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Blue Love

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...
 

The vinyl reissue of "Here's Sunshine" LP by Larry Sunshine Rice, originally released in 1969

by Peacock/Backbeat Records in Houston, Texas, is now available world-wide from

 

 

 

The following is a press release from Time-Lag Records:

"Top quality official reissue of this wonderful album.This project is a bit different from other Time-Lag

reissues, as the original isn't exactly a mega-rarity. That's not to say that they're easy to find, but our

motives for the reissue have more to do with the fact that this great LP has been seriously overlooked by so

many, and feels very ripe to reach some new ears. This one's got a pretty wild backstory too, being a rather

undiscussed piece of 60s Texas underground history: in 1966 Larry 'Sunshine' Rice was feeling burnt by the

increasingly superficial hippy scene in San Francisco, so headed to Dallas, Texas, the 'center of darkness'

and the place he was raised, with a vision to transform minds. A random gig doing psychedelic light shows

at a local bar led to a job managing a new 'hip' church. And so the 'Satori House' was founded. Through

this outlet Sunshine held experimental light & sound worship sessions, began hosting underground rock

concerts, launched a free press, and just about any & all other activities towards the goal of turning on

Dallas. It was, of course, a great success while it lasted, which was not long once a federal drug bust (total

set-up) went down, and the higher-ups in the parent church organization got wind of just exactly what

their cash had been backing. During the extended trial that followed Sunshine split the city for tiny Justin,

Texas and founded 'The Church Of Changes' Texas' first marijuana church, claiming grass as their sacrament

and legal right. It was at this point that a series of truly unlikely synchronicities led to a record deal &

recording session, but by the time Here's Sunshine was released in the summer of 1969, Sunshine was back

in California living as a fugitive. He never showed up at his meeting with the bigwigs at Blue Thumb records

who were planning to release his follow up album, thus quickly and purposely ending his connection to the

music industry. If that's got your head turned, you'll almost certainly dig the music. It's a mystical and

convoluted folk trip, executed with the lonesome single-mindedness of a true searcher. Warm intense vocals

are delivered in a magically loose, flowing style. Tim Buckley comparisons pop up, and that's not totally off

the mark if you replaced any avant/jazz leanings with more of a tripping-in-the-desert vibe. Lyrically things

get truly bent, venturing into some deeply surreal & glassy-eyed zones. There are a few grasps towards

religious ponderance, but it's very far from a 'Xian' album. Stream of consciousness broodings on nature,

work, love, god, Satan, sex, hallucinations, and so forth. It's a totally solo recording centered on

understated but effective acoustic guitar, and fleshed out via overdub with rather unusual use of electric

bass, organ, banjo, mandolin, and harmonica. Things get especially psychedelic when the bass comes in,

either as an ultra-minimal echo-drenched pulse or a flowing tonal improvisation. The hyper compressed and

reverb saturated production somehow suites the material perfectly, and the combination of elements creates

quite an immersive, mirage-like and exploratory space. This one is far stronger, more hallucinogenic, and

has gobs more personally then most of the over-hyped, mega-bucks coffee house folk strummers passed off

as loner/downer/acidfolk these days. This record's got a real spirit of its own, that with repeated listens will

sneak right into your mind before you even know it. And I'm sure that's the way Sunshine intended it.

Beautiful exact reproduction art packaged in a lovely heavy 60s style cover and pressed on 180gm

audiophile vinyl. Includes an insert with new notes from the artist, as well as a short except from his book

'Morning Glory,' which was written in 1968 and tells the story behind the album, but has yet to be

published. One time vinyl only edition of 500 copies."