With a common love of 60’s pop and early psychedelia, Ideal Free Distribution has released “Then We Were Older” and it sounds like a lost classic from that era, right down to the last detail. The strong influences from The Pretty Things, Zombies, Moody Blues and The Yardbirds are all over every track here. You know you’re doing something right when Robert Schneider of The Apples in Stereo happily joins in to mix the album. Opening with “Cold Wind Blows” it gets the mojo early on, pulling every sonic trick out of the hat including dreamy vocal harmonies and fuzz guitar. “Something I Know” then goes in a vintage Kinks mode with Tony Miller’s sad vocal and slow shuffle. “Carol Anne” then goes into a jam closer to Syd Barret-era Pink Floyd, with a dense layer of instrumental goodness. “Turn To Find You” adds a bit of Radiohead vocal angst to the mix and makes it one of the few songs here that isn’t rooted to the psychedelic sound. A great tune here is “William Buss” with its hand clapping go-go beat, organ intro and hook filled melody, it’s the poppiest of the songs here. The Powerpopaholic has a link to an authorized MP3 download below. “Trip Inside” and “Strawberry Crush” are rich psych-pop that has lush sonic landscapes that will carry you off to hookah dreams. It takes a garage nugget turn on “Anne Maria” with blaring guitars and roaring vocals similar to The Creation. Throughout the album the textures of the song often overtake the melody. And that’s the problem here – as wonderful the atmosphere is, the melody is often of secondary importance, especially in the album’s second half. Some fans of this genre will not mind it a bit. In fact, fans of Olivia Tremor Control and The Pillbugs would welcome this into their music collection with open ears. Turn on and tune out with your headphones, man.
Ideal Free Distrib. Website | My Space | Kool Kat Musik
DOWNLOAD “William Buss” here
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FYI: The poll on the top 200 power pop albums of all time is here. You can probably shuffle them around a bit, but I would have pulled up a few that were lower in rank, like Pugwash (#189), You Am I (#181) and The Dukes of The Stratosphere (#141). In any case, this is a great primer for those just getting into the genre.
That is the cool thing about this poll. everyone has their own opinion.
If I was to do this in 6 months after the top 25 there would be a completely different line-up
Thanks for the pub!
Curt