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Friday, March 22, 2024

The Ghost: When You're Dead - One Second 1970

 

UK ack THE GHOST was formed in 1969, at the very start using the moniker Holy Ghost but pretty soon shortened for obvious reasons. Paul Eastmont (vocals, guitar), Charlie Grima (drums), Terr Guy (keyboards, vocals) and Daniel McGuire (bass, vocals) were the forming members; and when Shirley Kent (vocals, guitars) hooked up with shortly after the line-up was complete, and they headed off to


record their first single, issued in 1969. swiftly followed by a full length production, both issued in 1969.
Ghost formed in Birmingham in the late sixties. They started out playing a heavish sort of blues-rock before they met up with singer Shirley Kent who'd already recorded two tracks on a charity EP, The Master Singers And Shirley Kent Sing For Charec 67 (Keele University 103) in 1966. Paul Eastment had earlier played in Velvett Fogg.
              

They recorded their album at the end of 1969, spawning their first 45 at the end of the year. When You're Dead was a strong song with a clear US West Coast influence. It was hardly Chart material, though, so predictably sales were poor. The album came out in January 1970. There's a clear contrast between the folk pieces that Shirley Kent sings on like Hearts And Flowers and Time Is My Enemy, which in style recall Sandy Denny's heyday in Fairport Convention, and the blues-rock numbers contributed by the rest of the band, of which For One Second sounds the strongest. Also worth checking out is the powerful Too Late To Cry. The album has now become a major collector's item, partly on account of its rarity but also on account of the breadth of its appeal to fans of both blues-rock and folk.
                   
               
The band returned to the studio in Spring 1970 to record I've Got To Get To Know You. Another track from their album, For One Second, was put on the flip, but when the 45 failed to sell the band slowly began to fall apart. Shirley Kent left to pursue a solo career and eventually released an album in 1975, Fresh Out, under the pseudonym Virginia Tree. I haven't heard it but it's reputedly folkier than Ghost's

output and featured former band members Paul Eastment and Terry Guy on three of the tracks. After Kent's departure, the remaining band members soldiered on for a while using the name Resurrection but this later incarnation of the band didn't make it onto vinyl. However, Shirley Kent decides to leave the band to start a solo career soon after. The band continue using the moniker Resurrection, but split up without releasing any more material.
                  

THE GHOST briefly appeared like a spectral vision in Birmingham, England in the late-1960's. Their hauntingly-titled one and only album "When You're Dead - One Second" rose from the grave in 1970 before the band just as quickly disappeared in a wisp of hazy smoke like a phantom apparition. The spooky album cover showed a ghostly translucent image of the five-piece band gathered around a large tombstone, headed by a Celtic Cross. Right from the first few opening bars of "When You're Dead", you can tell we're going to be in for a weird and wonderful wild psychedelic ride here. This acid-drenched music is very reminiscent of the American band H.P. Lovecraft. In fact, The Ghost have such a strong resemblance to the American West Coast sixties sound that it's hard to believe they could be from the gloomy backstreets of Birmingham in England. This "phantasmic" bunch of Brummies really know how to Rock! The Ghost are listed as Prog Folk on ProgArchives, but make no mistake, this opening number sounds like a wild Psychedelic Rock trip back in time to the flower-power freeway of love in San Francisco in the swinging sixties.
              

In complete contrast, the second song "Hearts and Flowers" is a gorgeous Folk Pop refrain that could quite easily have been recorded by Peter, Paul & Mary or The Seekers. It's a truly beautiful melody floating along on a gentle wave of gorgeous guitar strings and uplifting harmonies. This stunning song - featuring Shirley Kent on lead vocals - is a real gem that shines like a sparkling diamond and would

have had tremendous hit potential if it had ever been released as a single. We're back on the magic bus again for "In Heaven", and if you love the sound of H.P. Lovecraft, then you'll be "In Heaven" too when you hear this absolutely fabulous psychedelic sixties song. It's groovy, baby! There's a return to gentler Folk Rock territory for "Time is My Enemy", a poignant song about the passing of the years which conjures up fond memories of the classic years of Sandy Denny and Fairport Convention, although this is more of an unconventional slice of Psych-Folk.
                  

Shirley Kent sounds in magnificent voice on this hauntingly- beautiful song. It's a compelling blend of Sandy Denny's "Fotheringay" and "Who Knows Where the Time Goes", given a liberal psychedelic sprinkling of glowing rainbow colours. This is turning out to be a very good album indeed! Continuing with the intoxicating blend of storming Hard Rock songs and gentle Folk Rock refrains comes "Too Late To Cry", a rousing rip-roaring rocker, featuring an extended psychedelic wah-wah guitar trip back to the Streets of San Francisco in the hippy sixties, or the wild and untamed streets of Chicago in the case of H.P. Lovecraft.
               

We're onto Side Two now "For One Second", which opens as a gently laid-back country-tinged melody, but wait one second because there's a surprise in store when the song metamorphosises from a caterpillar into a bright and beautiful psychedelic butterfly for the storming crescendo of acid-soaked

guitar reverb in the fabulous finale. And now we come to The Ghost's magnificent magnum opus, "Night of the Warlock", a spirited Demons and Wizards song that barrels along at pell-mell speed, taking the listener on a crazy helter-skelter ride in a headlong rush towards psychedelic nirvana. This is like a maniacal harum scarum version of "Season of the Witch", wound up to 99 and given an energetic burst of adrenalin and raw power.
             

We're off to meet the "Indian Maid" next, so you can expect to hear some exotic far-eastern vibes from the Indian sub-continent, although the song is still firmly rooted in western psychedelia. Either way, it's another great song wherever you are in the world. It's time now to mount the battlements for "My Castle Has Fallen", a storming medieval ballista firing a relentless percussive artillery barrage of pummelling Psychedelic Rock! There's no let-up in the incredible pace either because "The Storm" is on the way, a thunder and lightning display of sonic energy to rattle the windows and light up the sky. It's not all Crash! Bang! Wallop! though, because there's a return to gentler climes for "Me and My Loved Ones", a bright rainbow sunburst of groovy psychedelic colours to close the album in magnificent style. Wait a minute though, we're not quite through yet, because there's the groovy sixties number "I've Got To Get To Know You" added as a bonus track.
             

The sole album by this British band was a strange entrant into the field of late-'60s/early-'70s psychedelia, mixing folk-rock, much heavier West Coast-influenced psych, and early hard rock. The lead-off track, "When You're Dead," is the most effective and famous (at least in the world of

psychedelic collectordom) cut. Lead singer Paul Eastment sounds much like Family's Roger Chapman, but even creepier (and more ostentatious), as the group vamp around a skin-crawling riff, anchored by an almost garagey shrill organ. Yet the second song, "Hearts and Flowers," could almost be the work of an entirely different outfit, with the band's other lead singer, Shirley Kent, shining on a pretty folk tune reminiscent of some of Fairport Convention's most precious early numbers. The CD reissue on Mellotron adds the non-LP 1970 single "I've Got to Get to Know You" as a bonus track.
               

The Ghost has risen from the grave of the psychedelic sixties era and reappeared as an awesome apparition fifty years later on ProgArchives. "When You're Dead - One Second" is an album full of haunting Folk refrains and spirited psychedelic acid trips. All in all, it's a heavenly album full of devilishly good songs.
                    


The Ghost – When You're Dead - One Second
Label: UFO Records – BFTP CD 005
Series: Blast From The Past
Format: CD, Album, Reissue 1991
Country: UK
Released: 1970    
Genre: Rock
Style: Psychedelic, Prog Rock

TRACKS

          


01. When You're Dead    4:25

Written-By – P. Eastment, P. Keatly
02. Hearts And Flowers   2:54
Written-By – S. Kent
03. In Heaven   3:21
Written-By – T. Guy
04. Time Is My Enemy   4:06
Written-By – S. Kent
05. Too Late To Cry   5:04
Written-By – P. Eastment, P. Keatly
06. For One Second   5:25
Written-By – T. Guy
07. Night Of The Warlock   4:22
Written-By – P. Eastment, T. Guy
08. Indian Maid   4:21
Written-By – T. Guy
09. My Castle Has Fallen   2:57
Written-By – P. Eastment
10. The Storm   3:36
Written-By – P. Eastment, P. Keatly
11. Me And My Loved Ones   4:09
Written-By – T. Guy
12. I'Ve Got To Get To Know You   4:02
Written-By – S. Kent

LINE - UP

                


Bass Guitar – Daniel MacGuire
Drums, Percussion – Charlie Grima
Engineer – John Taylor
Vocals, Lead Guitar – Paul Eastment
Liner Notes, Supervised By – Carl Denker
Organ, Piano – Terry Guy
Vocals – Shirley Kent

Flac Size: 314 MB

10 comments:

  1. I know GHOST, but i don't have it, the devil knows why. I'll order them straight away. Thank you.
    A band i listened to today. RAINBOW PRESS USA, with their 2 lps 1968/1969. I have both on one cd. Highly recommended and unfortunately quite unknown.

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    Replies
    1. Thank you my friend. I'm thinking to post even The Velvett Fogg.

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  2. Yes V. Fog a fine band. Currently on the wave of the old bands. They are the best. As much as i love other things.....

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  3. I'm listening to EPISODE SIX Radio 1 Club Sessions live 1968/69. Great Brit psych pop even though almost all of the tracks were copied. How great the bands were live in 1968. For me was the strongest year in the entire history of pop. The dogs were all very good back than.
    That remminds me yesterday i was listening to Brit pop the AARDVARKS Anthology 1987-1999. If you like Brit pop influenced by the 60s, it's a must.

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  4. Replies
    1. ...And Shirley Kent has an amazing voice! Great singer!

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    2. Everything is great. I couldn't remember. Now the cd stays with me on the sofa to listen to it often.

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  5. Dear Kostas, your blog is incredible and this post is unique.
    Max

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  6. I ran a search, and found a flac copy of the Virginia Tree album here... https://www.filefactory.com/search/get/7140e9378bf6ada0780f227aeaa50259/214887468

    ReplyDelete