portrait of this blog's author - by Stephen Blackman 2008

Wednesday, August 08, 2018

Hippie? You want HIPPIE!?


These guys were amongst many who I admired as a youngster and yet never discovered their album. They were largely known for their poster art and in my opinion were amongst the very best not just in theUK but around the globe at coming up with classic psychedelic art  in poster form. I knew the name Hapsash and the Coloured Coat and even sought out their real names [Nigel Waymouth, Michael English
and Guy Stevens - Guy going on to produce The Clash's 'London Calling') as I did with The Fool (Simon and Marijke from Holland) who did many posters and painted the Beatles Apple store facade wall. Hapsash opened the legendary 'Granny Takes a Trip'  'fashion boutique' or head and strides shop as we would have said at the time







AAAAOOOOMMMMMMM!


As The Rockasteria's Ned Raggett says : 



This album has acquired a bit of status as a minor legend over the moons, and it's not too hard on balance to hear why; besides the grandiose spirit-of-1967 group and album name, this brief but interesting record has a lot of descendants, though whether that was intentionally the case or not is up in the air. The English trio that made up Hapshash & the Coloured Coat for its original incarnation was composed of art designers and DJs by trade; this, their sole release together, is a classic situation of lightning in a bottle. The emphasis is on blunt but entrancing rhythm throughout -- pounding drums and bongos, rolling piano (sometimes practically barrelhouse), and chunky guitar parts that are proto-funk as much as steady, straightforward crunch. 
Combine that with vocals that appear then disappear as needed and an air of ragged partying, and it's not too off balance to consider this album as a fine equivalent to what the Velvet Underground were starting to cook up. Certainly it sounds like the original Amon Düül had this spinning when creating their own freak-outs a couple of years later, what with the chanting and fractured acid folk guitar here and there ("The New Messiah Coming 1985" is particularly gone). 
Even the shorter songs, like "A Mind Blown Is a Mind Shown" and the mostly a cappella chanting of "Aoum," sound like excerpts from much longer efforts. "H-O-P-P-Why?" kicks everything off with the right blend of things, but it's the monstrous, bell-laden "Empires of the Sun" that's the winner, with some great parts where the (at points elsewhere, orgasmic) vocalists sound like mariachi singers. Credit as well to member Guy Stevens' excellent production, which is much more lively and detailed than many recordings of the time; he went on to work as a house producer for Island Records, and it's easily clear why.by Ned Raggett
Hapsash's design for Oz magazine

Artist - Nigel Waymouth

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