Tintern Abbey

Tintern Abbey made only one single, "Beeside"/"Vacuum Cleaner," for Deram in 1967. But on the basis of that sole 45, they qualify as one of the very best one-shots of the British psychedelic era. There are plenty of obscure British psychedelic singles from the late '60s that attract fanatical raves in liner notes and collectors' magazines, but strike the unconverted as overrated or even ho-hum. "Beeside" is one example -- perhaps even the very best example -- of a buried treasure that does live up to its reputation. From the opening courtly solo piano, it segues into an explosive and blissful piece of melancholy British psychedelia, like the very early (psychedelia-era) Moody Blues with a more spaced-out, underground pop sense. The track had some excellent Mellotron, a lovely melody, slightly distorted vocals, pummeling drums, and an indefinable sense of foggy wistfulness, fading with a reprise of the quasi-classical piano riff that had opened the song. Its flipside, "Vacuum Cleaner," was more standard 1967 psychedelia, though still decent, with a harder rock approach in the Who-ish drums, tight vocal harmonies, and a good feedback-speckled guitar solo.

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