Just wondering if anyone here is a fan of the band Gorky's Zygotic Mynci. I did a search to see if they were mentioned in other threads but only saw them in passing in a list of other things -- generally either '90s psych-folk bands or '90s bands that took influence from Canterbury. They've always seemed to me like a uniquely wonderful act who never quite got the attention they deserved, either from the mainstream (they famously had eight singles in the top 75 in the UK without ever getting one into the top 40, though "famously" is relative there) or from connoisseurs of prog and related music.
I have some bias here I suppose because the Introducing compilation came out when I was 14, and it was one of my favorite things as a teenager. This was just slightly pre-Internet, at least in my home, and I didn't have any way of finding contemporary music which even seemed to exist in the same universe as my teenage prog favorites like Genesis, the Moody Blues, King Crimson, etc.
Having periodically dug back into them as an adult, I'm struck by how well they mingle (a) a fantastic sense of melody and songwriting which make everything they do compulsively listenable, (b) soundscapes which draw on all kinds of wonderful '60s and '70s analog sounds without being overtly retro or imitative, (c) total unpredictability and openness to experiment, and (c) a rich sense of personality which includes a strong undertone of melancholy. They're not hyper-accomplished as players, but listenability, personality and imagination are mixed as richly in their work, to my ears, as in classic prog.
I personally love & admire their work about as much as any music from the '90s, and I only ever hear them mentioned by the small number of people who were devoted fans while they were active. It doesn't help, I'm sure, that their most classic material isn't on streaming, and the post-breakup solo work has happened totally outside the boundaries of the standard music business.
Just did a YouTube video on them as well; hope it's not gauche to embed it.
Bookmarks