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Sold Date:
June 2, 2016
Start Date:
January 25, 2012
Final Price:
£17.99
(GBP)
Seller Feedback:
11024
Buyer Feedback:
0
This item is not for sale. Gripsweat is an archive of past sales and auctions, none of the items are available for purchase.
Canterbury Glass
The First time on Vinyl
The Full Album
Stamford Audio STAMLP1007
Brand New Sealed
Stamford Audio, in association with Canterbury Glass singer/songwriter
Malcolm Ironton, is proud to present the very first pressing on
beautiful 180 gram vinyl in a lavish gatefold sleeve of this superb
‘lost’ album, recorded in 1968.
The first engineering job for the great producer Chris Kimsey (famed for
his later work with The Rolling Stones, Yes, ELP, INXS among many
others), and with future Whitesnake drummer Dave Dowle in the
line-up, this album, a psychedelic/progressive crossover with
church-music and bluesy influences, was made by a group of musicians
very much on the London underground ‘scene’ of the time, playing gigs at
Middle Earth and The Electric Garden, supporting Hendrix, supported by
John Peel and pitched to CBS and Polydor, both of whom failed to pick up
on a fabulous and original piece of work by a band which, on the
strength of these songs, deserved more recognition.
At the time of a 2007 CD release of on Ork Records/RPM, 2 tracks
(‘Battle Hymn’ and ‘The Roman Head Of A Marble Man’) could not be found,
but after Simon Ashley at Stamford Audio contacted Malcolm Ironton late
in 2009 to arrange releasing the album on vinyl, he searched again and,
this time, the search bore fruit! Listening to all of the original
tracks together again, he remembered that ‘Gloria’ had been intended as
the last track on the album and ‘Battle Hymn’ finished off side one, so
‘The Roman Head Of A Marble Man’ then slotted in between ‘Prologue’ and
‘Gloria’ on side two and we now had the original running order for the
vinyl LP, as it should have been issued all those years ago…
‘…rooted in church music, you hear snatches and elements of the quieter
Seeds sounds, some Vanilla Fudge, Caravan and much more…The whole is
certainly evocative of the Middle Earth scene in 1968, which is no bad
thing.’
From the Kingsley Abbott 4 star CD review, Record Collector Magazine
Side One: Kyrie, Nunc Dimittis, Battle Hymn
Side Two: Prologue, The Roman Head Of A Marble Man, Gloria