Side 2 of the previous album Medium was a harbinger of things to come for The Mandrake Memorial. Gone is the trademark electric harpsichord and its place is the guitar trio - with a fully staffed choir and orchestra in tow. The conventional psychedelic songs are undoubtedly The Mandrake Memorial of the first two albums, but the other tracks show the band pushing the boundaries of rock into exciting new directions, oddly reminding me some of Pink Floyd's 'Atom Heart Mother' suite that had yet to appear. Guitarist Craig Anderton's growing interest in electronics is given a test drive on 'Bucket of Air' - a splendid display of proto Kosmiche Krautrock if there ever was one. Overall, it's definitely an experimental record, and one that did not result in commercial success for the band. The subsequent 45 single sees The Mandrake Memorial heading back towards the middle - not sure where else they could have gone honestly - and then decided to hang it up, having accomplished a great deal in only 2 short years.
Ownership: LP: 1969 Poppy; CD: 1996 Collectables. The original gatefold features a fetching Escher cover (House of Stairs from 1951), and comes with a cool circular insert, which is often missing (fortunately I have it). On the CD, Puzzle adds in the original LP liner notes which are in Dutch and likely come from Escher himself. In addition, the CD has both sides of their final 45 single as a bonus. They also inexplicably "colored in" the Escher sketch - who knows why?
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