– The Underground’s Underdogs and Psychedelic Sidequests That Deserve Your Ears –๐ง๐ผ๐✌️
When it comes to 1967, everyone and their flower-wearing nan will tell you it was the year. Sgt. Pepper painted the world technicolour. Hendrix burned guitars. The Doors opened minds. But for every record that history blasted into the stratosphere, a hundred more got left at the back of the van, gathering acid-drenched dust.
Let’s rewind to the other side of the Summer of Love – the hidden gems, the freaky footnotes, the albums that didn’t get the global peace sign but absolutely should’ve. Strap in, butt – we’re digging through the crates. ๐ถ๐
๐ช 1. The United States of America – The United States of America
๐ฟ Technically released Jan 1968 in the US, but recorded in '67 – and too wild to skip!
Imagine if The Velvet Underground went on a peyote vision quest and took a synth nerd from UCLA with them. That’s The United States of America, the band – not the place. Led by Joe Byrd and Dorothy Moskowitz, this one-off release fuses electronics, musique concrรจte, jazz, and protest-folk in a stew so experimental it makes Pink Floyd’s Piper at the Gates of Dawn sound like nursery rhymes.
๐ง Why it matters:No guitars. All synths. And still heavier than most fuzzed-out bands of the day. It’s proto-industrial, psychedelic, and politically sharp. You can practically hear the CIA sweating.
๐ฅ Standout Track: “The American Metaphysical Circus” – a sonic kaleidoscope of carnivalesque horror.
๐งจ 2. The Red Krayola – The Parable of Arable Land
This is the sound of a band losing their minds in real-time, and recording it for funsies. Texas psych-noise weirdos The Red Krayola went full avant-garde with their debut, blending fractured garage rock with “free-form freak-outs” from a collective of misfits dubbed The Familiar Ugly.
๐ฎ Why it matters:It's like Captain Beefheart, early Sonic Youth, and a malfunctioning radio signal from the Moon had a jam session. Utter chaos. Glorious chaos.
๐ฅ Standout Track: “War Sucks” – still relevant, still bonkers.
๐ป 3. Nico – Chelsea Girl
Okay, so Nico isn’t obscure – but Chelsea Girl gets tragically overlooked next to her Velvet Underground era. Released the same year as V.U. & Nico, this solo LP dials back the distortion and layers strings, flutes, and baroque beauty beneath her icy vocals.
๐ง Why it matters:It’s melancholy wrapped in a lace glove. The production is famously hated by Nico herself (too soft, she claimed), but the songs are haunted masterpieces. Dylan, Reed, Cale – the who’s who of sad 60s geniuses wrote for this.
๐ฅ Standout Track: “These Days” – covered by everyone, but never better than here.
๐ 4. Love – Da Capo
Before Forever Changes was canonised as one of the greats, Da Capo landed like a strange, jazzy comet from Laurel Canyon. Half sunshine pop, half proto-prog freakout, and all Arthur Lee madness, this album feels like two records smashed together – in a good way.
๐ฅ Why it matters:Side one? Tight, catchy psych-pop perfection. Side two? A 19-minute garage-jazz noodle session called “Revelation” that scared the record label witless. It’s the sound of a band on the edge, and it’s brilliant.
๐ฅ Standout Track: “Stephanie Knows Who” – harpsichords, sass, and snarl.
๐ 5. Tim Buckley – Goodbye and Hello
While most folkies were strumming about peace and daisies, Tim Buckley was crooning existential poetry from another plane of reality. Goodbye and Hello is part psychedelic troubadour, part cosmic jazz-folk fever dream.
๐ค Why it matters:Buckley had a voice that could melt steel beams and lyrics that spiralled into dreamworlds. You’ll hear the seeds of Jeff Buckley here – but this is its own beast.
๐ฅ Standout Track: “Phantasmagoria in Two” – yes, it’s as floaty and magical as it sounds.
๐ธ HONOURABLE MENTIONS – Because 1967 Was Stacked
- Sagittarius – Present Tense – California studio pop perfection that flew under the radar.
- Arzachel – Arzachel – Proto-Uriah Heep meets acid freakout.
- The Deviants – Ptooff! – The UK’s underground answer to The Fugs.
- Kaleidoscope (UK) – Tangerine Dream – Psychedelia filtered through whimsical English eccentricity.
- Moby Grape – Moby Grape – Criminally underrated despite major label hype.
๐ถ️ Final Riff:
The Summer of Love may have been soundtracked by the heavy hitters, but it was these lost treasures that made the underground simmer. They're the albums that whispered strange truths in smoke-filled basements, that played on battered radios while the revolution brewed in the backyard.
So go on, butt – dig these records out, roll something herbal, and time-travel to a year when music didn’t just soundtrack change… it was the change. ✌️๐ถ๐
Which of these have you spun lately? Got a forgotten ‘67 gem to add to the list? Hit us up on @theriffreportuk – we’re always up for a sonic adventure. https://theriffreport.co.uk/16/07/2025/%f0%9f%94%a5-the-five-best-forgotten-albums-from-1967-%f0%9f%94%a5/
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