The Electronic Hole
50 top tracks
The Electronic Hole
50 top tracks
Albums

The Electronic Hole
The Electronic Hole

100 Psychedelic Trips - Stoner Rock, Garage Rock, Acid Rock
The Electronic Hole

Hangover Helper: Eerowen's 2nd #it Mix D2
The Electronic Hole

Oozings from the Inner Mynde - Volume 18: Smiles, Jelly & Golden
The Electronic Hole

The Electronic Hole (1970)
The Electronic Hole

The Electronic Hole (Radish A.S. 0002-A)
The Electronic Hole

1970 - the electronic hole
The Electronic Hole

Hangover Helper: Eerowen's 2nd #it Mix (Disc 2)
The Electronic Hole

Eerowen's Hangover Helper (IT Mix #2)
The Electronic Hole

Slug's Oozings from the Inner Mynde - Volume 18: Smiles, Jelly & Golden
The Electronic Hole

The Electronic Hole 05
The Electronic Hole

The Electronic Hole 07
The Electronic Hole
Biography
Reissue of the extremely obscure 2nd Radish label album, originally issued in 1970. "Raw, noisy, droning and completely mesmerizing album recorded by Phil Pearlman between the first Beat of the Earth album and Relatively Clean Rivers. Pearlman assembled The Electronic Hole in 1969 strictly for personal use -- to audition musicians for his new band. To do this, and to add to his own collection of demos, he used local studios in off-hours thanks to his friendship with album engineer Joe Sidore. <a...Read more on Last.fm
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Reissue of the extremely obscure 2nd Radish label album, originally issued in 1970. "Raw, noisy, droning and completely mesmerizing album recorded by Phil Pearlman between the first Beat of the Earth album and Relatively Clean Rivers. Pearlman assembled The Electronic Hole in 1969 strictly for personal use -- to audition musicians for his new band. To do this, and to add to his own collection of demos, he used local studios in off-hours thanks to his friendship with album engineer Joe Sidore. The result is entirely different from Beat of the Earth, as it abandons a freeform improvisational approach in favor of 'compositions', including a wild cover of Frank Zappa's 'Trouble Every Day'. Pearlman plays sitar to great effect on the album, and another track has the thickest wall of fuzz guitars imaginable -- an effect he achieved by running his Fender amplifier out of a child's chord organ ('sounded great for about two weeks, then it blew up!'). Few albums have such an eclectic yet appealing sound."
Info found on MusicInfo.com <a href="https://www.last.fm/music/The+Electronic+Hole">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
