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“Official re-reissue of ultra-rare 1970 wasted underground hard rock monster!
A wild, loud, raw New Jersey hard psych beast that’s been a favorite target of record collectors, dealers, bootleggers, and swamp dwellers for the past two decades, originally released on the Zonk! label. Chugging guitars, screaming solos, gruff shouted vocals, hard-hitting drums, and a thumping bass.
Also described in this manner: “Totally fu*ked up, messed up New Jersey hard psych monster that can’t be bettered..
“Legendary and rare folk-psych private press record from 1967 that holds up well. Furthermore, the LP is legendary in a literal sense: until recently, few collectors really even knew it truly existed. And Roger Salloom? imagine Jack Kerouac, John Belushi, Lord Buckley, and Lenny Bruce, then throw in Leadbelly, Jimmy Reed, Lonnie Johnson, and Geoff Muldaur… all rolled into one person, and you have a glimpse of poet, singer-songwriter Roger Salloom.
Salloom was in the center of the 1960s San Francisco...
Eric Bikales - keyboards, flute, recorder, vocals
Roger Bruner - guitar, vocals
Dennis Loewen - bass guitar, vocals
Norman Weinberg - drums, percussion, vocals
First-ever reissue of this extremely obscure 1971 progressive rock album by a one and done band from Kansas.
“Kansas based progressive rock group, with remnants of psych, somewhat typical of the US rock scene of 1971. They take the unusual course of covering Yes'"Time and a Word", plus an Edgar Winter Group compositio
“The second album by the American Gamelan composer and instrument builder, Daniel Schmidt, following In My Arms, Many Flowers, his majestic debut on Recital. Abies Firma lies next chronologically, collecting works from 1976 to 1991, considered the second phase of his compositional form. "We were like children playing with new toys," Daniel recalls of the early days of American Gamelan music. "Though, as we moved into the 1980s, I moved away from Javanese traditional formalism completely, no longer using...