
Although Andwella's Dream were a versatile psychedelic group, they were nonetheless generic no matter what angle they were taking. On
Love & Poetry, you get sustained guitar that walks the line between freakbeat and heaviness, some swirling organ and husky vocals that betray the influence of
Traffic and
Procol Harum, pastoral acoustic folky tunes in the
Donovan style, airy-fairy dabs of phased guitars and storybook lyrics, etc. Eclecticism is to be commended, and since late-'60s British psychedelia is an interesting genre in and of itself, generic music in the subgenre is more interesting than some other generic music in other styles. Still, generic music is generic music, and being able to do a bunch of different things in an unexceptional manner does not make you exceptional. The fairly tuneful folk-rocker "Midday Sun" is the best cut; it's also interesting to hear a song about "Cocaine" in 1969, before the drug was too well known even in the counterculture.
AMG Review by Richie Unterberger
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου