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The Millennium
Begin


3.5
great

Review

by Robert Crumb USER (49 Reviews)
March 24th, 2005 | 18 replies


Release Date: 1968 | Tracklist


Released: 1968; Columbia

The Millennium is:

Curt Boettcher
Mike Fennelly
Joey Stec
Sandy Salisbury
Doug Rhodes
Lee Mallory
Ron Edgar

____________________

The Millennium’s Begin is a one-off, a late psychedelic sixties collaboration gathering several pop journeymen led by one of the most obscured masterminds of the era, Curt Boettcher. A demanding and visionary pop maestro in the vein of Brian Wilson, Boettcher’s mark on pop music is etched in stone. His staggering work in the Californian sunshine-pop scene touched many bands that came from the region and led to his eventual partnership with the aforementioned Wilson. However, it is with The Millennium that Boettcher’s legacy rests. Begin, part of rock and roll’s great tapestry of unsung commercial failures, is a prime example of exceptional 60's pop.

It’s unfair to give all credit to Boettcher. His vision wouldn’t last a second if not complemented with an astute squad of musicians backing him up. This is the nature of Begin: Boettcher only holds six writing credits on the album, three of them shared with collaborators. The songs Boettcher does have a hand in, however, are among the album’s finest cuts.

“I Just Want To Be Your Friend” cooks up perfect sunshine pop melodies, fries them in sea of bossa nova, and salts it with a bluesy bridge for good measure. Lee Mallory’s song writing and Boettcher’s fascination with psychedelics produce the extra-terrestrial “Karmic Dream Sequence #1.” The track progresses from desperate searching to ebullient wonder before collapsing into an koto-infused kraut rock freak out. “The Know It All” is another slice of psychedelia but this time, less dreamy. Think The Kinks’ “Wicked Annabella” meets Love’s “Maybe the People Would Be the Times or Between Clark and Hilldale” with weaker song writing and a garage rock slant.

The strongest pop songs on Begin are comparable to any of the masterworks of the same time frame. The Zombies, The Beach Boys, The Beatles, The Kinks... anything these bands produced would have a tough time going up against some of the pop visions of The Millennium. Mallory’s “Sing to Me” recalls classic Stax blue eyed-soul, jumping with horns and vibes. “There Is Nothing More To Say,” on the other hand, is sublime vocal pop, a cut that sounds like a missing 15th Revolver track. The influences that manifest themselves on Begin prove to be atypical fare, recalling all sorts of entries from the pop landscape.

More than anything, Begin is an incredibly tight and immaculate presentation. This is where Boettcher deserves most praise along with assisting producer, Keith Olsen. The clarity of Begin is spectacular, as first understood by “Prelude.” The instrumental opener hammers off an awesome beat, each sound, crystal clear as it flows into “To Claudia On Thursday.” Each track, and as a result, the entire album, sounds like a cohesive team effort. This is a remarkable feat considering the band as a whole existed for a little around a year.

As a complete album statement, Begin competes with any sixties classic. Track by track, it’s a bit tougher for the work to hold up. The Millennium’s roots are firmly grounded in Californian soft pop and many tracks are incapable of delivering the same punch many other artists were capable of. It should be assumed that none of The Millennium’s song writers can really compare to Lennon, McCartney, Davies or Wilson. But with those hinderances in mind, The Millennium’s Begin remains a significant collection of pop songs and is required listening for fans of the period.



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Comments:Add a Comment 
Jawaharal
November 26th 2005


1832 Comments


A crumb review no one has commented on :eek:
good review too.

BlackDeathMetalJazz or really ANYTHING else please-
January 21st 2007


200 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Great review, I really enjoy this album and I agree with you, it's most certainly required listening for anyone into that era. I'd say this stands right next to Oddessy and Oracle and Forever Changes as a lost psychedelic gem. Thanks for the download too.

starry
November 16th 2010


552 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

I agree with alot of what is said here, which is unusual for me in this place. I discovered this is the late 90s, even bought the cd. Not as good as Forever Changes but not too far off. The first few tracks in particular are remarkably strong, but later ones are enjoyable enough.

wacknizzle
September 13th 2013


14555 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

This record is so damn good, far too overlooked psych



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZyHXmkeuJC0

LifeAsAChipmunk
November 11th 2013


4852 Comments


the intro is fucking intense. great album.

Cygnatti
January 8th 2014


36021 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

sweet stuff

KILL
July 18th 2014


81580 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

take off your shoes and feel the grass

Xar
July 22nd 2014


1652 Comments


the prelude to this is beast. there are some great tunes on this but sometimes the melodies really
just fall flat.

sing to me is a jam.

Friday13th
March 15th 2015


7621 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

ugh whole thing is amazing but I can't get over the first 3 songs

Jeffrulesyou
May 14th 2016


1888 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

5 O Clock in the mooorrrninggg. The first song is a real trip, that shooobbbyy doooo shit gets me everytime.

Toad
September 4th 2017


2061 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

wow how have i never heard of this frickin record

wtferrothorn
October 27th 2017


5849 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

This record sounds so ahead of its time. The production unf

protokute
January 14th 2021


2578 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

What a pleasant revisit to this album, noticing way more stuff this time, and it's hitting even harder, truly a forgotten gem...

protokute
January 14th 2021


2578 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

that "synth" through the end of "It's You"...



edit: yeah this is definitely getting a 5

protokute
March 22nd 2021


2578 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

triple post? yea gotta spread the word... Should be ranked right on top with Pet Sounds, Odessey & Oracle, Forever Changes, as some of the best Psychedelic Pop albums of the 60's

JohnnyoftheWell
Staff Reviewer
January 15th 2023


60277 Comments

Album Rating: 4.3

This is absolutely magical

JohnnyoftheWell
Staff Reviewer
January 15th 2023


60277 Comments

Album Rating: 4.3

and yes how dare this have an average rating an entire increment below Pet Sounds'? scandal



"It should be assumed that none of The Millennium�s song writers can really compare to Lennon, McCartney, Davies or Wilson"



It should be assumed that *this kind of stunted hagiography died in the days of '00s Sputnik, but the reality do be otherwise

protokute
January 15th 2023


2578 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

this is utterly beautiful, I wish I could have more words to described how much this music means to me, and I really wish more people could find and connect to this beauty.







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