Monday, December 04, 2023

The Paisleys: Cosmic Mind At Play 1970

 

The Paisleys were formed in Minneapolis, and their sole album was produced by Warren Kendrick,


who produced a bunch of other garage rock and psychedelic recordings in Minneapolis in the mid-'60s to early '70s (most notably for the Litter). The Paisleys actually helped Kendrick build the studio in which Cosmic Mind at Play was recorded, and only a couple of thousand copies were pressed when it was released in 1970. The legitimate 2003 CD reissue of the album on Sundazed added six bonus tracks, all but one of them previously unreleased, from 1968-70 demos, outtakes, and live recordings.
                        

During the counterculture years, concept albums were in vogue. Any band that had the gumption to create such progressive noise was usually thought to possess supernatural faculties. That said, the

Paisleys command a pile of handclaps for laying down their own brain-bending voyage of adventurous twists and turns. “Cosmic Mind At Play” was to be the Minnesota band’s one and only album, which is a real pity because they seemed to have a lot going for them. Not a big-budget production, the disc bestows a definitive homegrown finish that sporadically splatters trickles of scruffy garage rock residue onto the psychedelic canvas. Archetypal hippy dippy psychobabble also blankets the album, as topics like spirituality, liberation and freedom are addressed.
                     

But a lighthearted persona still persists, making it evident the Paisleys didn’t take themselves too

seriously. For example, the jolting pulsations of “Now” features the sound of somebody sucking on a joint, while “Musical Journey” entails snippets of a car advertisement and the voice of a sports commentator announcing the score of a baseball game. Although a trippy tie-dye vibe dictates “Cosmic Mind At Play,” a variety of moods actually enter the picture, running the gamut from edgy power pop stylings to the classical ambience of “Wind.” Contrary to the greater percentage of their peers carousing similar terrain, the Paisleys didn’t saturate their songs with overblown jamming.
                     

Relying on basic instrumentation to get their point across, the band was clearly influenced by the

punchy rhythms and melodic sensibilities of the Beatles and the Who. Stunning harmonies, combined with catchy guitar riffs and inspired keyboard workouts further charge the album to heavenly heights. However, enough originality seeps through the grooves of “Cosmic Mind At Play,” allowing it to stand its own ground among numerous other concept confections of the era.
                      

To put it cruelly, the Paisleys were exactly the kind of band roasted by the Mothers of Invention so

unmercifully on We're Only in It for the Money. Their Cosmic Mind at Play album abounds with naive cosmic clichés of late-'60s psychedelic music, performed with sincerity and respectable instrumental competence. A lightweight (though not totally embarrassing) effort that put the electric keyboard more to the fore than many similar bands did; it found a greater audience when it was reissued for collectors on LP in the 1980s.
                   

The Paisleys – Cosmic Mind At Play
Label: Sundazed Music – SC 11112
Format: CD, Album, Reissue
Country: US
Released: 2003
Genre: Rock
Style: Psychedelic Rock

TRACKS

                



01. Cosmic Mind At Play    2:07
02. Rockin'    2:03
03. Now    3:12
04. Smokey Windows    1:39
05. Diddley   4:36
06. Wind    5:19
07. Musical Journey    18:42

BONUS TRACKS       

                            

  
08. Something's Missing    2:59
09. Medley: Comin' On / City Of Light / Home Again    7:26
10. The Fool With The Jewel    3:22
11. Step Quietly And Quickly    2:09
12. Elf In A Magic Bottle    6:08
13. In Dreams / (Untitled Hidden Track)    6:41

LINE - UP

                      


Bass, Vocals – Dick Timm (tracks: 1-10, 13)
Drums, Vocals – Bob Belknap (tracks: 1-5), Greg Payton (tracks: 10, 13), Mike Cornelius (tracks: 6-9)
Lead Guitar, Vocals – Brad Stodden (tracks: 1-9), Dick Timm (tracks: 11), Rick Youngberg (tracks: 10, 12, 13)
Piano, Vocals – Bill Smith (tracks: 1-9, 12, 13)
 

NOTES

               


Track 13 includes a hidden track after "In Dreams", it plays like this:
"In Dreams": 0:00-5:03
"(Silence)": 5:03-5:11
"(Untitled Hidden Track)": 5:11-6:41
Original album issued as Peace LP 70P-1, 1970.
Tracks 1-9 recorded 1969-1970 at Audio City Recording Studios, 3009 E. Lake Minneapolis, MN.
Tracks 10-13 recorded 1968 by Richard Timm.


MP3 @ 320 Size: 157 MB
Flac  Size: 373 MB
 

13 comments:

  1. My God! Thank U 4 this 1. Your blog is full of surprises! Keep on Rocking.

    ReplyDelete
  2. By far my favorite music blog on the internet. always an inspiration! Thank you so much, dear Kostas, for the blood and sweat you're putting into this! Big hugs, Dan

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you very much for your encouragement and your beautiful comment. People like you help me go on with my blog. Thank you again Dan.

      Delete
  3. I want to thank you too...you have an exceptional blog!

    ReplyDelete
  4. We also have something to say. Definitely ASPIRINES is the best blog in terms of the music it chooses, the genres and the presentation of the albums. All our wishes for the holidays and always prepare pleasant surprises for us.
    Steph & Nancy.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I'm always surprised how many people there are who don't know the often very important and basic psychedelic bands. I've known the band for 45 years and it's just a mystery to me, especially in time in the internet etc....
    I also only got to know the band around 1978. But at that time was no one in Europe knew about it. Paisleys were a local event. Not even, i'm sure, most of the music lovers in the USA knew about the band in the early 70s. But today??? Incredible.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I think that is obvious for the younger people to ignore many 60s bands.

      Delete
    2. Here you can find out that everything relevant was already in place in the 60's and early 70s. Ultimately it was this generation that " invented" everything. The following is mostly just a copy of the much better " original".

      Delete
  6. I just now look a closer look at the Paisleys entry. I don't even know some of the photos. Are also not avaible in the Sundazed booklet.
    The last one is particularly nice when the band given a concert on the steps in front of a few listeners. Everything was as beautiful back then. Well done.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Thank You Kostas for this from my home town that I have not heard! You work well in the collective. Have some great holidays!

    ReplyDelete
  8. Thanks for this! I recently read an article about them in an issue of Ugly Things and I want to check them out. Thank you for sharing!

    ReplyDelete