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2LP TWENTY SIXTY SIX AND THEN
Reflections On The Future
Limited Edition Of 500 Copies
Country of release: Greece, 2017
Original released: 1972
Label: Missing Vinyl
Catalogue number: MV043
Barcode: -
Klappcover/Gatefold Sleeve: Ja/Yes
Includes Insert
Condition Record: MINT
Condition Cover: MINT
LP ist noch verschweißt / LP IS STILL SEALED !!!
(Photo von meiner eigenen LP / Photo taken from my own copy)
Tracks Side 1:
1. At My Home (5:02)
2. Autumn (9:05)
3. Butterking (7:20)
Tracks Side 2:
1. Reflections On My Future (15:47)
2. How Would You Feel (3:22)
Tracks Side 3:
1. Winter (Demo 1970) (7:17) (Bonustrack)
2. I Saw The World (Demo 1970) (4:30) (Bonustrack)
3. The Way I Feel Today (Studio – Live Version) (11:15)(Bonustrack)
Tracks Side 4:
1. Spring (Duet for Two Hammonds) (13:02)(Bonustrack)
2. I Wanna Stay (the Munich Sessions) (3:59)(Bonustrack)
3. Time Can’t Take it Away (the Munich Sessions) (4:40)(Bonustrack)
Listen At YouTube:
So
you kind of dig those early
hard-rocking so-called
"proto-prog" bands but don't think
they musically explore enough, or
you love the early works of the
classic Symphonic Prog bands but
wish they had a bit more hair on
their chest and weren't afraid to
make a bit more noise? Then German
band Twenty Sixty-Six and Then and
their English language debut album
`Reflections on the Future' from
1972 might be just what you're
after, a Mellotron and
Hammond-dominated rocker that
incorporates traces of early
Genesis and Van der Graaf
Generator to their crossover of
late Sixties/early Seventies rock
sounds, plus a touch of Beggars'
Opera and Nektar with traces of
psychedelic and space rock
explorations also worked into
their punchy fuzzy tunes.
`At my Home' is a fairly typical
`proto-prog' up-tempo and
relentless rocker, all Gagey
Mrozeck's wild snarling electric
guitar, Veit Marvos and Steve
Robinson's Hammond organ (both are
credited to keyboards throughout),
Dieter Bauer's mud-thick bass,
Konstatin Bommarius's thrashing
drums and a confident, raucous
vocal from Geff Harrison (who is
actually English, and would later
be involved with other German
prog-related groups such as
Tritonus and King Ping Meh). It's
a reliable and addictive opener
that Atomic Rooster and Deep
Purple fans are sure to love, but
the best is yet to come!
`Autumn' holds a dreamy
introduction of electric piano
tiptoes and Mellotron wisps that
rise into grand symphonic veils
over humming Hammond organ. It
kicks to life with chugging
guitars full of bite and reveals a
heavy symphonic piece full of
frantic little bursts, and listen
to the way Harrison emulates Peter
Gabriel's raspy croon in the final
minutes! Retaining a trace of
flighty hippie-rock to its
fantastical lyric, `Butterking'
constantly bombards the listener
with booming Mellotron blasts,
instantly reminding of the heavier
moments of Van der Graaf
Generator, and there's plenty of
lengthy passages of runaway piano
soloing, sillier vocal spots that
again invoke Peter Gabriel and
frantic organ pomp and whimsy
backed by boisterous rumbles of
drums to remind of `Trespass' era
Genesis.
The flip-side's almost seventeen
minute title track `Reflections on
the Future' is mostly a free-
wheeling Beggars Opera-like fancy
and prancing vocal/organ tune that
gets attacked with a throat
shredding lead vocal and long
bouts of histrionic guitar
wailing, but it eventually drifts
into ambling deep-space freeform
sonic explorations ala early Pink
Floyd or Nektar's `Journey to the
Center of the Eye' debut. Finally,
drenched in scratchy Mellotron and
glorious piano, short closer `How
do you Feel' both vocally and
musically reminds of the stately
Van der Graaf Generator and
Genesis moments with its murky
regal dignity, instantly calling
to mind both Peter Hammill's
overwrought drama and Peter
Gabriel's wounded melancholic
wail, and the chorus could have
easily fit on the first few
Genesis albums.
Despite additional recordings to
what ended up on the LP (some of
the bonus tracks here hint at a
strong E.L.P/The
Nice/Triumvirat-like bombastic
dexterity), the band would sadly
split up mere months after its
release, leaving behind only this
first-rate work that's in
desperate need of some belated
extra attention! If the above
described mix of Sixties/Seventies
sounds and proto/symphonic styles
sounds enticing, then there's no
higher recommendation than
`Reflections on the Future',
something of a lost classic from
the vintage prog period. Five
stars.
(Aussie-Byrd-Brother/progarchives.com)
Geff Harrison - Vocals
Gerhard Mrozeck - Guitar
Steve Robinson - Keyboards
Veit Marvos - Keyboards
Dieter Bauer - Bass
Konstantin Bommarius - Drums
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