Day of Niagara
Day of Niagara | |||||
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Studio album by Theatre of Eternal Music | |||||
Released | May 9, 2000 | ||||
Recorded | 1965 | ||||
Genre | Drone, experimental rock, avant-garde, minimalist | ||||
Length | 30:52 | ||||
Label | Table of the Elements | ||||
John Cale chronology | |||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
Pitchfork Media | (8.1/10)[2] |
Inside the Dream Syndicate, Vol. I: Day of Niagara or simply Day of Niagara is a 1965 album by the minimalist music group the Theatre of Eternal Music, aka the Dream Syndicate. Contributors include future Velvet Underground bassist John Cale, original Velvet Underground drummer Angus Maclise, composers La Monte Young and Tony Conrad, and Marian Zazeela.
Overview
Consisting of a single half-hour track, Day of Niagara catches a glimpse of The Dream Syndicate in the prime of their short-lived but intriguing collaborative tenure. Recorded and forgotten, it was not released until several years later as a bootleg recording. La Monte Young threatened legal action on the release, as there had been no written agreement on who actually owned the rights to the music.
As it was released as a bootleg tape, the recording quality noticeably suffers.
Track listing
- "Day of Niagara" - 30:52