Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Ya Ho Wha - Penetration, An Aquarian Symphony (1974)

Ya Ho Wha 13
Penetration, An Aquarian Symphony (1974)

Living very literally up to the phrase "cult" band, Ya Ho Wa 13's recordings are the product of California's Source Family, one of the more well known and slightly less creepy hippie communes formed during the 1970's. Led by well-traveled weirdo Jim Baker (a.k.a Father Yod a.k.a Ya Ho Wha), the Source Family gained a large following which consisted of many musicians. With profits garnered from their popular vegan organic food restaurant on the Sunset Strip, the group recorded albums in a soundproof garage, completely unrehearsed in the early morning hours, and sold them in their restaurant under the name Ya Ho Wa 13.

Abstract. Meditative. Improvisational. All descriptions apply here. As such, I'm having trouble coming up with a review of something so thoroughly trance-inducing in nature, because with albums like this, the whole is always greater than the sum of its parts. Sure, I could probably talk about the haunting quality of Father Yod's nonsensical howling or the rhythmic taiko-like beat that is complimented by meandering psychedelic guitar strums, but I couldn't do so without sounding like a complete and udder tool. The songs are not really individual songs, but mere separations to mark the ends of certain movements before changing course slightly and building on a new rhythm. There are no individual moments. Swallow this one whole and enjoy. I'm sure there was a similar mindset going around within the Source Family (OOOOOHHHH!).


Score: 7.5/10








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