This Collectors' Choice reissue pairs the second and third albums released by the Incredible String Band, the first material they recorded after being officially reduced to the duo of Mike Heron and Robin Williamson. Though they were lumped in with the psychedelic movement, the first is more like a slightly cosmic version of traditional British folk; some listeners may find it to be the more accessible effort, and it featured what is probably Williamson's best-known song, "First Girl I Loved" (also familiar via Judy Collins' cover version, "First Boy I Loved"). The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter is the ISB's most ambitious album, with Williamson and Heron employing an arsenal of unusual instruments (sitar, gimbri, pan pipe, oud, chahanai, and more), and Dolly Collins adding a couple of the more dignified arrangements. It's usually considered their most important effort by critics, but there were also traces of the sprawling, occasionally grating lack of focus that would increasingly come to characterize their work. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide
I don't agree with the critic who says this is among their most important albums. The best are Wee Tam (Ducks on a Pond, Over in the Old Golden Land, Log Cabin Home in the Sky) and two others whose titles I can't remember. One has White Bird and Dust Be Diamonds on it, and the other has Do You Think It's Easy and Everything's Fine Right Now. Would be nice if you could somehow include selections from those records on your playlist for people who ask for ISB.
Next week a monkey is coming to stay.... hmmmmmmmm...
If I were a witch's hat, sitting on her head like a parafin stove,
I'd fly away and be a bat.
Across the air I would roammmmmmm......