" name="description"/> Wyrd Britain: folk
" itemprop="description"/>
Showing posts with label folk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label folk. Show all posts

Wednesday, 14 October 2020

3 Wyrd Things: Edward Parnell

For '3 Wyrd Things' I ask various creative people whose work I admire to tell us about three oddly, wonderfully, weirdly British things that have been an influence on them and their work - a book or author, a film or TV show and a song, album or musician.

(photo by K Walne)
This month: Edward Parnell

Edward first came to my attention in October 2019 with the publication of the hardback edition of his excellent Ghostland: In Search of a Haunted Country.

Ghostland tells of his "search of the ‘sequestered places’ of the British Isles, our lonely moors, our moss-covered cemeteries, our stark shores and our folkloric woodlands." and of the influence these places have exerted over some of the countries greatest writers of the uncanny such as Arthur Machen, William Hope Hodgson and M.R. James whose work he had returned to during turbulent times in his own life.

Alongside this the book also functions as both an autobiography and memoir of his relationships with the various members of his family and of the birdwatching hobby he shared with his brother in a moving meditation on love and loss and the power of stories, themes he also explored in his 2014 novel The Listeners (UK).

Ghostland is published in paperback on the 15th of October 2020 and you can buy it here - UKUS.

He can be found at  - edwardparnell.com - and on Twitter.

We urge everyone with an interest in the writers we feature here on Wyrd Britain to check out Ghostland and we are immensely pleased to be able to present to you his selections.

..............................................................................................

Book 
The Go-Between
L. P. Hartley
(Buy it here - UKUS)

Choosing just one book for this list is so difficult – I cycled through any number of contenders including: The Collected Ghost Stories of M. R. James, Alan Garner’s The Owl Service, The Usborne Guide to the Supernatural World, the stories of Algernon Blackwood, Arthur Machen or Walter de le Mare, or Janet and Colin Bord’s gazetteer of ancient sites, Mysterious Britain...

In the end though, I’ve settled on L. P. Hartley’s The Go-Between (1953). It’s a wonderful, haunting novel, about the naivety of youth, about class, about the mysteries of the English countryside (and its weather) – and about the complicatedness of human relationships. Along the way there are childish spells and curses, and significant encounters with a brooding deadly nightshade plant (“It looked the picture of evil and also the picture of health, it was so glossy and strong and juicy-looking”); Hartley himself also happened to be a very competent writer of supernatural short stories.

Above all though, The Go-Between is a novel dominated by an overwhelming sense of yearning for that which has been lost (whether that’s innocence, hope, or just time), and of the difficulties of trying to re-examine and make sense of our half-buried memories. It’s something that’s encapsulated in the book’s famous first line, a line which surely everyone is familiar with:

“The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there.”

At the novel’s heart is its young protagonist Leo Colston, whose aged older self begins his backwards-looking journey after discovering his childhood diary from 1900, hidden in the bottom of a cardboard box filled with various other forgotten reminders of that golden age: empty sea-urchins, two rusty magnets that have lost their magnetism, and “one or two ambiguous objects, pieces of things, of which the use was not at once apparent”.

Leslie Poles Hartley was born at the end of 1895 in the Fens at Whittlesey, not far from my own childhood home in south Lincolnshire. As fellow flatlanders, Hartley and I were bewitched by the otherness of the wooded Norfolk countryside after being raised among the empty expanse of all those breeze-stripped washes and ruler-straight Fenland droves. In the summer of 1909, Hartley was invited by a rather grander classmate, Moxey (his surname an approximation of The Go-Between’s Maudsley), to stay at West Bradenham Hall, a few miles from my own grandmother’s small west Norfolk cottage (Bradenham became Brandham in the novel). The hall – the ancestral home of Henry Rider Haggard – had been rented by the Moxeys, and it was at Bradenham where much of Hartley’s later inspiration for the novel originally stemmed. The novel’s setting in Norfolk is another aspect that draws me to it, given that I have now myself lived in the county for longer than I have anywhere else. (The excellent 1971 Joseph Losey film adaptation starring Julie Christie and Alan Bates was also filmed in my adopted county.)

The Go-Between, with its naïve narrator – the embodiment of ‘greenness’ in his newly gifted Lincoln Green suit – who is privy to an adult world beyond his comprehension, certainly fed into my novel The Listeners, a slice of WWII-set Eastern gothic, brooding nature, and family secrets set in a village based around the tiny hamlet in which my grandmother lived. And it also fed into my second book, the narrative non-fiction Ghostland, in which I attempt my own rather Leo-like examination of various haunted writers, artists and filmmakers, as well as my own haunted past…


Song 
Windy Old Weather
Bob Roberts (1960)

My musical tastes are rather eclectic, albeit also quite rooted in the past – ranging from ‘60s garage and Northern Soul, through to New Wave, ‘80s electronica, ‘70s-era Springsteen, and various whimsical soundtracks to the children’s TV series of my youth (like Bagpuss or The Moomins). I’m also partial to the odd spot of folk music and, with a strong love of the ocean, have become strangely attracted to old sea shanties. One such that really sticks with me is on an EP single I own dating from 1960 titled Windy Old Weather. It includes wonderful artwork and an extensively illustrated booklet, describing itself as a “record of sea shanties and saltwater ballads with skipper Bob Roberts”.

Alfred William “Bob” Roberts (1907–1982) was a sailor, folk singer and collector of traditional British maritime songs. He was also the author of a number of nautical books, and known for various appearances in the 1950s on BBC radio and television. As well as being a vocalist, he also played the melodeon, a “British chromatic button accordion”.

I enjoy all of the shanties on the record, but the one that really sticks out for me is the title track. Its back and forth rhythm mimics the North Sea’s swell, and it has me hooked with its opening line: “As we were a-fishing off Haisboro’ Light…” (Haisboro – spelled, in true Norfolk fashion as Happisburgh – is a village on the county’s north-east coast that’s gradually being washed away by the unrelenting sea.)

As the song progresses we’re introduced to various fishes, which in turn breach out of the water and seemingly speak to the crew of the boat – they half-taunt and tell the fishermen of the turning weather, warning them that they ought to head back towards land. It’s all rather magical and poetic (“Then up rears a conger as long as a mile / Winds comin’ easterly, he says with a smile”), certainly whimsical (I could picture it, for instance, as one of the stories told by the rag doll Madeleine in Bagpuss), but utterly compelling – and all delivered in Roberts’s endearing salty Dorset drawl.

It’s a song that makes me long to be at the coast, gazing down from those crumbling cliffs by Happisburgh Light into the grey-dark of the sea. It also makes me want to write about the ocean, a challenge that hopefully one day I’ll undertake.




Film 
Dead of Night
(Ealing Studios, 1945)
(Buy it here - UKUS)

Warning – this contains spoilers

“If only I’d left here when I wanted to, when I still had a will of my own. You tried to stop me. You wouldn’t have done if you’d have known,” says Mervyn Johns’s troubled protagonist Walter Craig to Frederick Valk’s Freud-like psychiatrist Dr Van Straaten, prior to the inevitable, nightmarish end sequence of the classic 1945 Ealing Studios portmanteau horror film Dead of Night. Inevitable, because Craig is a man who wakes each morning from the same unconscious, barely recalled terror – and because he has already informed us how events are set to play out.

At the start of the film, Craig arrives in a reverie of déjà vu at a Kentish farmhouse he’s never previously visited, summoned there by a man he’s unacquainted with to look into redesigning the place. The architect has the dawning realisation that the house forms the backdrop to his nightly recurring dream, and that his fellow guests, all uncannily familiar to him despite their having never met, might be mere phantoms in his head.

Dead of Night contains five embedded narratives recalled by the occupants of the farmhouse. The first concerns a premonition of an avoided future – its most memorable moment is the fateful line uttered by Miles Malleson’s bus conductor/hearse driver: “Just room for one inside, sir.” (The segment is loosely based upon a short story by E. F. Benson.)

The next, a gothic children’s Christmas party that’s haunted by the ghost of a murdered small boy (and inspired by the murder at the heart of Kate Summercale’s true-crime book The Suspicions of Mr Whicher), is much more atmospheric, as is the third tale, that of an antique mirror that possesses its owner. Some questionable light relief is provided by Basil Radford and Naunton Wayne’s comedic, ghostly golf shenanigans (a reprise of their sport-obsessed cameo in Hitchcock’s 1938 The Lady Vanishes), before we come to the last and most celebrated of the stories, in which Michael Redgrave’s unhinged ventriloquist Maxwell Frere is driven insane by his papier mâché companion.

However, it’s the film’s masterful, playful framing device (directed by Basil Dearden) that sets Dead of Night apart, providing both its end and its beginning. Because, at its climax we witness, once more, Craig’s identical arrival along a tree-lined country lane that followed on from the opening credits. First, though, we must spin back four minutes, to the moment Mervyn Johns’s character rises from his chair in the flickering, fire-lit lounge.

Craig saunters towards the camera and the seated Dr Van Straaten, blankly demanding why he had to set into motion what’s about to come: “Oh Doctor, why did you have to break your glasses?” Craig towers behind the psychiatrist, removing his tie and strangling the larger man with a casual ease. A voice in his head urges Craig to hide and suddenly he finds himself in the familiar surroundings of the Christmas masquerade of the film’s second section.

The teenage Sally Ann Howes and a massed rank of costumed children urge the murderer to join in their game of hide and seek. Craig flees up the same shadowed staircase Howes herself had previously traversed en route to offering comfort to the ghostly young Victorian victim, only this time the scene is skewed at an angle that recalls another film with a similarly mind-blowing ending: Robert Wiene’s masterpiece of German expressionism The Cabinet of Dr Caligari (1919). Craig pauses in front of the haunted mirror of director Robert Hamer’s third segment, which shimmers in a psychedelic haze, prior to accosting Hayes and dragging her to the attic. There, he strikes the blow to her face he earlier predicted he’d be powerless to prevent.

Without warning, Craig is seated alongside the malevolent, foul-mouthed puppet from the final story (stylishly directed by Alberto Cavalcanti, as was the Christmas party). Hugo urges Craig to “take a seat, sucker”, as the camera pans around the gathered cabaret faces that leer down at the guilty man – and the audience. The strangler is carried aloft to a prison cell manned by Miles Malleson from the first tale: “Just room for one inside, sir,” he once more intones, this time with added relish. On the opposite side of the cell from where Craig cowers, sits Hugo, who, in the most menacing scene of the film, takes to his feet and begins to walk. The crowd of onlookers grin like hungry wraiths through the bars of the door as an undersized actor in dummy make-up strides towards Johns and places his hands on the architect’s throat, before the shot pulls rapidly back to reveal the silhouetted darkness. Now Craig is lying in the bland, comforting surroundings of his own house, awakened by the sound of the phone beside his marital bed that’s ringing to summon him, once more, to that all-too-familiar cottage.

It’s a future of purgatorial dread and guilt that must hardly have been the uplifting tonic conflict-weary audiences were expecting when the film opened in London just one week after the second world war had finally reached its own grim conclusion.

It’s also a film that I can endlessly rewatch, marvelling at the way its storylines entwine and at how masterfully its ending – the most difficult of things to pull off – is handled.

Watch it here - http://www.veoh.com/watch/v87902984jRrcN5AB

..........................................................................................

If you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us continue then we would very much welcome a donation towards keeping the blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain

Affiliate links are provided for your convenience and to help mitigate running costs.

Friday, 2 October 2020

3 Wyrd Things: Andy Sharp

For '3 Wyrd Things' I've asked various creative people whose work I admire to tell us about three oddly, wonderfully, weirdly British things that have been an influence on them and their work - a book or author, a film or TV show and a song, album or musician.

This month: Andy Sharp

Andy is a musician, writer and multimedia artist and the driving force behind English Heretic, an autonomous creative research project. Pioneering the form of literary and aural aesthetics, he has released over a dozen albums and booklets.

On the 13th of this month Repeater Books are releasing 'The English Heretic Collection: Ritual Histories, Magickal Geography' a collection of his researches and rituals.  I was lucky enough to get a sneak peak at the book and I have to say if you have an interest in the outer edges of culture and the hidden branches of history then this book is for you - buy it here (UK / US)

We are very pleased in advance of the publication of his book to be able to bring you Andy's selections for this month's 3 Wyrd Things.

.........................................................................

Author / Poet
Robert Graves.

I've got an idiosyncratic take on the relationship between our 'wyrd' and the weird art it produces. I think 'wyrd' is the unique thread of our influences, which if we apply imaginally to creative output will allow access to a waking dream of personal mythology. That's the main gist of the last few years work as English Heretic A kind of surreal reworking in the countercultural midden of my adolescence.

Graves, isn't necessarily the biggest literary influence on me, more one that has unwound unexpectedly, a loose thread in the biographical tapestry, and also an influence inherited from my parents. As a family, we loved the BBC adaptation of Graves' I Claudius – I am pretty sure I didn't know it was by Graves or who Graves was at the time. That kind of obliviousness to future importance, I would say is a litmus test to the veracity of a wyrd influence. Graves wrote I, Claudius / Claudius The God using a form of 'poetic time travel' that he called the Analeptic Method. Similar in a way that you might do astral projection and then post-facto verify visions using Qabalah. Graves gives an example of this method in The White Goddess, where he attempts to decode the numerology of 666 to the emperor Nero. It's very eccentric, his whole approach to the mythology of poetry – but I am fascinated by the dream history of the occult that develops from this approach. On top of this all, the TV series also had a kind of joyful salaciousness. John Hurt around that time (playing Caligula) was incredibly ubiquitous too – from The Naked Civil Servant to Alien – and The Shout. I Claudius was initially panned for its unconvincing sets, fancy dress party togas and wonky toupees. But I think that's part of the magic, the luxurious ambition of Alma-Tadema, bathetically realised with MFI home furnishings. There's something of the camp operas of John Waters and George Kuchar here.

Jerzy Skolimowski's adaptation of Graves' short story “The Shout” left a powerful impression on me, as a teenager. The psychotic, itinerant charlatan, cuckolding the English marriage was a pure and frightening application of Graves' obsession with his single poetic theme – the battle between the poet and the wyrd for the muse. Not though as an engendered plot but more that this theme mirrors the solve-et-coagula in any creative journey.

The Shout also has an amazing sub score, as the hapless cuckold played by John Hurt happens to be an experimental musician. We see and hear him creating these musique concrete pieces during the film – that were actually scored by Mike Rutherford and Tony Banks of Genesis.

The Shout is told in flashback, by two inmates of an asylum, watching a cricket match within the grounds of the hospital. It's the perfect metaphor for the occult forces behind the polite rules of English life. I think it's significant that in JG Ballard's The Unlimited Dream Company – a similar intrusion of priapic shamanism to the village – the psychopathic hero Blake performs an Aboriginal mating act with the hole left by a cricket stump on his school playing field. I think both The Shout and Ballard's book are huge influences in my attempt to pollinate the country's geography and phoney tradition with a magically seeded satire – most definitely Satyre with a 'y'.

Graves' The White Goddess which I began to explore at the time I started English Heretic, has cut in to many projects almost despite myself. His chapter on “The Triple Muse” seems to exactly choreograph the scenes of ritual sacrifice in Blood on Satan's Claw. Here Graves' investigations into May-Eve tree cults are very compelling fictions of witchcraft. Robin Hood and Maid Marian become the lascivious black ram and seductive pucelle of a rebellious coven. Elsewhere, I've explored modern renditions of Graves' love chase. J.G. Ballard's Crash is pure Graves, only set along the causeways of West London. Vaughan, the psychopathic wyrd, is accurately described in Graves' words at the opening to Crash, appearing as a lean and dark spectral figure at the hospital bed of the protagonist Ballard.



Television
Play For Today: A Photograph.

I first watched this in March 1977, totally creeped out by its insinuations of vituperative rural magic against a sleazy underbelly to the urbane. More than this though, it's the titular photograph of the play that infected my imagination and still does. It's an entirely conspiratorial photograph, like Mary Moorman's grassy knoll or Antonioni's BlowUp.

Without spoiling the plot, a smarmy Radio 3 art critic receives a photograph in the post – it shows two flirtatious, country girls sitting outside a small white caravan. One blonde, one raven haired, Abbaesque, in a way, though there's something occult about them, troubled and troublesome, likely to experience poltergeist intrusions beneath a Starsky and Hutch poster. It's the grain of The Unexplained magazine. Definitely archetypes of naughty paranormality in the 70s. Anyhow, the critic's hopelessly nervous and downtrodden wife becomes obsessed with the photograph, blowing it up to massive proportions. In doing so, she discovers it's not two girls, but one, they both have the same faded tattoo on their arm. Cut to the music critic, in bed with his lover, an alabaster heart on the cabinet. We don't see his lover's face but there's the same tattoo on their arm..... as a clue to its meaning, I can't help hearing Coil's Tattooed Man recalling this scene. The ending is a total cognitive twist of the magic box, similar to that we see in Mulholland Drive. Never quite resolved, but throwing up unpleasant characters and permutations all the way. But unlike the over-saturated America of Lynch, it was the cheap plywood sets of Play for Today that suggested the beige misery of 70s suburbia could easily give way to a realm of pagan and terrifying energies.

It took me years to rediscover A Photograph and I was delighted to find it was intended as an oblique sequel to the more cult and vaunted Play for Today episode, Robin Redbreast. Both A Photograph and Robin Redbreast were written by John Bowen. Again, A Photograph, like all true intrusions in our wyrd biography, haunted me from the future. I suspect the shudder watching it in 1977, was as much from today's influence as its creepy Lynchian English vibe. Replace Bobby Peru in the trailer park of Lynch's nightmare, with the outcast family living on the periphery of all our villages.

But it's really the mystery of searching too much into an image that worked its way into my creativity. Pareidolia in the media age, that phantoms readily appear in the magnified darkrooms of Polaroid technology. David Lifton who first uncovered the Badgeman in Mary Moorman's JFK photo, has now identified 5 assassins staked out along the wall. No doubt about it these are shadow agents from the deepest cortical folds. Poltergeists of our innate tendency to paranoia in a hostile environment. The wife in A Photograph is gaslit into mad obsession, the blown-up picture revealing another plot behind surface reality.


Music
“Nostradamus” from Songs of Witchcraft and Magic
Peter Bellamy
Buy it here (UK / US)

I used to visit the pagan supply shop in Ipswich, often just to imagine the possibilities of an off-kilter English Heritage souvenir shop. I've bought all kinds of magical tat from this shop, a Baphomet statue with removable horns, a plastic necromancer's skull, and bags full of Horned God incense. I often tried to play live swathed in incense, and no matter when I visited the supply shop and whatever auspicious calendrical date the gig fell on, they would always recommend the male energies of the Horned God incense. It was like a sketch from an occult Fast Show, “Horned God it will be again, Sir”.

Anyway, I took a chance on this CD compilation from this shop, an album curated by The Museum of Witchcraft and was totally bowled over by Peter Bellamy's “Nostradamus”. The song was written by Al Stewart, the lyrics lifted from Erika Cheetham's controversial interpretations of Nostradamus' predictions. Stewart's version is great, a bongo and acoustic guitar driven epic, however Bellamy's take is far more haunting. Delivered in a baleful medieval bellow, accordion wheezing like an emphysemic sailor, it's a time-travelling shanty for sure. It is though the verse alluding to the deaths of the Kennedy brothers, JFK, Bobby and Joe that really captured me:

In the new lands of America, three brothers now shall come to pass.
Two alone are born to rule, but all must die before their hour. 


Peter Bellamy
JFK and Bobby's assassinations were American nightmares, televised live, but Joe Kennedy died over English skies. He had volunteered for a suicidal bombing mission, flying from Fersfield in Norfolk, his Torpex loaded plane exploding over Blythburgh in Suffolk. I created a black plaque for Joe Kennedy and shortly after discovered this song. It feels like this is the real soundtrack to that plaque. There's another lyric in the song that perfectly sums up history's violent ricochet and psychodrama, one that has propelled the doom laden course of the project:

Oh the more it changes, well the more it stays the same,
And the hand just rearranges all the players in the game.


I do believe the key to discovering our personal wyrd is to apprehend the paranoid doubling so inherent in our imagination. The same primal images re-emerging ever more forcefully, on different landscapes with different characters

Again, though there's so much music from “England's Hidden Reverse” that are conscious influences, I've chosen “Nostradamus” because it has become a completely unintentional touchstone. The litmus of my wyrd.

Bellamy committed suicide in 1991. He was actually from Norfolk, where Kennedy flew to his death. Oscillations of tragedy, Bellamy killed himself feeling his career was on a downward trajectory. Kennedy applied for the suicidal flight mission to steal back the mantle from his brother, who had become a war hero. There's Greek myths everywhere if we care to look. I think Bellamy, had he survived, would have had his day again, like Shirley Collins, Simon Finn and Bonnie Dobson. It makes the song all the more poignant that he could not foresee his future vindication.



..........................................................................................

If you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us continue then we would very much welcome a donation towards keeping the blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain

Affiliate links are provided for your convenience and to help mitigate running costs.

Tuesday, 19 June 2018

Nick Drake

Nick Drake

Despite only releasing 3 albums during his life time to very little acclaim English singer-songwriter Nick Drake has posthumously become one of the most revered of his peers.  

Drake was born in Burma in 1948 but grew up in Tanworth-in-Arden, Warwickshire, England.  His musical career was undistinguished and all 3 of his records - Five Leaves LeftBryter Layter and Pink Moon - sold poorly due in no small part to his reticence to play live or to engage with promotional opportunities.  After releasing his third album in 1972 Drake's mental health had deteriorated to a point that necessitated a return to the family home where, on 25th November 1974, he took a suspected overdose of antidepressants and died.

Since his death his music has been championed by musicians such as REM, Beck, Swans, Mars Volta & Norah Jones.  His three albums have become cornerstones of modern British folk and indie.

Buy them here...
Five Leaves Left
Bryter Layter
Pink Moon

Included below are two documentaries about Drake's life and music.  They cover much the same ground and are both very watchable but the first, produced by the BBC, has attained some notoriety amongst Drake fans for the slightly unflattering picture it paints whilst the second, a Dutch production, pays deeper attention to the music. I've included both to give you a choice.





..........................................................................................

If you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us continue then we would very much welcome a donation towards keeping the blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain

Affiliate links are provided for your convenience and to help mitigate running costs.

 

Thursday, 22 September 2016

Folk Britannia

BBC Four has a pedigree for producing quality documentaries and it's music ones are amongst the best.  Of those the 'Britannia' series has been notably impressive with mini-series based around punk, metal, jazz, synths, soul, prog and much more.  We might return to some of the others at a later date but first I think we'll head off to a land where the ale is real, the clothes are woolly and the hats, for some reason, have green willow all round them.

The documentary consists of three episodes each focusing on a different era of British folk music.  Episode 1 - 'Ballads and Blues' - explores the revival era, episode 2 - 'Folk Roots, New Routes' - travels through the acid-folk and folk-rock of the 60s and early 70s and episode 3 - 'Between the Wars' - looks at the post punk years.

As with all these documentaries there's something for the novice and the acolyte alike.  Even with music I'm not much of a fan of - and I have to include the vast majority of British folk music in there, hence the facetious comment about willowy hats back there - I do love to watch passionate people talk about their work and their love of the music and there's plenrty of that on offer here.

(The playlist below contains all three episodes)

Enjoy.

Wednesday, 6 April 2016

The Dandelion Set - A Thousand Strands 1975 - 2015

Buried Treasure

So, as some of you know I spent much of the second half of  last year pretty immobile due to numerous broken bones and the ensuing surgical procedures.  Truth to say it wasn't a whole lot of fun.  I was on quite a lot of morphine and as such watching films or reading books was out as I couldn't follow a plot and so I found myself staring at a lot of daytime TV - side note:  not even morphine makes Jeremy Kyle any less noxious - and listening to copious amounts of music, so much in fact that I quickly ran out of what was to hand and so began searching around for new delights to do interesting things in my ears and my opiate addled brain.

Alan Moore
One of the things I stumbled across was the Buried Treasure label whose John Baker Vendetta Tapes became one of my most played albums of last year.  In fact, if you check out my end of year list you'll find several Buried Treasure releases on there with several others not making the list simply due to numerical considerations.  So it was with real excitement that I opened the promo copy sent by label honcho Alan Gubby of this, the first B.T. release of 2016 by psychedelic troubadours The Dandelion Set here ably assisted by one of the spiritual godfathers of what we do here at Wyrd Britain,  Mr. Alan Moore.

Expectation, as we all know, can be a real bitch and I'd heard some Dandelion ditties on the recent B.T. comp, 'The Delaware Road', and I know now that Alan G. has an ear for the wonderful so this had a lot to live up to; an awful lot to live up to.  We've all been down that road of getting all 'kid at xmas' about a new release only for it to turn out to be more of a 'kid at dentist' experience but now and again under the tree, wrapped in some beautifully psychedelic wrapping is that perfect gift and it surpasses all expectations.

From the opening moments of 'Pristina Strawberry Girl' we know that we're in for a trip of a ride as dreamy psyche-pop insinuates itself into the room before the wordy wizard of Northampton weaves a weirdy, wandering narrative over a skronking frug noir soundscape and so the scene is set.

Angular prog excursions make way for forays into the realms of opiated French jazz pop.  Playful dances of electronic fireflies throw themselves through animated radiophonic swirls of psychedelic colour as tales of love, loss, hopes, delusions and a trip to the cinema stand square, stark and unflinching basking in the hallucinatory haze and calling you into this twisting, writhing, mesmerising world.  A technicolour playground of lysergic intensity and intent filled with love and magic.

.........................................................

'A Thousand Strands 1975 - 2015'  is released on 22nd April and Bandcamp pre-orders of the physical editions - LP / CD / Cassette - are sold out from the label - that's how good this album is - but will be available from an independent music supplier - shop independent and say no to tax avoiding multinationals - near you upon release.

Meanwhile here is a taster featuring the mighty Alan Moore, below that a video montage featuring live footage from 'The Delaware Road' launch gig and later this week you can hear a track on the next Wyrd Britain show on Mixcloud.