Dr. Z

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Evil Woman's Manly Child 00:00 Tools
Spiritus, Manes et Umbra 00:00 Tools
Summer For The Rose 00:00 Tools
Burn In Anger 00:00 Tools
In a Token of Despair 00:00 Tools
Too Well Satisfied 00:00 Tools
Lady Ladybird 00:00 Tools
People in the Street 00:00 Tools
Vago - Blow my horn 00:00 Tools
People In The Street (bonus) 00:00 Tools
Lady Ladybird (bonus) 00:00 Tools
Too Well Satisfie 00:00 Tools
Vago - Brainblower 00:00 Tools
Vago 00:00 Tools
Evil Woman's Man Child 00:00 Tools
People in the Street [*] 00:00 Tools
Lady Ladybird [*] 00:00 Tools
Vago - My Destiny 00:00 Tools
Vago - Lesson One 00:00 Tools
Vago - Straight from the Underground 00:00 Tools
Vago - Wazzaaaaaaaaa 00:00 Tools
Vago - Battle Machine 00:00 Tools
Too well satified 00:00 Tools
Vago - Underground, my sound 00:00 Tools
Vago - Hate Me 00:00 Tools
vago - Flying High (E-Noid remix) 00:00 Tools
Stronghold Blues (feat. Dr. Z) 00:00 Tools
Static 00:00 Tools
Vago - Underground My Sound 00:00 Tools
Dubtropolis Mini-Set 00:00 Tools
It All Adds Up 00:00 Tools
Vago - Paralizer 00:00 Tools
Evil Woman 's man child 00:00 Tools
People In The Street (Bonus Track) 00:00 Tools
Ina Token Of Despair 00:00 Tools
Lady Ladybird [Bonus Track] 00:00 Tools
Vago - Bonebreaker (Chrono and The Demon Dwarf Remix) 00:00 Tools
Vago Featuring DJ Outblast - A 00:00 Tools
Evil Woman's Mainly Child 00:00 Tools
Evil Womans Manly Child 00:00 Tools
To well satisfied 00:00 Tools
Vago - Blow My Horn (Re-Style Remix) 00:00 Tools
You Wouldn't Be You 00:00 Tools
Vago - Bat Device (Remix by Counterfeit) 00:00 Tools
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Dr. Z was lead by North Wales university professor Keith Keyes, who handles keyboards (harpsichord, piano, organ), as well as vocals, with Bob Watkins on drums, and Rob Watson on bass. This is another album, like Black Widow's Sacrifice, that featured lyrics that flirted with the occult in a prog rock setting. Here Keyes had the idea that in the afterlife, your soul is divided in to three parts, with a Latin term to each, Spiritus, Manes et Umbra. Spiritus was the soul that goes to heaven, Manes is the soul that's damned to Hell, and Umbra being the soul that stays on Earth to eternally haunt. There are some people who don't think this album is particularly good. OK, so don't expect polished Yes/Genesis-influenced prog here. What you get is early British prog, dominated mainly by harpsichord, with occult lyrics and very peculiar vocals, trying to sound "evil". The production isn't the greatest in the world, although it was produced by Patrick Campbell-Lyons of Nirvana (the late '60s/early '70s UK band that is, hardly the Kurt Cobain-led grunge band everyone knows of). "Evil Woman's Manly Child" is said to be a reverse of the Ten Commandments. Here you get two voices, a whispered voice and a sung voice. This is truly one of the album's many high points. "Spiritus, Manes et Umbra" could almost sound like a hit if things worked out a bit different for the band (and of course, rid of the drum solo). It's such a catchy little song. "Summer For the Rose" shows some psychedelic elements, showing how in 1971, the 1960s hadn't totally vanished. "Burn in Anger" is a piano-dominated ballad that truly screams 1971, while "Too Well Satisfied" is one of those cheesy songs with lots of appeal. "In a Token of Despair" is the closing ballad, regarding the spirit that haunts the Earth. The entire album has that theatrical quality. Many of the reissues come with two bonus cuts, "Lady Ladybird" and "People in the Street", which was released as a single back in 1970 on Fontana. What's really interesting about these two cuts, written by Keith Keyes as on Three Parts to My Soul, is you will find absolutely no signs of occult subject matters in these two songs. "Lady Ladybird" is a pretty cheery number. "People in the Street" on the other hand sounds too much like straight-up pop, lacking the charm of "Lady Ladybird". But for Three Parts to My Soul, this might not to be everyone's taste, but I like the album, regardless what might be said. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.