Original released on LP Elektra EKS 74028
(US, August 1967)

This album documents how Tim Buckley undisputedly distanced himself from the insecure singer/strummer debiting his love songs backed by an electric rhythm section image, which his debut Tim Buckley transmitted. Curiously, and as on the latter, his songwriting partnership with high school mate Larry Beckett - and drummer in their early Beat inspired trio (with Jim Fielder) -, still dominates the majority of the track-list credits. Not only did TB dropped his dependence on the 6-strings acoustic, enlarging his arsenal with the 12-strings and experimenting with bottleneck, kalimba and vibes, as a new collaboration with far-sighted producer Jerry Yester seems to be determinant in the creation of a sound which from now on will not resemble anything previously heard, and will establish our man (young man), as one of the truly original voices of the period (of any period), to the point of making him an exciting personality to work with, to the likes of such iconoclasts as Frank Zappa, his compositions earning the enviable stature of top-jewelry many would succumb to the desire of reworking on, as Al Kooper did with “Morning Glory” for the 1st Blood, Sweat & Tears release. That he perfected his writing skills is astonishingly evidenced in the 8:30 mini-epic title track, a complex, multiparted affair of shifting moods and rich arrangements of strings, horns and woodwinds (the sole orchestra inclusion in the album), and the band members contributing with harpsichords, harmonium and kalimbas; A shifting towards social-conscious themes makes part of that evolution as the striking “No Man Can Find the War” or the waltz-y experiment of “Carnival Song” attest, both of which integrate not previously used sound effects.

“Knight-Errant” in spite of being a retour to dubious taste, formal love theme, has a complex succession of time-signatures changes and accents that further confirm the care put into the songwriting, where as “Once I Was”, albeit the perfect single release, is enveloped in exquisite taste and rare sensibility, and the Beat feel of “Phantasmagoria in Two” («If You Tell Me of All the Pain You've Had, I'll Never Smile Again») is enriched by permanent guitar embroideries, a template often copied in the future. The Impressionistic tranquility of “Hallucinations” is a newly explored facet of TB’s personality, who uses the bottleneck tastefully amidst sprinkling percussions, Oud impersonations and his vocal Arabic scales bathed in heavy reverberation effects enhancing the overall ethereal mood; But it’s his heart-felt, dilacerating vocal performances that do set him specially apart, either coupled with the frenetic barrage of strummed acoustics and wild percussions a top a haunting organ drone in “I Never Asked to be Your Mountain”, or on the whirling sensation provoked by the organ, the percussions and the piercing/slashing electric guitar in the circular pattern of “Pleasant Street”. The door was wide opened for a stunning, if tragically too soon cut short, incomparable career. (in RateYourMusic)