The Psych Ward–Elephant’s Memory
The Psych Ward–Elephant’s Memory
Imagine the Mothers of Invention, Jefferson Airplane, Chicago, and the original cast of Hair having a good, old-fashioned love-in orgy in 1969. Nine months later, Elephantās Memory could be their mutant child. Known as John Lennon and Yoko Onoās backing band in the early Seventies, Elephantās Memory was an underground group on the New York scene long before they were ādiscoveredā by a Beatle.
In the late Sixties, they were known around Greenwich Village as a roving band of buskers who occasionally played shows replete with bizarre costuming and inflatable set pieces. Led by Saxophonist/Clarinetist/Vocalist Stan Bronstein and Drummer Rick Frank (the two musicians met each other on the New York strip club circuit), this outfit defies categorization.
Years before Lennon made them famous on his 1972 Some Time in New York album, the first self-titled album from 1969 stands out as something unique. Not quite as weird as the Mothers of Invention, similar at times to early Chicago with their horny and funky grooves, some of their songs can even be classified as bubblegum pop (āCrossroads of the Worldā). These folks are categorically hard to pin downā¦and thatās probably why I like them so much.
The album jumps off with the Blood, Sweat, & Tears/Chase funky vibes of āDonāt Put Me on Trial.ā This is an up-tempo song with a roving Sixties beat bass that reaches down into your soul. The choruses feature trading male/female vocals, similar to Jefferson Airplaneās interplay.
āJungle Gym at the Zooā is a slippery stone groove. The song was featured in the Oscar-winning film Midnight Cowboy. Using seedy Greenwich musicians for a film about the underbelly of New York is a perfect marriage.
āSuper Heepā is musically reminiscent of early Soft Machine with a heaping helping of Frank Zappaās rhyming schemes. In fact, the guitar solo work on several of this albumās tracks reminds me of Mike Ratledgeās Soft Machine organ work.
The strong Cowsills vibe of āBand of Loveā could fit as an alternate track from Hair. The song is co-written by Tony Visconti, just moments before commencing his working relationship with Bowie.
āOld Man Willowā (also in Midnight Cowboy) is a stepping stone to a more modern feminine-vocal band like Broadcast or Stereolab.
If you have 42 minutes to spare, spin this one. Digitally. You canāt afford the vinyl.
Highlights: āDonāt Put Me on Trial,ā āSuper Heep,ā āTakinā a Walkā
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