Light in the Attic
2009
The Early Years 1964 - 1965
About This Album
The Monks made one of the most aggressively odd albums of the 1960s with their first (and only) studio album, 1966's Black Monk Time; between the minimal, metronomic pounding of the drums, the fierce howl of the guitar, the metallic clank of the amplified banjo, and the nervous bleat of the organ, the five American GI's who created this music while stationed in Germany in the midst of the Cold War created something that (at least at the time) was utterly unique in rock & roll. But the Monks didn't start out sounding quite so fierce; from their humble beginnings as a fairly conventional beat combo called the Torquays, the group evolved into something significantly different, and as guitarist Gary Burger once told a journalist, "It probably took us a year to get the sound right." The Early Years 1964-1965 is an aural document of the Monks as they were trying to sort out the proportions of their singular approach. The bulk of The Early Years is devoted to a ten-song demo cut in 1965 featuring most of the tunes that would latter appear on Black Monk Time, along with a few others that would be left by the wayside. While most of the ingredients of Black Monk Time were here, the almost psychotic zeal and ferocious energy that set the album's performances on edge aren't quite in evident; this music may stomp and clank, but it doesn't bite, and that's a big difference.
Track List (try tracks 3,4,7,9,11 and 12)

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