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TCCDM Pulls One Out..."The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan" - Bob Dylan (1963 - Rei 1966)

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"The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan" - Bob Dylan (1963 - Rei 1966) As everyone knows, Dylan's poetry song-smithing is a mind-blow.  And his approach broke all the rules once the needle dropped on this square.  And this was only his second album!  This surprised me.  I always wanted this album because I was so familiar with the iconic album cover.  I always loved it.  But the truth is, I didn't know this was the follow-up to his debut.  And no sophomore jinx, this one. I recognized all the biggies from it.  "Blowin' In The Wind"... "A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall"... "Girl From The North Country"... "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right"... but I'd never listened to the record in its entirety.  The accolades are warranted.  I got chills spinning it.  The album photo of baby-faced Bob Dylan being arm-snuggled by his then-girlfriend Suze Rotolo walking down the middle of the snowy street in New York City is gold.  The e

TCCDM Pulls One Out..."Harvest Of Dreams" - Bobb Trimble (1982 - Rei 2007)

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"Harvest Of Dreams" - Bobb Trimble (1982 - Rei 2007) I picked up another psych album I discovered in the Acid Archives .  It's a 2007 reissue of "Harvest Of Dreams" that was originally released in limited numbers in 1982.  From a small town in Massachusetts, Bobb Trimble made a unique, otherworldly square that attempts to balance his jumbled magical thoughts on the head of a pin.  Spinning "Harvest Of Dreams" is like how it must feel to be in a slightly broken but genius mind.  Trimble's self-produced indie psych-folk album sounds like one foot standing close to George Martin and the other one burrowed deep into Brian Wilson's sand garden. Songs are heavily layered with surprising studio effects that make them both emotionally fragile and strangely euphoric.  Studio trickery is used everywhere but somehow never gets in the way.  How weird is that?  And for the coup-de-gras, Bobb Trimble's vocals are a jaw-drop.  Feminesque.  Like a ge

TCCDM Pulls One Out..."Milestones" - SRC (1969)

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"Milestones" - SRC (1969)      "Milestones" is the   2nd of three albums released by the Detroit psychedelic band... SRC and all are a tasty square to pick up.  " Milestones"  is not quite as strong as their self-titled debut, but the psych-searing fuzz-burn guitar is there and sounds fantastic.  Not as heavy as the first, but the vocals, guitar, drumming, and keyboard still play nicely together keeping mostly an acidic vibe even on the more commercial pop-dusted songs.  In other words, the music doesn't go limp on the more commercial reachouts. The pressing has beautiful separation with and without headphones and is one of those spins that continues to reward the listener after the first shake of hands.  And the opening track just scorches.  There is a "Spinal Tap" moment on the last track that's a bit of a smile-maker, but the music rescues the song.  I'm cool with it.  The album is a nice follow-up with enough goodness within to k

TCCDM Dig & Flip: "2001: A Space Odyssey" - Arthur C. Clarke (1968)

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2001: A Space Odyssey by Arthur C. Clarke (1968) Published - New American Library Hardcover, 222 pages NO SPOILERS: I'm not a sci-fi reader of habit but I saw this early hardback with the attached sleeve in the used library bookstore for a dollar and picked it up.  I've watched the classic film at midnight-movie offerings a time or two and always had questions about it...so it was cool to trip on the words for a change.  I'm glad I finally got around to turning pages.  The  Arthur C. Clarke  classic is short, reads easily, and is not a time-suck.  And having seen the movie first doesn't hurt the reading experience one bit.   The world is a conflict of sterile, yet oddly warm, experiences and ultimately about exploration and pushing the limits of space travel.  The descriptive prose along the way on this space journey is often a breathtaking mind-blow.  And, as anyone who has seen the film already knows, A.I. has been foretold in these pages and is a scary conundrum of c

TCCDM Pulls One Out..."Planet P" - Planet P (1983)

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"Planet P"  - Planet P (1983) Planet P has always been a bit of a guilty-pleasure for me.  And I don't disparagingly mean this.  It's just that synth pop-rock has never been something I've actively sought out.  But then there are always exceptions, right? Several years ago, I was driving back to Wichita from a comedy spew I did in Kansas City.  It was long after midnight before I got out of the suburb traffic, and finally found some highway space.  I picked up a radio station playing a three-fer from an artist I didn't catch.  The songs were... "Static" … "Top Of The World" …and "Why Me."   Never heard any of them before.  I was having one of those pitch-dark solo drives where songs can sneak up and smack ya in the mouth and buzz right into your head.  And for the next 15 minutes, I was drive-trippin'. Many months passed before learning it was  Planet P  I had been listening to on the radio.  And I rushed out and bought the C

TCCDM Pulls One Out..."The Wizard Of Oz and other Trans Love Trips" - West Coast Workshop (1967)

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"The Wizard Of Oz and Other Trans Love Trips"  - West Coast Workshop (1967) This is a wonderful psych album to add to the collection.  I suppose this offering falls under the exploitation hashtag, but don't be too quick to dismiss the West Coast Workshop goodness found within.  Nothing on "...Trans Love Trips" sounds the least bit cheap or throwaway.  This is an ambitious piece of avantgarde psych-jazz fusion.  Slices of sitars and flutes.  Guitars, brass, and percussion fall in beside a light dose of Eastern vibes.  Nothing is as it first appears.  The West Coast Workshop one-and-done offering might be cash-in but this spin gives back to the listener way more than it steals.   There are brief cops of a familiar melody, here and there, but just a dip.  And then only to remind us where we're at.  Nothing overstays its welcome.  Little is known about  West Coast Workshop,  but a member or three might have slipped in from the Wrecking Crew.  For 1967, the grou

TCCDM Dig & Flip: "Later" - Stephen King (2021)

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LATER by Stephen King (2021) Paperback, 248 pages NO SPOILERS: This is the third in Stephen King's... Hard Case Crime... novels.  It's a shortie and not King's best use of the QWERTY keyboard, but the story doesn't hurt none and reads like melted butter.  LATER  is told in the first person narrative by Jamie, a youngster who has the occasional brush with dead people who have recently passed.  Jamie is quick to remind the reader that it's a horror story he is sharing, and I suppose it is, but it doesn’t smack you in the mouth.  It's not a nerve-rattler, but it scratches a bit of the itch.    tccdm Arissa Chambers Unlike King's previous  Hard Case Crime offerings, LATER   is told in a single "Point-A to Point-B" style plot.  Not a bad thing.  Some supernatural shenanigans are definitely going on, but LATER   never reaches the level of "Get the fawck outta here" territory.  And this might be a dealbreaker for some, but as I mentioned, the