Rating:
Genre:
Rock
Release Date: 07/21/2003
At one point, the two albums credited to
Satya Sai Maitreya Kali were paired together on a double LP; both of these LPs were so rare that few knew of their existence. The music's a lot easier to hear now that
Normal/Shadoks has reissued both LPs on this double-CD package. Although issued in the early '70s, the records often sound a lot more in line with circa 1967
folk-rock, primarily because about half the cuts were actually recorded during that era by
Craig Smith's band of the time,
the Penny Arkade.
The Penny Arkade tracks are slightly odd but accessible Californian
country-influenced
folk-rock. The acoustic
ballads were recorded by
Craig Smith solo after
the Penny Arkade; these have a gentle yet spooky mysticism that recalls the fine (and almost as obscure) solo albums by the legendary
Dino Valenti and
Skip Spence. On
Apache,
"Color Fantasy," with its full harmonies and tremolo guitars, recalls a lighter, spacier
Buffalo Springfield (a group that not many artists could sound like). Something like
"Voodoo Spell," by contrast, sounds like a tougher
Monkees. The weirdness continues on
"Love Is Our Existence" and
"Revelation," both of which have truly eerie disembodied vocals, apparently getting run through a
Leslie speaker to the accompaniment of underdeveloped, interesting backing tracks.
Inca is really not that much different from
Apache, having also been assembled from the same pool of sessions (by both
the Penny Arkade and
Smith solo). If there's any difference between
Apache and
Inca, it's that the more extreme numbers seem weirder and more ambitious. Foremost among these is
the Penny Arkade's 12-minute
"Knot the Freize" (sic), which despite its length is a pretty well-thought-out combination of differing sections, not a long jam; it's far more
pop/rock than it is indulgent
psychedelia. The occasional insertion of lo-fi spoken word recordings between the tracks makes it seem as though the artist was determined to deliberately sabotage conventional commercial strategies, even though much of the music is actually rather commercial. It's that irony, among other enigmatic qualities, that makes this among the more interesting small-press
psychedelic reissues you're likely to find, though much of the enigma has been resolved after the discovery that this was a mix of tracks by
the Penny Arkade and later solo recordings by
Smith.
~Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide