VA - Where The Pyramid Meets The Eye (A Tribute To Roky Erickson) (2010)

  • 25 Dec, 07:35
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Artist:
Title: Where The Pyramid Meets The Eye (A Tribute To Roky Erickson)
Year Of Release: 2010 (1990)
Label: Rhino - Warner Records
Genre: Rock, Alternative
Quality: FLAC (tracks) | Mp3 / 320kbps
Total Time: 01:14:52
Total Size: 504 MB | 170 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist
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01. ZZ Top - Reverberation (Doubt)
02. John Wesley Harding - If You Have Ghosts (Album Version)
03. Poi Dog Pondering - I Had to Tell You (Album Version)
04. The Judybats - She Lives (In a Time of Her Own) (Album Version)
05. Primal Scream - Slip Inside This House (Album Version) :
06. Bongwater - You Dont Love Me Yet (Album Version)
07. Julian Cope - I Have Always Been Here Before (Album Version)
08. Doug Sahm & Sons - Youre Gonna Miss Me (Album Version)
09. Southern Pacific - Its a Cold Night for Alligators (Album Version)
10. Richard Lloyd - Fire Engine (Album Version)
11. Vibrating Egg - Bermuda (Album Version)
12. Various Interprets - I Walked with a Zombie (Album Version)
13. Butthole Surfers - Earthquake (Album Version)
14. Lou Ann Barton - Dont Slander Me (Album Version)
15. Sister Double Happiness - Red Temple Prayer (Two Headed Dog) (Album Version)
16. Thin White Rope - Burn the Flames (Album Version)
17. Chris & Thomas - Postures (Leave Your Body Behind) (Album Version)
18. T Bone Burnett - Nothing in Return (Album Version)
19. Jesus & Mary Chain - Reverberation (Doubt) (Album Version)

Roky Erickson often seems to be better known in rock circles for his well publicized psychological maladies and his less-than-gentle treatment at the hands of Texas' judicial system than for his music -- and that's a shame. While Roky's habit of informing anyone who asks that he's a Martian or is in contact with Satan makes for good fanzine copy, the best reason to be interested in Erickson is his songwriting -- there's a graceful, vivid surrealism to his lyrical style that's endured far better than most of the noodlers who came out of the psychedelic rock movement, and his later bursts of horror film fancy conjure up a troubling tension that's laughed at only by the shallow or ignorant. When Erickson's legal problems came to a head in the late 1980s, longtime fan and Sire Records executive Bill Bentley assembled Where the Pyramid Meets the Eye: A Tribute to Roky Erickson to raise money for Erickson, as well as drawing attention to the unique beauty of his music. Like most multi-artist tribute albums, the results are a bit uneven; some of these artists seem to have appeared out of convenience rather than any great love of Roky's music, and a few of the interpretations are simple miscalculations (Thin White Rope's Guy Kyser really goes overboard on his version of "Burn the Flames"). But there are a several moments of very real beauty and power here, especially from the artists who share Erickson's Texas heritage -- Doug Sahm and ZZ Top rock out on their contributions, the Butthole Surfers' version of "Earthquake" is one of their finest moments on wax, and T-Bone Burnett's take on "Nothing in Return" is a heart-tugging gem. The 13th Floor Elevators' first two albums are still the best place to sample Erickson's music (and the latter-day All That May Do My Rhyme is a fine album, for which Erickson actually receives royalties -- hint, hint), but Where the Pyramid Meets the Eye is a sincere if inconsistent tribute to his work, and shows how well his songs can translate to the styles of other artists.~Where the Pyramid Meets the Eye: A Tribute To Roky Erickson Review by Mark Deming


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