![]() ![]() Our singer-narrator suffers from depression, brought on by what appears to be a clinical case of blue balls. Definitive fuzz guitar, howling harmonica and stomping-on-the-gym-floor drums. Count Five: “Psychotic Reaction”: From 1965, a track that cops the Yardbirds’ rave-up sound, yet somehow anticipates the British stars’ journey into psychedelic territory.Roky Erickson, who wrote “You’re Gonna Miss Me,” sings from a place of pain and hostility, delivering a classic garage band kiss-off to an oh-so-deserving female. The madmen from Texas built the song around crunchy garage chords and a sci-fi sound poured from an electric jug. Often cited as the first psychedelic song, although that’s debatable. 13th Floor Elevators: “You’re Gonna Miss Me”: Also from late 1966.Alarming and compelling, the song told of a love hangover, but the ominous sonics summoned up a nightmare - or a really rotten LSD trip. ![]() The backwards vibrating guitar that begins the song sounds like the spawn of a buzz saw and a hornet. The Electric Prunes: “I Had Too Much to Dream (Last Night)”: A 3-minute rush of prescient psychedelic sounds from late 1966.Nuggets II: Original Artyfacts from the British Empire and Beyond, 19641969 by Various. 1965 - 1968 - Nuggets Original Artyfacts From The First Psychedelic Era (4Cds) - by siete.zip. Three proto-psychedelic songs were enshrined as classics by virtue of primo slots on “Nuggets” - although those of us who were around for their AM radio runs were never in danger of forgetting them: Nuggets spawned more than 200 like-minded collections under such titles as Pebbles and Back From The Grave, and is a consistent compilation favourite and has.
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