Jumble Lane

Jumble Lane

Genres: blues rock, classic rock, Psychedelic Rock, hard rock, rhythm and blues

About Jumble Lane

Jumble Lane were a British psychedelic folk-rock and jazz-rock band, best known for their ultra-rare 1971 self-titled debut album. Background: The band consisted of students from Bretton Hall College in Wakefield, UK, and the album was released on the private Wakefield-based label, Holyground. The album is considered exceptionally rare, with only 99 copies pressed. The album is described as a mix of folk, jazz, and progressive elements with a "bizarre" and "un-sense/non-sense" psychedelic sound. The band featured drummer Nick Dew (later of Be-Bop Deluxe) and Biff Byford (later the lead vocalist of the legendary heavy metal band Saxon), who played flute and wrote several songs on the album. The 1971 album included tracks such as "Prelude In D Minor / Allemande," "Girl From Gothenburg," "Flutelode," and "Frustration / Ends Away". The album has been reissued for collectors due to its reputation as a unique example of regional UK progressive/psych-folk.

Taken from Last.fm

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