Inner Marshland
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Average customer review:(4 )
Track Listing
- Cries From the Inner Marshland
- Termination Station Grey
- Window Eye
- Once More
- Defoliation (Part One)
- Reflections In A Tall Mirror
- Hey Mr. Undecided
- I've Got Eyes In The Back Of My Head
- Minsmere Sphagnum
- Mediaeval Siensese Acid Blues
- Defoliation (Part Two)
- Walking In The Lady's Garden
- Slave
- Run At The Sun
- Parapsynquiry
- The Great Mistake
- Solid Vimto
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #177077 in Music
- Released on: 2010-07-14
- Number of discs: 1
- Dimensions: .22 pounds
Editorial Reviews
CD Description
"This was the second Frond album recorded and issued in 1987. I’d never really envisaged that anyone would be up for a second album. In fact, I was totally shocked that anyone was up for a first. There seemed to be adequate enough demand to make another record more than just an ego trip. I started writing some new material, and learning how to get the best out of my trusty Porta One. I’ve never really found writing songs too difficult, and soon I had more than enough stuff for an album."-Nick Saloman
About the Artist
The Bevis Frond was Nick Saloman, a neo-psychedelic renaissance man and the sole writer, performer and producer behind the cottage industry bearing the Frond name. The head of his own label (Woronzow) as well as the co-publisher of his own underground magazine (the highly regarded Ptolemaic Terrascope), Saloman was a quintessential English eccentric, a frighteningly prolific talent and a true anachronism purveying an archaic musical genre while simultaneously pioneering the lo-fi aesthetic. Saloman cloaked his formative years in mystery; according to legend, he formed his first band, the Bevis Frond Museum, during his school years, and after the group disbanded he performed solo acoustic sets throughout the London area known as Walthamstow. After founding the Von Trapp Family, later known as Room 13, Saloman was sidelined in 1982 following a motorcycle accident. With the money he received as compensation for his injuries, he revived the Bevis Frond name and during his recuperation period assembled 1986's Miasma, a slice of twisted, latter-day psychedelia issued on Woronzow in a pressing of 250. Much to Saloman's shock, the record sold out; realizing an audience existed for his brand of time-warped pop, he quickly issued Inner Marshland, another underground success.-ALL MUSIC GUIDE
