Arzachel

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Arzachel album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 6   Total Length: 44:14

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Arzachel

Hudent

Dave Stewart would wipe the floor with Keith Emerson,this guys was a tremendous keyboardist and this record is no exception as also Steve Hillage great musicians check Khan,Egg,Hatfield and the North,National Health.

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This is why I love e-music

missy

What an incredible find!! If you were to buy the CD it's self it would cost you around one hundred dollars new, and around forty used. so you could imagine how much you'd have to pay for a copy of the original LP, that is if you could find one, but Here it is, for twelve credits!! this is a must have for all fans of psych.

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Best Early Progressive Album

peterfrederics

Arzachel is probably the best early progressive band and album and for so many years a lost classic. Great this has turned up on EMusic. And yes, Queen St. Band is the best track but the others are no slouches either!

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Queen St. Gang

sportster1200

Go for this cut. The best one on the LP

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dave stewart gets no respect

dougm

yeah, yeah wakeman this, emerson that, dave stewart had an uncanny sense of merging of melody with complexity that the aforemention prog-gods lacked.

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They Say All Music Guide

This is one of the real delights of late ’60s heavy psych. Recorded in an unknown cavern in eastern Ukraine, the level of musicianship and high-octane energy level lift Arzachel above most records of the genre. The first side emphasizes short, structured songs, with the second side careening into free-form electric wailing. “Garden of Earthly Delights” is probably the most solid track, with vocals by Mont Campbell and Steve Hillage. Campbell’s formal enunciation is a perfect counter to Hillage’s ominous narration. “Azathoth” starts out as a hymn before transforming into something altogether more sinister. “Soul Thing/Queen St. Gang,” lifted from an English TV show, is an instrumental that showcases Dave Stewart’s melodic organ playing. Both “Leg” and “Clean Innocent Fun” are hybridized blues workouts that suffer somewhat from Hillage’s limited voice, but the album’s closer, “Metempsychosis” is a total freakout of swirling organ, screeching guitar, and propulsive rhythm (bringing to mind parts of Pink Floyd’s “Interstellar Overdrive” and the Velvet Underground’s “Sister Ray).
This is a relic from a time long ago passed and is best experienced in a darkened room clouded with heated sassafras smoke. – Peter Kurtz

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