Side Trips
Side Trips is the debut studio album by Kaleidoscope, an American psychedelic folk rock band formed in the San Gabriel Valley area of California in 1966. Released in 1967 by Epic Records, it showcases the group's eclectic sound through a fusion of acid rock, folk, blues, jug band elements, and Middle Eastern musical influences, enabled by their use of unconventional instruments such as the oud, saz, bouzouki, dulcimer, and fiddle.[1][2] The band, comprising multi-instrumentalists David Lindley (guitar, banjo, vocals), Chris Darrow (fiddle, guitar, mandolin), Solomon Feldthouse (oud, saz, bouzouki, vocals), Chester Crill (keyboards, autoharp, vocals), and John Vidican (drums, doumbek), drew from diverse traditions to create a raw, experimental vibe reflective of the era's counterculture scene.[1] Kaleidoscope gained local notoriety performing at venues like the Fillmore Auditorium, Avalon Ballroom, and Ash Grove, often enhancing their sets with flamenco dancers and belly dancers to complement their worldly instrumentation.[1] Spanning a concise 26 minutes, Side Trips includes ten tracks blending originals and covers, such as the instrumental opener "Egyptian Gardens," the traditional "Hesitation Blues," the psychedelic "Pulsating Dream," and a bluesy take on Cab Calloway's "Minnie the Moocher."[2] The album's production captures the band's live energy, with layered arrangements that shift unpredictably between Eastern scales, ragtime flourishes, and folk harmonies, making it a standout example of 1960s musical experimentation.[1] Reissued on vinyl by Sundazed Music in later years, Side Trips has endured as a cult classic among fans of psychedelic and roots music for its boundary-pushing diversity.[1]Album Development and Context
Band Formation and Early History
Kaleidoscope formed in 1966 in the San Gabriel Valley area of Los Angeles, California, emerging from the vibrant local folk and jug band scene of the mid-1960s. The band was formed by multi-instrumentalists David Lindley and Solomon Feldthouse, who had been performing as a duo influenced by folk and jug band traditions. Lindley was skilled on banjo, fiddle, mandolin, and guitar, while Feldthouse contributed vocals and exotic instruments such as the saz, bouzouki, and dulcimer. They were soon joined by bassist and keyboardist Chester Crill (also known as Max Buda) and drummer John Vidican. This core lineup reflected the band's initial roots in acoustic folk-blues traditions, with Lindley and Chris Darrow—whom they recruited later—having previously collaborated in informal string bands influenced by American roots music.[3][4][5] From its inception, Kaleidoscope began evolving beyond conventional folk-blues into psychedelic experimentation, blending elements of the folk revival with blues structures and the emerging West Coast psych sound. Influences included jug band styles, country, and Eastern musical motifs, which Feldthouse in particular brought through his use of non-Western instruments, adding an eclectic, world-music dimension to their sound. The band's "leaderless" approach, as described by Darrow, encouraged collaborative improvisation and genre fusion, setting them apart in the competitive LA music landscape. This transitional phase marked their shift from acoustic sessions to more electric, exploratory performances that foreshadowed the psychedelic folk style of their debut album.[3][6][5] Kaleidoscope quickly established a presence through early gigs in Los Angeles clubs, where they honed their improvisational sets often featuring extended jams and unconventional elements like accompanying dancers. These performances along the Pacific coast, including venues in Southern California, helped build an underground following amid the psych scene's rise. By late 1966, after recording and submitting demo tapes that showcased their unique blend of folk, blues, and psychedelia, the band signed with Epic Records under manager Michael Goldburg, securing a deal that led to the release of their single "Please"/"Elevator Man" and their full-length debut.[3][4][6]Conception and Pre-Production
The conception of Side Trips emerged from Kaleidoscope's desire to create an album that served as a metaphorical "side trip," venturing into unexpected musical territories and reflecting the exploratory spirit of the mid-1960s. Guitarist Chris Darrow proposed the title, noting that "'Trip' was a big word at that time," capturing the psychedelic and countercultural connotations of altered states and personal discovery prevalent in the era's youth movement. This vision aligned with the band's free-form, boundary-pushing ethos, influenced by the burgeoning 1960s counterculture and the anticipation of the 1967 Summer of Love, which encouraged artistic experimentation and rejection of conventional boundaries.[7][3] The album's eclectic concept blended American folk traditions, blues roots, psychedelic improvisation, and Middle Eastern sonorities, allowing the group—comprising multi-instrumentalists such as David Lindley—to weave diverse influences into a cohesive yet unpredictable whole. Song selection emphasized this diversity, incorporating originals that highlighted innovative textures alongside reinterpretations of earlier works to fit the band's experimental palette. For instance, the original "Egyptian Gardens" showcased their pioneering use of Arabic scales and exotic stringed instruments, evoking Eastern mysticism within a psychedelic framework, while "Please" addressed social concerns like the Vietnam War through folk-protest leanings.[8][3] Covers were chosen to bridge historical and contemporary sounds, such as the traditional "Hesitation Blues," originally popularized by Charlie Poole in the 1920s, reimagined with bluesy introspection, and "Minnie the Moocher," Cab Calloway's 1931 jazz standard, transformed into a playful, vaudeville-infused romp. Pre-production in late 1966 focused on intensive rehearsals and initial demos to refine this fusion, culminating in the December release of the single "Please" backed with "Elevator Man," which tested the band's live-oriented approach and world music integrations before full studio commitment. These preparations underscored Kaleidoscope's leaderless structure, where collective input drove the album's innovative, genre-defying preparations.[2][9][8]Recording and Production
Studio Sessions
The recording sessions for Side Trips took place at Columbia Studios in Los Angeles, a CBS facility featuring a large room with high ceilings, from November to December 1966 in preparation for the album's 1967 release.[3] The process unfolded over an intensive period of several weeks, focusing on capturing the band's live energy through basic tracks recorded in a straightforward manner that mirrored their stage performances.[3] This approach was notable in the raw, psychedelic recording era, where the group laid down multi-layered arrangements with minimal intervention, producing seven songs in their initial session alone.[3] Key challenges arose from the band's limited prior studio experience and the low-budget production constraints, particularly in coordinating their array of exotic instruments—such as oud, dulcimer, and violin—and incorporating improvisational elements into structured takes.[3] These hurdles were compounded by the need to balance the group's eclectic lineup, including electric bass and guitar, within the era's emerging eight-track technology.[10] However, breakthroughs occurred during overdub sessions, where the musicians successfully integrated folk traditions with Eastern motifs, enhancing the album's diverse sonic palette.[3] Produced by Barry Friedman, the sessions resulted in 10 tracks with a total runtime of approximately 26 minutes, underscoring the album's emphasis on concise, varied compositions that showcased the band's experimental spirit.[11]Key Personnel and Techniques
The production of Side Trips was overseen by Barry Friedman, known professionally as Frazier Mohawk, who played a key role in facilitating the band's creative process and encouraging their experimental approach to fusing diverse musical elements.[2] Mike Goldberg served as production supervisor, guiding the sessions held at Columbia Studios in Los Angeles, where the team employed early eight-track multi-tracking—a standard 1960s technique at the time—to effectively blend acoustic and electric instrumentation while capturing the group's live energy in a limited timeframe of just eight hours for seven tracks.[12] Engineering efforts emphasized live-room recording to maintain an organic, improvisational feel, with minimal post-production editing to preserve the raw performances honed through extensive rehearsals.[12] Techniques such as direct injection were applied to string instruments for clearer signal capture, while reverb was used sparingly to enhance the psychedelic atmosphere without overpowering the natural sound.[12] Liner notes for the album were provided by Arnold Shaw, who contextualized the project's innovative spirit and the band's multi-instrumental versatility in the original Epic Records release.[2]Musical Style and Content
Instrumentation and Arrangements
The core instrumentation of Side Trips features a standard rock lineup of electric and acoustic guitars, bass, and drums, augmented by an eclectic array of folk and world instruments that reflect the band's multi-instrumentalist approach.[2] Bassist Chris Darrow handled bass duties, while guitarist David Lindley contributed guitar alongside additional acoustic elements; drummer John Vidican provided rhythmic foundation with occasional doumbek for exotic flair.[13] The sound is extended significantly by multi-instrumentalists David Lindley and Solomon Feldthouse, who played banjo, fiddle, mandolin, dobro, saz, bouzouki, dulcimer, and veena, creating a rich tapestry of textures drawn from American folk, jug-band, and Middle Eastern traditions.[2] Arrangements on the album emphasize a layered folk-rock foundation with psychedelic edges, incorporating jug-band rhythms and Eastern modal scales to produce a distinctive "melting pot" sonic identity.[13] Band members frequently switched instruments during recording, fostering dynamic shifts and improvisational feel that set Side Trips apart from the more guitar-driven psychedelia of 1967 contemporaries like Jefferson Airplane or the Grateful Dead.[1] For instance, the track "Egyptian Gardens" employs Middle Eastern drones via saz and doumbek, blending them with acoustic strums and subtle electric swells to evoke an otherworldly atmosphere.[2] The album maintains a predominantly acoustic-driven balance, prioritizing fiddles, banjos, and mandolins for its folk core, while electric guitars and effects add psychedelic accents without overpowering the organic ensemble sound.[13] This hybrid approach underscores the band's experimental ethos, yielding arrangements that fuse rustic Americana with global influences in a concise, 26-minute runtime.[1]Song Structures and Influences
The songwriting on Side Trips was primarily collaborative, with guitarist Chris Darrow contributing approximately two-thirds of the original material, drawing from his earlier compositions and adapting them for the band's eclectic sound, while multi-instrumentalists David Lindley and Solomon Feldthouse co-wrote several tracks alongside other band members.[12] This process emphasized a leaderless, democratic approach, where originals like "Keep Your Mind Open" emerged directly from band discussions, often starting as live jams before refinement in the studio.[3] Covers, such as traditional folk and blues numbers, were reinterpreted with psychedelic flourishes, incorporating extended improvisations that twisted conventional verse-chorus forms into more fluid, exploratory structures.[12] The album's structures frequently employed modal scales and non-Western rhythms, reflecting Feldthouse's Turkish-Jewish heritage and his integration of Arabic and Middle Eastern elements, such as odd time signatures in 7/8 or 9/8, which added an exotic, hypnotic layer to tracks blending country-folk with saloon-style blues.[12] Themes of travel and movement, as in Darrow's "Pulsating Dream" (originally "Move on Down the Line"), evoked a sense of wandering and transition, while "Hesitation Blues" explored uncertainty and pause amid life's journeys.[3] Open-mindedness and subtle anti-war undertones permeated the lyrics, particularly in "Keep Your Mind Open," a somber protest against the Vietnam War that urged tolerance and reflection in turbulent times.[12] Influences spanned American roots music, including blues and Appalachian folk akin to the Byrds' folk-rock innovations, jug band traditions, and vaudeville energy reminiscent of Cab Calloway's jump blues, all fused with emerging psychedelic edges similar to the Velvet Underground's experimental feedback and drone.[12] Lindley's early exposure to figures like Mississippi John Hurt and world music pioneers such as Ravi Shankar further informed the band's boundary-pushing style, prioritizing improvisation over rigid forms.[14] This eclecticism—marked by seamless shifts from twangy country-folk to gritty blues within individual songs—mirrored broader 1960s trends of genre fusion, creating a hallmark sound that defied categorization and anticipated later world-psych hybrids.[3]Release and Market Performance
Initial Release Details
Side Trips, the debut album by the American psychedelic folk band Kaleidoscope, was released in May 1967 on Epic Records. The album appeared in both mono (catalog number LN 24304) and stereo (catalog number BN 26304) editions, available as vinyl LPs.[2] Preceding the album's launch, Kaleidoscope issued their debut single "Please" backed with "Elevator Man" in December 1966 on Epic (5-10117), which did not achieve notable chart success. Following the album's release, a second single featuring the track "Why Try" backed with the non-album B-side "Little Orphan Nannie" was put out in August 1967 on Epic (5-10219), likewise experiencing limited commercial impact and failing to enter national charts.[15][16] Promotion for Side Trips centered on ties to the Los Angeles psychedelic music scene, where the band performed at local events and festivals organized by promoters like RGB Productions, though it received minimal national marketing support from Epic Records. The album's commercial performance was modest, overshadowed amid the competitive 1967 landscape dominated by blockbuster releases such as The Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, and it did not register on Billboard charts.[7]Reissues and Commercial Trajectory
Following its initial 1967 release on Epic Records, Side Trips saw several notable reissues that sustained its availability across formats. In 2007, Sundazed Music issued a vinyl reissue, faithfully reproducing the original stereo mix on high-quality pressing to appeal to audiophiles and collectors.[2] This edition highlighted the album's raw psychedelic folk sound, contributing to renewed interest among vinyl enthusiasts. Subsequent reissues included a 2014 180-gram vinyl pressing by Music On Vinyl in the Netherlands, emphasizing the band's eclectic instrumentation.[2] A significant milestone came in 2018 with the expanded edition on Legacy Recordings, a Sony Music imprint, which added bonus tracks such as outtakes and alternate versions to the original 10-song lineup, extending the runtime to 31 minutes across 12 tracks.[17] This CD and digital release broadened accessibility, including versions with previously unreleased material that showcased the band's studio experimentation. By 2020, a limited vinyl pressing was documented on Discogs, likely tied to boutique labels, further catering to the growing demand from analog format revivalists.[18] The album's commercial trajectory evolved from modest initial sales to cult status, particularly during the 1970s and 1980s psychedelic revivals, where it found appreciation among fans rediscovering West Coast folk-rock hybrids. The 2000s saw a boost from guitarist David Lindley's rising solo fame and collaborations with artists like Jackson Browne, drawing new listeners to Kaleidoscope's early work.[19] In the 2020s, availability expanded through digital streaming on platforms like Spotify and Apple Music, featuring the expanded edition with outtakes, alongside boutique vinyl pressings from labels such as Sundazed and Grapefruit Records.[20] These efforts have been fueled by streaming plays and collector interest in rare pressings.Reception and Cultural Impact
Contemporary Reviews
Upon its release in 1967, Side Trips garnered limited but notable attention in music trade publications, reflecting its position as an underground psychedelic folk album amid the year's explosion of psych-rock releases from bands like Love and The Doors. Cash Box highlighted it as one of Epic Records' key LPs from the West Coast group Kaleidoscope, emphasizing its role in the label's underground offerings.[21] Similarly, Record World praised the album's unusual sound, grouping it with the band's follow-up Beacon from Mars as innovative work from a group blending diverse influences.[22] Critics in mainstream outlets viewed the album's eclecticism—spanning folk, Middle Eastern motifs, and psychedelia—as both innovative and challenging for broader pop audiences, leading to uneven reception and restricted airplay due to its non-conformist style. Liner notes by music historian Arnold Shaw positioned Side Trips as a vibrant showcase of the band's multi-instrumental experimentation and genre fusion, underscoring its appeal in folk and psych circles.[2] The album remained undervalued compared to more conventional 1967 peers.Retrospective Legacy and Influence
In the decades following its release, Side Trips has been celebrated in retrospective analyses for its groundbreaking fusion of psychedelic rock with global folk traditions, earning acclaim as a pioneering work in American world-psych experimentation. AllMusic's review describes it as "arguably the most diverse effort of 1967," highlighting its eclectic blend of raga influences, jug-band revivalism, and acid-rock improvisation that defied the era's conventions.[23] Similarly, a 2017 BrooklynVegan retrospective on Summer of Love albums praised the record for sounding "like nothing else from this period," noting its innovative use of numerous instruments to create a "melting pot of sounds" that remains fresh and boundary-pushing today.[24] By the 2020s, the album continued to receive nods in psychedelic overviews, with outlets like DJTees positioning it as a foundational text for modern genre fusion, influencing jam-band aesthetics and experimental acts through its emphasis on multi-instrumental improvisation.[6] The album's legacy lies in its role as a trailblazer for world-psych fusion, predating the "world music" label while integrating Middle Eastern scales, Appalachian folk, and blues into rock frameworks—a sound that echoed in later artists' explorations of cultural hybridity. Guitarist David Lindley's tenure with Kaleidoscope informed his subsequent collaborations, notably with Jackson Browne from 1971 to 1981, where he applied similar global string techniques to infuse Browne's albums with eclectic textures, as detailed in tributes following Lindley's 2023 death.[25] This influence extended broadly, with figures like Jimmy Page citing Kaleidoscope as his "favorite band of all time" for their adventurous jamming, underscoring Side Trips' impact on progressive and fusion rock trajectories.[5] Culturally, Side Trips experienced a rediscovery during the 1990s acid-folk revival, bolstered by CD reissues like Edsel's 1988 edition that introduced it to new audiences seeking underground psychedelia.[26] Its relevance persists into 2025 within global fusion scenes, where its non-Western instrumentation inspires contemporary acts blending psych with international roots. The 2021 passing of co-founder Solomon Feldthouse at age 81 prompted memorials, including a GoFundMe campaign to fund an anthology of his work, reigniting interest in Kaleidoscope's catalog and highlighting Feldthouse's distinctive contributions to the album's raw, multicultural voice.[27] Despite this enduring appeal, Side Trips remains underrated relative to British psych counterparts like Pink Floyd's early output, often overshadowed by its own versatility, which Chris Darrow attributed to overwhelming 1960s listeners unready for such genre defiance.[5] Nonetheless, it holds an essential place in the U.S. underground canon, revered for its uncompromised innovation and multi-instrumental prowess that anticipated fusion's rise.[5]Credits and Track Details
Track Listing
The track listing for Side Trips, the debut album by the American psychedelic folk band Kaleidoscope, consists of ten songs on the original 1967 Epic Records LP release.[13]| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Egyptian Gardens | Lindley/Feldthouse | 3:05 |
| 2 | If the Night | Darrow | 1:45 |
| 3 | Hesitation Blues | Traditional | 2:25 |
| 4 | Please | Freedman/Feldthouse | 3:10 |
| 5 | Keep Your Mind Open | Feldthouse | 2:15 |
| 6 | Pulsating Dream | Darrow | 1:58 |
| 7 | Oh Death | Traditional | 3:25 |
| 8 | Come On In | Feldthouse | 2:07 |
| 9 | Why Try | Lindley | 3:43 |
| 10 | Minnie the Moocher | Calloway, Gaskill, Mills | 2:13 |
Personnel
The personnel for the 1967 album Side Trips by Kaleidoscope consisted of the band's core multi-instrumentalists, who contributed vocals and a wide array of stringed, percussion, and folk instruments across the tracks.[2][13] Band Members:- David Lindley (also credited as David Perry Lindley): guitar, banjo (including 7-string banjo), fiddle, mandolin, vocals. Lindley's contributions appear prominently on tracks like "Egyptian Gardens" and "Hesitation Blues," where his fiddle and banjo lead arrangements.[29][2]
- Solomon Feldthouse (also credited as David Solomon Feldthouse or Saul Feldthouse): saz (baglama), bouzouki, dobro, veena, dulcimer, fiddle, twelve-string guitar, goblet drum (dumbek), vocals, harmonica. Feldthouse's ethnic string instruments, such as the saz and veena, are featured on "Egyptian Gardens" and "Please."[2][30]
- Chris Darrow (also credited as Christopher Lloyd Darrow): guitar, bass, banjo, mandolin, fiddle, autoharp, harmonica, vocals. Darrow provided guitar and fiddle on multiple tracks, including "Minnie the Moocher" and "Keep Your Mind Open," with additional bass support.[29][2]
- Max Buda (also known as Chester Crill or Fenrus Epp): bass, washtub bass, violin, viola, piano, organ, harmonica, vocals. Buda handled primary bass duties throughout, with supplemental violin and keyboard contributions.[2][31]
- John Vidican: drums, percussion. Vidican's percussion, including standard drum kit, supported the rhythmic foundation on all tracks, such as the upbeat "Please" and bluesy "Hesitation Blues."[2][13]
- Barry Friedman: producer, overseeing the recording sessions at TTG Studios in Los Angeles.[13][2]
- Mike Goldberg: production supervisor.[13]
- Arnold Shaw: liner notes writer for the original Epic Records release.[2][13]