Extracts from The Story of Freedom's Children by Tom Jasiukowicz
(sleeve notes from Astra re-issue in 1997)
If ever there was a rock band around which a legend was created,
then Freedom's Children were that band. Were they simply a broken-hearted
horde writing psychedelic love songs? Were they galactic flyers in tune with
astral days? Or were Freedom's Children just one of the best rock bands the
world ever heard, or is it appropriate to say categorically that
Freedom's Children were the best band the world never heard.
An ironic suggestion, perhaps, but one with a lot of truth in it.
That the circumstances surrounding their existence played against
them does not detract from the fact that the original group formed
in the year and in the world of music, the ground was breaking.
In contrast to the hit parade sounds of The Beatles, The Beach Boys and The Monkees,
groups like The Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane and Pink Floyd were producing
albums marked by their experimental creativity and music styles termed
acid rock or astral music.
In 1966, Ramsay Mackay and Colin Pratley had teamed up in Durban to
experiment with their music ideas. In Cape Town they met Kenny Henson,
who had been playing blues with Leeman Ltd., and together with Jimmy Thompson,
of the same band, they began to perform as Freedom's Children.
Their sound was acid-astral rock.
South Africans had not been prepared for this group.
The group created controversy and newspaper headlines,
in every small South African town they performed at. Some towns banned them.
But to those who understood quality rock, Freedom's Children provided
their break with conventional thinking and music ideas.
Julian Laxton replaced Kenny Henson on guitar in 1968 and Harry Poulus
joined on keyboards. The group travelled to England but, perhaps for the
reason that the group was from South Africa, and the politics of apartheid swayed opinion,
the musicians were refused work permits and so their dream of attracting
world acclaim faded. While the group returned to South Africa disillusioned,
began work on the recording of the 'Astra' album.
The album provided the magic of a classic rock album. There were dramatic climaxes,
socio-philosophical lyrics, hard, pulsating rhythms, blistering lead guitar solos,
sense-riveting sound-effects and soaring vocals.
Ramsay Mackay left the group after the recording of 'Astra' and it was
Julian Laxton who drove the band on their last album, 'Galactic Vibes',
and where the music on it was still devastatingly good, the aura of 'Astra'
had dissipated.
Ramsay Mackay, Colin Pratley, Kenny Henson, Julian Laxton and Brian Davidson
all carried on producing music in their respective forms and styles,
through the Seventies and Eighties. But if the world of South Africa had been perfect,
and had Freedom's Children achieved their breakthrough in England,
one can only speculate how difficult the success of this group would have been.
The world would have heard some good creative music.
Long live Freedom's Children!
I am trying to find Celebrate by JLB!
furakkueroru 3 years ago
I don't have that one, sorry...
PsychedelicLand 3 years ago