like
Pentagram. Johnny and I have been listening to them for over a quarter of a century so it is just natural I suppose." See Brule playing at London's Desertfest in April this year!
05. Wucan - "Wandersmann"
Taken from "Sow The Wind" LP on Made in Germany (2015)
If you are at Desertfest London this year, you'll be able to see
Wucan's first appearance there. Singer and bandleader
Fran comments on their track 'Wandersmann'; "Well, what is there really to be mentioned? We all see this song as the
Wucan-defining song. In many ways this song took our musicianship a step further.
Even now we are still stunned by how much this song has developed, and continues to take shape, since we first performed it."
06. Admiral Sir Cloudesley Shovell - "Bulletproof"
From "Check 'Em Before You Wreck 'Em" on Rise Above Records (2014)
Hastings' own
Admiral Sir Cloudesley Shovell (try saying that after 9 pints of Double Diamond) have been belting out no-nonsense swagger-filled rock'n roll for a few years now. Their third album 'Keep It Greasy!' is recently out on Rise Above Records and it's their best yet!
07. Amulet - "Glint Of The Knife"
Taken from "The First" LP on Century Media (2014)
London's
Amulet are one of the UK's proudest purveyors of traditional heavy metal, championing the days of the NWOBHM.
Founding guitarist
Marek Steven also organises London's annual
Live Evil festival (
link), a two-day festival which hosts vintage and new heavy metal bands from around the world.
08. Deep Space Destructors
- "Journey To The Space Mountain"
From "Spring Break From Space" EP (2015) on bandcamp (link)
Bassist
Jani Pitkänen speaks: "With
Deep Space Destructors, we are on a similar path musically to the old band we chose,
Woodoo; making more rocking songs, simplifying things here and there but still the songs have unique characteristics in them, but we don't expose these things straight out. It's best not to serve everything on a silver platter all at once, even though it's the thing to do nowadays. We still believe in discovering things in music on your own and finding new or old cool music, for which TDATS compilations are a great example!"
Band links for part 2
Part 3 - The New School contd.
01. Pushy - "Salem Man"
From Ragged Barracudas/Pushy split LP on Who can you trust? (2016)
Some excerpts straight from the band: "
Pushy started as a long-fantasized side project for Travis Clow of Crag Dweller and Adam Burke of Fellwoods. They wanted a band that'd make you want to light your bushes on fire/take your pants off/stop showering/give up on Dry January/put off your taxes/kiss random people/dig holes and throw away all your post punk records. Crack open a cold one...well, several cold ones, and get down to the good time rock and roll for river doggin', hot doggin', hangin' out and catching trout."
02. The Golden Grass - "Get It Together"
Taken from "Coming Back Again" LP on Listenable Records (2016)
Golden Grass's drummer / singer Adam Kriney has been a fan of TDATS for a long time and has assisted in a few of the volumes so far, most notably when I was looking for biker movie rock for vol 109 (
link), which was a ton of fun to make! The band describe themselves as "Rooted in sun-soaked and funky southern/country US classic rock back-beat, emblazoned with swinging, hip and groovy UK mod/soul/freakbeat vibrations and bursting with proto-metal bluesey-prog overtones", and I'm not going to argue there!
03. Elder - "Compendium"
Taken from "Lore" LP on Armageddon (US) and Stickman (EU)
'Compendium' is the opening track from
Elder's third LP "Lore". The band is widely improvisational and specialises in long tracks that pull from all ages and flavours of heavy rock.
When asked which Elder track he'd like to offer, guitarist
Nick DiSalvo said "None of our songs really obviously reference only 60s-70s stuff. I have a hard time in general seeing the forest for the trees with our own music, if you get me, but Compendium is the most obvious reference to me."
04. Radio Moscow - "Before It Burns"
Taken from "Magical Dirt" LP on Alive Records (2014)
Bandleader
Parker Griggs: "Before it Burns is one of my favorite tunes to play live. It starts heavy and in the middle goes into some free-form jams that give the band a chance to reach outer space. Different each time we play it, so always keeps us on our toes!"
05. Supersonic Blues - "Supersonic Blues Theme"
Pre-release exclusive
Guitarist
Tim Aarbodem: "Supersonic Blues was started in 2013. Gianni (bass) and I met through our love of vinyl, spinning some records on Radio Tonka, an underground radio station in The Hague. Lennart joined on drums at the end of 2015.
Guy Tavares (Orange Sunshine, Santa Cruz) made our first studio recordings in his Hague studio. It’s packed with rare vintage amps, drums, studio gear, it was an awesome and crazy experience! 'Supersonic Blues Theme' is one of the four songs we recorded, we had a high-school-rock-MC5 thing in mind for this one. This and another song will be released as a 7" on Who Can You Trust? Records in early 2017, thanks to Ragged Barracudas drummer/vocalist Christian Dräger, the man behind the label. There are a lot of cool bands on that label, such as Hot Lunch, Lecherous Gaze, Pushy, Wild Eyes and Zig Zags."
06. Stubb - "The Wingmakers"
Taken from "The Theory of Light & Matter" split EP with Mos Generator on HeviSike Records (2015).
See them recording this in the studio (
link).
Stubb are one of four bands in this comp that are playing at London's Desertfest this year, so check out their warm-sounding fuzzy grooves there if you are attending.
07. Samsara Blues Experiment - "Midnight Boogie"
From "Center Of The Sun/Midnight Boogie" EP on World In Sound (2012)
Band founder
Christian Peters talks about the track: "Midnight Boogie is our rendition of the
UFO track, which was one of the bands I totally worshipped in my later school days. Blasting their early albums on my car stereo, windows down, drinking beer during free lessons, all the stupid stuff you do when you're young and pretend to be cool. It's nice memories, and I can be very nostalgic... well...".
Samsara Blues Experiment will be playing at Desertfest in London this year.
08. Danava - The Last Goodbye [Slowbone cover live]
From "Hemisphere Of Shadows" LP on Kemado Records (2011)
Like The Golden Grass, Portland OR's
Danava have been vocal supporters of TDATS for years and have appeared in the site before, including a 2013 interview with main man
Greg Meleney for vol 86 (
link).
Greg kindly submitted some very raw live recordings to include in this one, but as they are in need of a lot of cleaning-up, for the sake of the deadline I decided to use a live recording of theirs from a different occaision. It's a
Slowbone cover, an awesome UK hard rock act that unfortunately did not release an official album but were an inspiration to a young Iron Maiden. Perfect choice here, seeing it's a fantatstic track and Slowbone's original version has been in the blog already!
Band links for part 3
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I hope you enjoyed this. Many thanks to all the bands who took part, and to all of you who have supported Aftersabbath.com thus far! Cheers, Rich
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