OUR STORY
A review
The year is 1971 and Stephen Titra, from Chicago, records
an LP with advance money from Universal. The
record company ends up passing on the album, and the project,
Of Wondrous Legends, grinds to a halt. And just
like that, the world lost a fabulous yes, fabulous folk LP. Dawson Prater,
head of Locust Music, stumbled upon one of a handful of test
pressings over 30 years later, managed to track down Titra, and finally
released Of Wondrous Legends in 2008. By then, unearthing obscure
psychedelic and freak folk recordings was the craze, with very mixed
results, but rest assured that this album has nothing to do with those kinds
of productions. In fact,
Of Wondrous Legends is surprisingly 'straightforward' and well recorded. Titra's songs are poetic, soaring, imbued with a fondness for Romanticism and Old Europe, with a current of humanism running through the lyrics. Most of all, his voice is very pleasant and he is surrounded by solid musicians. As a result, the album offers genuine pastoral folk of the highest caliber, up there with Shawn Phillips' Second Contribution - the closest comparison and, frankly, the
best compliment one can make. Had this album been known a few years
earlier, it could have been seen as an influence on contemporary folk
artists like In Gowan
Ring. There is not a single weak track on the album, with only "Renaissance & Rococo" sounding derivative of King
Crimson's "I Talk to the Wind" and "Cadence
and Cascade"). "A Tale of a Crimson Knight" and
"Breton Landscape" are the best soft numbers, while
"Midnight Carnival" and "Everyman & The Philosopher King" liven
up the set with a rockier edge. Of
Wondrous Legends ranks among the very best previously-unknown finds of the last decade, as it would rank among the best folk records of the late-60s/early-70s had it been released when it was recorded. A must-have, as much for collectors of obscure psych/folk than for fans of Simon
& Garfunkel. Yeah, it¹s that good, that accessible,
and that universal." - Francoise Couture, All Music
Guide_
Of Wondrous Legends is a Chicago baroque psych gem recovered from the dustbins of history. To the
few who have heard it, it has earned comparisons to Tim Buckley, Pearls Before Swine, and 60s British prog-folk.
O.W.L was formed in 1968 on Chicago's north side by Stephen Titra. A founding member of the beloved midwestern hippie
jam band Mountain Bus, Titra left that band just as their Dead-inspired, bluesy jams gained serious regional traction in order
to fully devote himself to the inward looking, singular vision of O.W.L.
Of Wondrous Legends was
recorded at Chicago's Universal Studios over a six month stretch in 1971 and a handful of test pressings were produced
and circulated, but despite serious interest from a number of major labels, this gem went unreleased. The passage of time
only further helped ensure the album's place in near total obscurity until a copy of one of the test pressings was unearthed
in a Chicago thrift shop in 2004. Following several years of collaborative efforts on this lost epic, Of Wondrous Legends
now sees its first public release after some 35 years of obscurity.