Blues for the Guru - 101 Strings Orchestra, Kelly, M.
Strings for Ravi - 101 Strings Orchestra, Kelly, M.
Barrier X-69 (Slippin' and Trippin')
A Disappointed Love with a Desensitized Robot
Where Were You in 1982?
Trippin' on Lunar 07
A Bad Trip Back in '69
Karma Star - 101 Strings Orchestra, Kelly, M
Whiplash - 101 Strings Orchestra, Huckridge, M
Instant Nirvana - 101 Strings Orchestra, Huckridge, M
What happens if you take legendary surf guitarist Jerry Cole, after his brief spell with The Animated Egg and put him in a room with a lush orchestra and lots of Philip K Dick books? According to the sleeve of the original... more » mid- 60s album: 'A space Odyssey in the beat of today with the far out sounds of tomorrow s uncharted trip beyond the now generation. Yes, all that and song titles like Re-Entry To Mog and the supreme A Disappointed Love With A Desensitized Robot . Astro-Sounds From Beyond The Year 2000 is a work of psychedelic genius with a Krautrock-styled rhythm, a trippy meander through the planets that s very PIL in places over ten years before the fact. As groovy as it gets! Remastered with sleevenotes by Dave Henderson of MOJO magazine fame.« less
What happens if you take legendary surf guitarist Jerry Cole, after his brief spell with The Animated Egg and put him in a room with a lush orchestra and lots of Philip K Dick books? According to the sleeve of the original mid- 60s album: 'A space Odyssey in the beat of today with the far out sounds of tomorrow s uncharted trip beyond the now generation. Yes, all that and song titles like Re-Entry To Mog and the supreme A Disappointed Love With A Desensitized Robot . Astro-Sounds From Beyond The Year 2000 is a work of psychedelic genius with a Krautrock-styled rhythm, a trippy meander through the planets that s very PIL in places over ten years before the fact. As groovy as it gets! Remastered with sleevenotes by Dave Henderson of MOJO magazine fame.
CD Reviews
This is a cult album!
03/27/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Fans of Danny Elfman, Joe Meek and AIR should check this one out. Space Muzak with vintage synth sounds and fuzz guitars! One of those kitschy albums only the 60's could have produced, and only contemporary ears can fully appreciate its weirdness and (probably accidental) inventiveness.Look at the price of this CD compared to the rest of the 101 strings catalog. Doesn't it tell you something? For a delicious bonus, three tracks have been added, with "Whiplash" being the obvious highlight: a woman moans and screams to the sound of whips! It'll make even Serge Gainsbourg blush.This is one cool album, get it and tell all your friends about it! Build the cult."
A Trip Into The Future of the Past
Jim McDade | Birmingham, AL USA | 07/28/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"In 1968-69 this LP appeared on local discount store record racks. This was during the time that astronauts were flying, for the first time, to the moon on the Apollo spacecraft. Millions of people gathered near Cape Kennedy to watch the moon shots go up. Millions more lined streets to watch the lunar astronauts feted in parades in major cities all around the world. The stunning Stanley Kubrick feature film, 2001: A Space Odyssey was released in the Spring of 1968. Space offered new hope and opportunity for all--- or so we thought at that time.
The future never seem brighter as it did when viewed from an otherwise dismal 1960s decade of assassinations, social unrest, and war. Growing up in the backwards, poor state of Alabama was especially miserable for me. Poverty and racial hatred were all around those of us who were stuck in Alabama in those days. The world around me was uncompromising. The future seemed like the only way out for a poor kid with no hope for a college education or other good opportunities. I knew that I was facing a future filled with dismal opportunities in either plant, or warehouse work. The product of a broken home, I was not one of Alabama's fortunate sons. Music was a pleasant escape from the misery of those days.
It might seem hard to believe now, Apollo astronauts were more well known than the 1969 Woodstock stars at the time. Some of us looked to space exploration and new, improved technology as the best pathways for making a better life for all. Overall, it seemed like the space program was carrying us into a better, brighter future.
"Astro-Sounds From Beyond the Year 2000" was the perfect soundtrack to accompany the optimism offered by the Final Frontier of space. I was only 14-15 years old in 1968-69. The LP was released on the "budget" Alshire label, so I took some of my money earned from lawn care work to purchase it. I took it home on my bicycle and slapped it on my homemade stereo system that was cobbled together from neighbor's discarded equipment. The tracks were tasty and "supersonic" to 1968-69 ears!
I wondered if the future music of the year 2000 would sound anything like Astro-Sounds. I am sad to say that it did not. I was fortunate to live beyond the turn of the century, but I am very disappointed that we human beings have failed to build that better world (or worlds as we space dreamers saw it) as it was imagined by many of us as we listened to "Astro Sounds From Beyond the Year 2000". I still own my original copy of Astro-Sounds. I have carried it through all of the apartments and houses where I have lived beyond those years. I even listened to it on cassette, in sight of the launch pads, while jogging on the Space Coast beach of Florida!
Fortunately, I was able to "hang in there" and finally earn a university degree later in life, thanks to my wife's sacrifices. Music is a great source of inspiration and encouragement. Perhaps this old, but very cool music will inspire new listeners to their own bright dreams."
Startling hip theme LP from 101 Strings
hyperbolium | Earth, USA | 02/17/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"It's hard to imagine how the moribund stylings of the 101 Strings could mate with by-the-numbers psychedelic sounds (phase shifters, oscillators, etc.) and space themes to produce something as compelling as this 1969 release. But brilliantly compelling it is. Though certain to have confounded 101 Strings fans of its day, and failed in any appeal to the contemporary rock or jazz crowds, its reappearance as part of the lounge revival is a blessing.There's a nearly unexplainable alchemy that makes this so hypnotically listenable. Once past the kitsch factor, listeners will find themselves enveloped in superb bubblegum melodies, rendered with orchestrated strings and guitars that range from crystalline to exotically fuzzed. The drumming would fill any discotheque dance floor, and the organs hum with the power of the Spencer Davis Group (whose "Gimme Some Lovin'" riff is borrowed for "A Disappointed Love With a Desensitized Robot").Three bonus tracks from the 101 Strings erotic period (strings + moaning woman = wow!) fill out this reissue. "Karma Sitar" is a flavorful faux-Indian raga, while "Whiplash" adds daring (for a mainstream 1969 release) whip cracks to the erotic equation.Unlike the hucksters who predict the future and then disappear when their prophesies fail to materialize, the 101 Strings laid theirs to tape, for all the world to revisit "beyond the year 2000." With Scamp's digital reissue (which, unfortunately, contains no production, playing or songwriting credits), one realizes that these Astro Sounds are still reaching into the future."
Trip with the 101 Strings
S. N. Smith | Albuquerque, NM USA | 09/02/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This CD delivers! There is something extra spacey about a phase-shifted string section matched with fuzzbox guitar.. The original album cuts are best here. The extra cuts are OK, but aren't really in the same spaced-out league as the originals. If you are looking for a little class with your early psychedelic music, this is for you."