Home / Tag Archives: Baroque Pop (page 3)

Tag Archives: Baroque Pop

The Weeds

Fred Cole became among the elder statesmen from the garage area punk scene in the 1980s, ‘90s, and 2000s along with his rings Dead Moon as well as the Pierced Arrows, but Cole, given birth to in 1948, have been playing rock & move since the middle-’60s, as well as …

Read More »

The Peppermint Rainbow

Baltimore’s Peppermint Rainbow had a high 40 hit in 1969 using their harmony-laden soft rocker “ARE YOU CONSIDERING Staying After Weekend” — a nod (both thematically and musically) towards the Spanky & Our Gang strikes “Sunday Morning hours” and “Weekend Will Never End up being the Equal.” Like Spanky & …

Read More »

Orpheus

Boston’s Orpheus made four albums in the late ’60s and early ’70s which were something of the antecedent to soft rock and roll. Although some from the associates had root base in the folk picture, and although these were lumped along with the heavier and even more psychedelic rings that …

Read More »

The Mojo Men

Among the earliest SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA rock rings, the Mojo Males had local strikes on the Fall months label with “Dance BESIDE ME,” “She’s My Baby,” and a cover from the Rolling Rocks’ “From the Hook” in the mid-’60s. Their early edges shown a raunchy but slim approach extracted …

Read More »

Noel Harrison

Pop singer Noel Harrison is well known best in music circles for credit scoring popular in 1969 with “Windmills of YOUR BRAIN,” a tune compiled by Michel Legrand. The haunting one had received a lift when it had been highlighted prominently in the Steve McQueen film The Thomas Crown Affair …

Read More »

Rosebud

The short-lived Rosebud has sometimes been classified as an outgrowth from the duo of Judy Henske and Jerry Yester, who did one album, the underrated cult classic Farewell Aldebaran, in 1969. Actually, although Henske and Yester had been both essential performers and songwriters in Rosebud, Rosebud was a completely individual …

Read More »

Van Dyke Parks

In a line of business where in fact the term “genius” is passed out freely, Van Dyke Parks may be the real article. Being a program musician, composer, arranger, lyricist, and vocalist, he’s contributed considerably to several years’ value of inimitable masterpieces acknowledged to various other performers, aswell as generating …

Read More »

Sandy Salisbury

Sandy Salisbury was a honey-voiced person in sunlight pop guru Curt Boettcher’s solid of singers and players in charge of a number of the finest pop records from the 1960s. Boettcher and Salisbury fulfilled up in Boettcher’s group the Ballroom and discovered that their voices combined collectively magically. The Ballroom …

Read More »

Sagittarius

Though it only reached number 70 in the national charts, Sagittarius’ 1967 single “My World Fell Down” is among the great experimental psychedelic pop gems from the era. Sounding like a dropped Beach Boys traditional through the “Great Vibrations”/SMiLE period, the record got gorgeous California pop harmonies, beautiful symphonic orchestration, …

Read More »

The Millennium

Affected by psychedelia and California rock and roll, pop/rock and roll producer Curt Boettcher (the Association) made a decision to put together a studio supergroup who explore progressive sounds in 1968. Millennium’s resultant recording would discover no commercial achievement in support of half-baked artistic achievement, but nonetheless keeps some period …

Read More »