HURDY GURDY

HURDY GURDY AROSE OUT OF DANISH GROUP PETER BELLI & THE B.B. BROTHERS IN 1967. THREE OF THE B.B. BROTHERS -- GUITARIST CLAUS BOHLING, DRUMMERS JENS OTZEN, AND ENGLISH BASSIST MAC MACLEOD, THEN TEMPORARILY BASED IN DENMARK - SPLIT FROM BELLI TO FORM A PSYCHEDELIC-HARD ROCK-ORIENTED TRIO. THE BAND MOVED TO ENGLAND 1968, AFTER MACLEOD HAD BEEN DEPORTED. IT'S BEEN REPORTED THAT DONOVAN, A FRIEND OF MACLEOD WHOM MAC HAD PLAYED WITH PREVIOUSLY AS A BACKING MUSICIAN, WANTED TO PRODUCE A VERSION OF THE BAND COVERING "HURDY GURDY MAN", A DONOVAN COMPOSITION. HOWEVER, DONOVAN RELEASED HIS OWN HIT VERSION OF THE SONG, AND HURDY GURDY DIDN'T ISSUE ANYTHING WHILE MACLEOD WAS IN THE GROUP. DESPITE DOING SOME RECORDINGS PRODUCED BY CHRIS WHITE AND ROD ARGENT OF THE ZOMBIES. TWO LATE-'60S TRACKS BY THE MACLEOD LINE-UP OF HURDY GURDY, "NEO CAMEL" AND "TICK TOCK MAN", EVENTUALLY APPEARED ON THE 2003 MACLEOD ANTHOLOGY "THE INCREDIBLE MUSICAL ODYSSEY OF THE ORIGINAL HURDY GURDY MAN", AND ARE RATHER LOOSE AND FRENETIC PIECES OF PERIOD GUITAR PSYCHEDELIA. BOHLING AND OTZEN HAD TO GO BACK TO DENMARK SHORTLY AFTER THOSE RECORDINGS, OWING TO THEIR INABILITY TO SECURE WORK PERMITS. THERE THEY PICKED UP A NEW BASSISTS, AND IN EARLY 1970S RECORDED A SELF-TITLED ALBUM FOR CBS SCANDINAVIA WHICH WAS RELEASED IN 1971. THE RECORD, A ROUTINE, EARLY-70'S HARD ROCK OFFERING WITH HENDRIX-INFLUENCED GUITAR BY BOHLING.