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The Third Eye / Searching

Жанр: Heavy Psych
Год издания диска: 1969
Издатель (лейбл): Shadoks Music
Номер по каталогу: 116
Страна: South Africa
Аудиокодек: FLAC (*.flac)
Тип рипа: tracks+.cue
Битрейт аудио: lossless
Продолжительность: 0:34:36
Источник (релизер): блог (marios)
Наличие сканов в содержимом раздачи: да
Треклист:
1. A Sad Tale
2. Selby's Hospitality
3. Retain Your Half-Ticket
4. Stagemakers
5. Awakening
6. I Can't Believe It
Код:
EAC extraction logfile from 29. December 2009, 11:50 for CD
The Third Eye / Searching

Used drive  : HP      CD-Writer+ 8200a   Adapter: 2  ID: 1
Read mode   : Secure with NO C2, accurate stream, disable cache
Read offset correction : 572
Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No

Used output format : C:\Program Files\FLAC\flac.exe   (User Defined Encoder)
                     320 kBit/s
                     Additional command line options : -V -8 -T "artist=%a" -T "title=%t" -T "album=%g" -T "date=%y" -T "tracknumber=%n" -T "genre=%m" %s

Other options      :
    Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
    Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
    Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000

Track  1
     Filename D:\Music\rapid\The Third Eye - Searching (1969)(South Africa)\01 - A Sad Tale.wav

     Pre-gap length  0:00:02.00

     Peak level 97.7 %
     Track quality 100.0 %
     Test CRC 80B6EC96
     Copy CRC 80B6EC96
     Copy OK

Track  2
     Filename D:\Music\rapid\The Third Eye - Searching (1969)(South Africa)\02 - Selby's Hospitality.wav

     Peak level 95.1 %
     Track quality 100.0 %
     Test CRC 794D7AE8
     Copy CRC 794D7AE8
     Copy OK

Track  3
     Filename D:\Music\rapid\The Third Eye - Searching (1969)(South Africa)\03 - Retain Your Half-Ticket.wav

     Peak level 97.7 %
     Track quality 100.0 %
     Test CRC 9EC0C432
     Copy CRC 9EC0C432
     Copy OK

Track  4
     Filename D:\Music\rapid\The Third Eye - Searching (1969)(South Africa)\04 - Stagemakers.wav

     Peak level 97.7 %
     Track quality 100.0 %
     Test CRC 2E2E277F
     Copy CRC 2E2E277F
     Copy OK

Track  5
     Filename D:\Music\rapid\The Third Eye - Searching (1969)(South Africa)\05 - Awakening.wav

     Pre-gap length  0:00:02.00

     Peak level 82.7 %
     Track quality 100.0 %
     Test CRC 5693C16E
     Copy CRC 5693C16E
     Copy OK

Track  6
     Filename D:\Music\rapid\The Third Eye - Searching (1969)(South Africa)\06 - I Can't Believe It.wav

     Peak level 94.6 %
     Track quality 100.0 %
     Test CRC 63D8A5D7
     Copy CRC 63D8A5D7
     Copy OK

No errors occured

End of status report
Код:
REM GENRE "Progressive Rock"
REM DATE 1969
REM DISCID 45081C06
REM COMMENT "ExactAudioCopy v0.95b4"
PERFORMER "The Third Eye"
TITLE "Searching"
FILE "01 - A Sad Tale.wav" WAVE
  TRACK 01 AUDIO
    TITLE "A Sad Tale"
    PERFORMER "The Third Eye"
    INDEX 01 00:00:00
FILE "02 - Selby's Hospitality.wav" WAVE
  TRACK 02 AUDIO
    TITLE "Selby's Hospitality"
    PERFORMER "The Third Eye"
    INDEX 01 00:00:00
FILE "03 - Retain Your Half-Ticket.wav" WAVE
  TRACK 03 AUDIO
    TITLE "Retain Your Half-Ticket"
    PERFORMER "The Third Eye"
    INDEX 01 00:00:00
FILE "04 - Stagemakers.wav" WAVE
  TRACK 04 AUDIO
    TITLE "Stagemakers"
    PERFORMER "The Third Eye"
    INDEX 01 00:00:00
  TRACK 05 AUDIO
    TITLE "Awakening"
    PERFORMER "The Third Eye"
    INDEX 00 05:35:31
FILE "05 - Awakening.wav" WAVE
    INDEX 01 00:00:00
FILE "06 - I Can't Believe It.wav" WAVE
  TRACK 06 AUDIO
    TITLE "I Can't Believe It"
    PERFORMER "The Third Eye"
    INDEX 01 00:00:00
Код:
-----------------------

DON'T MODIFY THIS FILE

-----------------------

PERFORMER: auCDtect Task Manager, ver. 1.5.1RC4 build 1.5.1.5
Copyright (c) 2008-2010 y-soft. All rights reserved
[url=http://y-soft.org]http://y-soft.org[/url]

ANALYZER: auCDtect: CD records authenticity detector, version 0.8.2
Copyright (c) 2004 Oleg Berngardt. All rights reserved.
Copyright (c) 2004 Alexander Djourik. All rights reserved.

FILE: 05 - Awakening.flac
  Size: 84877942 Hash: 17219369405A77C411C8CA9F0CAF879B Accuracy: -m0
  Conclusion: CDDA 100%
  Signature: 4983ED243E5F3667AAD3E5AF86DD4F2CB45C5A27
FILE: 04 - Stagemakers.flac
  Size: 34783839 Hash: DE272E1155721686F718EE9FD718C4B7 Accuracy: -m0
  Conclusion: CDDA 100%
  Signature: B26EB8A39B5315ACC32114D7D8CCBA08FA7486AD
FILE: 03 - Retain Your Half-Ticket.flac
  Size: 25147266 Hash: 98DE661648C9F5BF4683EC0D7AE1E1B1 Accuracy: -m0
  Conclusion: CDDA 100%
  Signature: 87375188D2E804886C32B08D9B969984F003625E
FILE: 02 - Selby's Hospitality.flac
  Size: 13301038 Hash: 96DA4EA2ADB6B6DD3B1827999574E360 Accuracy: -m0
  Conclusion: CDDA 99%
  Signature: 211F5BCE26F983E3BB9FB4BA91ECB04D26DDED78
FILE: 01 - A Sad Tale.flac
  Size: 36034549 Hash: C39235032E75D058AF8196A0C6CE6A4E Accuracy: -m0
  Conclusion: CDDA 100%
  Signature: D3035499836F3CF6469B684B54D8D1F28DE9BBE4
FILE: 06 - I Can't Believe It.flac
  Size: 19738550 Hash: 4ADD07FBD3CB6E2E7F29D81A390B0602 Accuracy: -m0
  Conclusion: CDDA 100%
  Signature: 11B96F783DECD95157E8CA363E11DDE4230D77D9
Time and fortune have not been kind to Third Eye. Back in the late 1960s they were one of the top acts in South Africa, recording three powerful albums that easily matched the creative output of their now better-known contemporaries. Four decades on, though, and they are the also-rans in the contest to name the nation’s rock royalty. Search the web for information on the band and all that pops up is sketchy information on their recording output and brief notes on recent revival concerts. Search for the recordings of Third Eye and you would – until this timely reissue – have been hard pressed to find anything other than the hugely expensive original vinyl pressings. Although badly reproduced CDs of their releases – Awakening, Searching and Brother – have been available on bootleg labels, the band have been poorly represented in digital form. Contrast this with the plethora of bootlegs and, more recently, official releases on offer from other South African artists of that era.
Perhaps their ‘misfortune’ was that they lived and performed in Durban, a coastal city several hundred miles away from the recording and musical hub of Johannesburg (although they recorded their three albums in Johannesburg). Perhaps it was the fault of their record label – Polydor – which did not promote them as heavily as EMI did its stable of artists (although Third Eye got to feature on two internationally released Polydor Super Groups compilation albums, in the company of global stars Cream, Hendrix, John Mayall and The Who among others). Perhaps it was simply that just not enough people outside of Durban heard their driving, organ-powered rock for it to remain lodged in their consciousness over the years. Remember, back in South Africa in the early 1970s there was no television to give a band national coverage, radio airplay was almost exclusively on state-controlled stations and government censors had a very narrow view of what would or wouldn’t subvert the nation’s youth; Third Eye’s version of Arthur Brown’s Fire was kept off the airwaves by these very custodians of the nation’s morals. The band did get support from LM Radio, the first commercial radio station in Africa that was broadcasting from Lourenco Marques, now Maputo, in Mozambique. Fire b/w With the Sun Shining Bright was on the station’s hit parade for six weeks and Apricot Brandy, which featured on the Awakening album, later became a playoff signature tune on the station. But LM Radio and the state broadcasters focused solely on pop-oriented singles; and as for radio airplay of extended album tracks, the band’s forte – forget it.
Third Eye coalesced in Durban in 1968 around the young brother and sister team of Ron and Dawn Selby. The two – with Ron on guitar and Dawn, just into her teens, on Hammond organ – had played alongside bassist Mike Sauer in a Durban band It’s a Secret. Formed in 1963, It’s a Secret had played mainly commercial cover music, but the times they were a-changing’. The arrival of Maurice Saul, a guitarist who had worked the boards in what was then Rhodesia (later Zimbabwe) before travelling the well-worn path south, and Robbie Pavid, a drummer who doubled as the percussionist for Abstract Truth, another Durban-based progressive outfit, saw the band morph into Third Eye.

Says Dawn Selby, who has kept faith with the band through times good and bad: “When the line-up of the band changed, we thought It’s a Secret was not a suitable name for the type of heavier original music that was developing. At that hippy time there was a book called ‘The Third Eye’ written by Tuesday Lobsang Rampa [who claimed to have been a Buddhist lama in Tibet before spending the second part of his life in the body of a British man - one Cyril Henry Hoskin!]. The book was very popular when people were searching for spiritual knowledge. We thought this would be a more suitable name for the band and the music that was developing. The content of the book had no particular influence on the band, but we just liked the name.“
Mixing original compositions with favourites from the overseas scene – such as Deep Purple and Hendrix – Third Eye gigged around Durban and the neighbouring city of Pietermaritzburg, with Robbie playing the cocktail set with Abstract Truth between 5pm and 7pm before taking up the sticks with Third Eye. At the start the band played ‘sessions’, with Third Eye blitzing a single venue alongside such groups as The Flames, The In Crowd and The Bats. As they grew in popularity, so did the number of gigs they played. ‘Battles of the Bands’, peculiarly South African musical contests that saw bands competing against each other at mini-festivals, were fought and full-blown festivals trawled. Soon Third Eye found themselves playing to bigger, more appreciative audiences and having the freedom to perform their own compositions. The scene was blossoming, on the verge of a massive creative flowering – and the record executives were sensing an opportunity.
In 1968 the song Fire had been recorded by the band on four-track at Troubadour Studios in Johannesburg under producer Billy Forrest, and it was the strength of this single that led to a more significant recording contract. Third Eye were snapped up by Trutone, on the Polydor label, one of the premier labels at the time, which signed them for three albums. It heralded a hectic couple of years, with Awakening released in 1969 followed by two releases in a single year in 1970 – Searching and Brother. Amazingly the three albums were recorded in just six days. “I think there was real purpose behind what was being written in those days – before the general commercialisation of music in South Africa,” says Dawn. “We didn’t have things like auto-tune for our voices, or the possibilities of overdubbing. All three albums were recorded over three two-day periods (which had to be over the weekends so that the guys could take time off work and I didn’t miss out on school). As a result we didn’t have the opportunity of re-taking many songs as there wasn’t enough time. We also recorded on eight track, so it was a case of one, two, three go – and see you at the end! Only the voices and some brass work were overdubbed.”
They were heady days – both musically and politically. Awakening had been dedicated by Maurice Saul, driven by a “personal disgust with war and hatred”, to all “young men in this world forced to go to war”. It could have been directed nearer to home, where boys were being conscripted into the army and the white society was becoming deeply polarised. The increasingly authoritarian government clearly saw rock musicians as a threat, playing “devil’s music” to the gullible young. No one could escape the looming crackdown. And it all came to a head in October 1970 at the Milner Park 24 hour rock festival near Johannesburg, with Third Eye as top of the bill alongside a host of other big names – including The Flames, Otis Waygood, Freedoms Children, Abstract Truth and Suck. As the good-natured crowd gathered, they were stormed by conservative youths – divinity students from a nearby university, say some, while newspaper reports claim they were from a local police college – who dragged some of the audience away to cut their hair.
“We were there for the music,” remembers Dawn. ”I saw the Hell’s Angels (who were there for security) arrive, which was pretty scary, but I’m sure the violence had nothing to do with them. These festivals were about peace and anti-war, but I suppose there were some people present who opposed change and the ‘long-haired hippies’. This was the year after Woodstock and I think all us musos were trying to make peace statements. One of the cover songs in our repertoire was Morning Dew (also recorded on the album Awakening). If you look at the lyrics it’s all about global warming and how nothing was being done about it. What’s changed? The band never discussed the problems of the world – we just said it all through our lyrics and the music.”
The festival proved to be a symbolic turning point, mirroring in a South African microcosm the era-ending events of Altmont that had taken place just a few months earlier. With the writing on the wall, musicians were leaving South Africa in ever-larger numbers in search of more commercially and politically friendly climes. Third Eye considered a move abroad but their tentative plans came to nought. But staying at home was not the easy option. Musical styles within the country were shifting, disco was rearing its ugly head and work was becoming increasingly scarce for those bands playing original material. The problems were compounded by an influx from abroad of jobbing musicians – mainly British and Irish – who were being allowed in even though South Africans were barred from playing in other countries – especially Britain. Without a strong musicians’ union the interlopers were taking many of the limited gigs available, pushing local musicians to the periphery.
Trutone were not renewing the contract and there were no royalties coming from the three albums already recorded. “With no support from our record company in terms of publicity or marketing (despite having signed a very binding contract which still stands today) it was impossible for us to continue,” says Dawn. “If we wanted to play, and earn something back for what we had put in, we had to go commercial and do the gig band thing. It became a ‘chicken and egg‘ situation. To create the music, we needed to spend time with the band. But as the band was not earning any income we had to work in the day (I started teaching when I was 14) to support ourselves. But this limited our time for rehearsing or travelling to the better gigs.”
Maurice and Robbie called it a day. Ron, Dawn and Mike continued to carry the flag for Third Eye, although Mike eventually quit a year later. In 1973 Third Eye, with only Ron and Dawn as surviving members of the original line-up, returned to RPM Studios in Johannesburg to record some tracks for an album. Two of these songs – Caterpillar b/w What’s Going On – were released by Bluejeans Records in the Benelux countries and one – Free – made its way on to an EMI compilation album in 1998. Needless to say, no royalties have been forthcoming.
Disillusionment with the industry had set in but the band battled on. Ron remembers that “after the recordings of the albums, and with the band line-up changes, we were wary of dealing with untrustworthy promoters and managers so we undertook to do our own concerts, bookings and marketing. We recorded with Chris Kritzinger at RPM and the single Caterpillar was released.
“In the early ’70s we toured South Africa’s eastern Cape province, playing some of the original material as well as newly written compositions. We were very well supported, despite the Christian group outside Port Elizabeth’s city hall who were demonstrating with placards, we think because of the banning of Fire on state radio. The irony of this is that we were no longer performing Fire, as our new vocalist, Richard Wright, had a different vocal feel and we had a different repertoire to suit the new line-up. We realised that the market was not supporting progressive rock music, so we had no choice but to go the commercial route.”
Dawn is still championing the band – a task, she says, that is a load of fun despite time constraints. “I am grateful that I have been able to remain in the music industry for 46 years and am still very active (one big advantage of having started playing at such an early age), but it hasn’t been easy a lot of the time. I’ve always felt that Third Eye was a wonderful band creating great music and it is a pity that, at the time, we didn’t get what I felt we should’ve. We have had such a lot of fun with our recent reunion concerts [in 2008, 39 years after it all began, the members of the original band - minus Mike - reunited for concerts in Durban] and hopefully the reissue of the albums will change a few things for the better.”

Ron now runs an audio-visual and lighting company, Mike is in the motor industry and Robbie has a jewellery business. Only Maurice and Dawn remain deeply involved with the music industry; Maurice is gigging one-nighters as a solo artist, while Dawn still performs and is involved with orchestral arrangements and teaching.

Today, any revisionist rewriting of the history and influence of South African psychedelic and progressive music would see Third Eye back in their rightful place among the rock aristocracy – battered and bruised, but jostling in a mighty Battle of the Bands to see just who, among the many creative and innovative acts thrown up in such a peculiar place and time as South Africa in the ‘60s and ‘70s, was the leader of the pack. No one can say who would win. But what an awesome contest that would be.
by Roger Browning
"Shadoks reissues the second album by South African heavy proggers The Third Eye. Searching shortly followed after their debut, originally released by Polydor in 1969. Today, originals of this album are rare as gold-dust and among 2 or 3 others, the most valuable collector's items from South Africa. Many collectors who have basically everything in their collection are missing this one. The music is heavier, the lyrics full of political statements, and it's more psychedelic and a bigger step down into the musical underground. The 14-minute track "Awakening" is really amazing with tons of great organ parts and extra heavy fuzz-guitar. Members include: Ron Selby (lead guitar), Maurice Saul (vocals, lead guitar), Dawn Selby (piano, Hammond organ), Robbie Pavid (drums), and Mike Sauer (six-string bass)."
LabelShadoks
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