Vanguard's Lost Psychedelic Era (1966-1970) Vinyl Set To Celebrate
Record Store Day (February 15, 2011) : News : PlugInMusic.com

posted February 15, 2011

Share

Deep within the Vanguard Records vaults lies a curious story framed by
some of the craziest and most mysterious green and purple paisley'd rock
music to come out of the mid-to-late-sixties. On April 16th, Vanguard
will unveil these releases for the first time in celebration of Record
Story Day.

Follow Me Down: Vanguard's Lost Psychedelic Era (1966-1970), co-produced
by Vanguard staffer Stephen Brower and Birdman Records founder David
Katznelson, is a double gatefold, 18 track vinyl compilation that
encompasses hand-selected tracks from Vanguard's best "lost" records and
45's. Many of the bands featured here only released one record, or a
smattering of singles, before drifting into obscurity, though many of
the artists went on to greater fame after their stint at Vanguard was
done. And while they are stylistically varied, there lies a common
thread of musical proficiency and integrity that represents the
trademark of quality Vanguard strived (and still strives) to uphold...no
matter how bombastic, fuzz-soaked or outer-worldly the music may have
seemed.

Some of the artists on Follow Me Down include: The 31st of February (A
Nickel's Worth of Benny's Help) - Originally forming in 1965 under the
moniker The Bitter Ind - short for Independents, this Florida band
recorded one album for Vanguard Records. The band disbanded shortly
thereafter, and drummer Butch Trucks was invited to join the Allman
Brothers as a permanent member. Circus Maximus (Travelin' Around) - The
band recorded two albums for Vanguard, a self-titled 1967 outing and
1968's follow-up Neverland Revisited. Each album is driven by the dual
songwriting contributions of the band's leaders and co-founders, Bob
Bruno and Jerry Jeff Walker, with the band gaining most of its
still-modest notoriety from Bruno's 8-minute epic "Wind," which became a
minor hit on FM radio at the time. The Hi-Five (Did You Have To Rub It
In?) - A classic rock and roll tale of a band that was so very close to
superstardom, but fell short. The band were regulars at the famous Café
Wah, when Beatles manager Brian Epstein walked into the club and signed
the Hi-Five to management. Soon after, labels like RCA and Columbia were
cutting demos on the band. But when Epstein died at 32 of a drug
overdose, the doors that had been opened were slammed shut. It was then
that Vanguard, who had also had been interested in the band, offered
them a single deal. Did You Have To Rub It In? featured here is a
Mamas-and-Papas-esque groover and one of the best titled rock songs of
all time. And those are just a few of the various and sundry tales this
landmark compilation has to tell.

Click here to listen to excerpts from Follow Me Down: Vanguard's Lost
Psychedelic Era (1966-1970).

In its fifth year, Record Store Day is an occasion for all independently
owned record stores to come together in celebration of the art of music.
Limited edition vinyl and cd releases are made available exclusively for
the day, and hundreds of musicians across the country perform at various
events.

Full track listing:

LP 1
Side A

- The Third Power: Getting Together
- Erik: You Said/But I've Got My Way
- Listening: Stoned Is
- The 31st of February: A Nickel's Worth of Benny's Help
Side B

- Elizabeth: You Should Be More Careful
- Jeff Monn: I Can Understand Your Problem
- Listening: See You Again
- Circus Maximus: Travelin' Around
- The Frost: Take My Hand
LP 2
Side C

- Notes From The Underground: Where I'm At
- The Vagrants: I Can't Make a Friend
- Serpent Power: The Endless Tunnel
- The Family of Apostolic: Saigon Girls
Side D

- The Third Power: Persecution
- Notes From The Underground: Why Did You Put Me On
- The Hi-Five: Did You Have To Rub It In?
- The Far Cry: Hellhound
- The Frost: Big Time Spender

--
http://www.pluginmusic.com/news/article/vanguards-lost-psychedelic-era-1966-1970-vinyl-set-to-celebrate-record-store-day%3E
Via InstaFetch

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Sixties-L" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/sixties-l?hl=en.

Reply via email to