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Snowy White

Voiceprint Web Radio's Jon Kirkman talks with rock legend and former Thin Lizzy member, Snowy White.

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Featuring an audience with Dave Brock of Hawkwind
 
Release
Cover scan for Euterpe Studio Rehearsal's 1977
 
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Catalogue number
BMOVP001CD
Release date
29/03/2004
Format
CD
Label
Bananamoon Obscura
Daevid Allen
Euterpe Studio Rehearsal's 1977
Disc 1
1. Goddess Invocation 2. Magick Brother 3. Teashop 4. Friend 5. I Am The Rapist 6. Mystic Sister Invocation 7. A Wee Bit More 8. Prostitute Poem 9. Five and Twenty Schoolgirls 10. Bananamoon Reggae 11. Deya Goddess

Daevid Allen was born in Melbourne Australia although he has been a traveller of the world for many years. Daevid came to England in 1960 and met up with Robert Wyatt whilst lodging with the Wyatt family. Daevid and Robert struck up an immediate rapport, which would ultimately result in the pair playing together in Soft Machine. Before that Daevid spent time in Paris where he met and experimented with Terry Riley and also performed with William Burroughs. Daevid also formed a number of bands including The Daevid Allen Trio. Some of the trio's early recordings were subsequently released however it was with The Soft Machine alongside Mike Ratledge, Kevin Ayers and Robert Wyatt that Daevid Allen first came to the attention of many people. Soft Machine was at the forefront of the psychedelia movement and played at many prominent gigs at this time such as the IT launch at the Roundhouse alongside Pink Floyd. Following a gig in St. Tropez Daevid was refused re entry to England and decided to return to France and from there Daevid and Gilli Smyth went to Deia where they met Didier Malherbe who would go on to become a vital part of their next band Gong.

During this period Daevid recorded the albums Magick Brother and Banana Moon Gong also came into being at this point and played their first concerts. Over the years Gong was to be a proving ground for many incredible musicians and a number of popular albums were recorded and many gigs played. Gong also moved between many musical genres from jazz, rock and even ambient music before the term had even been coined. Daevid Allen however left Gong in 1975 along with Gilli Smyth and the band would carry on for a number of years without the guiding force of Daevid Allen initially led by Steve Hillage and subsequently in a more jazz oriented direction by Pierre Moerlen.

Daevid then spent many years moving around the world (America, Australia, Spain) all the time forming bands and recording until in 1988 he returned to England and formed Gongmaison along with Didier Malherbe in tow once again. Gong has continued to this day constantly re inventing itself and proving to be as popular as ever with many archive and new recordings becoming available.

The Daevid Allen and Euterpe recordings are part of a series of recordings that form the Bananamoon Obscura collection and these recordings come from the period when Daevid was rehearsing for a Gong reunion gig at the Hippodrome in Paris in 1977. These rehearsals were recorded at Bananamoon Observatory studios in Spain and have been re mastered for this release.

Reviews

This is the first volume in what is promised to be a series of 20 CDs of archival Daevid Allen-related material, each disc pressed in a limited run of 1000 copies and packaged in a simple yet elegant black-and-white cardboard sleeve. And the Bananamoon Obscura series is off to a very fine start with this release documenting a little-known period in Allen's career. We are treated to 50 minutes worth of Daevid Allen and Gilly Smyth rehearsing with the group Euterpe, just before their 1977 reunion concert at the Hippodrome in Paris. The line-up includes Pepe Milan and Juan Biblioni (both acoustic guitars) and Cloudhairy Pepe Riba (violin, doublebass and sousaphone). This acoustic band (except for Allen's glissando guitar) delivers tasty renditions of early Allen classics like Magick Brother and several tunes from the Good Morning era. Gong's classic repertoire is largely ignored, the only exception being Smyth's Prostitute Poem, but the Pothead Pixie mythology is represented by the rarely heard Sittin in a Teashop. The mantric Deva Goddess provides the smooth highlight of the set, thanks to Riba¹s inspired violin playing, while the then-new piece Wee Bit More and the silly reggae Time of the Bananamoon are the other stand-out pieces. Sound quality is fair, with some distortion, tape deterioration, and a lack of bass, but quite listenable overall. Don't let the mention 'rehearsal tapes' fool you: this is not a set of partial takes interspersed with conversion, but a tightly edited sequence of complete performances, akin to a studio demo. Obviously a fan item (and prior knowledge of this particular era in Allen's career is an asset in enjoying it), this CD fills a gap in the man's discography (some of this material has been previously available, with worse sound quality, as the bootleg Deya Daze).

François Couture

"...this recording will be a coveted item for Gong collectors."  Jeff Melton, Expose Sept 2005, Issue 32