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Sunday, August 1, 2021

Krokodil - Krokodil (1969) [German Original]

Krokodil - Krokodil (1969)

Original German Pressing
Liberty LBS 83 306 I  (Discogs)
~ThePoodleBites rip in 96kHz / 24bit FLAC + full high-res scans!~

Though the average foreigner may suppose that everyone in Switzerland is still dancing to the accordion and yodeling off mountaintops, it turns out that the central European country had some pretty hip bands even way back in the 1960s/70s, which are worth exploring to psych-heads as much as the Alps are to adventurous sportsmen. In such an endeavor into Swiss rock, there's no better place to start than the first Krokodil LP. Though the band was/is based in the Schweizerdeutsch-speaking city of Zürich, Krokodil's early records are entirely in English, which will certainly appeal to the monolinguists amongst us. "Krautrock" seems to be the genre most attributed to Krokodil, though their style is clearly distinct from the usual sauerkulprits of Can, Amon Düül, Agitation Free, etc. While the later LPs voyaged deeper into heavy prog territory, this debut is firmly rooted in blues-rock, and with the aid of significant Eastern influence the sound is not unlike Kaleidoscope (US) or maybe even J.K. & Co. 

Major thanks to the record phantom C.F. for sharing his Krokodil LPs in the name of blogdom!


What a front cover. Drummer Düde Dürst (ex-Les Sauterelles) discusses his artwork in this phenomenal interview with Klemen Breznikar of It's Psychedelic Baby Magazine:

Sigi E. Loch knew that I had already designed many LP covers and posters for various bands. He ordered me to draw something. My idea was to make the Liberty logo as a crocodile. My illustration was enthusiastically accepted and printed by the record label. The US record company did not want this cover, on the grounds that their logo should not be defaced. We insisted on our version, which then led to the rejection of production. Various US stores have then simply imported the LP.

The design is undeniably a twisted Swiss production, with half-naked Helvetia holding the Swiss coat of arms, as her stoned counterpart on the Confoederatio Helvetica coin (drawn to look like Dürst himself) smokes a joint; an open wheel of Emmental rests on a cutting board near an aroused Holstein; with the collage topped by an Alpine peak in front of the westward setting sun. Wow. The design is reflected on the back cover, along with the usual listing of tracks and credits, also drawn by Dürst himself.


As you may have guessed, Krokodil (pronounced like "kroh-koh-deal") translates to "crocodile" in English, though the word has also been used regularly in "street" terms to refer to the opiate desomorphine, manufactured by the Swiss healthcare company Roche. Whatever the meaning, it is clear that Krokodil's sound had no small influence form the stoned-out '60s sounds of bands like the Grateful Dead and Iron Butterfly. The striking Bonnie Dobson tune "Morning Dew" -- which many will know from the Dead's or West Coast Pop Art's debut LPs -- opens this album, and is immediately followed by one of the band's best tracks, "You're Still A Part Of Me." Other highlights are "Prayer" and "Dabble In Om," with the latter having an Arabic-influenced intro of misshapen oboe figures over a resonant middle-eastern drone. It's closer to Yusef Lateef than anything I've ever heard in psych music before, and the following 10-minute trip is an adventure across equally stunning architecture.

The third Krokodil LP is apparently the one which has really become a cult item, but this debut is perhaps currently still the favorite for me. There's not one boring moment on this record, even if the straight-ahead riffage / 'telephone call' on "Mis Blues" isn't the mind-blasting apocalypse of its neighbors. 

Krokodil hanging out in some sort of industrial facility

This record, along with the later Krokodil LPs, has been reissued from the master tapes on CD via the Second Battle label circa 1999. Unfortunately, though, the mastering was ruined by heavy-handed EQ along with digital compression and limiting. The result is that over 50 years later the extremely well-pressed original LPs (which were manufactured a tad north of CH in Munich, Bavaria) are still superior in fidelity to anything that came after. Thus I have manually restored this high-resolution transfer for your enjoyment, which turned out to be barely any work at all, given how well C.F.'s copy performed. Stay tuned; there is much more to come. 


Track listing:
1) "Morning Dew" - 4:42
2) "You're Still A Part Of Me" - 6:30
3) "All Alone" - 3:58
4) "Mis Blues" - 3:19
5) "Prayer" - 4:15
6) "Watchn' Chain" - 6:58
7) "Dabble In Om" - 9:34

Vinyl condition: M-

Dynamic Range: DR11

Equipment Lineage:
– Audio-Technica VMN40ML stylus on AT150MLx dual moving-magnet cartridge
– Audio-Technica AT-LP1240-USB direct drive professional turntable (internal stock preamp/ADC removed)
– Pro-Ject Phono Box S2 Ultra preamp with dedicated Zero Zone linear power supply
– Focusrite Scarlett 6i6 MkII (96kHz / 24bit)
– Adobe Audition CC 2020 (recording)
– iZotope RX 8 audio editor (manual declicking, EQ subtraction, additional adjustments)
– Audacity 2.3.3 (fades between tracks, split tracks)
– Foobar2000 v1.5.1 (tagging, dynamic range analysis)

Full album available on YouTube here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=shHUYY8A0Y0

Thanks for taking the time to read my posts and check out my blog. I'd greatly appreciate it if you leave a small comment below. Notes from my readers are what inspire me to keep going. Thanks!
MEGA: https://mega.nz/folder/mEF0WLYT#s4k8kNOFFvaoHnfemGA8mA

Enjoy!  :)

16 comments:

  1. Many thanks for this share.
    Its a brilliant recording and sound very good.
    Thanks again for all your hard work.

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  2. Many thanks for another amazing share TPB !!

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  3. Nice to see you back, and with this most intriguing share -- thank you!

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  4. Wow, thanks for a new discovery with excellent sound to boot.

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  5. I'm not familiar with this band, but wow, that album cover is amazing. Thanks for sharing all the wonderful music with great sound.

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  6. Great work! Thank you so much!

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  7. Thanks a lot for your work for this gem. Now we really can "see the crocodile walk!"

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  8. Thanks very much for all your work! Your notes greatly increase my interest in discovering all those bands and music in such a great sound restorations.

    I would appreciate it if you could check if the "03 Gatefold.tif" file is as intended (2.6 BG!) and if a file (02?) is not missing in the folder with the artwork.

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    Replies
    1. The 2.6 GB file is correct -- it's a 1200dpi, 24-bit color scan of the gatefold (~24"x12"). That's a lot of data!

      The missing 02 was indeed an error. It should be there now. Thanks for the catch!

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  9. thanks a lot for this very pleasuring transfer, TPB & C.F. :)

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  10. Thanks very much! This earlier and more psychedelic side of the band is a welcome discovery.

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  11. Thanks for an awesome rip of a seminal LP. The irony of a US label called Liberty leading to rejection of pressing the album based on the cover is top notch. Smell the glove and don't step on Capitalism, friends.

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  12. Thanks very much for the TLC you put in to preserving the classics like this album - it is very much appreciated!

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