Here they go again. The tireless
Gilli Smyth,
Daevid Allen, and
Orlando Allen (aka for this date,
Gong, that long-lived, acid-crazed hallucinatory wonder and nightmare), are back with
I Am Your Egg. More a conceptual recording than a rock record, as if any of them ever were.
Smyth,
Daevid and
Orlando recruit singer
Clara Quennfranc, drummer
Sam McClain, guitarist Kawabata Makoto (
Acid Mothers Temple), and nearly a dozen others to help them realize their rather political vision. A spoken word sound sculpture called "End St. Station" ushers it all in, with
Smyth narrating and
Quennfranc singing a lonely Celtic song in the backdrop. On the very next track, she wails like a banshee with
Allen on what amounts to a punk track called "Sacrifice," though it's certainly got its space-out aspect. Indian raga meets psychedelia in
Orlando Allen's "Melting Love," with lyrics like "love is a glowing lamp in daylight..." with
Smyth reciting the poetry before she and
Allen get to singing in their damaged way. It's quite beautiful in its distorted non-narrative way. But what did you expect? Over seven minutes in length, it is the most musically satisfying thing here with jazz trumpets and
Smyth's voice wailing in Arabic; it's a love song with real style and the proper sort of vulgarity; it's actually sensual as well as kooky. "Midnight Sun" is two minutes of fractured hippie craziness, but at least it's not
Sunburned Hand of the Man going on for an hour without a clue and calling it an album. "Midnight Sun" is a lovely instrumental also by
Orlando, full of acoustic guitars and sounds and spaced-out textural touches. "Time in Dilation" with
Josh Pollock and Makoto on guitars is utterly glorious weirdness, with
Smyth doing her best psychedelic recitation and wailing as the guitars simply pulse and drone; no six-string pyrotechnics here. There is a little more action on the closer, "Memory," where it's simply the guitarists with nothing else going on. But it's still a drone bliss-out, thankfully, rather an electric six-string wankfest. Ultimately,
I Am Your Egg is as good a
Gong album as you can expect, and that's saying a lot. It's an utterly seamless if fractured listen, and it proves without question that
Smyth,
Daevid, and
Orlando still understand the true spirit of collaboration better than almost any other act.