With a name like the Magic Lanterns, one would expect a late-1960s band that might reflect the psychedelic side of the era's music – when first heard of in 1968, they seemed to fit in with groups like Strawberry Alarm Clock and other trippy-sounding acts (what Bleeker Bob's in New York calls "Lounge Acts That Dressed Cool"), promising their own brand of incense and peppermints. Instead, the Magic Lanterns were a pop/rock outfit, closer in spirit to the Tremeloes or Marmalade; and apart from the exquisite pop-psychedelia of "Impressions of Linda," … read more
With a name like the Magic Lanterns, one would expect a late-1960s band that might reflect the psychedelic side of the era's music – when first heard of in 1968, they seemed to fit in with groups like Strawberry Alarm Clock and other trippy-sounding acts (what Bleeker Bob's in… read more
With a name like the Magic Lanterns, one would expect a late-1960s band that might reflect the psychedelic side of the era's music – when first heard of in 1968, they seemed to fit in with groups like Strawberry Alarm Clock and other trippy-sounding acts (what Bleeker Bob's in New York calls "Lounge Acts That Dressed Cool"), promising th… read more