I am listening to a brilliant album
called Parallelograms by Linda Perhacs which I bought about six
years ago. This is what I said about it at the time.
Linda Perhacs is an American psychedelic folk singer, who
released her album Parallelograms in 1970 to scant notice or sales. The album
was rediscovered by record enthusiasts and grew in popularity with the rise of
the New Weird America movement and
the Internet. It was reissued on CD and 2-LP in 2005, and again in 2008. I
found it had been released by Sunbeam Masters in a limited numbered edition of
1000 copies so ordered it and my copy arrived. I am number 0184. It has a very
attractive gate-fold sleeve and liner notes written by Linda herself. I must say
it is a quite brilliant album and hard to define. I am listening to it now on a
rainy Winter’s morning. I really like the opening track Chinacum Rain. It reminds me a little bit of the song Wind Chimes
on the Beach Boys Smiley Smile album. 'I'm Seeing silences between leaves', sings
Linda. The vocals shimmer like sunlight on a lake. I am not so enamored of the
second track Paper Mountain Man which
is quite bluesy and featuring harmonica. The third track though, Dolphin is wonderful. Her vocals are amazing and just accompanied by
acoustic guitar. Call Of The River is next. The way the vocals
are mixed, so she harmonises with herself is very clever. Sandy Toes is more upbeat. The title track Parallelograms is next, and it is a tour de force that I urge you
to listen to. On first hearing it I thought Joni Mitchell meets Pink Floyd. Considering
it is 40 years old it is very experimental and avant-garde. How people didn't
pick up on this album when it came out is hard to understand because it was in
the zeitgeist of the times but apparently it didn't get any airplay or
publicity. Hey, Who Really Cares is
the next track which is followed by Moons
And Cattails.
Morning
Colors is the next track which is superb, featuring some
beautiful flute playing. The flute is an instrument that goes really well with psychedelic
music because it’s so spacey. Porcelain
Baked-Over Cast-Iron Wedding is quite vitriolic about the shallow middle-class
values of some of the people where she lives. This is one of the more
conventional songs on the album. The last track is called Delicious which is exactly that. There are eight bonus tracks on the
album including a BBC interview from 2005. Check it out for yourselves. I
heartily recommend this album which I have enjoyed listening to this morning
and it's even made the sun come out.