Sunday, May 18, 2025

The Incredible String Band - BBC Sessions, Volume 1: 1967-1968

In the poll I conducted in February of new musical acts you'd like to see BBC albums from, the Incredible String Band tied for third place. So here's the start of a series of BBC albums by them. I found enough for seven albums.

Personally, I've never really gotten into the Incredible String Band. I know they were talented, and their style of psychedelic folk was unique and interesting, but their songs generally don't grab me. Still, the voters have spoken, so here you go.

The heart of the band were the singer-songwriters Robin Williamson and Mike Heron, with the two roughly doing about the same number of songs. In fact, for some of the time period of this album, they were the only two members of the band. However, in 1968, their girlfriends at the time, Licorice McKechnie and Rose Simpson, were also made band members. Happily, they were talented singers and musicians.

This band arguably peaked early, around the time period of this album. If you look at the crowd-sourced ratings of their albums on rateyourmusic.com, their 1967 album "The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion" and their two 1968 albums "The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter" and "Wee Tam and The Big Huge" are their highest rated ones. 

All the performances here are unreleased. The first four songs are from a 1967 appearance on the "Top Gear" radio show, hosted by John Peel. The rest all date from early 1968. Tracks 5 through 7 are from "Once More with Felix," a BBC TV show hosted by Julie Felix. Tracks 8 through 12 are from the "Night Ride" radio show, which was also hosted by Peel. The last two songs are from another appearance on "Once More with Felix."

Unfortunately, one song is repeated, "Painting Box." It's both the first song and the last song. And two of the songs have "[Edit]" in their titles because Peel spoke over the music a little bit. That was pretty unusual for him. I did the usual, using the UVR5 program to wipe the DJ vocals while keeping the music.

This album is 52 minutes long.

01 Painting Box [Edit] (Incredible String Band)
02 Mercy I Cry City (Incredible String Band)
03 Chinese White [Edit] (Incredible String Band)
04 Nightfall (Incredible String Band)
05 Three Is a Green Crown (Incredible String Band)
06 Geordie (Incredible String Band)
07 See All the People (Incredible String Band)
08 You Get Brighter (Incredible String Band)
09 All Too Much for Me (Incredible String Band)
10 Ducks on a Pond (Incredible String Band)
11 I Bid You Goodnight (Incredible String Band)
12 Won't You Come See Me (Incredible String Band)
13 The Half-Remarkable Question (Incredible String Band)
14 Painting Box (Incredible String Band)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/kfLHempX

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/UmFrpOKn2L0yyJM/file

The cover image is from around 1967, when the band was only a duo. That's Robin Williamson with blonde hair and a beard and Mike Heron with dark brown hair.

8 comments:

  1. Well, you might not care for them, Paul, but I'm looking forward to this. Thanks for posting it.

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  2. Excellent stuff - did you know that a decade or more ago, a few ISB fans (called the Gimbris) assembled a set of all the (then) known radio shows? They called it God's Holiday and I think it ran to 15 CDs worth, and is probably still online somewhere.

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    1. Yes, I found that, and drew from that. But also the official BBC album, which has better sound quality. But nothing from this first album is on that official album.

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    2. It also has a lot of non-BBC stuff, which is why my series will be seven albums instead of 15.

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  3. I'm a later convert to all things ISB, so i really appreciate this. I'm looking forward to the rest too. Thank you.

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  4. Wow thanks so much Paul! One of the folk who asked if you could find things ISB and so thank you SO much for this! Appreciated!

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  5. It was 1972. Bought a best of, Relics of the ISB. I was 13. I was fascinated by all the weird instruments and how some songs had so many sections. Got everything they did, including the many boots, and now these. Thank you so much, Paul!
    Tony

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