Space Hymn/Presenting...Lothar & The Hand People
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Artist: Lothar & The Hand People
Label: Acadia Records
Category: Music
Average customer rating:
Format: Import
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 2
UPC: 805772805828
EAN: 0805772805828
ASIN: B0000D8HV0
Release Date: 2003-10-09 |
Space Hymn/Presenting...Lothar & The Hand People
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Tracks:
- Yes, I Love You
- Today Is Only Yesterday's Tomorrow
- Midnight Ranger
- Sister Lonely
- Wedding Night for Those Who Love
- Heat Wave
- Say "I Do"
- What Grows on Your Head?
- Sdrawkcab
- Space Hymn
Tracks:
- Machines
- This Is It
- This May Be Goodbye
- That's Another Story
- Kids Are Little People
- Ha (Ho)
- Sex and Violence
- Bye Bye Love
- Milkweed Love
- You Won't Be Lonely
- Woody Woodpecker
- It Comes on Anyhow
- Paul, in Love
- L-O-V-E (Ask for It by Name)
- Rose Coloured Glasses
- Comic Strip
- Every Single Word
- Have Mercy (Mercy, Mercy, Mercy)
- Let the Boy Pretend
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Album Description
The complete Capitol recordings of one of the most unusual & experimental rock bands to emerge in the U.S.A. in the late 60s. Lothar who fronted the band was in fact a theremin. Features 29 tracks including 10 from the album Space Hymn, originally released in 1969, & 19 from their debut album, Presenting...Lothar & The Hand People. Acadia. 2003.
Album Details
One of the Most Unusual and Experimental Rock Bands to Emerge in the USA in the Late 60's.
Customer Reviews:
A band that never made it big, but should have!.......2006-01-31
Some may remember this band from the late `60s. Originating at the University of Denver, CO in 1966, they quickly realized they were quite the attraction. After winning a Battle of the Bands contest, they took a chance, dropped out of school, and moved to Greenwich Village in New York City in an attempt to make it big. They played there during the Village's heyday and made their home at a club named the Night Owl. They also frequented Steve Paul's Scene Club and would occasionally be fronted by a soon-to-be-discovered guitarist named Jimi Hendrix, who returned and sat in with them even after his success in 1968 and 1969
Lothar and the Hand People had some unique things going for them. Visually they sported long hair at a time when greaser bands were on their way out. They were the first to use a synthesizer during live gigs. And they were the first to use a Theremin, which played well with psychedelic Hendrix-inspired atonal jams. In case anyone was wondering who Lothar is: Lothar is the Theremin; The Hand People are the band members.
This CD represents all of their Capital records, which includes two LPs and a handful of singles packed on two CDs.
Their first LP, "Presenting," enabled them to experiment with the Moog synthesizer, which was a monophonic device in those days. They had access to Bob Moog's lab and spent a lot of time working with the equipment, which they used on their first LP more than their second. They actually recorded their first LP and then decided not to use it. They re-recorded it and the second recording was released by Capital as "Presenting." The first attempt is purported to have been thrown away by the record company.
Their second LP, "Space Hymn," was intended to be a concept LP, but the concept was too convoluted and the band's lead singer, John Emelin, no longer remembers what that concept was. The LPs final song, "Space Hymn," was written with the first moon walk in mind. The first moon walk occurred shortly after the LPs release.
Lothar and the Hand People was a band that played on the verge of commercial success; it was always just an arm's reach away. Unfortunately, they were never able to reach that goal. They had a respectable four year run during an explosively creative time period in a highly creative environment (Greenwich Village in the late 1960s). They disbanded in late 1969.
As for the music, the LPs and singles offer a very unique collection of homegrown pieces written and polished during live gigs for the express purpose of commercial release. The pieces are catchy and varied in style. "Presenting" offers shorter pieces that are at times more acoustic in approach while "Space Hymn" is more varied and touches on rock, in one case country (Midnight Ranger, which features a young and unmentioned Johnny Winter on backing vocals), and psychedelic (Space Hymn).
I would highly recommend this CD to anyone who appreciates the explorative bands of the late `60s. Lothar and the Hand People is an often overlooked gem that made a splash rather than a wave.
This is the One to Get.......2005-03-09
Sine I found a TAKRL boot of extracts from both Lothar albums in 1980, I've heard several releases of this material, including a pristine copy of the second album. None of them match the sound quality in this comprehensive package, not even the orignal LP. If you are a Lothar fan, this is what you've been waiting for. Snap it up before it becomes a pricey rarity on EBAY!
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