[ RPM International / CD ]
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Between playing in popular jangly rock trio the Vanguards and the launch of what became a lifelong solo jazz career, Norwegian guitarist Terje Rypdal was briefly involved with a psychedelic band called the Dream. Active from 1967 until 1969, the Dream recorded a sole full-length, Get Dreamy, a cornucopia of various trippy delights ranging from Cream-like blues rockers to pseudo-Baroque arrangements, and greatly influenced by Jimi Hendrix's guitar wizardry and overall swagger. The band was so indebted to Hendrix that not only did Get Dreamy include a strange, psyched-out dirge titled "Hey Jimi," but Rypdal went so far as to send Hendrix an autographed copy of the album upon its release. While easily dated as a product of its "Turn on, tune in, drop out " times, Get Dreamy is also a top-notch album, excitedly bouncing between revved-up acid rock and sunny, soulful jangle pop. Experimental jams like "Ain't No Use" employ a familiar bag of psychedelic tricks, backwards drums, creepy spoken word voice-overs, and, as ever, Hendrix-inspired spaceship guitar sounds. Drummer Tom Karlsen adds a soulful touch to warm ballads and mellow reflections like "Driftin'" and "Emptiness Gone." While a lot of the songwriting, playing, and even production is directly derivative of other better-known acts of the day, Get Dreamy is a solid record with its own character, and even feels charming in its naive exuberance. The band sounds enamored, not just with Hendrix, but with the very concept of being a psychedelic group and with applying their own experiences to this strange, newly forming breed of sound. While the Dream would be a memory less than two years after the release of their only album, the fresh-faced enthusiasm of Get Dreamy is infectious and enduring. - AllMusic
Green Things (From Outer Space)
Emptiness Gone
Ain't No Use
Driftin'
I'm Counting On You
Night Of The Lonely Organist And His Mysterious Pals
You
You're Right About Me
Hey Jimmi
Do You Dream