Prophets, Seers And Sages the Angels of the Ages (Digitally Remastered Deluxe Edition)

 
Prophets, Seers And Sages the Angels of the Ages (Digitally Remastered Deluxe Edition) cover
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Tyrannosaurus Rex
Prophets, Seers And Sages the Angels of the Ages (Digitally Remastered Deluxe Edition)

[ Universal Music / 2 CD ]

Release Date: Friday 30 January 2015

This item is only available to us via Special Order. We should be able to get it to you in 3 - 6 weeks from when you order it.

The most underrated of Tyrannosaurus Rex's four albums, Prophets, Seers & Sages was recorded just six months after their debut and adds little to the landscapes which that set mapped out. There is the same reliance on the jarring juxtaposition of rock rhythms in a folky discipline; the same abundance of obscure, private mythologies; the same skewed look at the latest studio dynamics, fed through the convoluted wringer of the duo's imagination -- the already classic pop of the opening "Deboraarobed" is further dignified by its segue into the same performance played backwards, a fairly groundbreaking move at a time when even the Beatles were still burying such experiments deep in the mix.

But if the album itself found the duo rooted to the musical spot, still it delivered some of Marc Bolan's most resonant songs. The nostalgia-flavored "Stacey Grove" and the contrarily high-energy "Conesuela" were as peerless as any of Bolan's more feted compositions. Equally intriguing is the confidence which exudes from "Scenes of Dynasty," a successor of sorts to the last album's "Scenesof," but presented with just percussion and some strange vocal noises to accompany Bolan's singing -- at a time when "singing" was maybe not the term a lot of listeners would employ for his vocals. The excited "one-two-three-four" count-in only adds to the dislocation, of course.

Finally, the owlishly contagious "Salamanda Palaganda" offers a first-hand peek into the very mechanics of Bolan's songwriting. Other composers stuck for a rhyme either reach for the thesaurus or abandon the lyric altogether. Bolan simply made one up, and in the process created a whole new language -- half nonsense, half mystery, but wholly intoxicating. Just like the rest of the album, in fact.

Tracks 1-14 are from the original album produced by Tony Visconti. Tracks 17-21 and 24-26 were recorded for John Peel's BBC Radio Show "Top Gear" in 1968. Tracks 22-23 were recorded fro BBC's "Voice of Pop" in 1968.

Tracks:

Disc One
1. Deboraarobed
2. Stacey Grove
3. Wind Quartets
4. Conesuala
5. Trelawny Lawn
6. Aznageel The Mage
7. The Friends
8. Salamanda Palaganda
9. Our Wonderful Brownskin Man
10. Oh Harley (The Saltimbanques)
11. Eastern Spell
12. The Travelling Tragition
13. Juniper Suction
14. Scenescof Dynasty
15. One Inch Rock - Single A
16. Nickelodeon - Take 1
17. Stacey Grove
18. One Inch Rock
19. Salamanda Palaganda
20. Eastern Spell
21. Wind Quartets
22. Juniper Suction - Poem
23. Juniper Suction
24. Top Gear - Jingle
25. Conesuala
26. The Travelling Tragition

Disc Two
1. Deborah - Take 2
2. Stacey Grove - Take 2
3. Wind Quartets - Take 4
4. Conesuala - Take 8
5. Trelawny Lawn - Take 3
6. Aznageel The Mage - Take 3
7. The Friends - Take 5
8. Salamanda Palaganda - Take 4
9. Our Wonderful Brownskin Man - Take 7
10. Oh Harley (The Saltimbanques) - Take 5
11. Eastern Spell - Take 12 16/5/68
12. The Travelling Tragition - Take 1
13. Juniper Suction - Take 1
14. Scenescof Dynasty - Takes 3 & 4
15. Nickelodeon - Take 5
16. One Inch Rock - Take 5
17. Wind Quartets - Take 1
18. Conesuala - Take 4
19. Trelawny Lawn - Take 1
20. Aznageel The Mage - Take 1
21. The Friends - Take 3
22. Salamanda Palaganda - Take 3
23. Our Wonderful Brownskin Man - Take 6
24. Oh Harley (The Saltimbanques) - Take 2
25. Eastern Spell - Take 2
26. The Travelling Tragition - Take 2
27. Juniper Suction - Take 3
28. Nickelodeon - Take 6
29. One Inch Rock - Take 4
30. Conesuala - Take 3