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Blossom Toes

About Me

They never had any commercial success in the U.K. or the U.S., but Blossom Toes was one of the more interesting British psychedelic groups of the late '60s. Starting as the Ingoes, just another of thousands of British R&B/beat bands of the mid-'60s, the group hooked up with legendary impresario Giorgio Gomelsky (early mentor of the Stones and manager of the Yardbirds and Soft Machine, among others) in 1966. Gomelsky changed their name and put them on his Marmalade label. Their 1967 debut LP was miles away from R&B, reflecting an extremely British whimsy and skilled, idiosyncratic songwriting more in line with Ray Davies. After some personnel changes, the group released their second (and final) album a couple years later. Another extremely accomplished work, it was markedly different in character than their first effort, showing a far more sober tone and heavier, guitar-oriented approach. The group broke up at the end of the decade; members Brian Godding and Brian Belshaw formed the equally obscure B.B. Blunder, and Godding became active on the fringes of the British experimental rock scene. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 26/12/2005
Influences: The Beatles, the Kinks, the Who, the Move, early Pink Floyd, the Yardbirds
Sounds Like: Pink Floyd (Syd Barrett-era only), the Beatles, the Kinks, the Move, Tomorrow, the Who, the Creation, the Yardbirds, the Rolling Stones (circa 1967), the Pretty Things, Art, Elmer Gantry's Velvet Opera, the Small Faces, the Smoke, Fire, the Idle Race, the Herd, the Syn, the Attack, Skip Bifferty, Simon Dupree and the Big Sound, the End, Orange Bicycle, Apple, Turquoise, July, Dantalions Chariot, Wimple Winch, Jason Crest, Nirvana (the UK 60s psych band), Rainbow Ffolly, Les Fleur De Lys, Floribunda Rose, the Tages, the Outsiders, 49th Parallel, the James Taylor Move, the Twilights
Type of Label: Major

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