VA - Forge Your Own Chains: Heavy Psychedelic Ballads And Dirges 1968-1974 (2009)
Artist: VA
Title: Forge Your Own Chains: Heavy Psychedelic Ballads And Dirges 1968-1974
Year Of Release: 2009
Label: Now-Again Records
Genre: Psychedelic Rock, Prog Rock, Folk Rock, Acid Rock
Quality: Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 01:10:44
Total Size: 468 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: Forge Your Own Chains: Heavy Psychedelic Ballads And Dirges 1968-1974
Year Of Release: 2009
Label: Now-Again Records
Genre: Psychedelic Rock, Prog Rock, Folk Rock, Acid Rock
Quality: Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 01:10:44
Total Size: 468 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. The Top Drawers - Song of a Sinner
02. Sensational Saints - How Great Thou Art
03. East Of Underground - Smiling Faces
04. D.R. Hooker - Forge Your Own Chains
05. Hyun, Shin Jung & The Men - Twilight
06. T. Zchiew And The Johnny - Let Your Life Be Free
07. The Strangers - Two To Make A Pair
08. Damon - Don't You Feel Me
09. Ellison - Strawberry Rain
10. Morly Grey - Who Can I Say You Are
11. Shadrack Chameleon - Don't Let It Get You Down
12. Ofege - It's Not Easy
13. Ana & Jaime - Nina Nana
14. Kourosh Yaghmaei - Hajm-e Khaali
15. Baby Grandmothers - Somebody Keeps Calling My Name
Forge Your Own Chains represents the best and worst of that impulse. To the credit of curator Egon, his liner notes state that the purpose of this collection isn't to show off a bunch of rare collector-baiting nuggets but to find common threads between an international assemblage of acid-rock oddities. And the subtitle-- Heavy Psychedelic Ballads and Dirges-- points to an intriguing vein of music; more intriguing yet is the aim of collecting variations of it from five different continents. But when you're working with psychedelic rock, one of the most uneven genres when it comes to old, small-press, and private-press releases, even the best intentions can result in a bit of a mess.
The good news with Forge Your Own Chains is that listening to it all the way through will leave you with both positive first and last impressions. Bookending the comp with its two most sprawling and intense tracks is a canny move, and what Top Drawer's mournful, wailing-guitar-in-a-cathedral epic "Song of a Sinner" and the open-throttle squall of Baby Grandmothers' "Somebody's Calling My Name" share is a sense of slowly-building anxiety, which they use to different ends. But a sizeable chunk of the stuff between these two tracks lacks a lot of their focused intensity, and there's moments where a conceptually promising piece of music is let down by an amateurism that can't quite match the ambition.
The good news with Forge Your Own Chains is that listening to it all the way through will leave you with both positive first and last impressions. Bookending the comp with its two most sprawling and intense tracks is a canny move, and what Top Drawer's mournful, wailing-guitar-in-a-cathedral epic "Song of a Sinner" and the open-throttle squall of Baby Grandmothers' "Somebody's Calling My Name" share is a sense of slowly-building anxiety, which they use to different ends. But a sizeable chunk of the stuff between these two tracks lacks a lot of their focused intensity, and there's moments where a conceptually promising piece of music is let down by an amateurism that can't quite match the ambition.