All Artists: Pretty Things Title: S.F. Sorrow Members Wishing: 3 Total Copies: 0 Release Date: 8/19/2003 Number of Discs: 1 SwapaCD Credits: 1 UPC: 766482041640 |
Pretty Things S.F. Sorrow
By 1967, the Pretty Things, the long-haired English group whose shocking, maraca-rattling, R&B-fueled sound and outrageous antics had made parents of teenage music fans long for the good old days of the Rolling Stones,... more » | |
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Album Description By 1967, the Pretty Things, the long-haired English group whose shocking, maraca-rattling, R&B-fueled sound and outrageous antics had made parents of teenage music fans long for the good old days of the Rolling Stones, had breathed in the perfumed air of psychedelia--and they'd moved on! Cut in the same studio where the Beatles and Pink Floyd were changing the world of pop music daily, S.F. Sorrow was the enthralling, cradle-to-grave saga of Sebastian F. Sorrow, a landmark release now credited with being the world's first rock opera--a full year ahead of the Who's Tommy. Similar CDs
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CD ReviewsNobody remembers the brave pioneers... Jeffrey Blehar | Potomac, MD | 12/04/2008 (5 out of 5 stars) "You want to know how to recognize the pioneers? They're the ones with the arrows in their backs. In late 1967 The Pretty Things struck out into a whole new realm, taking a suicidally daring chance by forsaking their R&B roots to plunge into psychedelia and create the FIRST EVER "rock opera" (a full year before The Who ever released that pinball opus of theirs)...and were roundly ignored for all their troubles.
Because everybody remembers Tommy, and nobody remembers its inspiration S.F. Sorrow, about a dreamy little fellow who wants to fly himself to the moon. Now perhaps it's down to the fact that nobody expected this coming from a band that previously had more in common with Them or The Rolling Stones than Pink Floyd. But it's certainly not because of the music itself, which is gorgeous, enveloping, fully-realized and touching in its idealism and ambition. Somewhere God is flogging an angel because of the fact that "Trust" was never a hit single." |