Tune of the day #148

Members of The Blues Project joined with fiddler Richard Greene, a Bill Monroe alumnus, and a few other musicians to form Sea Train (two words). Their 1969 self-titled debut had possibly the worst cover of any album — it wasn’t even ugly1 — and it sold miserably. I’ve never met anyone other than myself who bought a copy. This is a pity, because it was a fully-realized example of progressive rock, intricate, complicated and ambitious. It’s almost completely forgotten. Sea Train is not even mentioned on Prog Archives.

The band subsequently underwent personnel changes, altered their name to “Seatrain,” and came to George Martin’s attention. The resulting album was better-produced and easier to listen to, and it yielded a small hit, but it was less interesting than the one that preceded it.2

Notes

  1. The visual of this “video” is not the album cover. The person who uploaded the tune didn’t bother to find an image for it.
  2. The album is worth seeking out for the final number, in which Greene introduced a million hippies to bluegrass fiddle.

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