Let's take a look into the stories I found in this little red book. Some white, some black, they were just laying down some of the grooviest tracks.
They were rulers of the sunset. They had something to offer and love to be shared (no one had heard it before). They were living in a castle. They had people like Morrison walk through the door (getting thrown out of the door). It was out of sight. They had touched the light.
You’re always playing out of tune. Stop playing, please stop playing dude. You always have something to say. And it always will be that way. You party every single day. I'm living it up, I can't get enough to do. One more album, one more album then I'm leaving you. It was Arthur Lee, and Brian Mclean.
Love never really got the exposure that they deserved mostly because they never left the city of LA. They had a voice in protest of war, influenced the doors and barely anybody ever got their name. Mclean, he ended up as a catholic, crawling right back to everything he used to be. Probably ended up in the choir, back to the hymns and everything he used to sing. Reminiscing “Love.”
supported by 5 fans who also own “Forever Changed”
With its debut album, this young band from Vienna follows the footsteps of honorable Austrian prog masters like "Matter Of Taste". The music on this concept album is not of the kind I'd call particularly innovative - it travels pretty much on well known roads paved by many others long ago. However, these youngsters do it in a highly pleasant way, skillfully avoiding the pitfalls of pseudo-progressive phrase rehashing most of the time - certainly more successfully so than several of their experienced grand paragons of prog. Sven B. Schreiber (sbs)
supported by 5 fans who also own “Forever Changed”
Siguiendo la evolución de Michael Whiteman , encontramos temas con desarrollos más largos introduciendo piano , xilófono y flauta . Buscando un estilo más propio digamos . Igor Huertas
supported by 5 fans who also own “Forever Changed”
A very pleasant album. Like other comments said, if you like the first Camel album (Moonmadness for exemple), you have to listen at this one. calm, relaxing are the first words that come to me
You can listen from the start to the end: it’s like a journey…. in the space! yodablanc
Big, clanging psych-rock from this Arizona outfit fuses monk-like vocals with slow-winding guitars for songs that feel like strange hymns. Bandcamp New & Notable May 2, 2016
The Brooklyn band deliver a blissful psychedelic rock album steeped in sci-fi and spirituality, awash with organs, strings, and reverb. Bandcamp New & Notable Jun 23, 2021