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Riding Easy
v/a- BROWN ACID: THE SIXTEENTH TRIP LP
Highly recommended.
Sixteen trips might fry the fragile psyche of the average teenager, but the hoary old heads at Brown Acid boiled their brain pans long ago! As such, Riding Easy is bringing even more hard rock, heavy psych, and garage rock rarities from the North American wasteland of the 1970s.
All songs are officially licensed. This sixteenth installment kicks off with âShuckinâ and Jiving,â a seven-minute power jam from L.A.âs kings of garage psych, the Seeds. The song appeared as a single in 1972 with âYou Took Me By Surpriseâ on the flipside. It was the only release on Productions Unlimited, a label created by (or for) the Seeds at the tail end of their late â60s / early â70s run as Sky Saxon And The Seeds. Get shucked! Macbeth released their one and only 45 in 1978, with the steamrolling âFreight Trainâ as the b-side to âDidnât Mean (To Come This Far).â Boasting a thick-ass riff, a tasty stereo-panned guitar solo and at least one space laser sound effect, this one should satisfy fans of Blue Cheer and Grand Funk alike. Macbethâs bassist, Ned Meloni, went on to play with UFO guitarist Paul Chapman, Virgin Steele guitarist Jack Starr and do a brief stint with doom legends Pentagram. Formed by three brothersâDavid, Bruce and Barry Flynn, all GM factory workersâalong with organist Tom Applegate, The Headstones (also known as simply Headstone) lent their 1974 garage boogie âCarry Me Onâ to The Fourth Trip. This time, the Midwest psych rockers return with their killer 1975 instrumental âSnake Dance.â One can hear echoes of this particular guitar style in the recent work of Swedish adventure rock overlords HĂ€llas. The band Clinton mightâve been from Pennsylvania, but that didnât stop them from writing about New York City. âMidnight In New Yorkâ is the flipside to their sole single, 1976âs âFalling Behind.â Stylistically and thematically, itâs not unlike something famous New Yawker Ace Frehley wouldâve written for KISS around the same time.