The Mellotron Group group photo

Yahoo Groups archive

The Mellotron Group

Index last updated: 2026-04-28 23:38 UTC

Message

Re: [newmellotrongroup] Paris' 68

2010-11-03 by lsf5275@aol.com

Good back story! The myth lives on 
 
 
In a message dated 11/3/2010 4:18:05 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
epdowd54@yahoo.com writes:

 
 
 
 
 
 
I found this track on an old cassette at a local charity shop. Paris' 68  
were a leading experimental group based in Ashburton, New Zealand who burst  
onto the local music scene in the early 1970's. They were founded by Eric  
Foucalt who played keyboards, he was joined by his girlfriend Simone Derrida  
on vocals, panpipes and recorder, with Johnny Sartre on drums.

For  years all recordings of this seminal band were thought to have been 
lost. I  believe this piece which only features Eric and Simone was a demo for 
one of  the tracks of their eagerly awaited debut  album "Deconstruction" 
which  has an almost mythical reputation amongst the band's legions of  fans.

Eric was without doubt the leading New Zealand mellotron player.  It is 
rumoured that his Mark II was originally owned by Barclay James Harvest,  
having been severely damaged after it was pushed down a flight of stairs, it  was 
brought to New Zealand in pieces by a party of backpackers. It was then  
lovingly reassembled with the help of  fence posts and number eight   wire.

The group were touring New Zealand to widespread critical acclaim  and 
ectastic audiences, when tragedy struck. Whilst practicing for a sell out  gig 
in Eketahuna, Eric had the inspiration to create the "prepared mellotron"  by 
filling the Mark II with a selection of nuts, bolts and ball bearings.  
Whilst changing stations the machine exploded killing Eric and Johnny  
instantly and leaving Simone with critical injuries. She did eventually  recover 
physically, but suffered a series of nervous breakdowns and later  joined the 
"Children of the Spotted Kiwi"  cult.

I can't give a  better introduction to this track than a quote from what 
would have been the  sleeve notes to "Deconstruction" :

"The music's sense points to the  signicance of it's difference, it's 
determinate transcendence in movement to  the phenomenon of endless regress."

That says it all,

_http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5AEW4x8pGZ4_ 
(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5AEW4x8pGZ4) 

Enjoy

Mark

Attachments

Move to quarantaine

This moves the raw source file on disk only. The archive index is not changed automatically, so you still need to run a manual refresh afterward.