In 1959, along with a group of musicians collectively known as The Blue Men… Read Full Bio ↴In 1959, along with a group of musicians collectively known as The Blue Men, studio pioneer Joe Meek recorded the innovative, strange album “I Hear A New World” at his Holland Park flat and at Lansdowne Studios.
The Blue Men were originally the West Five, a skiffle group from Ealing in London. In addition to recording as The Blue Men, they also recorded under the name of Rodd, Ken and the Cavaliers for Meek. The line up was:
Rod Freeman (group leader) – guitar, vocals
Ken Harvey – tenor sax, vocals
Roger Fiola – Hawaiian guitar
Chris White – guitar
Doug Collins – bass
Dave Golding – drums
Of the recordings only a 4 track EP was released in 1960. Apart from a few demo copies, I Hear A New World was not released in its entirety until 1991. Nevertheless, it is regarded as a watershed in modern music due to Meek’s approach to the recording process, opening up the world of sound technology, redefining it from science to an art in its own right. It marked the beginning of creative audio engineering, with vocals being recorded in obscure locations for effect, peculiar time and pitch shifting effects, and home built compressors and equalizers (the original designs of which are still used today by professional engineers). Joe Meek & The Blue Men created an album that would not only go on to become a musical success, but which would also inspire and influence countless people and generations in both music and music technology.
The Blue Men were originally the West Five, a skiffle group from Ealing in London. In addition to recording as The Blue Men, they also recorded under the name of Rodd, Ken and the Cavaliers for Meek. The line up was:
Rod Freeman (group leader) – guitar, vocals
Ken Harvey – tenor sax, vocals
Roger Fiola – Hawaiian guitar
Chris White – guitar
Doug Collins – bass
Dave Golding – drums
Of the recordings only a 4 track EP was released in 1960. Apart from a few demo copies, I Hear A New World was not released in its entirety until 1991. Nevertheless, it is regarded as a watershed in modern music due to Meek’s approach to the recording process, opening up the world of sound technology, redefining it from science to an art in its own right. It marked the beginning of creative audio engineering, with vocals being recorded in obscure locations for effect, peculiar time and pitch shifting effects, and home built compressors and equalizers (the original designs of which are still used today by professional engineers). Joe Meek & The Blue Men created an album that would not only go on to become a musical success, but which would also inspire and influence countless people and generations in both music and music technology.
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The Valley Of Sarooes
The Blue Men Lyrics
No lyrics text found for this track.
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
charliedontsurf70
I hope somewhere Joe can see that all his hard work is still appreciated 57 years later.
OMG Productions
This is definitely a soundscape I can vibe too.
john robertson
a legend
Garluth
Genius.
54markl
1959? This is advanced for Now!
jcee
I know unbelievable, like something Syd Barrett would have done in 1970 or some post punk thing later on!:-)
Esx ilo
very pleasant
Phil Hine
Out of this world !
Alfred Giesen
Title is wrong........it's SAROOS
( on all records/tracks : SAROOS )
Martin Be
sounding like mac demarco in 1960. incredible