psychedelic and avant-garde music from the 1960s to the present
psychedelic and avant-garde music from the 1960s to the present
psychedelic and avant-garde music from the 1960s to the present
psychedelic and avant-garde music from the 1960s to the present
psychedelic and avant-garde music from the 1960s to the present
psychedelic and avant-garde music from the 1960s to the present
psychedelic and avant-garde music from the 1960s to the present
psychedelic and avant-garde music from the 1960s to the present
psychedelic and avant-garde music from the 1960s to the present
psychedelic and avant-garde music from the 1960s to the present
psychedelic and avant-garde music from the 1960s to the present

:Episode One Hundred Ninety: 6.5.2020

Artist Title Album
OrgöneMothership EgyptMothership Egypt (Single)
Vinnum SabbathiIn Search Of M-TheoryOf Dimensions & Theories
CB3Acid HazeAeons
Modulator IIStopover CommanderStopover Commander (Single)
Colin StetsonFather ClapeBarkskins OST
Moon DuoPlanet CaravanPlanet Caravan (Single)
Harald Grosskopf1847-EarthSynthesist (40th Anniversary Edition)
Roly PorterAn Open DoorKistvaen
TALsoundsSoarAcquiesce
Ka BairdThe UnshownBespires EP
Volodymyr BystriakovAlice Theme IAlice Through The Looking Glass OST
CybotronMedusaColossus
PythagorasI Hope My Considerations Are Of Some Benefit To YouThe Correlated ABC
Hayvanlar AlemiThundercloud MuseumPsychedelia in Times of Turbulence
Sunburned Hand of the ManRed CrossCovered In Mud
The Transcendence OrchestraBut Said in My Head, Not out Loud (Comment Made)Feeling The Spirit
Listen Now!

Open playlist in Spotify

* Not on Spotify:
Nothing this week. Sometimes, they really do have it all.

Description

This show begins with a song from Mos/Fet, the French band Orgöne's hour-plus opus of prog-metal (but not contemporary prog-metal a la Tool or System of a Down; more like freaky 70s prog - Magma, specifically - gone metal). Plus, you have Portland's own Moon Duo, doing their early-90s trip-hoppy version of Black Sabbath's Planet Caravan, from an album of Sabbath covers forthcoming on Sacred Bones (although the greatest Sabbath cover ever remains 1000 Homo DJs version of Supernaut). And there's a track from the recently reissued Colossus, by the 70s Australian avant-garde electronic group Cybotron (not to be confused with the Detroit techno Cybotron, who though I've never played them on the show - too dance-y, I'm afraid - are actually pretty spaced out in their own right)