Iron Butterfly - In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida (1968)
No doubt about it, "In-a-Gadda-da-Vida," the 1968 album and song by Iron Butterfly, is a relic from a different age. I bought the record to reward myself upon passing my driver's license test after I turned sixteen the following year. Every classic rock fan has an opinion about this 17:05 track that took up all of side two on the original 33 1/3 rpm record from which it came. It's a song that people either love or hate. There appears to be no middle ground. While it's really a very simple composition built around a very famous riff it represents all of the excesses of the psychedelic era: extended guitar jams featuring both fuzz and wah-wah pedals, lots of electric organ, and long drum solos. The lengthy work's name is based on the phrase "In the Garden of Eden." Supposedly, singer/organist/composer Doug Ingle was so drunk in the studio that when he recited the lyrics of the epic-length p...