This is a killer four hour 3-CD set filled with some heavy
psychedelic and proto hard-rock heavy metal voyages from the underground scene
that you might want to play this very, very loud. You have some of these bands
from that era including some of the big names that would later become
successful including Uriah Heep, Fleetwood Mac, and Deep Purple to name a few
along with heavy nuggets with The Move, Chicken Shack, and Jerusalem.
Not to mention one of my favorite scenes of the music genre
of the Ladbroke Grove scene from The Deviants, Pink Fairies, Hawkwind, and the
Edgar Broughton Band that were raw, in your face, and just delving into
uncharted territories that will make your skin crawl. The 34-page booklet
contains notes by David Wells and the bands contained with historical notes
about them.
I just couldn’t get enough of this amazing box set that
Grapefruit have unleashed this year. It sounds like an eruptive volcano waiting
to burst at the right moment to let the lava come out with blaring guitars,
thumping drums, and dooming bass lines. You have some amazing highlights on
here including Iron Claw’s Skullcrusher is
one of my favorite tracks. There’s some essence of High Tide’s Sea Shanties-era while the roaring
punches of Second Hand’s Rhubarb! Which
deals with the situation between reality and fantasy was all right there and
giving you the situation about television, sins, and dementia with some prog
attitude.
Scotland’s own Writing on the Wall’s accordion intro starts
off like something straight out of the seas and drinking rum until dawn on a
pirate ship before getting into the horror movie settings with a screaming
terror with a fearsome and sinister sound for the Bogeyman. Ladbroke Grove’s The Deviants bring the styles of The
Fugs with a shuffling garage-rock late ‘60s proto-punk blues on I’m Coming Home as both Edgar Broughton
Band and Stack Waddy channel Captain Beefheart and the Magic Band on Love in the Rain and Bring it to Jerome.
The heavily guitar riffs from Tony McPhee would see an influence
on Iggy and the Stooges Raw Power-era
with The Groundhogs on Cherry Red as
the Pink Fairies would be a call psychedelic-punk freak-out taking their name
from radical Jerry Rubin’s book Do It which
the Rollins Band would later cover in 1987. But you will find some more nuggets
and secret treasures that you might want to take note of.
Blonde on Blonde’s staggering Heart Without a Home, the extreme bass riff and fuzztone guitars
with a vicious sound of The Mickey Finn’s
Garden of my Mind, the essence of early Black Sabbath and Led Zeppelin can
come in handy with the heavy blues rock of Don Nix’s Going Down done by Chicken Shack, The Move’s early beginnings of
Glam Rock with thunderous riffs can get you on the dance floor with the Brontosaurus, and essences of Amon Duul
II can be heard with Barnabus’ Apocalypse followed by the styles of Doom/ Stoner Metal of Jerusalem's Primitive Man which was produced by Deep Purple's Ian Gillan.
This is an energetic 3-CD set I enjoyed from beginning to
end. I almost headbanged throughout the entire set and I have to admit now that
Grapefruit Records know their compilations very well when it comes to finding
treasures deep beneath the sand or in the salty ocean. If you admire the Doom
Metal, Proto-Punk, Psych-Prog, and Proto-Metal sounds, then I highly recommend
you get I’m a Freak Baby: A Journey
Through the British Heavy Psych and Hard Rock Underground Scene 1968-72.
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