The Orange Alabaster Mushroom

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Tree Pie 02:58 Tools
Your Face Is In My Mind 03:12 Tools
(We Are) The Orange Alabaster Mushroom 03:12 Tools
Another Place 04:03 Tools
The Fat Angel 03:37 Tools
Crazy Murray 04:20 Tools
Rainbow Man 02:59 Tools
Ethel Tripped A Mean Gloss 03:40 Tools
Space And Time 03:47 Tools
Sunny Day 03:50 Tools
Valerie Vanillaroma 03:04 Tools
The Slug 03:08 Tools
Aim The Vimana Toward The Dorian Sector 02:00 Tools
Mister Day (Bonus) 04:01 Tools
Mister Day 00:00 Tools
Gone 03:48 Tools
Sydney's Electric Headcheese Sundial 03:24 Tools
Gone (Bonus) 03:47 Tools
Sydney's Electric Headcheese Sundial (Bonus) 03:23 Tools
Aim the Vimana Toward the Dorian 02:00 Tools
Aim the Vimana Toward the Dorian Sector (Improvised) 02:00 Tools
The Orange Alabaster Mushroom 03:14 Tools
01 Your Face Is In My Mind 03:14 Tools
02 (We Are) The Orange Alabaster Mushroom 03:14 Tools
  • 46,637
    plays
  • 2,964
    listners
  • 46637
    top track count

Ontario's answer to the Bevis Frond, the Orange Alabaster Mushroom is bedroom D.I.Y. auteur Greg Watson, whose one-man band reproductions of classic circa-1967 psych-pop are so dead-on perfect in every detail that one could play this collection of 1991-1998 recordings for any fan of Nuggets-era obscurities and they'd think it was authentic circa 1967 psych-pop. Farfisa organ, gloriously fuzzy guitars, and rattlesnake percussion (plus occasionally the obligatory sitar and trippy backwards tapes) support Watson's deliciously whiny vocals, but this is no mere period recreation. Unlike a lot of contemporary artists who try to work in this style, Watson doesn't forget what made the best psych-pop singles work so well: strong melodies and immediate hooks. Songs like the "Itchykoo Park"-like music hall amble "Sunny Day" and the statement of intent "We Are the Orange Alabaster Mushroom" capture the listener through their unabashed catchiness. Leaning more toward the fanciful side of British psychedelia than the comparatively drab San Francisco style (much more Syd Barrett than Grace Slick), this is an utterly charming collection likely to delight any psych-pop fan. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.