Liquid Sound Company is the psychedelic outlet for guitarist and bassist John Perez, from Fort Worth, Texas. John comes from the rich musical background that DFW offered in the 80s and 90s - the same one that I was fortunate to learn and participate in. It would be some years before John and I crossed paths, but he's yet another great individual who represents the sprit of the times. And a super cool guy. John's primary claim to fame is his participation/leadership of the doom metal band Solitude Aeturnus, a group who later provided Candlemass with their lead singer. But he's run the gamut from death metal to psychedelic and everything in between. And he's promoted many such bands through his Brainticket label. I don't know where John first heard of Brainticket, but it's very well possible it was through our radio program in the late 80s/early 90s, or a friend of his was turned on that way. That would be satisfying for sure.
Exploring the Psychedelic is the debut for Liquid Sound Company, a brand name that continues to live on, even though there are only 4 releases in a 25 year timespan (including a new release this year). But way back in 1996, Exploring the Psychedelic was indeed doing just that. Perez and crew were tuned into the scales of Asia, while turning the amps to 11. It's mostly instrumental, and the band were able to avoid falling into the common Stoner traps. There's no metal here, this is pure heavy psych - 1969 moved forward 27 years. Mostly a guitar based trio, with some fakeatron on the last track. There's plenty of variation of sound and songwriting, so it's a fully realized effort, not a one-trick pony. I have many such releases in my collection that I've grown tired of, but Exploring the Psychedelic isn't one of them. It remains a bright light from the burgeoning 90s retro heavy psych prog scene.
Ownership: CD: 1996 Brainticket. Acquired not long after release, from a catalog dealer most likely. I was living in Denver by this point, so I probably didn't buy it locally. Standard jewel case with a hard to read booklet :-) It was also released locally on LP from Dallas' own Rockadelic Records, a label that was trying to promote newer bands after years of great success releasing rare American artifacts.
Hello Tom. They have a new one out, but unfortunately it's their weakest one to my ears. Or it needs many repetitive listens to be fully digested.
ReplyDeleteThat's unfortunate to learn. I haven't heard the 3rd one either, though I picked up the second one near the time of release. That should be coming up for a listen soon enough (you know, like in 5 years... lol)
DeleteThe 3rd one is very good. Recommended!
Delete