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Freedoms Children-Battle Hymn Of The Broken Hearted Horde-NEW CD

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$17.47
SKU:
6009834170006
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Product Description

Freedom's Children ‎– Battle Hymn Of The Broken Hearted Horde
Label:
Fresh Music (2) ‎– FRESHCD152

NEW CD


Format:
CD, Album, Reissue
Country:
South Africa
Released:
2007
Genre:
Rock
Style:
Psychedelic Rock


Tracklist
1     Introduction     2:26
2     Season     2:59
3     Judas Queen     3:47
4     Mrs. Browning     3:00
5     Country Boy     2:51
6     Your Fathers' Eyes     2:22
7     Eclipse     3:13
8     10 Years Ago     5:45
9     Kafkasque     3:20
10     Boundsgreen Fair     3:09
11     Miss Wendy's Dancing Eyes Have Died     4:22
12     My Death ( Kafkaesque 2nd. Movement.)     3:23
Companies etc

    Manufactured By – Sonopress
    Distributed By – Sony BMG South Africa
    Copyright (c) – Fresh Music

Credits

    Bass, Vocals, Narrator – Ramsay MacKay
    Drums – Colin Pratley
    Guitar – Julian Laxton, Pete Clifford
    Keyboards – Harry Poulos (tracks: B1, B3), Nic Martens
    Vocals – Dennis Robertson (2), Peter Vee, Steve Trend, Stevie van Kerken
    Written-By – Ramsay MacKay

Barcode and Other Identifiers

    Barcode: 6009834170006

Freedoms Children - Battle Hymn Of The Broken Hearted Horde Freedoms Children -

Recorded in 1968 "Battle Hymn..." is the debut album by arguably South Africa's greatest psych rock band. In keeping with the experimental musical influences of the times the album is a melting pot of pastoral folk, quirky prog, psychedlic pop and beat poetry. Included in this first time officially sanctioned release is the rare track "My death". Also available by Freedom's Children - "Astra" and "Galactic Vibes". Freedoms Children - Battle Hymn Of The Broken Hearted Horde Introduction (Narrative) Season Judas Queen Mrs. Browning Country boy Your father's eyes Eclipse Ten years ago Kafkasque Boundsgreen Miss Wendy's dancing eyes have died Bonus track My death (Kafkasque 2nd Movement) Tracks 1-11 originally released on the vinyl album by Parlophone Records in 1968 (catalogue number PCSJ 12049).Engineered and produced by John S Norwell.Track 12 originally released as the B side of the ¿Eclipse¿ vinyl single- courtesy of Tertius Louw. NB The original master tapes were lost in a fire at the EMI studios in the mid 70's. Please note that the tracks were transferred from vinyl and every effort was made to reduce the surface noise .However despite the mastering there are still clicks and pops on the final product as well as some distortion which is resident on the original pressings. All tracks mastered by Brendan Farrell @ Sonic Solutions. Publishing Info: Tracks 1-6,8,10,11 written by Ramsay MacKay ; Tracks 7,9,12 written by Ramsay MacKay and Harry Poulos.All songs published by Ardmore & Beechwood SA. Original cover design by Creative Photography,front cover photo of Ramsay MacKay by Jorg Genzmer .

Liner notes written by Nick Warburton Grateful thanks to : Ramsay MacKay & Colin Pratley ,Nick Warburton for his help with info,pics ,liner notes and his passion for the music, as always Tertius Louw for his enthusiasm and knowledge,Brian Currin,Veronica Adamou @ EMI for the legal clearance. Musicians: Ramsay MacKay: Bass, vocals, narration Julian Laxton: Guitars on Eclipse and Kafkasque Colin Pratley: Drums Nic Martens: Keyboards Pete Clifford: Guitar Harry Poulos-keyboards on Eclipse and Kafkasque Dennis Robertson, Stevie van Kerken, Steve Trend, Peter Vee-vocals Text from the original vinyl BATTLE HYMN OF THE BROKEN-HEARTED HORDE - RAMSAY MACKAY Love has gone to war in uniforms of words; They lie here discarded on battlefields where my guns of youth stand silenced; they listen to a girl with rainbow eyes tell of storms; I say to her "I was once the rain" she smiles; I stumble across myself falling into what I really am. Is there anybody who can call me a fool without being a fool themselves, is there anybody who could love me and expect to be loved in return? I have been remembered, then forgotten - everybody is but a switch on the minds of others; touch me, perhaps I am broken, I do not know. A medal of bravery for the new world hiding in the bomb craters of stimulated-love affairs. Tomorrow they say it will be different, today is spent waiting, yesterday is forgotten except by those leaving the craters. Yesterday I saw the last bell being dismantled by half-starved choir boys, today I saw a bell pining a white robe to the gutter where it lay. The hospital have disbanded the doctors - I pass them in broken fields attending dying horses. The new bible has already grown old in the torn hands of preachers wearing diamond-studded purple dog collars, which chain them to the pulpit. The jet bombers have become cowards, hit and ruining their pilots while the control towers save the lives of migrating swallows from the fall-out which is about to fall. All the flags and the flags which burned the others have no purpose left to put forward the triumph of thinking that what happened, even if it should not have, even if I do not know why it did, or even, yes this is the hardest, that it never did happen. I know there have been changes; somebody has been making changes, beware the changers; guard your straight lines and your circles; should you have a lover see that there is only two of you in bed and that the floor has no dark footsteps. If you have bomb shelters beware of bombs; if you have bombs his search begins at twelve for shelters, do not worry about the people, they shall die naturally, kill the shelters. If you see spaceships now and then think of yesterday when you laughed at people who did. There is no news today, news is bad, it destroys. Dedicated to the girl from Boundsgreen Fair: When we meet again it will not be under this tower, time will have erased it. We shall stand amongst its ruins talking in whispers, ghosts of what we were will stand sadly to the side. Perhaps amongst the rubble we could search for our laughter; our almost forgotten dreams, perhaps we could if we were not so weary. We might hold hands and walk amongst the dead stones and touch them, caress the things we once loved, see a dead poem which I wrote for you, see it then and know it once lived. "Chestnut green colourride wears a pattern in my life a vision helpless paints the sound of your voice, silent black with tears of silver". I hold your smile while I climb inside you, motionless we became, making statues out of words which became invisible on our lips. Could love ever return to us, wanderer come home to smile on our faces, rest in our hearts, telling us tales of travels? From Ramsay's book "Parade" Let the past lie for us - digging it up shall bury tomorrow. Show me the man who laughs but never cries, he is but half a man whose laughter cries for him. Truth is a river - you must be its banks and its beds. Life the wilderness has many explorers, but there are no maps to show of their knowledge. To have knowledge is to be wise, to know everything is not wisdom for wisdom is infinite to know that is wisdom. Astral travellers from the South One of the best rock bands the world never heard? It sounds like a familiar refrain doesn't it? Just another one of those ¿what if¿ stories by your average ¿60s rock aficionado bent on hyping their favourite obscure band. But in the case of South African acid-rock legends Freedom's Children, there is some justification in the hyperbole. Formed at the height of the hated apartheid era, Freedom's Children swiftly became South Africa's most innovative sons, incomparable to anyone both musically and politically during those turbulent years. Their explorative, sonic excursions pushed the musical envelope and broke down barriers, culminating in the groundbreaking Astra album, arguably one of the era's most overlooked recordings. The problem was no one was listening beyond South Africa. When Freedom's Children tried to establish a profile in England during 1969, the group soon ran into problems. Thanks to British policy on the apartheid system, most of the band's members were refused work permits and could only play gigs illegally. All hope of establishing themselves on the burgeoning London rock scene was thwarted and with it any chance of launching the band on the international stage. Arguably, it might have been an entirely different story if circumstances had been more favourable. At least, that's the view held by one influential person ¿ the band's one-time manager Clive Calder, nowadays one of the most successful men in the international music business thanks to his companies Jive Records, Zomba Music Publishers, Zomba Management and Zomba books. For those who are not familiar with his name, Calder's record label has spawned international hits with Tight Fit, A Flock of Seagulls and Billy Ocean, while his publishing represents the Stiff catalogue, Bruce Springsteen and The Stray Cats. He's also been mastermind behind the careers of Britney Spears and The Backstreet Boys. Calder, however, has never forgotten his South African roots and his work with Freedom's Children. A few years ago, he was quoting, saying the band ¿was then and probably still is today the only South African group that, given the right circumstances in the right geographical location, could have become an internationally successful rock band by just by being themselves and doing what they did.¿ Like all great artists, Freedom's Children's story is littered with its own share of conflicts and disappointments, perhaps more so. But now with the cloak of apartheid lifted and a growing interest among '60s aficionados of the hidden treasures to be found beyond British and American shores, perhaps the brilliance of Freedom's Children's music can finally be appreciated. At the centre of the band's story and the man responsible for providing the creative spark that drove the group through its glory years was poet, songwriter and bass player Ramsay MacKay. One of South Africa's rock geniuses, Ramsay MacKay was actually born in the Scottish Highlands on 15 August 1945. Arriving in South Africa in 1953, aged 7, his family settled in Graskop in the Eastern Transvaal. Taking up bass in his early teens, MacKay's first musical venture was Eshowe, Zululand band, The Stilettos. Changing name to The Beathovens in the early ¿60s, the group became one of the first South African bands to specialise in R&B. ¿I knew this guy whose father was American, he was a missionary,¿ says MacKay from his home near Edinburgh where he records with his latest project, The Fumes. ¿He went back to America for his holidays when I was at boarding school, so I asked him to get me Chuck Berry and any other rhythm ¿n' blues he could find. He brought Bo Diddley, Howlin Wolf, Muddy Waters. I really got to love that music and still do now. We started to play them in this band called The Beathovens and must have been one of the first bands in South Africa to do so¿. From there, MacKay and fellow Beathovens, Angelo Minietti and Gary Demmer moved to Pretoria where they formed a new group, The Lehman Limited in October 1965, alongside future Freedom's Children sideman, keyboard player Nic Martens and self-confessed jazz addict, drummer Colin Pratley (b. 27 June 1946, Springs, South Africa). Both musicians had previously played together in The Navarones, a Johannesburg group formed a year earlier, before going their separate ways in mid-1965. Before forming The Lehman Limited, Pratley also briefly drummed with The Upsetters, another local group led by British expats (and future members of Canadian underground legend, Influence), Andy Keiller and Louis McKelvey (see Ugly Things magazine, issue 20), although Pratley left before that band got round to recording its lone single. The Lehman Limited soon fizzled out and during the summer of 1966, MacKay and Pratley joined forces with another future Freedom's Children member, singer Mick Jade in The Seven Faces, a more experimental project, which despite its name only contained six musicians. Once again, the band proved to be a transitory move. MacKay and Pratley then headed to the coast and Durban. ¿We were living on the beach,¿ remembers MacKay. ¿We were living like bums. We were so close to just being nothing and then became something. It was so amazing what happened really. The chances of us doing it were really small because we came from the outside. We were still country hicks in the big city, well especially I was, having been brought up in the Eastern Transvaal and Zululand. We were living in the beach hut and sleeping in schools. We survived on our wits. I don't know how long it lasted for, I can't remember. I don't know how long we could have gone on but then we met Kenny. He was already quite well known.¿ The Kenny in question was future South African guitar legend, the late Ken E Henson (b. 28 March 1947, Durban) who had recently tasted some success with (no relation) The Leemen Limited. An established local act, The Leemen Limited's recording legacy comprised two singles for Trutone's Continental label ¿ a cover of The Rolling Stones' ¿Under My Thumb¿ and Wilson Pickett and Steve Cropper's ¿In The Midnight Hour¿. Henson was intrigued by MacKay and Pratley's musical ideas and in December 1966 he introduced his former pal from The Leemen Limited, blues singer and James Brown fanatic, Jimmy Thompson (b. Demetrius Thomopoulos, Greece), to contribute keyboards and vibes. Together the musicians created a new revolutionary group that drew its inspiration from The Mothers of Invention's ¿freak-outs¿. South Africa had never seen anything like it. As MacKay explains, it was Henson who came up the band's reactionary name. In a conversation with the bass player, Henson made a reference to ¿freedom's sweet¿, after which MacKay added ¿children¿ and henceforth the band became known as Freedom's Children. ¿It was a combined effort,¿ confirmed Henson, from his Durban home in 2006, on the genesis of the band's name. ¿I said, ¿We should call it, Freedom's Sweet' and I think there was a British blues band around that time with the name so Ramsay said, ¿What about ¿Freedom's Children?'¿ It was certainly a bold move considering the political climate at the time and was the first in a series of provocative moves that stoked the authorities' ire. ¿You don't call yourself Freedom's Children in South Africa without a good reason,¿ says MacKay. ¿We were banned on most radio. Freedom's Children meant something back then.¿ ¿The name was deliberate,¿ adds Pratley. ¿It was an expression of what we wanted to do with our music. The music [at the time] was very commercial and it had to be that way. There were a lot of good musicians but they weren't taking any chances, so we took the chances.¿ Initially, the band found work at the Le Macabre nightclub, housed in Durban's Butterworth Hotel, playing standard R&B numbers. Then in March 1967, the group announced that it would be holding a ¿freak-out¿ there, starting on Saturday, 4 March. As a way of attracting people to the happening, MacKay wrote an article for Durban's Natal Mercury, which was featured on the paper's Wednesday ¿In Set¿ teen page three days before the event. The publicity describes Pratley as ¿a demon on the drums¿[who] has instincts of barbaric savagery in his bass pedal actions. This often results in broken drums and loss of drummer while he takes a trip on a freak-out.¿ Demetrius meanwhile ¿plays vibes, piano and also shines at ¿Scotland the brave' on organ. He dabbles in drama, has a yen to be an actor, reads Shakespeare and does a tidy bit of dancing on stage.¿ It then goes on to describe Henson as ¿a torturer¿of the guitar. He will go to any lengths to create weird sounds¿ and ¿paints vocal pictures of fairy tales and solitary men.¿ As for MacKay, he is described as ¿a poet and owner of weird thoughts. Quote: We stand in corridors of time watching the processions of paper banner gods. Freedom is commercialised you can buy it¿pay with death.¿ Both Henson and MacKay are credited for writing most of the group's compositions, like the aptly titled, ¿Journey For Lost Souls¿. As for the ¿freak-outs¿ themselves, the paper's reporter warns the public that, ¿the boys will be playing their wildest music. The name for it is ¿psychedelic music' because it is accompanied by flashing lights, numerous voices gabbling in foreign languages, a simultaneous film show and anything else that will contribute to the chaos.¿ He then goes on to say, rather ominously, that the happening would not go on all evening because, ¿apparently, human nature just couldn't stand it. But it will take up half an hour¿and the boys will challenge anyone to stay watching longer than 20 minutes.¿ For MacKay, Le Macabre represented a high water mark in the group's musical development and was where Freedom's Children's music was at its most experimental, most original and strangest. ¿We played to pre-recorded sound effect tapes,¿ he points out. ¿The show incorporated films, jelly projectors, dry ice and white sheets around the total area, including the audience so that the audience and the band was one thing, it was a happening.¿ According to MacKay, the band's use of strobe lights was possibly the first time they had been used outside California. ¿It was not bought. It was home-made and involved a guy who was almost part of the band actually twirling contacts on an open board mechanically to achieve the strobe effect, at some personal risks,¿ he explains. ¿Due to the strobe lights and the intensity of volume people had epileptic fits. At this period in time, nobody knew that strobe lights gave people epileptic fits. This is how the band became notorious, because of society, the press, the police and even the Mayor of Durban who all tried to suppress what they thought was happening ¿ that we were brainwashing the youth.¿ So intense were the shows that some people ended up being hospitalised. When it became clear that the strobe lights were causing epileptic fits, the band was forced to put warning signs up, as MacKay explains. ¿It became known as having a ¿frothy' and was quite a cultural event as people started having ¿frothies' without being epileptic, but probably just stoned.¿ While playing at Le Macabre one night, representatives from the South African Broadcasting Corporation dropped by (unofficially) and captured one of the band's ¿freakouts¿ for posterity. ¿When we were doing the freakouts, two guys from the SABC came and privately recorded us with this tape recorder and they took us back to the SABC and played it to us,¿ remembers MacKay. ¿Man, it really blew my little mind. I don't know what happened to that tape. I didn't even think to ask for a copy.¿ Soon afterwards, Freedom's Children found work at another Durban club, Tiles where they played for a few weeks before moving on to the Scene 70. However, while the band clearly reveled in upsetting the establishment, its first record label, Troubadour, wasn't prepared to take the same risks, and according to MacKay was so scared of getting into trouble that it issued the group's early recordings under the name, Fleadom's Children. (Producer Billy Forrest later explained that the label was forced to change the name because government-funded radio stations refused to play their singles as Freedom's Children.) Troubadour had signed Freedom's Children in the summer of 1967 and hooked the group up with Forrest, who, at the time, was South Africa's most successful male pop artist. However, Freedom's Children's line up had recently undergone a radical shake up with two new members joining the ranks to replace Jimmy Thompson, who left after a dispute to concentrate on running his own Greek restaurant. To start with, the band added lead singer and electric pianist Craig Ross (b. 27 January 1946, Durban) from local band, The Gonks. Initially starting out as a drummer with another Durban band, The Clansmen in 1963, Ross found himself lead singer by default one night when the band's vocalist got food poisoning and was unable to perform. An instant success with fans and band alike, he gave up drumming to specialise in singing and in 1965 formed The Gonks, appearing on the singles, ¿You Can't Stop Me Loving You¿, ¿Nobody But Me¿ and ¿Hard Lovin¿. Freedom's Children also decided to take on board a second lead guitarist in the form of Julian Laxton (b. 17 July 1944, Johannesburg). A prodigious talent, Laxton had started playing guitar at an early age, inspired, the legend goes, by American country guitarist/singer Merle Travis, who visited South Africa in the ¿50s and stayed with the Laxton family. Equally adept on the drums, Laxton began his career in the early '60s playing guitar with local bands, The Commanchees and The Avantis before moving to Durban to work with The Nevadas during 1962-1963. While there he helped piece together The Five of Them, who played professionally at Claridges Hotel. Shortening their name to Them, the group recorded two singles for EMI's Parlophone label, ¿I Want To Be Rich¿ and ¿One Time Too Many¿ and then travelled to Johannesburg in late 1965. On arrival, Laxton ran into aspiring folk singers Mel Miller and Mel Green, who were in the process of recording their debut album. A mutual friend of the duo, David Sapire, suggested that they add a lead guitarist to ¿improve their sound¿ and duly recommended his brother ¿ Julian Laxton! The re-named Mel, Mel and Julian recorded three albums for CBS before Laxton got itchy feet to play rock music again and took up the offer to join Freedom's Children. As Henson recalls, ¿We started playing on that whole dual guitar thing. We were doing a lot of Yardbirds, Cream and Hendrix covers at that point as well. That was before Ramsay started writing prolifically.¿ With Forrest handling production duties, Freedom's Children entered the studios that summer and proceeded to lay down four tracks in one session. Understandably, the label went with what it thought were the two strongest cuts for the band's debut single, issued towards the end of 1967. On the a-side was a raw cover of Tony Colton and Ray Smith's ¿The Coffee Song¿, which Cream had also recorded, initially for inclusion on their debut album Fresh Cream. Nestled on the flip, meanwhile, was the band's tribute to The Rolling Stones, a bristling version of ¿Satisfaction¿ with a heavy guitar work out courtesy of Laxton and Henson. A rare outing at the time, the single is now almost impossible to find but fortunately both sides have recently turned up as bonus tracks on Fresh Music's digitally remastered Astra CD. Aficionados of the band, however, are still waiting to hear the two remaining tracks from that session, which were duly rounded up for the group's second Troubadour single, issued a few months later. Credited again to Fleadom's Children, the single comprises an outstanding version of The Yardbirds' ¿Mr, You're A Better Man Than I¿ (composed, incidentally, by Mike Hugg of fellow South African, Manfred Mann's group) backed by a cover of The Fleur De Lys' ¿Mud In Your Eye¿. While the a-side was a relatively well known number (and later covered by dozens of bands, most notably The Sons of Adam in California), the flip seemed an unusual choice, especially as The Fleur De Lys were hardly household names. According to South African rock journalist Tertius Louw, the connection was probably made through Forrest, who'd recorded a cover of Gordon Haskell's ¿Lazy Life¿ as a single using the pseudonym Quentin E Klopjager. Henson provided the guitar on the recording, which also saw backing from The Gonks. The Fleur De Lys of course often supported South African singer Sharon Tandy who was resident in London during the mid-¿60s and knew Forrest well. By this point, the band had moved on from Durban's Scene 70 and travelled to Johannesburg to play the 505 Club where, according to MacKay, they worked for over a year, playing six nights a week. ¿[505] was the big gig,¿ adds Pratley. ¿Everyone needed to play there. It was an underground club in Hillbrow, which was a very cosmopolitan area.¿ Drugs had started to enter the picture and later became as inseparable from the band's music as the politics ¿ grass, black bombs, purple hearts, LSD, were all essential ingredients in creating the band's music. Nevertheless, MacKay is quick to put the band's drug use into context. ¿Something subliminal happened to kids in the ¿50s and ¿60s that was precursor to the drugs,¿ he explains. ¿Drugs was not just about drugs. In the beginning Freedom's Children took no drugs [and] what we saw on the drugs was what we were aware of anyway¿that the world was (and still is) run by squares who relied on fear and authority to stifle any way of seeing the world differently. ¿The ¿60s drug scene is much more related to people who took drugs in the 19th century, starting with the Romantic Movement in poetry and thinking and moving on to the Symbolists in France ¿ people such as Verlaine, Rimbaud and Bauderlaire,¿ he continues. ¿One cannot understand the ¿60s without knowing that drugs only played a part in what was naturally coming out of our brains. Drugs made a metaphor of which the reality was already in that generation.¿ While the group was forging ahead into new musical territory, behind the scenes one of Freedom Children's founding members was on the way out. ¿I was with the band for about 18 months and had to leave due to domestic problems,¿ explains Henson looking back on his sudden departure in spring ¿68. After a brief respite, Henson signed up with beat group, The Bats for a six-week stint and then formed the jazz group, The Sounds. ¿I was going to stay with [The Bats] permanently,¿ he says. ¿But they already asked Pete Clifford to join and he arrived back from England.¿ It didn't matter, by 1969 Henson had put together a much more ambitious project, South Africa's second legendary band, Abstract Truth (who deserve a feature in themselves). Eschewing the two-guitar approach, Freedom's Children duly recruited 19-year-old Marc Poulos (aka Harry Poulos) on organ and vocals. A hugely gifted multi-instrumentalist, Harry Poulos had played in a number of Durban bands during the early ¿60s before turning professional and teaming up with Four Jacks and a Jill (formerly The Zombies) in May 1966. During his time with the band, he added keyboards to the single ¿House With The White Washed Gables¿. The group's poppy sound, however, proved too restricting for such an imaginative and versatile musician and in June 1967, Poulos left to form Little People, who backed soul singer Una Valli at the Club Nine Eyes. When Little People folded, Poulos briefly found work with the band Privilege. Freedom's Children stayed on in Johannesburg and recorded the Harold Spiro/Phil Waldman composition, ¿Little Games¿, which had been covered in the UK by The Yardbirds the previous year, with new producer John Nowell. The track would resurface in April 1968 as the b-side of Freedom's Children's debut single for EMI subsidiary, Parlophone Records. (It has also been included on Fresh Music's remastered Astra CD). While ¿Little Games¿ was a competent enough performance, it was hardly representative of the band's rapidly evolving sound. To see where Freedom's Children were heading, listeners had to flip the record over to hear Ramsay MacKay and Harry Poulos' ¿Kafkasque¿, one of the first songs that turned up on Freedom's Children's debut album, Battle Hymn of the Broken Horde, released later that year. By the time the single had reached the shops, however, Craig Ross had split from the group, his girlfriend having given him a ¿me or the band¿ ultimatum. Dropping out of the scene for a while, he would resurface in later years with the progressive rock band, The Third Eye. Today he lives in Durban and designs kitchens (and occasionally sings in clubs). ¿Craig was a good singer and performer,¿ says MacKay of his former colleague, ¿and the band took up a more rock ¿n' pop ¿n' soul kind of sound. This was quite a bit different from our psychedelic beginnings. We also had two guitars so it was a much denser sound. The people who followed the band at this time began calling us ¿Freedoms' and as far as I know they still do. ¿At that time we were playing 4 x 45 minute sets six nights a week for months on end. It became a way of life. You've got four hours a night to work on it. It's a lot different from playing one 40 minute show every now and then¿. Soon after Ross's departure Laxton and the band parted. With the guitarist joining The Crystal Drive, Freedom's Children now consisted of Ramsay MacKay, Colin Pratley, Harry Poulos and seasoned jazz musician Mike Faure on saxophone. The new set up, however, was short lived and the band then effectively split into two camps with Poulos and Faure finding work with The Laughing Convention. ¿We actually left the band because we got tired of it,¿ explains MacKay. ¿We weren't happy with the sax player and the organ. [Also] it was getting very heavy with the politics. We looked pretty radical for the time and got searched all the time. We just wanted to play somewhere we didn't have to worry about all that.¿ With this thought in mind, MacKay and Pratley made plans to relocate to London that summer and establish a new version of Freedom's Children overseas. Before setting off for England in July, the pair started recording tracks with John Nowell, ¿a strange guy¿ according to MacKay, who, together with executives at EMI, would raise eyebrows a few months later over the handling of the Battle Hymn of the Broken Hearted Horde album. From the outset, MacKay and Pratley found themselves at loggerheads with the producer and only got as far as recording the backing tracks with help from former Dusty Springfield guitarist Pete Clifford and keyboard player Nic Martens (fresh from a stint with The Neil McDermott Group). MacKay, who'd written most of the songs for the project on his own or with Poulos, also found time to record the talking parts between the tracks. Soon afterwards, ¿we came to London and sort of forgot about it,¿ he admits. Colin Pratley picks up the story. ¿We recorded some tracks and we told EMI in South Africa that we were going (to England) and there was no way we were going to wait around. We never got to hear the finished product until the album had been sent to England.¿ In their absence, Nowell, following EMI's instructions, set to work putting the final touches to the album, changing words here and there on some songs and also adding brass to several tracks. EMI also made the controversial decision to place two Pepsi promotions on the end of each side of the album. ¿I think the record company said something about ¿Well, we've got to get promotion to pay for it because we won't pay for the cover,¿ says MacKay. ¿I don't think I knew that they were actually going to put it on the record. I don't know how we came to record Battle Hymn. We were about to leave for London and found ourselves laying down tracks for a record. Freedom's Children then consisted of Colin Pratley and I. As it did in the beginning.¿ Since no vocals had been laid down before MacKay and Pratley's departure, EMI also instructed Nowell to bring in several singers to complete the tracks. Steve Trend was one of the singers hired, while female backing vocals were provided courtesy of Stevie Van Kerken. The remaining tracks featured former It's a Secret lead singer Dennis Robertson and some other singers, one of whom MacKay thinks might be Peter Vee but the other remains unknown. With all this fiddling, one could be forgiven in thinking that the whole project might have ended up an unmitigated disaster. But even with its obvious flaws, Battle Hymn of The Broken Hearted Horde stands up surprisingly well even if isn't what MacKay and Pratley had initially envisaged. Looking back, MacKay describes the album as a ghost because neither he nor Pratley were present to oversee the making of the album. ¿On some tracks we are not playing at all. On others we left very basic tracks and no guide vocals. Some of the songs are very different to what was planned. The fact is we recorded an album but we were not there. The whole thing was really put together by John Nowell. It's sort of accurate to how things had become in South Africa for us... very confused. We had to move on and take quite a chance by going to London. It was very heavy back then. We had had enough. It's a pity about Battle Hymn. That we were not there¿. On listening to the album today, Battle Hymn of The Broken Horde sounds remarkably fresh and contains some beautiful period music, which ranges from hard rock workouts like ¿Judas Queen¿ and ¿Eclipse¿ to more pastoral pieces like ¿Season¿ and ¿Boundsgreen Fair¿. The album's eventual release in spring 1969 went virtually unnoticed, as did a new single, which coupled ¿Judas Queen¿ with the non-LP and ultra rare track ¿Fare-Thee-Well¿. Perhaps this wasn't such a surprise bearing in mind that Freedom's Children were no longer an active unit on the South African music scene. Over in England, Ramsay MacKay and Colin Pratley decided to continue with the Freedom's Children name and, after finding their feet, decided to bury the hatchet with Laxton and also encouraged Poulos to rejoin. The former members left their respective groups and flew to London that September to stay at MacKay and Pratley's digs in West Kensington. As MacKay points out, it was not a particularly good time to be a South African in the UK. The musicians came up against a lot of prejudice during their stay, which must have seen quite ironic in light of the band's anti-apartheid stance back home. More problematic was the difficulty in getting work. Because most of the band couldn't gain work permits, Freedom's Children were unable to get consistent gigs and had to work illegally. Nevertheless, one early performance found the group opening for Pink Floyd at the Country Club in Belsize Park on 6 October. ¿All I remember about Pink Floyd is seeing Roger Waters' tonsils as he screamed ¿Careful with the axe Eugene',¿ says MacKay. What he does vividly remember is an audition to back American soul singer Geno Washington at London's famous jazz club, Ronnie Scott's. ¿He was just telling us, ¿play funky man, play funky'. He had a bottle of whisky and a roast chicken, I remember this clearly. He was telling us to play funky and we were this acid-freak group. We were looking at each thinking, ¿What the hell is funky?' I think that the singer's manager gave us our taxi fare home.¿ In the early months of 1969, the band received some rare publicity when US trade magazine Billboard ran a brief article on EMI South Africa in its 1 March issue. ¿The Freedom's Children project is one of the most ambitious to be undertaken by a local group,¿ the review said. ¿The album revolves around a central theme and each track is introduced by spoken verse.¿ The snippet added that the album was being released in the UK where Freedom's Children are now appearing. Indeed, by the time the magazine appeared, Freedom's Children had picked up further sporadic gigs, including another show at the Country Club in Belsize Park on 6 April with Van Der Graaf Generator. ¿I remember [them] coming up to us after we played and saying they liked our sound as it was different,¿ remembers MacKay. The show, however, proved to be one of Pratley's last with the band. Faced with visa problems, the drummer begrudgingly returned to South Africa leaving the others to draft in a succession of inferior replacements ¿ three Englishmen, including a one-eyed drummer from Liverpool, and 19-year-old South African Terry Acres, who today owns Prosound, a huge sounds systems company in South Africa. ¿Colin was a very good drummer,¿ says MacKay on the dilemma of replacing such an integral member. ¿He had a certain style, a way of playing so it was very hard to find someone to play like him.¿ Acres was hardly a stranger to the band having taken drumming lessons from Pratley in Springs during the mid ¿60s and also followed Freedom's Children during its early days. He had left South Africa during 1969 with the intention of studying in the UK when he crossed paths with the group again. ¿In London Julian knew a mutual acquaintance in John Kongos. That's where we caught up and they needed a drummer,¿ he recalls. ¿I was only with them for a few months and probably only because I had a brand new premier drum kit. Certainly my drumming talents were not up to the band's standards.¿ With Acres on board, the remaining musicians, joined by English flautist Robin Clapham who was also a member during this period, recorded a demo for EMI in a studio around Tottenham Court Road. Those recordings offer a tantalising glimpse of the band's next project. ¿We recorded this one 15-minute piece of music, which probably had a couple of songs in it but we played it as one thing,¿ says MacKay. ¿Some of these [songs] were re-recorded when we got back to South Africa and became part of Astra.¿ Julian Laxton went further in explaining the genesis of the album in an interview with Raymond Joseph in 2004. ¿We had lots of time to practice,¿ he recalled. ¿¿I had invented a gizmo, which was the beginning of my black box [a modified echo box]. ¿I got some interest from a company that was keen to develop it further and produce a prototype. In return they gave us a place to stay and some music equipment, which is how we came to start working on Astra. It took about eight months of experimenting and hard practice to get it right.¿ By the end of 1969, Freedom's Children had acquired a manager, a shady ¿Mafia type¿ character who put the band up in a flat above a nightclub in Dunstable, a commuter town some forty miles north west of London. ¿We did do quite a few gigs actually but in weird places,¿ remembers MacKay. ¿Places that you wouldn't put a rock ¿n' roll band. It was like he didn't know. He was going on about trying to break into rock ¿n' roll but he didn't know what it was.¿ It was through the manager, however, that the group came into contact with South African singer Emil Dean Zoghby, who was resident in the UK at the time and later wrote the music for, and played in, the rock opera, Catch My Soul. MacKay has clear memories of the singer dropping in to see the band at rehearsals to offer encouragement and feedback on the songs. During the band's countryside retreat that winter, MacKay also remembers the musicians dropping acid together. For the sensitive Harry Poulos, the trip appears to have been a turning point and MacKay describes his colleague a changed man after the experience. ¿Acid back then was very strong ¿ it was quite an unsettling experience,¿ he explains. ¿South Africa is an extreme country because of the total cruelty and then everyone normalises it. That could drive you crazy on its own, and if you took acid on top of it¿¿ When the musicians returned to Cape Town by boat in early 1970, Harry Poulos' erratic behaviour became a cause for concern. Soon afterwards, the troubled musician abandoned the group, and following a brief stint with former member, Ken E Henson's Abstract Truth, he joined The Otis Waygood Blues Band, assisting with the albums Otis Waygood and Ten Light Claps and A Scream. Events sadly took a tragic turn when Poulos died after jumping off a building, another casualty of the psychedelic era. The enigmatic musician was always going to be difficult to replace but fortunately Freedom's Children came up trumps with the late Brian Davidson, an amazing singer, who according to Laxton was a bit like Robert Plant in that he used his voice like a musical instrument. Recruited from soul band Coloured Rain during a talent-scouting mission in Cape Town, Davidson's powerful voice was the perfect mouthpiece for the band's astral rock. (In an interesting aside, Brian Davidson and Colin Pratley are rumoured to have collaborated on an album with Pete Clifford in 1969 called King of The Axe-Grown Maker under the name Grunganc Flerc.) With Pratley back in the group's ranks (following a brief stint in The Third Eye alongside Craig Ross), it was time to get down to business. Catching a flight from Cape Town to Johannesburg, the band went immediately from the airport to see Clive Calder, formerly a bass player with local bands, Birds of a Feather and Calder's Collection among others, but at the time working as an A&R man for EMI. ¿I took my suitcase, and it had all my writing, all of my songs on tape that I had done in London,¿ recalls MacKay on the personal disaster that unfolded. ¿I left the suitcase in the office as he wanted to show me the studio and when we came back it was gone. It really hit me hard. I lost all of these songs, so I had to start from the beginning again.¿ Fortunately, some of the material that MacKay had written in England ¿ ¿The Homecoming¿, ¿The Kid He Came From Nazareth¿, ¿Tribal Fence¿ and ¿Medals of Bravery¿ were already well rehearsed and fully arranged, and it didn't take long for Davidson and Pratley to learn their parts. Abetted by Calder as executive producer and part-time member Nic Martens, who was invited to engineer the album, Freedom's Children entered EMI's Johannesburg studio that spring and began work on Astra. The story of Astra and the band's final album Galactic Vibes can be found in the liner notes of both reissued releases, available via Fresh Music. © Nick Warburton, 2006. Updated June 2007. This is an edited version of Nick Warburton's article that originally appeared in Ugly Things magazine in its summer 2007 issue. www.vinylkiosk.com


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