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Hapshash and The Coloured Coat: Western Flier
File Audio I have it ★★★★
Thanks to the legendary producer Guy Stevens (the one from The Clash, to be clear), those two crazy guys, Michael English and Nigel Waymouth, partially repent for that extreme and almost carnival-like, kaleidoscopic allegory and the LSD-like evanescence of their first work, and they record this second album with their usual lineup of countless guests and contributors - including the legendary Brian Jones. It enjoys less fame and celebrity than its predecessor, but in truth, it’s one of the best of British psychedelia from those years, also due to its greater completeness. It’s a more electric work, which quite consciously looks towards the Texan psychedelia of that era rather than the Eastern imagery, which was somewhat 'out of fashion' for that historical moment, and yet it’s a great album.

#levitation
It is impossible to attempt to provide an exact definition of this work, a fundamental chapter in the history of British psychedelia, which begins with Michael English and Nigel Waymouth, two well-rounded artists engaged in both the musical and graphic fields. The record is a multifaceted allegory between the British psychedelic experiments of the Beatles and Rolling Stones and what would become the most acid episodes of kraut-rock. The contribution of producer Guy Stevens is essential, as he is practically a legend in the British music scene of the sixties and seventies. Deliberately, wildly indefinable.

#levitation
Harold Becker: Watchbird
File Video I lack ★★
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Heaters: Holy Water Pool
File Audio I have it ★★★★
Beautiful and surprising debut album by this band from Michigan, released at the end of 2015 on the usual psych label, 'Beyond Beyond is Beyond Records' (the one known for Myrrors, Kikagaku Moyo, and Jeffertitti's Nile, just to be clear). Super fresh garage psychedelia to listen to and relisten to.
Hey Colossus: Radio Static High
File Audio Not intrested ★
I can't understand where they want to go with this. An album where confusion reigns supreme. They probably want to somehow emulate the mad genius of a band like Clinic, but - assuming that's the case - we are far from achieving a result even remotely close to what they are aiming for.