Brain Food: Pete Fowler's Favourite Psychedelic Albums | Page 10 of 14 | The Quietus

Baker's Dozen

Artists discuss the 13 records that shaped their lives

This was the point where Steve Miller set up his own studio and started recording in his own time. He lost himself in that process. I love his take on music – it’s his own brand of psychedelia. It’s very blissful on one hand, very groovy on the other. He created his own musical world and almost ends up referencing himself rather than taking influences from other people. I love it when an artist has a feedback loop to their own music. The first track, ‘Song For Our Ancestors’, is the one for me. It’s soundtrack-y, incredibly evocative. It starts with a giant foghorn and this beautiful tremolo guitar that seems to emerge from the mists. Again, it’s taking you somewhere, imagining this other world, albeit rooted in history rather than just imagination.

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