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The Incredible String Band

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The Incredible String Band
A black-and-white photo of the band on a stairwell
The Incredible String Band (1970)
Standing: Likky McKechnie. Seated L-R: Mike Heron, Rose Simpson, Robin Williamson
Background information
OriginEdinburgh, Scotland
Genres
Years active1966–1974, 1999–2006
LabelsElektra, Island
Past membersMike Heron
Robin Williamson
Clive Palmer
Licorice McKechnie
Rose Simpson
Malcolm Le Maistre
Stan Schnier
Jack Ingram
Gerard Dott
Graham Forbes
John Gilston
Lawson Dando
Bina Williamson
Claire Smith

The Incredible String Band (sometimes abbreviated as ISB) were a British psychedelic folk band formed by Clive Palmer, Robin Williamson and Mike Heron in Edinburgh in 1966.[1] The band built a considerable following, especially in the British counterculture, notably with their albums The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion, The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter, and Wee Tam and the Big Huge. They became pioneers in psychedelic folk and, through integrating a wide variety of traditional music forms and instruments, in the development of world music.

Following Palmer's early departure, Williamson and Heron performed as a duo, later augmented by other musicians. The band split up in 1974. They reformed in 1999 and continued to perform with changing lineups until 2006.

History

Formation as a trio: 1965–66

In 1963, acoustic musicians Robin Williamson and Clive Palmer began performing together as a traditional folk duo in Edinburgh, particularly at a weekly club run by Archie Fisher in the Crown Bar which also regularly featured Bert Jansch. There they were seen in August 1965 by Joe Boyd, then working as a talent scout for the influential folk-based label Elektra Records. Later in the year, the duo decided to fill out their sound by adding a third member, initially to play rhythm guitar.[2] After an audition, local rock musician Mike Heron won the slot. The trio took the name "the Incredible String Band". Early in 1966 Palmer began running an all-night folk club, Clive's Incredible Folk Club, on the fourth floor of a building in Sauchiehall Street in Glasgow, where they became the house band.[3] When Boyd returned in his new role as head of Elektra's London office, he signed them up for an album, beating off a rival bid from Transatlantic Records.[4]

They recorded their first album, entitled The Incredible String Band, at the Sound Techniques studio in London in May 1966. It was released in Britain and the United States and consisted mostly of self-penned material in solo, duo and trio formats, showcasing their playing on a variety of instruments. It won the title of "Folk Album of the Year" in Melody Maker's annual poll, and in a 1968 Sing Out! magazine interview Bob Dylan praised the album's "October Song" as one of his favourite songs of that period, stating it was "quite good".[5]

The trio broke up after recording the album. Palmer left via the hippie trail for Afghanistan and India, and Williamson and his girlfriend Licorice McKechnie went to Morocco with no firm plans to return. Heron stayed in Edinburgh, playing with a band called Rock Bottom and the Deadbeats. However, when Williamson returned after running out of money, laden with Moroccan instruments (including a gimbri, which was much later eaten by rats), he and Heron reformed the band as a duo.[3]

Development as a duo: 1966–67

Cover of The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion, designed by The Fool

In November 1966 Heron and Williamson embarked on a short UK tour, supporting Tom Paxton and Judy Collins.[6] In early 1967, they performed regularly at London clubs, including Les Cousins. Joe Boyd became the group's manager as well as producer and secured a place for them at the Newport Folk Festival, on a bill with Joni Mitchell and Leonard Cohen.

The duo were always credited as separate writers, maintaining their individual creative identities, rather than working as a writing partnership. Boyd wrote, "Mike and Robin were Clive's friends rather than each other's. Without him as a buffer, they developed a robust dislike for one another. Fortunately, the quality and quantity of their songwriting was roughly equal. Neither would agree to the inclusion of a new song by the other unless he could impose himself on it by arranging the instruments and working out all the harmonies."[4]

In July, they released their second album, The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion, accompanied by Pentangle's Danny Thompson on double bass and Licorice on vocals and percussion.[3] The album demonstrated considerable musical development and a more unified ISB sound. It displayed their abilities as multi-instrumentalists and singer-songwriters, and gained them much wider acclaim. The album included Heron's "The Hedgehog's Song", Williamson's "First Girl I Loved" (later recorded by Judy Collins, Jackson Browne, Don Partridge and Wizz Jones) and his "Mad Hatter's Song", which, with its mixture of musical styles, paved the way for the band's more extended forays into psychedelia. Enthusiastic reviews in the music press were accompanied by appearances at venues such as London's UFO Club (co-owned by Boyd), the Speakeasy Club, and Queen Elizabeth Hall. Their exposure on John Peel's Perfumed Garden radio show on the pirate ship Radio London and later on BBC's Top Gear made them favourites with the emerging UK underground audience. The album went to Number One in the UK folk chart, and was named by Paul McCartney as one of his favourite records of that year.[7]

The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter and Wee Tam and the Big Huge: 1968

1968 was the band's annus mirabilis with the release of their two most-celebrated albums, The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter and the double LP Wee Tam and the Big Huge (issued as two separate albums in the US). Hangman's reached the top 5 in the UK album charts soon after its release in March 1968 and was nominated for a Grammy in the US. Robert Plant of Led Zeppelin said his group found their way by playing Hangman's and following the instructions.[8] A departure from the band's previous albums, the set relied heavily on a more layered production, with imaginative use of the then new multitrack recording techniques.[4] The album featured a series of vividly dreamlike Williamson songs, such as "The Minotaur's Song", a surreal music-hall parody told from the point of view of the mythical beast, and its centrepiece was Heron's "A Very Cellular Song", a 13-minute reflection on life, love and amoebas, its complex structure incorporating a Bahamian spiritual ("I Bid You Goodnight"). Williamson and Heron in this album had added their girlfriends, Licorice McKechnie and Rose Simpson, to the band to contribute additional vocals and various instruments, including organ, guitar and percussion. Despite their initially rudimentary skills, Simpson swiftly became a proficient bass guitarist, and some of McKechnie's songs were recorded by the band.[3]

By early 1968 the group were capable of filling major venues in the UK. They left behind their folk club origins and embarked on a nationwide tour incorporating a critically acclaimed appearance at the London Royal Festival Hall. Later in the year they performed at the Royal Albert Hall, at open-air festivals, and at prestigious rock venues, such as the Fillmore auditoriums in San Francisco and New York. After their appearance at the Fillmore East in New York they were introduced to the practice of Scientology by David Simons (aka "Rex Rakish" and "Bruno Wolfe", once of Jim Kweskin's Jug Band). Joe Boyd, in his book White Bicycles: Making Music in the 1960s and elsewhere,[9] described how he was inadvertently responsible for their "conversion" when he introduced the band to Simons, who, having become a Scientologist, persuaded them to enrol in his absence. The band's support for Scientology over the next few years was controversial among some fans and seemed to coincide with what many saw as the beginning of a decline in the quality of their work.[citation needed] In an interview with Oz magazine in 1969 the band spoke enthusiastically of their involvement with it, although the question of its effect on their later albums has provoked much discussion ever since.[citation needed]

Their November 1968 album Wee Tam and the Big Huge, recorded before the US trip, was musically less experimental and lush than Hangman's but conceptually even more avant-garde, a full-on engagement with the themes of mythology, religion, awareness and identity. Williamson's otherworldly songs and vision dominate the album, though Heron's more grounded tracks are also among his very best, and the contrast between the two perspectives gives the record its uniquely dynamic interplay between a sensual experience of life and a quest for metaphysical meaning.[citation needed] The record was released as a double album and also simultaneously as two separate LPs, a strategy which lessened its impact on the charts.

Woodstock and multimedia: 1969–70

At this time most of the group lived communally at a farmhouse near Newport, in Pembrokeshire, Wales, where they developed ideas for mixed media experiments with Malcolm Le Maistre and other members of David Medalla's Exploding Galaxy troupe and the Leonard Halliwell Quartet. There, a film was made about the ISB, Be Glad For the Song Has No Ending. Originally planned for BBC TV's arts programme Omnibus, it featured documentary footage and a fantasy sequence, 'The Pirate and the Crystal Ball', illustrating their attempt at an idyllic communal lifestyle. It made little impact at the time, but reissues on video and DVD have contributed to the recent revival of interest in the band.

The band toured for much of 1969, in the US and the UK. In July they played at the Albert Hall on the fourth night of the "Pop Proms".[citation needed] They were introduced by John Peel and talked about their first brush with Scientology.[citation needed] Other acts in the week were Led Zeppelin and The Who.[citation needed] On 28 May 1969 the band received a phone call from Michael Lang, the producer of the momentous Woodstock Festival, asking the band to perform at the festival for a payment of $4,500.[10] In August, they were slotted to play on Friday when all the folk-oriented and acoustic acts were expected to perform. However, the band refused to perform in the pouring rain, so stage manager John Morris rescheduled their performance for the following day. Their open slot was taken by Melanie, whose showing inspired her song, "Lay Down (Candles in the Rain)". The following day, 16 August 1969, at approximately 6:30 p.m., the band played in between the Keef Hartley Band and Canned Heat. The crowd was not anticipating the band's performance on a day that featured mainly hard rock acts.[11] For that reason, the group was generally disfavoured and, perhaps more importantly, were not included in the filming of the festival.[12] Over the Labor Day weekend in 1969, they appeared at the Texas International Pop Festival, in Lewisville, Texas. In November, they released the album Changing Horses, which was generally seen as a disappointment after their earlier work. By late 1969, they had established a communal base at Glen Row near Innerleithen. In April 1970 they released the album I Looked Up.

The ISB's performances were more theatrical than those of most of their contemporaries. In addition to the spectacle of their exotic instruments and colourful stage costumes, their concerts sometimes featured poems, surreal sketches and dancers, all in the homegrown, non-showbiz style characteristic of the hippie era. In 1970, Robin Williamson (with little input from Heron) attempted to fuse the music with his theatrical fantasies in a quixotic multimedia spectacular at London's Roundhouse called "U", which he envisaged as "a surreal parable in dance and song". It combined the band's music with dancing by the Stone Monkey troupe (which had evolved out of Exploding Galaxy), the letter U representing a transition from a high level of spiritual awareness to a low, then returning to a final peak of awareness and communication. Although the performance was ambitious, critical response was mixed, with some harsh reviews from critics who had in some cases acclaimed their earlier work. It fared little better in New York, and a planned US tour of "U" had to be cancelled after a few performances at the Fillmore East. Joe Boyd described the show as "a disaster".[3]

Diminishing returns: 1971–74

After that the group lasted another four years, although there was a gradual decline in their status and commercial success after 1970. Joe Boyd, whose skillful handling of the band had contributed much to their international success, stopped managing them and returned to the US. The group left Elektra Records and signed with Island, for whom they recorded five albums. The first was a soundtrack to the "Be Glad..." film, and this was followed by the eclectic Liquid Acrobat as Regards the Air, regarded as their best album for some time.

The band continued to tour and record. Rose Simpson left in 1971 and was replaced by Malcolm Le Maistre, formerly of the Stone Monkey troupe. Mike Heron took time out to record a well-received solo album, Smiling Men with Bad Reputations, which, in contrast to the ISB's self-contained productions, featured a host of session guests, among them Pete Townshend, Ronnie Lane, Keith Moon, John Cale and Richard Thompson. The following year, Licorice left, and was replaced by Gerard Dott, an Edinburgh jazz musician and friend of both Heron and Williamson who had contributed to Smiling Men. Williamson also recorded a solo album, Myrrh, which featured some of his most extraordinary vocal performances.

The group's changing lineup, adding Stan Schnier (aka "Stan Lee") on bass, Jack Ingram on drums, and Graham Forbes on electric guitar, reflected moves toward a more conventional amplified rock group. Their final albums for Island were received disappointingly, and the label dropped them in 1974. By then, disagreements between Williamson and Heron about musical policy had become irreconcilable, and they split up in October 1974.[3]

Solo careers: 1974–2014

Williamson soon formed Robin Williamson and His Merry Band, which toured and released three albums of eclectic music with a Celtic emphasis. Within a few years, he went on to a solo career, moving between traditional Celtic styles and more avant-garde material. He also produced several recordings of humorous stories. In all, Williamson released over forty albums post-ISB. Notable in this output are the Grammy-nominated Wheel of Fortune (1995, with John Renbourn) and four records on the jazz/classical/avant-garde ECM label: The Seed-at-Zero (2000), Skirting the River Road (2002), The Iron Stone (2006), and Trusting in the Rising Light (2014). Heron formed a rock group with Malcolm Le Maistre, called first Mike Heron's Reputation, then just Heron, and later released occasional solo albums. Malcolm Le Maistre continued teaching in schools and performing theatre and music, and he released two albums.

Reunion and final separation: 1999–2006

In 1997, Williamson and Heron got back together for two concerts, which were warmly received. This was followed by a full reunion of the original three members plus Williamson's wife, Bina, and Lawson Dando in 1999. However, they did not recapture the high reputation of the original ISB, playing mostly small venues to mixed critical and audience responses. In March 2003 it was announced that Robin and Bina Williamson had "temporarily" left to pursue other projects and their solo careers. Rumours circulated of an acrimonious split. A long-standing agreement between Williamson and Heron that neither would use the name 'Incredible String Band' without the other's involvement was bypassed by a temporary re-branding as 'incrediblestringband2003'. Heron, Palmer and Dando, and new member Clare "Fluff" Smith, continued to tour regularly around the United Kingdom and internationally. Heron, Dando and Palmer toured the US in 2004. Another live album was released in 2005. Their last concert together was at the Moseley Folk Festival, Birmingham, UK, in September 2006.

Barbican: 2009

In 2009, Heron and Palmer announced a concert entitled "Very Cellular Songs: The Music of the Incredible String Band" at The Barbican, featuring Richard Thompson, Danny Thompson, Robyn Hitchcock, Alasdair Roberts, Trembling Bells, Green Gartside, and Dr Strangely Strange.

Musical style

Stylistically the ISB were centred around the idioms of conventional folk and pop, but their notable experimentation with musical form, instrumentation and styles (e.g. Indian and Moroccan) led them to innovative, often eclectic, compositions. In 1967–68 they were described as part of pop music's "underground".[13] Williamson claimed that, as both the Beatles and the Rolling Stones saw them play before Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band and Their Satanic Majesties Request were recorded, the ISB were an influence on those albums.[2] Chris Cutler commented that "They were one of the most important bands of that era ... Instead of AABABA etc., their developments would go linearly, A-B-C-D-E-F-G-H-I-J-K-L-M and beyond; no one else thought that way ever ..." [emphasis in original][13] One of Bob Dylan's favourite songs was 'October Song' from ISB's debut album.[citation needed] Robert Plant claimed that Led Zeppelin found their way by playing 'The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter' (see above). Following in the footsteps of ISB, Led Zeppelin later successfully incorporated Moroccan rhythms (e.g. on 'Dancing Days').

Both Mike Heron and Robin Williamson would insert seemingly unrelated sections in their songs in a way that has been described as "always surprising, laughably inventive, lyrically prodigious".[14] Music critic Robert Christgau wrote of the band in Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies (1981): "Way back in the 1960s I tried to figure out whether these acoustic Scots were magic or bullshit and concluded that they were both."[15]

Legacy

In 1994 Rose Simpson, a former member of the band, became Mayoress of Aberystwyth.[16] In 2003 the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Rowan Williams, who had previously chosen "The Hedgehog's Song" when he appeared on Desert Island Discs, wrote a foreword for a full-length book about the band, describing them as "holy".[3] Licorice McKechnie was last seen in 1987, and may be deceased.[17]

Personnel

Members

Lineups

1965–1966 1966–1968 1968–1971 1971–1972
  • Mike Heron
  • Clive Palmer
  • Robin Williamson
  • Mike Heron
  • Robin Williamson
  • Mike Heron
  • Robin Williamson
  • Licorice McKechnie
  • Rose Simpson
  • Mike Heron
  • Robin Williamson
  • Licorice McKechnie
  • Malcolm Le Maistre
1972–1973 1973–1974 1974 1974–1999
  • Mike Heron
  • Robin Williamson
  • Malcolm Le Maistre
  • Gerard Dott
  • Jack Ingram
  • Stan Schnier
  • Mike Heron
  • Robin Williamson
  • Malcolm Le Maistre
  • Jack Ingram
  • Stan Schnier
  • Graham Forbes
  • Mike Heron
  • Robin Williamson
  • Malcolm Le Maistre
  • Stan Schnier
  • Graham Forbes
  • John Gilston

Disbanded

1999–2003 2003–2006
  • Mike Heron
  • Robin Williamson
  • Clive Palmer
  • Lawson Dando
  • Bina Williamson
  • Mike Heron
  • Clive Palmer
  • Lawson Dando
  • Claire Smith

Discography

Albums

Studio albums

Release date Album Chart positions Label
UK Albums Chart[18] Billboard 200[19]
June 1966 The Incredible String Band 34 (in 1968) - Elektra
July 1967 The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion 25
March 1968 The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter 5 161
November 1968 Wee Tam and the Big Huge 174 (Wee Tam)
180 (The Big Huge)
November 1969 Changing Horses 30 166
April 1970 I Looked Up 30 196
October 1970 U 34 183
March 1971 Be Glad for the Song Has No Ending Island
October 1971 Liquid Acrobat as Regards the Air 46 189
October 1972 Earthspan
February 1973 No Ruinous Feud
March 1974 Hard Rope & Silken Twine

Live albums

Compilations

For solo releases, see under Robin Williamson, Mike Heron, Clive Palmer and Malcolm Le Maistre.

Singles (UK only)

  • "Way Back in the 1960s" / "Chinese White" (Elektra EKSN 45013, promotional release only,[20] 1967)
  • "Painting Box" / "No Sleep Blues" (Elektra EKSN 45028, March 1968)
  • "Big Ted" / "All Writ Down" (Elektra EKSN 45074, October 1969)
  • "This Moment" / "Black Jack Davy" (Elektra 2101 003, April 1970)
  • "Black Jack David" / "Moon Hang Low" (Island WIP 6145, November 1972)
  • "At the Lighthouse Dance" / "Jigs" (Island WIP 6158, February 1973)[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c Strong, Martin C. (2000). The Great Rock Discography (5th ed.). Edinburgh: Mojo Books. pp. 473–474. ISBN 1-84195-017-3.
  2. ^ a b "Robin Williamson interviewed on 13 August 1979". Angelfire.com. Retrieved 13 December 2012.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Williams, Rowan (Foreword), Boyd, Joe (Foreword), Whittaker, Adrian (Editor) (2003) Be Glad: An Incredible String Band Compendium, Helter Skelter Publishing ISBN 1-900924-64-1
  4. ^ a b c Joe Boyd, White Bicycles - Making Music in the 1960s, 2005, ISBN 1-85242-910-0
  5. ^ ""The Incredible String Band were an inspiration and a sign." So wrote Robert Plant in his programme notes for Led Zeppelin's 1979 tour" (PDF). 2.kenyon.edu. Retrieved 1 July 2017.
  6. ^ "ISB Diary- Be Glad for the Song has No Ending". Makingtime.co.uk. Retrieved 24 November 2014.
  7. ^ Walter Everett, The Beatles As Musicians: Revolver Through The Anthology, 1999, p. 97, ISBN 0-19-512941-5.
  8. ^ "Retying the Knot", 1997 BBC documentary on ISB
  9. ^ "Article by Joe Boyd on the ISB and Scientology". Archived from the original on 23 October 2007. Retrieved 24 November 2014.
  10. ^ "A Little Upstate Folk Festival". makingtime.co.uk. Retrieved 12 March 2015.
  11. ^ Mike Evans (2009). Woodstock: Three Days That Rocked the World. ISBN 9781402766237. Retrieved 12 March 2015.
  12. ^ "The ISB Live at Woodstock". woodstockstory.com. Retrieved 12 March 2015.
  13. ^ a b Stump, Paul (1997). The Music's All that Matters: A History of Progressive Rock. Quartet Books Limited. p. 61. ISBN 0-7043-8036-6.
  14. ^ Chris Cutler, File Under Popular, Autonomedia (1985/1991) p.118
  15. ^ Christgau, Robert (1981). "Consumer Guide '70s: I". Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies. Ticknor & Fields. ISBN 089919026X. Retrieved 27 February 2019 – via robertchristgau.com.
  16. ^ "So knotty but nice". The Herald. 29 November 1997.
  17. ^ Mark Ellen, "Supertroupers-The Incredible String Band," MOJO, August 2000, Issue 81, EMAP Metro, London, p.46
  18. ^ Roach, Martin, ed. (2009). The Virgin Book of British Hit Albums. Virgin Books. p. 146. ISBN 978-0-7535-1700-0.
  19. ^ Whitburn, Joel (1985). Top Pop Albums 1955-1985 (1st ed.). Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin: Record Research Inc. p. 175. ISBN 0-89820-054-7.
  20. ^ Record Collector Rare Record Price Guide 2010, ISBN 978-0-9532601-9-5, 2008, p.589

Sources

  • Boyd, Joe: White Bicycles - Making Music in the 1960s. London: Serpent's Tail. 2006
  • Green, Jonathon: Days In The Life: Voices from the English Underground, 1961–71. London 1988 (ISB-related contributions from Joe Boyd and Steve Sparkes)
  • Harper, Colin: Dazzling Stranger: Bert Jansch and The British Folk and Blues Revival. London: Bloomsbury 2006 (plenty on the Edinburgh folk scene of the early 1960s, from which both Jansch and the ISB emerged)
  • Heron, Mike, and Andrew Greig. You Know What You Could Be: Tuning into the 1960s. London: riverrun, 2017.
  • Moon, Tim. The Incredible String Band: Every Album, Every Song. Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire: Sonicbond Publishing, 2021.
  • Norbury, Paul. Smiling Men with Bad Reputations: The Story of the Incredible String Band, Robin Williamson and Mike Heron and a Consumer’s Guide to Their Music. Tolworth, Surrey: Grosvenor House, 2017.
  • Shindig Magazine. Witches Hats & Painted Chariots: The Incredible String Band and the 5,000 Layers of Psychedelic Folk Music. Cambridge: Volcano Publishing, 2013.
  • Simpson, Rose. Muse, Odalisque, Handmaiden: A Girl’s Life in the Incredible String Band. London: Strange Attractor Press, 2020.
  • Unterberger, Richie: Eight Miles High: Folk-Rock's Flight from Haight-Ashbury to Woodstock. San Francisco/London, 2003 (especially the interviews with Williamson and Boyd. Also has informative chapters on the British folk scene)
  • Wade, Chris. The Music of the Incredible String Band. Wisdom Twins Books, 2013.
  • Whittaker, Adrian, ed. beGLAD: An Incredible String Band Compendium. London: Helter Skelter, 2004; revised, expanded edition, 2013.