Bull of the Woods

Bull of the Woods Artist: 13th Floor Elevators
Label: Collectables
Category: Music


Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
Media: Audio CD


UPC: 090431055724
EAN: 0090431055724
ASIN: B000000864


Release Date: 1993-11-12

Bull of the Woods


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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. Livin' On
  2. Barnyard Blues
  3. Til Then
  4. Never Another
  5. Rose And The Thorn
  6. Down By The River
  7. Scarlet And Gold
  8. Street Song
  9. Dear Dr. Doom
  10. With You
  11. May The Circle Remain Unbroken

Similar Items:

  1. Easter Everywhere
  2. Happy Trails

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Almost as good as the first two.......2005-10-27

Only the absence of Roky's manic energy makes BULL OF THE WOODS a bit of a letdown compared to PSYCHEDELIC SOUNDS and EASTER EVERYWHERE. If anything, BULL has the weirdest songs and trippiest-sounding production of the three albums. Ghostly background vocals, bizarre horn arrangements (yes, horns!) and somberly mystical lyrics make this set a must-own for conoisseurs of the psychedelic genre. The audio quality is pretty miserable, but oddly enough, the thin, grungy sound seems to work with this material, producing a proto-Flying Saucer Attack effect. If you own the first two Elevators LPs (and you'd damn well BETTER own them if you care about psych-pop), don't hesitate to check this one out.

4 out of 5 stars Dear Doctor Doom.....um, yea..so, how've you been?.......2004-12-25

It seems like most of the bitching about this album stems from a spoiled rigidness on "production" and "studio quality". These people write scathing letters of disappointment to their congressman when a piano key or guitar pluck doesn't sound like it was being played in their very room. Did your guys' vaginas get all sandy when you heard the Stones' "Out of our Heads"? Huh? Ohh...i guess ole Hips and Lips get some slack 'cuz they don't get no satisfaction (no no no, hey hey hey). Listen, biatches...when the musicianship doesn't tend to ramble (even then, it's still enjoyable), like on "Rose and the Thorn" and "Scarlet and Gold", Sutherland's sprawling acid-drenched, wet-as-hell guitar work is pretty incomparable as far as I've heard. The Elevators can still work that echo like they did on "Psychedelic Sounds.." while their subtle feedback and distortion almost has sexual intercourse with the distinct, strange and damn catchy falsetto chants, like "Till Then". The galloping heavy psych-folk and tight harmonies of "With You" and "Down by the River" conjure up the Dead, in more ways than one. And Cream couldn't come up with better trippy-ass blues-raunch than "Livin' On" and "Barnyard Blues" even if they had Robert Johnson stand in for Clapton and plugged a wah-pedal to his guitar.

Erikson's last wails and howls on the former and "Never Another" is kind of foreboding, racked with a kind of psychological desperation and frustration only a cult-followed Texan psych-garage band leader- who feigned insanity til he went insane (really)- could only have. And they add those horns to already farkin' sublime "Dear Doctor Doom" without any psychedelic pretense, while Erikson harmonizes flawlessly with Sutherland and the rest of the gang. And to botch this up 'cuz of some fuzz in yer speakers. I WAS RAISED ON FUZZ GODDAMNIT! IT BUILDS CHARACTER!...ahem, yea. This album is the audio psych-rock equivalent to a bottle of purple Nyquil. You know you'll trip balls on that shiite...yummy.

3 out of 5 stars 13th Floor Elevators - 'Bull Of The Woods' (Collectables).......2004-12-09

Originally released in 1968,this was the band's third actual/legit/real.... however you wish to put it lp(not counting compilations).I understand that vocalist/frontman Rocky Erickson wasn't on this album.So,apparently guitarist Stacy Sutherland(R.I.P.)took over and wrote pretty much most of the lp.To bad the group never got past the cult status point.I think I hear a female vocalist on some of these cuts,and speaking of such,I liked "Livin' On","Never Another",the swinging "Rose And The Thorn"(could maybe see a country pop band covering this tune) and "Street Song" the best.The Elevators are by NO means another Jefferson Airplane or the Grateful Dead,but they're still worth checking out.'Bull...' would probably be considered second rate psychedelia.Their first two lp's,'Psychedelic Sounds Of...' and 'Easter Everywhere' are better.

4 out of 5 stars Progressive even for the '60s.......2004-03-27

I've been listening to '60s music for over 25 years, and this is one of the few albums of that time that really fits the description of 'strange, but groovy'. I've been an Elevators fan for almost as long, and for me this one really kicks. It was the perfect release for '68. The first two tracks alone are worth the acquisition. I love all three albums and 'Bull of the Woods' is a good closer to the trilogy. If you're going to get the first two (highly recommended also), then complete the set with this one. Pure Texas psychedelia ala the 13th Floor!!!

3 out of 5 stars

Music Album:

  1. Forms and Follies ~ The Lonesome Organist
  2. Alaska ~ Between the Buried & Me
  3. Essentials ~ Bread & David Gates
  4. The Sinners of Daughters ~ The Talk
  5. Inter Funda Stifle
  6. Untitled
  7. Empathy for the Devil ~ Electric Hellfire Club
  8. Collectors' King Crimson, Vol. 9 ~ King Crimson
  9. Oro ~ Propeller
  10. The Sicko Inside Me ~ Necessary Evils

Music Album

Music Album

Music CD

Music CD 44

Out And About

That's Funky ~ Benny Golson

The Best Is Yet to Come ~ Jr. Grover Washington

In the Tradition, Vol. 2 ~ Anthony Braxton

Per un Pugno Di Samba ~ Chico Buarque, Ennio Morricone

Entre Deux Reves ~ Charles Aznavour

Tipsis ~ Yannis Parios

Naguila: Chants Mystiques Sefarades ~ Andre Taieb, Kamal Berrada, Mohamed Zeftari

Vibe Quest ~ Mao Denda