The Free Design, Haji’s Kitchen, Holocaust
As we’ve mentioned a few times prior, the Outer Music Diary was once a private list on Yahoogroups. From the beginning of 2004 to the advent of this blog in early 2006, we had written literally hundreds of blurbs similar to what you’re seeing here. Since the group was small and we knew our audience, the tone was slightly different and more geared towards addressing the group itself. Many of those reviews are ready to be published for a wider audience now and others will need to be slightly cleaned up. I will only tackle my own reviews, of course, and work backwards from 2006 towards the beginning. I will place a note at the bottom of each post with the original publish date, so as to not confuse them with new postings. No date = a new entry! So with that, we boldly go forward….
The Free Design – Kites Are Fun (1967 USA). One of the best discoveries for me in the last few years. I absolutely adore soft pop like this (with psych harmonies and overtones). This contains an unbelievable innocence that is hard to create when you’re damaged goods. I think this is the real thing! They’re singing about KITES for crying out loud! And wait until you hear the tune they crafted about their 8 year old brother “Woody”, playing football, climbing trees and his sundry “GOOFS”. If the sun isn’t shining in your room after listening to this album, it’s time to exorcise your Univers Zero collection…
Haji’s Kitchen – s/t (1995 USA). A little ahead of the stoner rock movement, but essentially of the genre. Local to Dallas bunch. Great down-tuned guitar tone, plus a lively punch to the compositions. Before the name “stoner” caught on, some of us referred to it as “groove metal”, which is probably more apropos here. Anyway, the first track is great. And so are all the others, except they’re all variations of the first track. Not by design you understand…
Holocaust – The Nightcomers (1981 Scotland). Hallmark of the NWOBHM era. Immortalized by Metallica through their garage series, and heard by practically no one else upon release. 25 years later, I finally heard myself the debut from this Scottish group. Typical metal of the day with some great catchy riffs, a couple of more ordinary hard rockers and the usual anthems about rocking, fighting, sex and other 15 year-old boy topics. But the 2 or 3 tracks that are on, are really, really special. And worth it for that alone. Interesting to note the group is still chugging along, and at least one website (BNR Metal Pages) cites them as one of the best groups in metal today. Apparently they have quite the original sound. I’ll have to investigate.
(Originally posted Jan. 2006)
September 4, 2008
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Posted by TH
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