Customer Reviews


23 Reviews
5 star:
 (18)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
 
 
Only search this product's reviews

The most helpful favorable review
The most helpful critical review


29 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Groundbreaking Album From Incredible String Band
In 1966 the Incredible String Band completed their first album simply titled "The Incredible String Band." Upon the completion of the album, the band made a curious career move...they retired. The principal members felt that they had reached their pinnacle of acheivement and decided to get out of the music business. Banjoist Clive Plamer headed for Afganistan, while...
Published on December 10, 2001 by Gavin B.

versus
1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars incredibly stringy and nothing else
I love two albums by the Incredible String Band- U and the Hangman's Beautiful Daughter.

The reason I admire these two albums is mainly because of the sheer, overwhelming amount of tasty arrangements. Sitars, acoustic guitars, piano, drumming, absolutely *fascinating* lyrical subjects, sophisticated approach to writing vocal melodies that takes time to...
Published 7 months ago by B. E Jackson


‹ Previous | 1 2 3 | Next ›
Most Helpful First | Newest First

29 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Groundbreaking Album From Incredible String Band, December 10, 2001
By 
Gavin B. (St. Louis MO) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion (Audio CD)
In 1966 the Incredible String Band completed their first album simply titled "The Incredible String Band." Upon the completion of the album, the band made a curious career move...they retired. The principal members felt that they had reached their pinnacle of acheivement and decided to get out of the music business. Banjoist Clive Plamer headed for Afganistan, while multi-instumentalist Robin Williamson travelled to Morocco to learn to play Moroccan flute. Only Mike Heron remained in Edinburg Scotland, (the group's home) where he gigged with the rock band Rock Bottom and the Dead Beats. Robin stayed in Morrocco about six months and returned to Scotland with dozens of exotic musical insturments. Together Robin and Mike reformed the Incredible String Band with Robin's girlfriend Licorice "Likkie" McKenzie. The new Incredible String Band recorded "5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion", which was released in 1967, the year of Sgt. Pepper's and the Summer of Love. This album with it's strange musical alchemy, surreal lyrics, and gentle whimsy placed the String Band in the vangaurd of the burgeoning psychedelic movement in Europe and the USA. The ISB counted amoung it's fans Bob Dylan, John Lennon, Led Zepplin and Steve Winwood. The album is a ground breaking soundtrack of psycedelica's Age of Innocence and charted the course for the development of the String Band until 1972, when the group's increasing involvement in the Scientology movement caused a creative implosion.

The first thing you notice about "5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion" is it's arresting mystical day-glow cover art by Simon Marijke. Marijke was the painter of the fabled psychedelic Rolls Royce owned by John Lennon. The cover art broke with traditional notions what kind of art should grace the cover of an album. If you saw this album in a record store bin in 1967, you would indeed know that "something's happening here."

The talented Mike Heron and Robin Williamson played about 40 different musical insturments between them. Exotic intruments like the sitar, hand drums, gimbri and the jew's harp were featured on "5000 Spirits", giving the music the feel of a cosmic global stew. The surrealistic lyrics inspired by eastern mysticism, American blues, celtic lore, and pagan mytholology transported the listener to a paralell reality akin to Tolkien's Middle Earth. With "5000 Spirits" two powerful voices with distinct visions emerged as one: Mike Heron's gentle pantheism rooted in folk traditions and Robin Williamson's cosmic and often elegalic mysticism blended the Celtic bardist tradition.

Some of Mike's most memorable songwritting is on "5000 Spirits. On "Painting Box" Mike's gentle voice blends with Likkie's waifish harmony to produce a delicate impressionistic gem about love and the beauty of imagination. Mike's worship of nature is apparent in "Little Cloud", where a passing cloud beckons him to float to distant lands. Many of ISB's chemically fuelled devotees interpreted "Little Cloud" as invitation to pass through doors of perception via a certain substance often licked from blotter sheets in the sixties. Robin Williamson's "First Girl I Loved" is a melancholy reflection on "a grown-up female stranger" who at age 17 was his first love. Robin's plantive voice rises from his intimate Galeic conversational tone to a mornful atonal Arabic wail as he recounts thinking of his first love in the "six sad morning and in the lonely midnight." The song is the most requested and most recorded in Williamson's considerable body of work. When Judy Collins heard the ISB perform "First Girl I Loved" on tour together, she changed the gender to "First Boy" and it is a favorite of her fans. Jackson Browne recorded it on "Rubaiyat" which was a Elektra tribute to the Striggers. Robin's other masterpiece was "My Name Is Death" an existential bow to the inevitabilty of death, "the question that cannot be answered."

"Five Thousand Spirits or the Layer of the Onion" is a flat-out Sixties classic and the first milestone the long pilgrimage of the Incredible Sting Band. It is a pilgrimage that appears to never end... Robin Williamson made the 2001 best of [...]music critics list for his stunning C.D., "The Seed-At-Zero." Mike Heron and Robin Williamson recently reformed the Incredible String Band and are touring the U.K. in October, November and December of 2001. Likkie McKenzie the third Sting Band member on this album moved to California in the 1970s where she worked as a waitress and coat checker. About 10 years ago, Likkie, in the cosmic String Band fashion, set out on a journey across the desert in Arizona, and was never seen or heard from again.

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars ONE OF 'THE' GROUNDBREAKING RECORDINGS OF THE 1960s, March 9, 2003
By 
Larry L. Looney (Austin, Texas USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion (Audio CD)
With the release of their eponymous first album, the Incredible String Band made it know to the music listening public that a new force had arrived - one which would inject some energy and vitality into the folk music scene in the UK and the world. With the appearance of this album, THE 5,000 SPIRITS or THE LAYERS OF THE ONION, there could be little doubt that something special had been born. The albums which were to follow over the next few years bore this out dramatically.

THE 5,000 SPIRITS was released originally in 1967 - at the height of the psychedelic music movement. One only has to look at the artists of the day, and their releases, to see the rapidly expanding imaginations and creativity at work, breaking new ground right and left. This album, I feel, stands head and shoulders above most other releases of its day, in many ways - it should be regarded as a classic for its lyrical content alone. Musically, the ISB were going places - and drawing from sources - that other artists would only dare to touch in years to come. I believe it was their long-time producer, Joe Boyd, who once said that the ISB was the original `world music' group - he couldn't have stated it better.

After the critical acclaim garnered by their first album, the trio (at the time composed of Robin Williamson, Mike Heron and Clive Palmer) split up and traveled separately. The music Robin and Mike heard (for the band had become a duo by the time this album was recorded) around the world touched their souls - they breathed it in and gave it back to there listeners, combining both vocal and instrumental styles and techniques that would most like never have met if not for their artistic explorations. Mike had begun playing the sitar, and Robin's singing clearly bears the influence of the voices he encountered in the Middle East and Asia. The two writers' heads were already bursting with poetry and ideas born in their native lands - myths from Europe and Asia mingled with other images, creating a heady concoction perfectly suited to the times. Listeners were eager to hear something new - something besides the standard pop fare of the day, love songs with `moon/June/spoon' rhymes. The ISB gave it to them in abundance.

The album is pretty evenly balanced between the two writers - an equity which would be present in most of their subsequent releases as well. Licorice McKechnie makes her first appearance with Robin and Mike on this recording - and they are assisted by Danny Thompson on bass here and there. The songs deal with a variety of subjects - even the aforementioned love songs are present, but in the ISB's own unique style.

The set opens with Mike's `Chinese white' - the bowed gimbri played by Robin on this track lets the listener know right away that things have `expanded' a bit since the band's 1966 release. `The bent twig of darkness grows the petals of the morning', sings Mike - a beautiful image worthy of traditional Asian poetry. Mike's other songs on this album run the gamut from love songs (`Painting box' and the eternally lovely `Gently tender') to humorous looks at our place in the world (`Little cloud' and `The hedgehog's song') to a song offering encouragement to the listener to reach for his full potential (`You know what you could be'). The seriousness of some of his topics is gently offset by a childlike quality that, through the ensuing years, would infuse most of his writing with an innocence that would endear it to his fans.

Robin's offerings here are for the most part more serious than Mike's - but there is humor in his writing as well, as is evidenced by `No sleep blues' and the hilarious `Way back in the 1960s'. His `First girl I loved' - covered by Judy Collins as `First boy I loved' on her WILDFLOWERS album - is simply one of the most beautiful songs ever written to a first love, looking back with honesty and tenderness on the gifts exchanged, both physical and emotional. His guitar work on this song - and, actually, throughout his career - is astonishingly creative and lovely. In 'The eyes of fate', he muses `O who can see in the eyes of Fate all life alone in its chronic pattern?' - his lyrics are, throughout this album and all to follow, insightful, probing, spiritual. He is one of the most amazingly talented writers ever to pen a verse.

There are a couple of places in the recording where the signal is over-driven - but that's to be expected, given the era from which this dates. The remastering has been done lovingly - the sound on the cd is as good or better than any edition of the lp I ever owned.

Anyone with any sort of appreciation for the musics of different parts of the world, of exploring the myths with which mankind has explained the unexplainable, who has ever asked the really deeply rooted, `half-remarkable' questions, will find in the music and lyrics of the Incredible String Band the voices of kindred spirits of the closest order. This album - and, indeed, everything they released up until about 1970 (and they produced a lot of music in that short span) - is as beautiful and relevant today as when it first appeared. Moreover, there are still those who will never `catch up' to them.

The band continued to experiment and expand into the follow-up album, THE HANGMAN'S BEAUTIFUL DAUGHTER, issued the following year...

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars And you must see clearly sometime my poor little man..., January 28, 2001
By 
This review is from: The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion (Audio CD)
Truth be told this is a bit of an uneven album, but the peaks are so high that they excuse the weaker cuts (and with a cd you can always jump over them). To me this album epitomizes what happens when some fine songwriters encounter LSD, not to say that this is merely an acid album, but somehow the psychedelic experience opened the songwriters to some incredibly transcendental music. My favorites are "Chinese White", "Mad Hatter Blues", "Little Cloud", and "Eyes of Fate"...though oddly enough the beloved "First Girl I Loved" is one that I just can't bear to sit through again. This is truly majestic material, makes the likes of the Beta Band seem like middling squibs in comparison. This is music that scrapes the ineffable, truly precious 2 a.m. lying in the dark music. Die if you must, but go out listening to these whispers from the another world...
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars If you let the pigs decide it, they will put you in the sty, September 9, 2006
This review is from: The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion (Audio CD)
This album sits at no. 2 in my list of the greatest albums ever made. It really is that good!I have been listening to this album regularly for nearly 40 years, ever since it came out, and have never tired of it. It has stood the test of time better than many better selling contemporaries for sure. There is no other album that I can say that about. I never tire of the stunning acoustic guitar work, or trying to fathom the meanings of the lyrics.Even the name of the album is brilliantly chosen. The 5000 sprirts, well yes it is very spiritual as is all good music, and looks at things from different spiritual perspectives. The Layers of the Onion, yes, it is a bit like pass the parcel. When you think you understand something, you find there is a whole new layer of meaning underneath, and even after 39 years I can't claimto have got to the bottom of it.OK some of the songs are easy. The whimsical ones, like Little Cloud and the Hedgehog Song, and obvious ones like Painting box and The first Girl I loved. But do you fully understand the Eyes of Fate or even Chinese White? I love The Mad Hatters Song, since it is very Christian, and I am a Christian. It even mentions Jesus. The First Girl I Loved seems a very personal song, and very beautiful, but one that I and I am sure many others can relate to. And even if you don't, the guitar work is stunning. I was a young man back in the 1960s always seems to me to be the one track that doesn't fit. It is pure science fiction! Not particularly spiritual, or with any great depth, or with many "layers" but it could have been the basis of a novel. Yes it is a great album. If you don't know it buy it. But be warned, it is something you either love or hate. My wife does not like it at all, but then there are certain instruments she can't stand, and I think the oud is one (bagpipes is another, but there are not bagpipes on the 5000 spirits) My favourite of all of the ISB albums.Just in case you are wondering which is the one album I consider betterthan this , it is Pink Floyd's "Wish you were here".
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Incredible - a true masterpiece of mystic folk, May 25, 2000
By 
This review is from: The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion (Audio CD)
Messrs. Williamson and Heron hit an astonishing artistic and creative peak with this, their second album. An essential recording for anyone with more than a passing interest in music which defines the spirit of the late 1960's, but far more than just a fashion statement. This is music which still sounds fresh and amazing, but which has its roots deep in celtic (and other) traditions. Sometimes baffling, always fascinating, trippy, weird and completely wonderful - but if you're reading this you probably knew this anyway. Contains the classics "First Girl I Loved" and "Hedgehog Song" but every track is a wondrous treasure.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A must-have music purchase, June 25, 1998
By 
This review is from: The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion (Audio CD)
My first but not my last Incredible String Band recording. The psychedelic cover art is a good tip-off to what you'll find inside -- highly imaginative and fantasy-filled songlets played on a variety of instruments: harmonium, penny whistle, sitar, acoustic guitars, etc. One particular favorite song of mine is about "a funny little hedgehog." Music for flowerchildren and their children. Highly recommended.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Classic!, July 18, 2010
By 
Onegin (Portland OR) - See all my reviews
There's been nothing like the ISB. Their introduction of an eclectic and exotic (for the time) variety of stringed instruments, and their distinctive writing and vocal styles, endeared them to me way back in the 1960's and it's still a pleasure to hear them. Their mixture of musical sophistication, poetry, mysticism, humor, and a certain innocence resonated with the times. This disc was the first with the two-man set-up, and contains the beautiful First Girl I Loved. Other standouts are Painting Box, No Sleep Blues, and Chinese White, to name three of many. In this configuration Williamson and Heron went on to record The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter, which many consider their best, and my favorite, Wee Tam/Big Huge. Light the incense, and enjoy!
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars very inventive, October 8, 2000
This review is from: The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion (Audio CD)
There are some really wonderful songs on here. My personal favorites are "Chinese White," "No Sleep Blues," "The Mad Hatter's Song", "Blues for the Muse," and "First Girl I Loved." Yes, nearly all Robin songs. I think that Robin's songs are generally a good deal better than Mike's, although there isn't a single track on here I actually don't like. (Well, sometimes I find "The Hedgehog Song" just a bit annoying. *shrug*) Certainly well worth buying, anyway. The use of unusual instruments (bowed gimbri et al), unusual chord progressions, and beautifully filled-out textures (perhaps the only really "psychedelic" thing about this album, except for the cover) makes it far better than most other folk. And the Dylan parody in "Way Back in the 1960s" is hilarious!
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A true masterpiece of mystic folk, May 19, 1999
By 
This review is from: The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion (Audio CD)
Messrs. Williamson and Heron hit an astonishing artistic and creative peak with this, their second album. An essential recording for anyone with more than a passing interest in music which defines the spirit of the late 1960's, but far more than just a fashion statement. This is music which still sounds fresh and suprising but which has its roots deep in celtic (and other) traditions. Sometimes baffling, always fascinating, trippy, weird and completely wonderful - but if you're reading this you probably knew this anyway. Contains the classics "First Girl I Loved" and "Hedgehog Song" but every track is a wondrous treasure.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely one of their best, July 17, 1998
By 
Brian D. (Blacksburg, VA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion (Audio CD)
This album is one I have to limit my listening to because otherwise I'd love it to death. It truly is an original style of Folk music incomparible to anything else. Myriad ethnic instruments in the hands of masters contribute to an unparalleled experience.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


‹ Previous | 1 2 3 | Next ›
Most Helpful First | Newest First

This product

The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion
The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion by Incredible String Band (Audio CD - 1994)
Used & New from: $9.98
Add to wishlist See buying options