Dave Bixby

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Drug Song 00:00 Tools
Morning Sun 00:00 Tools
Free Indeed 00:00 Tools
I Have Seen Him 00:00 Tools
Mother 02:58 Tools
666 00:00 Tools
Open Doors 00:00 Tools
Prayer 00:00 Tools
Lonely Faces 00:00 Tools
Waiting for the Rains 00:00 Tools
Peace 00:00 Tools
Secret Forest 00:00 Tools
Time To Clear Your Mind 00:00 Tools
Cosmic Energy 00:00 Tools
Sun in the Morning 00:00 Tools
Take to the Sky 00:00 Tools
Control 00:00 Tools
People That I Love 00:00 Tools
Faith to Move a Mountain 00:00 Tools
The Sun Goes Down 00:00 Tools
Circus World 00:00 Tools
Harmony 00:00 Tools
The More You Know 00:00 Tools
Soft Winds 00:00 Tools
Rainbow 00:00 Tools
All Of The Truth 00:00 Tools
Valley of the Shadow 00:00 Tools
Ode To Elias 00:00 Tools
Transform Dreams Into Reality 00:00 Tools
Desert Lady 00:00 Tools
NW Coast to Mexico 00:00 Tools
war torn war born 00:00 Tools
Mayday Surfing USA 00:00 Tools
cliff by the lighthouse 00:00 Tools
Ode To Quetzalcoatl 00:00 Tools
Drug Song (MGMT Late Night Tales) 00:00 Tools
Dave Bixby - 1969 - Ode To Quetzalcoatl - 01 - Drug song 00:00 Tools
Drug Song [Ode to Quetzalcoatl] 1969 00:00 Tools
Drug Song (Late Night Tales: MGMT) 00:00 Tools
1969 - Ode To Quetzalcoatl -Drug song 00:00 Tools
Drug song - Dave Bixby 00:00 Tools
"Drug Song" 00:00 Tools
Drug Song (from "Ode to Quetzalcoatl") 00:00 Tools
Drug Song (1969) 00:00 Tools
Morning Sun 1969 00:00 Tools
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In the early '70s, there was a subgenre -- still being excavated and discovered by collectors -- of privately pressed, or quite limited-edition, singer/songwriter folk albums that sounded like burnt-out leftovers from the hippie era. A percentage of these, in turn, were recorded and released by musicians with fervent if rather inarticulate religious beliefs. Dave Bixby's Ode to Quetzalcoatl is one of these, and though its purpose seems to have been to celebrate his deliverance from evil after embracing Christianity, it nonetheless sounds quite despondent and isolated in its mood. With acoustic guitar usually serving as his only instrumental accompaniment (and a bit of flute and harmonica heard at times), Bixby sings in a moan-lilting, slightly echoing voice whose sad and lonesome feel gives the impression that his demons have by no means been wholly exercised by salvation. Bixby also released a second album, Second Coming under the name Harbinger, around the same time as Ode to Quetzalcoatl. This album would remain almost unheard until both albums were reissued in 2009 by Guerssen records of Spain. http://psychedelicbaby.blogspot.com.au/2011/11/dave-bixby-interview-about-ode-to.html https://www.facebook.com/davebixbyo2q/ Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.