Psychotic Reaction | ||||
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Studio album by Count Five | ||||
Released | October 1966 | |||
Recorded | January 1965 and September 1966 in Hollywood, California | |||
Genre | Psychedelic Rock | |||
Length | 24.50 | |||
Label | Double Shot | |||
Producer | Hal Winn, Joseph Hooven | |||
Count Five chronology | ||||
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Singles from Psychotic Reaction | ||||
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Psychotic Reaction is the only studio album by the American garage rock band Count Five, released on October 1966, through Double Shot Records DSS5001.
It features the hit single “Psychotic Reaction”, number five on the Billboard charts in October 1966, and The Who covers, “My Generation” and "Out in the Street".
Previously to recording sessions, Count Five was rejected by several record labels before they got signed to the Los Angeles-based Double Shot Records in 1965. Double Shot was an independent label (active 1965-1972) owned by Harold "Hal" Winn and Joseph "Joe" Hooven, who were also songwriters and record producers.
The song "Psychotic Reaction" was released as a single (first on February 1965), peaking at number 5 in the U.S. charts in late 1966, after the second release on July 1966. To capitalize on the success of the single, Winn and Hooven at Double Shot immediately pressured the band to record a full-length album.
The songs' lyrics were written mostly by John "Sean" Byrne, and the music and vocals were recorded in a very short time, so deliberately included two covers of The Who band as filler songs, to complete a brief album of eleven tracks. Band members complained in later interviews that due to the hurried nature of the recording sessions, they never had the chance to shape the songs the way they wanted them to sound. The style of the album is fairly basic but effective, set to the rhythms and ways of garage rock.
With a low budget production and insufficient marketing, Psychotic Reaction peaked at number 122 on the Billboard 200. Other singles, released between 1966 and 1969, sold poorly and did not chart (some not included in the original LP).
The band enjoyed limited success for a short time, dropping out of view altogether when their only hit had fallen from public memory. Accordingly, Count Five had to break up in 1969, so its members could pursue college educations.