Classic Rock

Psychic TV

Reissues sacRed Bones

- david stubbs

Reissues of Genesis P-Orridge’s post-Throbbing Gristle outfit.

Initially revolving around the core of Genesis P-Orridge and Alternativ­e TV’s Alex ‘no, not that one’ Fergusson, Psychic TV moved away from the sonic extremism of Throbbing Gristle in a more song structured direction, although deeply subversive intentions always lurked at their core.

Pagan Day feels like an attempt to revisit the strange gardens of the late 1960s, not very fashionabl­e in 1984 – a lo-fi, bucolic, hazily psychedeli­c cover of Pearls Before Swine’s Translucen­t Carriages particular­ly feels like it’s channeling the spirit of Syd Barrett. These are winsomely fragile, tentative affairs, which would later evolve in a live setting. Baby’s Gone Away, which sounds like a Velvet Undergroun­d pastiche, is here sketched on guitar and organ, demo-style.

By the time of 1988’s Allegory And Self, neo-psychedeli­a was increasing­ly the rage. Godstar celebrates the Rolling Stones’ Brian Jones, whose death in 1969 makes him a symbol of a decade forever gone, a creature of a spirit world. Elsewhere, on She Was Surprised and Ballet Disco, Psychic TV venture tentativel­y into the reams of acid-style electronic­s, as if to note that the times were coming full circle and an old English countercul­ture was rising again.

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