An early incarnation of
the Third Ear Band (before the group lost several members and signed with Harvest) was known as
the Hydrogen Jukebox, a name nicked off
Allen Ginsberg. Confusingly, however, the compilation Songs from the Hydrogen Jukebox was not recorded by this late-'60s, pre-historical edition of
the Third Ear Band, but by a different side project of the same name formed by percussionist Glen Sweeney. Although Sweeney is the only member of
the Third Ear Band present on these recordings, the sound of these songs follows the same template minus the early music and folk influences of his once and future bandmates. Sweeney provides an almost tribal beat over which guitarist Mick Carter, bassist Brian Diprose, and singer Jim Hayes (seemingly) improvise. The results sound a bit like a somewhat more song-oriented version of Angels Egg-era
Gong: The groove is paramount, but in a structured format that, in spots, is recognizable as the kind of post-new wave/art-pop music that, say,
Simple Minds was doing around the time of
New Gold Dream. That connection to '80s pop is cemented in the album's last three songs, recorded by a reunited (and newly electronic)
Third Ear Band in the early '90s and sounding like outtakes from
Japan's later records, especially on the worldbeat-influenced "Behind the Pyramids." ~ Stewart Mason