Music Millennium

Beeside - The Anthology
Artist: Tintern Abbey
Format: Vinyl
New: In Stock $49.99
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Formats and Editions

DISC: 1

1. Beeside
2. Vacuum Cleaner
3. Tanya
4. Bodmin Blow
5. My Prayer (Early Version)
6. Let the Wind Blow
7. Stickleback
8. Busy Bee
9. Do What You Must
10. Hookah
11. Nightfall
12. Mrs, Daisy (Polydor Version)
13. Blue Pants
14. People Can't See (Acetate Version)
15. How Do I Feel Today? (Decca Acetate Version)
16. Magic Horsemen
17. My Zoo
18. My House
19. Life Goes By
20. Reaching for Nothing
21. Witchcraft
22. Something
23. Strange Dame
24. Snowman (Master 2)

More Info:

Double purple colored vinyl LP pressing in gatefold jacket. The biggest British psych find of the century! Think that's hyperbole? Well, of the 24 tracks on this collection, the only two to be previously issued on vinyl, "Beeside" b/w "Vacuum Cleaner," comprise probably the rarest and most highly prized single in '60s British rock, an original copy having sold for as much as $1600! Indeed, that single was the only recording officially released by Tintern Abbey, and only a small handful of skeletal demos have leaked out since; yet, their legend persists some 55 years later. Now, after two decades of planning, research, tape transfer and sound restoration, the full story of Tintern Abbey can at last be told. The 2-LP set Beeside-The Anthology unearths 24 tracks of music recorded by Tintern Abbey between the summer of 1967 (when they spent a month in a Cornwall cottage, rehearsing and taping their performances prior to their London launch) and the end of 1968. Alongside that genre-defining Deram single and those previously-leaked demos are some astonishing treasures. Among the highlights: the intended late 1967 follow-up 45 "Snowman" (a disorientating melange of sinister Mellotron, disembodied voices and backward tapes that was abandoned when original guitarist Don Smith left the group); the Arabic-sounding "My Prayer" and the SF Sorrow-anticipating "Let The Wind Blow," along with late 1968 creations like "Raspberry Ripple," "Life Goes By," and "My House," suggesting that, even at the point of their collapse, Tintern Abbey remained a vital, vibrant unit.
        
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