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Dreaming With Alice
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Dreaming With Alice in Franklin, TN
Current price: $18.99

Barnes and Noble
Dreaming With Alice in Franklin, TN
Current price: $18.99
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Size: CD
Mark Fry
's obscure 1972 album was pleasing but derivative British
acid
folk
, very much influenced by
Donovan
in its
mood
and vocals, though more unceasingly oriented toward
-
rock
than any of
's efforts. In fact, it was a little behind the curve in 1972, sounding rather more like something that would have been recorded and issued a couple of years earlier. The gentle, haunting songs are breathily vocalized acoustic guitar tunes at their core, but lightly spiced with
psychedelic
echo, backwards tapes, flutes (one song is even called
"Lute and Flute"
), sitar, and extended
raga
-influenced passages. In fact, the final track is nothing but a backwards tape -- all two and a half minutes of it.
Fry
's singing is far more reticent than
's, though not unattractive; at times it's a bit like hearing a further-out
Al Stewart
. As suitable as this music might be for dozing off to in a forest and the like, the songs -- broken up by several half-minute or so interludes, all consisting of verses from
"Dreaming with Alice"
itself -- aren't too substantial, functioning more as
pieces than works that make a solid impact. ~ Richie Unterberger
's obscure 1972 album was pleasing but derivative British
acid
folk
, very much influenced by
Donovan
in its
mood
and vocals, though more unceasingly oriented toward
-
rock
than any of
's efforts. In fact, it was a little behind the curve in 1972, sounding rather more like something that would have been recorded and issued a couple of years earlier. The gentle, haunting songs are breathily vocalized acoustic guitar tunes at their core, but lightly spiced with
psychedelic
echo, backwards tapes, flutes (one song is even called
"Lute and Flute"
), sitar, and extended
raga
-influenced passages. In fact, the final track is nothing but a backwards tape -- all two and a half minutes of it.
Fry
's singing is far more reticent than
's, though not unattractive; at times it's a bit like hearing a further-out
Al Stewart
. As suitable as this music might be for dozing off to in a forest and the like, the songs -- broken up by several half-minute or so interludes, all consisting of verses from
"Dreaming with Alice"
itself -- aren't too substantial, functioning more as
pieces than works that make a solid impact. ~ Richie Unterberger
Mark Fry
's obscure 1972 album was pleasing but derivative British
acid
folk
, very much influenced by
Donovan
in its
mood
and vocals, though more unceasingly oriented toward
-
rock
than any of
's efforts. In fact, it was a little behind the curve in 1972, sounding rather more like something that would have been recorded and issued a couple of years earlier. The gentle, haunting songs are breathily vocalized acoustic guitar tunes at their core, but lightly spiced with
psychedelic
echo, backwards tapes, flutes (one song is even called
"Lute and Flute"
), sitar, and extended
raga
-influenced passages. In fact, the final track is nothing but a backwards tape -- all two and a half minutes of it.
Fry
's singing is far more reticent than
's, though not unattractive; at times it's a bit like hearing a further-out
Al Stewart
. As suitable as this music might be for dozing off to in a forest and the like, the songs -- broken up by several half-minute or so interludes, all consisting of verses from
"Dreaming with Alice"
itself -- aren't too substantial, functioning more as
pieces than works that make a solid impact. ~ Richie Unterberger
's obscure 1972 album was pleasing but derivative British
acid
folk
, very much influenced by
Donovan
in its
mood
and vocals, though more unceasingly oriented toward
-
rock
than any of
's efforts. In fact, it was a little behind the curve in 1972, sounding rather more like something that would have been recorded and issued a couple of years earlier. The gentle, haunting songs are breathily vocalized acoustic guitar tunes at their core, but lightly spiced with
psychedelic
echo, backwards tapes, flutes (one song is even called
"Lute and Flute"
), sitar, and extended
raga
-influenced passages. In fact, the final track is nothing but a backwards tape -- all two and a half minutes of it.
Fry
's singing is far more reticent than
's, though not unattractive; at times it's a bit like hearing a further-out
Al Stewart
. As suitable as this music might be for dozing off to in a forest and the like, the songs -- broken up by several half-minute or so interludes, all consisting of verses from
"Dreaming with Alice"
itself -- aren't too substantial, functioning more as
pieces than works that make a solid impact. ~ Richie Unterberger















