Magick Brother Explained

Magick Brother
Type:studio
Artist:Gong
Cover:Gong_Magick_Brother.jpg
Border:yes
Released:March 1970
Recorded:September–October 1969
Studio ETA and Studio Europa Sonor, Paris, France
Genre:
Length:43:52
Label:BYG Actuel
Producer:Jean Georgakarakos, Jean-Luc Young
Next Title:Camembert Electrique
Next Year:1971

Magick Brother is the debut studio album by the progressive rock band Gong, recorded in Paris during September and October 1969 and released in March 1970 on the French BYG Actuel label.

The band's recently recruited bass player Christian Tritsch was not ready in time to play on the album, and so singer/songwriter/guitarist Daevid Allen played the bass guitar himself; a photo of Allen recording bass tracks for the album is featured on the cover artwork. They also made use of jazz contrabass (double bass) players Earl Freeman and Barre Phillips, who were recording for the label at the same time, on three tracks.[1] Occasional early Gong collaborator Dieter Gewissler, who normally played violin, also contributed some "free" bowed contrabass to two tracks. The LP sleeves were printed before the final track order and titles had been decided and so the songs "Rational Anthem" (AKA "Change the World") and "Glad To Sad To Say" were listed the wrong way round.[2]

Shortly afterwards, the band played its debut gig at the BYG Actuel Festival in the small town of Amougies, Belgium, on 27 October 1969, introduced to the stage by bemused compere Frank Zappa.[3]

Track listing

All songs written by Daevid Allen, though credited to his partner Gilli Smyth for legal reasons.[4]

Produced by Jean Georgakarakos and Jean Luc Young.

The version on CD has a different tracks grouping and lengths:

Credits

Gong
Additional personnel

Notes and References

  1. Allen, Daevid. Gong Dreaming 2. SAF Publishing, 2009, p. 14.
  2. Allen, Daevid. Gong Dreaming 2. SAF Publishing, 2009, p. 19.
  3. Allen, Daevid. Gong Dreaming 2. SAF Publishing, 2009, p. 31.
  4. Allen, Daevid. Gong Dreaming 2. SAF Publishing, 2009, p. 20.