Sallies Fforth (Mono) Rainbow Ffolly

Album info

Album-Release:
1968

HRA-Release:
27.04.2015

Label: Parlophone / Warner Music

Genre: Rock

Subgenre: Classic Rock

Artist: Rainbow Ffolly

Composer: Diverse

Album including Album cover

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  • 1 She's Alright 03:37
  • 2 I'm So Happy 02:44
  • 3 Montgolfier '67 02:38
  • 4 Drive My Car 02:17
  • 5 Goodbye 03:45
  • 6 Hey You 02:22
  • 7 Sun Sing 04:04
  • 8 Sun And Sand 03:36
  • 9 Labour Exchange 02:27
  • 10 They'm 01:57
  • 11 No 03:01
  • 12 Sighing Game 03:05
  • 13 Come On Go 03:05
  • Total Runtime 38:38

Info for Sallies Fforth (Mono)

Rainbow Ffolly were four art school boys who recorded an album's worth of amazing, dayglo music in an independent studio and ended up selling it to Parlophone Records and rubbing shoulders with The Beatles who, along with The Who and The Moody Blues, name checked our heroes regularly. Sallies Fforth songs It sounds like time you heard what everyone is so worked up about.

„Thirteen examples of pleasant, mid-tempo, mildly amplified psychedelic pop, most of them owing some considerable debt to the influence of the Beatles' Rubber Soul and Revolver (though not their production), with some of the nutsy brand of humor that Giles, Giles, & Fripp later traded in.

This is basically Paul McCartney-influenced psychedelia, not only in the tone and texture of the lead vocals, but the retro style of songs like 'I'm So Happy,' with some vaguely progressive touches that make one think of the more ornate tracks off of Bee Gees' 1st. 'Montgolfier' is a folky/trippy, deliberately antiquated cut that intersects somewhere midway between the early psychedelic Bee Gees and the early work of Amazing Blondel.

The group also had the temerity to write and record a bouncy number called 'Drive My Car' that sounds McCartney-esque (even anticipating the scatting on the latter's 'Heart of the Country') without ever sounding at all like the Beatles' song of that name. Other cuts, such as 'Goodbye,' contain elements that anticipate Simon & Garfunkel's 'So Long, Frank Lloyd Wright.' It's all under-produced, which makes the attempted guitar flourishes on 'Hey You' seem a bit anemic, but imparts a nicely lean and trippy sound to 'Sun Sing.' Every track here was essentially a demo, a fact that may explain why the album never found an audience in an era when layer upon layer of overdub was the norm -- but it is pretty, in a minimalist sort of way.“ (Bruce Eder, AMG)

Jonathan Dunsterville, guitar, vocals
Richard Dunsterville, vocals, guitar
Roger Newell, bass, vocals
Stewart Osborn, drums, vocals

Digitally remastered

No biography found.

This album contains no booklet.

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