With
the Misunderstood,
Tony Hill co-wrote epochal
psych-rock anthems like
"Children of the Sun"; however, while
High Tide's sound has roots in the peace-and-love era, the band was also in tune with the post-
psychedelic comedown at the decade's darker end. On
Sea Shanties, there's nothing fey and flowery in
Hill's bleak lyrics or his doomy
Jim Morrison-like delivery, and psychedelia's melodic whimsy is supplanted by a physicality more in line with the visceral heft of
metal progenitors such as
Cream,
Blue Cheer, and
the Jeff Beck Group.
Hill's grinding riffage and searing, effects-laden guitar pyrotechnics combine with the punishing rhythms of drummer
Roger Hadden and bassist
Pete Pavli to forge some of the heavier sounds to emerge from Britain in 1969: tracks like
"Futilist's Lament" are matched only by
Led Zeppelin for sheer weight.
High Tide weren't a power trio, though, and it was the interplay of
Hill's guitar with
Simon House's violin that created the band's unique signature. Showing that
rock violin needn't be a marginal adornment,
House whips up an aggressive edge that rivals the guitar: on the nine-minute
"Death Warmed Up," House refuses to play second fiddle and matches
Hill's scorching assault all the way, while on the album's other epic,
"Missing Out," the violin generates a trance-inducing Eastern groove.
High Tide had the muscularity of a no-nonsense proto-
metal band, but they also ventured into
prog territory with changing time signatures and tempos, soft-hard dynamics, multi-part arrangements, and even some ornate faux-
Baroque interludes. Indeed,
"Pushed, but Not Forgotten" and
"Walking Down Their Outlook" share common ground with
King Crimson (especially
Crimson's mid-'70s work with violinist
David Cross). Far from the collection of nautical ditties its name suggests,
Sea Shanties is an overlooked gem encapsulating the shifting musical currents in late-'60s British
rock. ~ Wilson Neate