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The Weed Tree [EP]
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Album: The Weed Tree [EP]
# Song Title   Time
1)    Rosemary Lane More Info... 0:04
2)    Tomorrow More Info... 0:04
3)    Black Is the Color More Info... 0:05
4)    Afraid More Info... 0:03
5)    Blue Mountain More Info... 0:04
6)    Flaming Telepaths More Info... 0:10
7)    Dead King More Info... 0:04
 
Album: The Weed Tree [EP]
# Song Title   Time
1)    Rosemary Lane More Info... 0:04
2)    Tomorrow More Info... 0:04
3)    Black Is the Color More Info... 0:05
4)    Afraid More Info... 0:03
5)    Blue Mountain More Info... 0:04
6)    Flaming Telepaths More Info... 0:10
7)    Dead King More Info... 0:04
 
Product Description
Product Details
Performer Notes
  • Espers: Sietinsons, Smith, Hauser, Baird, Weeks, Helena Espvall .
  • Audio Mixer: Brian McTear.
  • Recording information: Cycle Sound; Miner St.
  • Like a reincarnated Pentangle for the neo-psychedelic folk crowd, newly expanded Philadelphia sextet the Espers come full circle on their intoxicating EP The Weed Tree. Less murky than their self-titled debut, Tree is a bright, fluid, and promising collection of six covers and one original that sees the group poised for an explosive (quietly, that is) full-length record in the near future. The Espers mine the traditional ("Rosemary Lane," "Black Is the Color") with grace and reverence, keeping the framework steeped in enough British folk acoustics that when a keyboard appears out of nowhere it's not at all intrusive; rather it's the lightening bolt in a gray sky that illuminates the crows below. Speaking of dark imagery, the collective's creepy rendition of Blue yster Cult's "Flaming Telepaths" from 1974's Secret Treaties stays surprisingly true to its source. A haunting version of Manchester, England, post-punk outfit Durutti Column's "Tomorrow" is also a highlight, with the refreshingly clear voices of Meg Baird and Greg Weeks finding the perfect middle ground between despair and serenity. The Weed Tree could have been an exercise in tedium, but like fellow interpreter Alasdair Roberts, the Espers have more than a love for the sound of late-'60s acid folk; they have a vision for its future. ~ James Christopher Monger
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