|

Click to hear the great BBC DJ John Peel speaking on New Years
Eve 1967
BUY
NEW NOVEL ON AMAZON - LIKE,
MISUNDERSTOOD
Hilarious
& Candid Narrative in Surf Speak
A wise-ass psychedelic-music tragedy-adventure of Baby-boom
proportions

Click
the cover to BUY
ON-LINE
"There's
no disputing that it's an extremely entertaining read - and
I can't wait to see the promised film (Phil McMullen,
Terrascope On-line Reviews)
"A
most engaging and thoroughly fascinating read. It's edge-of-the-seat
stuff in a lot of places, and would certainly make for a thrilling
and captivating appearance up on the silver screen."---Lenny
Helsing (Shindig Magazine)
FLASH:
Misunderstood Honored in New Book
The
Misunderstood, London, 1966
Musicians: Drummer Rick Moe, Lead Singer Rick
Brown, Steel Guitarist Glenn Ross Campbell, Guitarist Tony Hill
(UK), and Steve Whiting on Bass
|
Children
of the Sun: The Misunderstood
|
| In
1966 the Misunderstood, an ambitious anti-war rock band
from small town California, set off on a mission to England.
In swinging sixties London they forge a revolutionary new
psychedelic sound, but on the very brink of international
success the heart of the band is ripped out when their lead
singer is drafted by the US Army. Torn from stardom and
faced with war or prison he miraculously escapes from boot
camp and embarks on a spiritual journey to mystical India,
living for seven years as a monk in a primitive ashram.
With the discovery of a secret ruby mine, and magical jewels,
he becomes embroiled in further extraordinary adventures,
his fugitive life forcing him to live in the shadows, one
step ahead of the authorities. Children of the Sun is the
thrilling true-life saga of the greatest lost rock band
of the 1960s and one young mans quest for spiritual
peace, personal freedom, and survival. |
"The American Yardbirds"
--- Rolling Stone: September
2004
"If
I had to list the ten greatest performances I've seen
in my life, one would be The Misunderstood at Pandora's
Box, Hollywood, 1966. My god, they were a great band!"---John
Peel Interview 2003
On the Spot: John Peel interview with Readers
Digest: 2003
Q: Which is the best band you have ever seen?
A: "The Misunderstood, from California!"
Shindig
Magazine - John Peel OBITUARY
"(John's) earliest and greatest deed (was) discovering
The Misunderstood."
"They (The Misunderstood) were just a revelation.
I mean,
they were extraordinarily good, as good a live band as
I've ever seen"
---John Peel quote in
Record Collector Magazine, January
2005
"Not to forget his first and most brilliant discovery:
The Misunderstood. He will be missed."
---John
Peel Tribute by Graham Bond News, Oct. 2004
"The
Misunderstood (were) hailed in the late sixties as pioneers
of the psychedelic movement by the likes of Pink Floyd."---Review
by Surge Music
|
FLASH:
New Misunderstood Album In World
News

FLASH:
New Album/CD Release of the Misunderstood
| "The
Misunderstood may just be the greatest lost band of the
1960s. They had the gifts, the creativity, the chemistry,
the ambition, the drive - all the ingredients to make
it, plus that extra indefinable 'magic' in their sound,
which in its purest moments seemed tuned to a wonderful
and strangely magnetic frequency. Torn apart by the Vietnam
War draft the band was denied the breakthrough they deserved."
---
Mike Stax |
Click
HERE to read a review by Goran Obradovic
Click
HERE to read another NEW review
Click
HERE to read a review by Richie Unterberger
The
saga of the Misunderstood is one of the most unbelievable,
heartbreaking, and unlikely stories in the entire history
of rock.
SL Duff: Creem Magazine, September 2004
HOT
NEW REVIEW!!!

GLENN
ROSS CAMPBELL: "Jeff Beck & Jimmy Page rolled
into one"
ROLLING
STONE review by David Fricke
(Issue 956, September 2, 2004)
The Misunderstood
The Lost Acetates 1965-1966
UT Records
Too
little-known in their time to qualify as forgotten,
the Misunderstood were, in all but riches and renown,
the American Yardbirds: a panzer-garage quintet
from Riverside, California, combining electric-blues
lust with rave-up dementia and tight, flammable
songwriting. After an early-66 line-up change,
the band boasted, in the country-raga invention
and greased lightning of steel guitar prodigy Glenn
Ross Campbell, its own Jeff Beck and Jimmy Page
rolled into one.
The Misunderstood also had heavy patronage: Future
BBC DJ John Peel caught the group at a shopping
mall gig in San Bernardino, California (where he
was a local Top 40 jock), and was instrumental in
the groups June 66 move to London, where
the Misunderstood made their few official singles
and slowly fell apart.
These feral demos show why Peel went wild: singer
Rick Browns deep, scarred bark, like Howlin
Wolf swallowed whole by Eric Burdon; the searing
psychedelic prophecy of Campbells pedal steel
in the London audition takes of My Mind
and Children of the Sun.
Two weeks after that September 66 session,
Jimi Hendrix arrived in the UK and became all the
rage, the immigrant acid king. But the Misunderstood
got there first. Hear the proof.
|
Featured
in
"Unknown
Legends of Rock 'n' Roll"
by Richie Unterberger, 1998
Click
to see some old pre-London band photos
Click
to read some HOT Reviews:
"The Misunderstood were a band of immense
talent. They were technically American, although Tony
Hill, the rhythm guitarist on their best 45s, was British
and the bulk of their material was recorded in England.
At the end of 1966 their debut single, "I Can Take You
to the Sun," was unveiled that December -- the same
month as Hendrix's "Hey Joe," and a good two before
"Strawberry Fields Forever." Without apologies, the
Misunderstood single stands alongside both these classics
as one of the most powerful and best psychedelic singles
ever released." ---Record
Collector Magazine, July 1999
|
Produced
by Dick Leahy
Recorded 1966 in London at Fontana Studios
Released by Cherry Red Records, London:
CDMRED32
Produced
by John Peel
Recorded 1965 in Hollywood, California at Goldstar Studios
Released by Cherry Red Records, London:
CDMRED142
Produced
by Kevin Reach
Recorded 1981-1983 in Hollywood
Released by Cherry Red Records, London:
CDMRED147
|
The
Misunderstood - Riverside - 1965
Currently
also featured in the new
NuggetsII CD Collection
Check out THIS review (above)
UT
MAGAZINE
THE STORY OF THE MISUNDERSTOOD: the epic struggle
of the greatest unknown band of the 1960s. They left
Riverside, California for England in search of success
and understanding; their daringly original music helped
light the fuse of the first psychedelic explosion, but
on the verge of their breakthrough they were cruelly
torn apart. The real story in full vivid detail for
the first time, as told by all the original band members.
|
Click
here for the Band's story from Before the Dream Faded album
| "When
it comes to the Misunderstood, I have no shame and offer
no apologies. "Children of the Sun" is the GREATEST psychedelic
track of all time and it's CRIMINAL that the band was
taken down in it's prime."
---CD review by Jade Hubertz. 1998
|
Click
here to purchase all The Misunderstood CDs on the WWW
Cherry
Red Records,
3a, Long Island House, 1-4 Warple Way
London W3 0RG UK
Tel - 02087 404110
Fax - 02087 404208
infonet@cherryred.co.uk
To
contact the Misunderstood click The
Misunderstood
|
|