The C.A. Quintet

簡(jiǎn)介: by Richie UnterbergerVirtually no one outside Minneapolis heard of the C.A. Quintet during their late-60s heyday. It was their fortune (or 更多>

by Richie UnterbergerVirtually no one outside Minneapolis heard of the C.A. Quintet during their late-60s heyday. It was their fortune (or curse) to actually reach a considerably bigger international audience when their album was reissued in the 80s. Starting as a rather conventional pop-soul/garage band, their one and only album, Trip Thru Hell (1968), was a worthy slice of dark psychedelia. With spooky organ and the occasional trumpet of singer/songwriter Ken Erwin, the groups murky and macabre vision — dotted with trips through hell, cold spiders, Colorado mornings, and the like — was genuinely original and chilling. Trip Thru Hell only sold 700-800 copies when it was first issued, but after gaining status among hardcore 60s psychedelic collectors, it was reissued in 1983. The group also released a few non-LP singles in 1967 and 1968, most in a much poppier vein.

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