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Ted Lucas

Current price: $26.99
Ted Lucas
Ted Lucas

Barnes and Noble

Ted Lucas

Current price: $26.99

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Detroit musician
Ted Lucas
spent decades quietly pursuing musical greatness in and around his hometown. Throughout the '60s and '70s,
Lucas
' name was attached to several regional rock bands, session work for
Motown
before they left Detroit for Los Angeles, and even time spent studying the art of raga with
Ravi Shankar
. He continued playing up until his death in 1992, leaving behind only scattered documentation of his various output, the most lasting and visible article being this self-titled album from 1975, first released by
himself on his
OM Records
imprint. Recorded largely in his attic apartment, the album is divided into a first side of six spare tunes of soft psychedelic folk and a second side with two instrumentals and a wandering blues jam. The first half is a non-stop string of winners, beginning with the looming minor-key proclamation "Plain and Sane and Simple Melody" and continuing through to the grinning, sing-song mellowness on tracks like "It's So Easy (When You Know What You're Doing)" and "It Is So Nice to Get Stoned," or the more weary, broken feelings on "Now That I Know" and "I'll Find a Way (To Carry It All)." These subtly composed tunes are on par with some of the best "lost classic" psych folk albums of the era,
' multi-tracked layers of his own harmonies reaching the same sometimes spooky, often beautiful heights as those of
Judee Sill
, and the entire album shares the same psychedelic hitch-hiker feel as
Skip Spence
's
Oar
does.
' musicianship is masterful but never showy, even when stretching out on the woozy "Love and Peace Raga" that closes the album. Instead, he chooses straightforward arrangements that better serve the themes of idealism and compassion that sit at the center of even the most heartbreaking tunes. The shift in presentation between the near-perfect acid folk of side one and the more instrumental-minded expansion of side two makes for a somewhat polarizing listen, but both are valuable looks into
' talents, even the jammier tracks feeling like deliberately placed statements instead of filler to reach full album length. Though the album lingered in deep obscurity during his lifetime, a reissue campaign in the 2010s brought the album to a new audience hungry for just this type of privately pressed '70s psych folk; the kind that is so captivating it's a mystery as to why it didn't catch on in its time.
' album is a perfect example of this trope, ranking up there with
Nick Drake
,
Index
the Contents Are
Anonymous
, and other artists who made astonishing albums that got lost in the shuffle in their day. While a lot of those private press albums are fascinating in the context of their histories,
' sole album borders on timelessness in its best moments and soars from start to finish. ~ Fred Thomas

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