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Pebbles, Volume 3

Pebbles, Volume 3
Pebbles-Volume-03-lpcover.jpg
Compilation album
Released 1979
1992 (CD)
Recorded Mid-1960s
Genre
Label BFD
AIP
chronology
Pebbles, Volume 2
(1979)
Pebbles, Volume 3
(1979)
Pebbles, Volume 4
(1979)

Pebbles, Volume 3, subtitled The Acid Gallery, is a compilation album featuring American underground psychedelic rock musical artists from the 1960s. It is the third installment of the Pebbles series and was released on BFD Records in 1979 (see 1979 in music). The album is marked for containing among the most unusual recordings of psychedelic music.

Compiling the most bizarre examples of psychedelia, The Acid Gallery opens with Higher Elevation's "The Diamond Mine", showcasing the nonsensical ramblings performed by lead vocalist Dave Diamond. The Jefferson Handkerchief's novelty song, "I'm Allergic to Flowers", mocks the flower children by lyrically telling the story of an individual who cannot become a hippie as a consequence of allergies. The narrative concept continues with "Flight Reaction" by Calico Wall, which describes the acid-drenched glimpse into the mind of a passenger concerned with crashing before takeoff in an airplane. A Frank Zappa-inspired instrumental on "Loose Lip Sync Ship" highlights a track supposedly recorded by the Chocolate Watchband under the moniker the Hogs. Side one concludes with the Driving Stupid's comedic number "The Reality of Fried (Air) Borsk", a tune music historian Richie Unterberger describes "Some listeners would subscribe to the 'it's-so-stupid-it's-brilliant' school; many would find the single unbearably amateurish and dumb. But of such things reputations are made, if only cult ones".

Opening the second side is the Third Bardo's "I'm Five Years Ahead of My Time", a cult favorite that was later highlighted on Nuggets: Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era, 1965-1968 in 1998 along with the subsequent track, "Voices Green and Purple", recorded by the Bees. Among the majority of the remaining songs, there is a pattern of remakes of compositions by more successful musical acts. Godfrey's "Let's Take a Trip" is based off Kim Fowley's "The Trip", the Monocles' "Spider and the Fly" is a revisioning of 1950s surf rock, and Race Marbles' "Like a Dribbling Farm" is a spoof of Bob Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone".


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