
The Incredible String Band inspires extreme reactions. Their music is either one of the few instances of genuine Blakean vision to come out of the 60s; or they are Exhibit A in the museum of addle-brained twee hippy self-indulgence. The release of Tricks of the Senses, a collection of String Band rarities and oddities, is an opportunity to look for a more nuanced approach, an opportunity I explore in "The Vision Thing," a meditation on the Incredible String Band in the June issue of The Bluegrass Special:"The first cut on Tricks of the Senses is taken from a rehearsal tape ca. 1966. By way of introducing himself and his Incredible String Band partner Mike Heron, Robin Williamson gives their names, and then adds, "We are songwriters and players and prophets from the North; also seers extraordinary by appointment to the wonder of the universe."
I guess you'd have to have lived a little bit of the '60s life to understand how this might not sound completely risible. Listen again. There's not a hint of preciousness or acid mysterioso about Robin's comment. It's thrown away. Instead of a petal-strewing fool, he sounds like a cheeky 18-year-old Scots elf lord on Adderall...."Read the rest here.


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