Psychedelic Lollipop / Electric Comic Book

Psychedelic Lollipop / Electric Comic Book Artist: Blues Magoos
Label: Collectables
Category: Music


Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1


UPC: 090431273029
EAN: 0090431273029
ASIN: B00000JJAM


Release Date: 1999-07-27

Psychedelic Lollipop / Electric Comic Book


Related Categories:

General General
Categories | Rock | Styles | Music
Psychedelic Rock Psychedelic Rock
Categories | Classic Rock | Styles | Music
Pop Rock Pop Rock
Categories | Pop | Styles | Music
Garage Rock Garage Rock
Categories | Rock | Alternative Styles | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music

Tracks:

  1. (We Ain't Got) Nothin' Yet
  2. Love Seems Doomed
  3. Tabacco Road
  4. Queen Of My Nights
  5. I'll Go Crazy
  6. Gotta Get Away
  7. Sometimes I Think About
  8. One By One
  9. Worried Life Blues
  10. She's Coming Home
  11. Pipe Dream
  12. There's A Chance We Can Make It
  13. Life Is Just A Cher O' Bowlies
  14. Gloria
  15. Intermission
  16. Albert Common Is Dead
  17. Summer Is The Man
  18. Baby, I Want You
  19. Let's Get Together
  20. Take My Love
  21. Rush Hour
  22. That's All Folks

Similar Items:

  1. Psychotic Reaction: The Very Best of Count Five
  2. Turn On: The Best of the Music Machine
  3. Dark Sides: The Best of the Shadows of Knight
  4. The Electric Prunes: I Had Too Much to Dream (Last Night)
  5. Leaves Are Happening!

Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars they put the alkaline in acid-rock.......2005-12-22

While it may be easy to poke fun at the Blues Magoos (the quintessential one-hit-wonders who could double as the Hee-Haw of psychedeia), the band put together, at the very least, one good album side of respectable 1960's rock. The sum of their production was one massive hit, 1967's 'We Ain't Got Nothin' Yet', which checked out at number 72 for the year, and number five at its peak in January. The band hailed from the Bronx in New York, but first gathered a following as residents at the Night Owl Club in Greenwich Village. They started out as The Trenchcoats, evolved into the Bloos Magoos (true to their psychedelic persona, though it's hard to believe any of this music is truly tripped-out), and became the Blues Magoos at the insistence of their manager, though the blues are hardly the band's forte, which appears to be recording garage-rock covers.

Aside from their singular hit, which leads off the first of two studio albums offered on this CD, the Magoos best work consists of cover songs, which fortunately are also the lengthiest tracks. The vocals on track three, the familiar 'Tobacco Road', sound much like the original version by The Nashville Teens, which hit number 14 in 1964. Though also covered by the likes of Eric Burdon, Rare Earth, and Jefferson Airplane, this version by the Magoos more than holds its own, and at four and 1/2 minutes is the second longest number performed. 'Psychedelic Lollipop' also features robust covers of David Blues 'Queen of My Nights', James Brown's 'I'll Go Crazy' (the lead song on Brown's famed 'Live At the Apollo' disc), and a sincere attempt at Maceo Marriweather's 'Worried Life Blues', although the Farfisa organ lines and vocals that don't bleed tend to mock rather than sing the blues. Their only other attempt at the blues, 'Sometimes I Think About', only serves to reveal the irony of the band's namesake. Another song of note on 'Psychedelic Lollipop' is 'One By One', a nice pop tune released as a follow-up single to 'Ain't Got Nothin' Yet', but which never cracked the Top-40 (a cover of Alan Gordon's 'Gotta Get Away', with its great chorus of "Gotta get away, gotta get away, gotta get away... I wanna be free!", probably had a much better shot at success).

Tracks 11-22 on this disc were originally released on vinyl as the band's sophomore effort, 'Electric Comic Book'. It is, in some respects, a novelty album (tracks 15, 'Intermission' and 22, 'That's All Folks' aren't really songs, but bookends intended to give the unrelated compositions a sense of cohesion; and the liner notes are actually a fold-out mini-poster featuring black and white comic book-like panels featuring the band members as characters). Another novelty track appears on the disc, 'Life Is Just a Cher O' Bowlies', which really makes little sense at all. The gradual deterioration of the compositions on 'Elecric Comic Book' reveal the lack of substance the band possessed. Side two of the original vinyl offered tracks which are just a cut above disturbing aural chaos, 'Albert Common Is Dead', and 'Take My Love'. Clearly, something is amiss by the time 'Rush Hour' begins delivering the questionable lyric "take my love and shove it up your heart". While some of the tracks may have represented passable attempts at late-1960's psychedelia ('Summer Is the Man' and the vibrato-lined sounds of 'Baby, I Want You', which are heavy on sunshine, flowers, and love), the cumulative effort here makes one wonder why the band ever got a shot at a third album, which I'm too afraid to hear. The band might have really had something going had they stuck to covers, such as their rich rendition of Van Morrison's 'Gloria' (which the Shadows of Knight took to number ten in 1966), track fourteen on this disc, which at just over six minutes is also the longest number. The song features some bold variatons on the original organ and guitar lines. If the Vanilla Fudge could subsist on cover songs, why not the Blues Magoos? I should have been a manager...

This two-fer 'Blues Magoos' disc is a fun CD to pop into your player for one or two listens, and there are some redeeming tracks, but by-and-large there is way too much filler here to make this a staple of any respectable music collection. It is an interesting artifact, indeed a caricature, of what was considered fashionable in the late-1960's rock scene. This band performed with neon tubes outlining their bell bottoms, and lava lamps decorating the stage. It's op-art, both visual and auditory. If you're a synesthete, you can probably smell and taste psychedelia all over this one, too. If you truly "dig" this, you either took the 1960's way too seriously, or way too superficially. I'm not sure which is the greater error, but a mistake it is.

4 out of 5 stars TWO GREAT ALBUMS {ONE BY ONE}.......2005-03-09

THESE ARE TWO GROVEY ALBUMS, THE BLUES MAGOOS ARE A WONDERFULL
BAND. IF YOU LIKE PSYCHEDELIC MUSIC YOU LOVE IT

4 out of 5 stars Blues Magoos-'Psychedelic Lollipop/Electric Comic Book'.......2004-09-13

Another great 2 lp's-on-one CD release brought to us by the Collectables label.Some of you may not remember much about the Blues Magoos.They were a Bronxe five piece that played some decent psychedelic garage rock that released six lp's from 1966-70,with the first three probably being their best work.This 2-on-1 includes two of those three albums.A total of 22 songs,starting off with their only hit,"We Ain't Got Nothin' Yet" along with many of their other decently penned tracks,like "Gotta Get Away","One By One","Pipe Dream",their outstanding six-minute cover of "Gloria"(one of the disc's best tracks) and "Let's Get Together".Aimed at fans and collectors of '60's psych/garage rock.Will appeal to fans of Shadows Of Knight,Strawberry Alarm Clock,The Creation,The Leaves and Count Five.

5 out of 5 stars Psychedelic Pop At Its Best.......2003-12-20

This CD is a must from the psychedelic 60's. No they were not musicians of the caliber of the Yardbirds or Quicksilver, but there are a number of pop tunes on this CD that could have made top 40, given sufficient airplay and promotion, such as Queen Of MY Nights and Love Seems Doomed.These guys were the embodiment of the psychedelic era. Give them credit for cranking out some great psychedelic-garage rock.

5 out of 5 stars

Music Album:

  1. Disco Still Sucks! ~ Swamp Rats
  2. Mental Notes ~ Split Enz
  3. Here's Some That Got Away ~ The Style Council
  4. Phillips 66 ~ John Phillips
  5. A Few Steps More ~ Monade
  6. Endangered Species ~ Lynyrd Skynyrd
  7. Up 'Til Now ~ Art Garfunkel
  8. Dead Leaves ~ Versus
  9. Greatest Zits: 1990-2003 ~ The Ziggens
  10. Fuck Forever ~ Babyshambles

Music Album

Music Album

Music CD

The Spirits Up Above ~ Steve Turre

Mal Waldron With the Steve Lacy Quintet ~ Mal Waldron, Steve Lacy

Samba Rio Trio ~ Joe Carter

Bird of Paradise, Vol. 1 ~ Charlie Parker

Hangin' Out ~ Michael Bolivar

Live: Theatre De La Ville Paris 1989 ~ Joachim (Trio) Kuhn

Pra Que Mentir? ~ Quarteto Livre

Pink ~ Boris

30 Tangos Para Bailar y Cantar ~ Various Artists

Seasons Changing ~ Ayaapii