beGlad Archive
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Boston
Tea Party, Jordan Hall 30th November 1968
Talisman of the Beyond
Their terrain is the fresh green
landscape of ancient pastoral, replete with somber mountains,
gloomy caves, anthropomorphic rivers. They sing not of ordinary
men, but of lovers, amoebae, angels, village rustics, swans,
emperors, unicorns. And their music is an eerie compound of
British and U.S. folk traditions, Indian ragas, rock, calypso,
blues, even nursery songs. This is the magical mystery world of
The Incredible String Band,
which is almost as exotic as its name. The band consists of two
lank-haired 25-year-old Scots, Robin Williamson and Mike Heron,
each of whom seems to be half child, half wizard, and all
musician. They compose their own songs, sing them in soft, burred
voices, and accompany themselves on a bewildering array of
instruments: guitars, whistles, sitars, ouds, organs, harmonicas,
violins and gimbris. At a time when the music scene reverberates
with cacophony and aggression, they expound gentleness, lyricism
and fantasy. As they put it in one of their songs, Ducks on a
Pond, they sing "a magic word, speak of hopes with
thoughts absurd."
The band moved up from the British
pop underground early this year, soon captivated a following in
Britain that combines the commercial weight of a mass audience
with the intensity of an avant-garde cult. 'I feel like I'm in a
cathedral', said one awed fan at a performance. The last two of
their four LPs have been top ten bestsellers, and their concert
tours sell out from London to Liverpool. Last week, in Boston's
Jordan Hall, Robin and Mike wound up a brief series of East Coast
appearances designed to introduce them to their growing audience
in the U.S. Festooned with colorful rugs and cluttered with
instruments, the stage on which they appeared had the aura of
gypsy encampments. That aura was heightened by an occasional waft
of incense and by the presence
of two girls known as Licorice and Rose (real names: Caroline
McKechnie and Rose Simpson), who live, travel and perform with the
band. Resplendent in beads, braids, silks and velvet, Robin and
Mike wandered about, sipped tea, and spent interminable intervals
tuning up. But once they started singing, they wove a trance.
Their lyrics connect the natural and supernatural, transmuting
homely details into talismans of the beyond. An ordinary object
like the stone in The Iron Stone evokes a vision of
Atlantis, of a divine jester called 'Sir Primalform Magnifico', of
'forests and centaurs and gods of the nights'. The meandering
songs, some of them 25 minutes long, contain dreamlike cascades of
cryptic imagery, as in Ducks on a Pond: "Moving pieces
on
the plains of Troy, Carving faces on the rocks of joy; Pretty lady
washing the tiles, Soapy pictures like crocodiles."
The meaning of all this is often
unclear, even apparently to the boys in the band. "If the
songs could be explained, they wouldn't be songs," shrugs
Robin. "They mean something different to everybody."
Although their work suggests a blend of late Beatle and early
Blake, Mike will only say about influences: 'I get something out
of everything, even Doris Day. New spheres of reference, ways of
widening the mind - everybody finds his own path to them.' Their
own paths were surprisingly mundane. Mike, the son of an Edinburgh
schoolteacher, began by teaching himself songs on the ukulele by
Fats Domino and other vintage rock'n'rollers. By the time he
finished high school, he had moved on to playing guitar with
"a lot of bad rock groups" while working in the daytime
as an apprentice accountant. Robin, whose father is an Edinburgh
insurance executive, started in music when his grandmother gave
him a recorder, eventually worked up to playing banjo in a New
Orleans-style jazz group.
The two met five years ago, when
both were in what they call a "British gypsy folk-music
band". Mike admired the poems that Robin had been scribbling.
Robin was impressed with the songs that Mike had been writing. Yet
when they decided to string along with each other, they thought
they were forming a jug band to play traditional Appalachian
tunes. Could they have foreseen that ahead lay Atlantis and soapy
pictures like crocodiles? Incredible."
Review by Time Magazine, 13
December 1968
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