Elephant Mountain
The Youngbloods

Surprisingly hard album to define. On the outside it looks like another psychedelic rock band from sixties, and it is absolutely correct, but the album itself is diverse enough to sligthly escape that label. You can have a trio of songs, one by one: first instrumental, guitar solo-frenzy, or as one would say, epic song, then a transition to a sort of country piece, and finally an almost pop song made for radio with a very toned down instruments and a classic verse-chorus system. In general, the longer the song is, the most likely that it's going to be a classic psychedelic experience. And truth to be told, those tracks are actually highlights of the album (together with couple of the transition pieces). "On Sir Francis Drake" and "Ride The Wind" are nothing new, but they are very nice pieces, which will be enjoyed by every fan of psychedelic culture from 60s and 70s. The rest of the album falls flat, it doesn't fit with other parts and when listened on its own, is pretty average, especially the tracks with a traditional design. I will give it a three stars as an appreciation of the better parts of album, but as a whole it's not on par with other positions from this list.

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