Although formed in Davis, California, Kak were based in San Francisco
for a good part of 1968, when they recorded their only album. Lead
singer, guitarist, and primary songwriter Gary Lee Yoder and lead
guitarist Dehner Patten had been in the Oxford Circle, an obscure early
Northern Californian psychedelic band that had cut one garage/psych
single ("Foolish Woman"/"Mind Destruction") and played some shows on
the San Francisco psychedelic circuit, while bassist Joe-Dave Damrell
had been on a 1965 single on Scorpio Records with Group "B".
The self-titled Kak LP was minor-league San Francisco psychedelic rock
colored by a lot of influence from bigger Bay Area bands, particularly
Moby Grape; the vocal harmonies and curling guitar work on tracks like
'Disbelievin'" and "Everything's Changing" in particular sounded like a
more pedestrian Moby Grape. There were also more distant echoes of
Quicksilver Messenger Service (in the guitar work) and the Grateful
Dead (in faint traces of country-blues-rock). Kak were best, and least
derivative, at their quietest, as on the gentle country-tinged rocker
"I've Got Time, " the good-time wistful psych-folk-rock of "Lemonade
Kid, " and the harpsichord-decorated ballad "Flowing By, " which was as
derivative of Donovan as much of their other songs were of Moby Grape.
Kak's album was barely promoted and sold little. It didn't help that
the band played less than a dozen shows before breaking up in early
1969, Damrell having already quit prior to the split. Yoder did a
single for Epic and and then joined Blue Cheer. The Kak album
eventually became a pricey collector item, and was reissued on CD by
Big Beat (with the new title Kak-ola) in 1999 with plenty of bonus
cuts, including previously unreleased acoustic demos and Yoder solo
tracks from the late sixties. - Richie Unterberger
Blue Cheer
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