Saturday, September 8, 2007

Camel - "Mirage" 1974

Sorry for the lack of posts lately... I've been on a job hunt. But here's an amazing psych prog album to make up for it!!!

Camel - Mirage
Deram, 1974


















UK prog band that is not as appreciated as it should be... This is their best album, representing the earlier more psychedelic influenced sounds. Later on they became much more "cheesy prog" with some synthesizer wizardry, exploring spacier territory. However, here their sound is quite amazing. Great keyboard and flute work adding those progressive touches. The best song is the suite "Lady Fantasy". That song alone will blow you away. A masterpiece of psych prog, one of my favorite psychedelic rock songs of all time. Plus a nice album cover paying tribute to their apparent vice....

"The band had obviously settled on what sort of music they wanted to make with "Mirage", and it’s palpably progressive at every turn, shrouded in a magical mist that falls and rises with the needle. The sleepy vocals, carried on the winds of a magnificent mellotron and buttressed by the bass and drums, conjure a waking dreamstate that few albums can match. This" Mirage" first takes the form of “Freefall," whose seductive siren’s call simply smokes, followed by the instrumental “Supertwister", featuring Andy Latimer’s heretofore unheard (and otherworldly) flute playing. It’s all leading up to the two-part “Nimrodel", a transcendent retelling of GANDALF’s reappearance as the white wizard that remains my favorite journey in all of CAMELogue.

For this heroic feat alone, CAMEL could count itself minstrel-kissed through the ages. “Earthrise” shakes off some of that sleepy, far-off land with a sweaty workout that finds Pete Bardens’ brilliant organ working overtime while Andy Ward attacks his kit with unrelenting energy. The three-part “Lady Fantasy” would seem to continue in this vein, but soon slides effortlessly into a mesmerizing melody spiced with keyboard commentary from Bardens that beats down The DOORS’ hallowed path. If I were assembling the Gods in order, a task best left to presumptive chess players, "Mirage" would appear near the head of the receiving line for progressive initiates.

The entire album bespeaks what’s best about the genre: a self-sustaining musical world where fantasy is the reality and the strings of man remain unseen. CAMEL provides a different ride than the great carriages of the immortals (YES, GENESIS), using softer strokes in lieu of striking genius, but "Mirage" is no mere illusion of prog heaven, it’s the genuine article. So climb aboard and strap yourself in for a ride you won’t soon forget." - Dave Connolly, Prog Archives



















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FILL YOUR EARS

(Thanks to Early Rock and Blues)

2 comments:

Jorge said...

Daan. I want to thank you for this great site you have made. It has open a little bit more my mind to different kinds of prog music. The selection of Canterbury scene music was perfect.

Well thanks and please keep on theaching

Regards From Patagonia
Jorge

Daan said...

thanks for your kind words, jorge.
i am thrilled that this blog has had an impact... it is music that means a lot to me.