“War, Or Hands Of Time” might have had an esoteric title but there’s no mistaking the meaning of its lyrics of going off to war with no guarantee of a return. The psycheclic undetone belies the sentiment and that's one of the things that makes it stand apart from the trite pop that dominated the charts of the time. Again, the mastering sounds fantastic and beggars belief that it was recorded in 1966 (or maybe that’s why it sounds so great.)
Later line-ups would make a mark but there's no denying this one, built on the songwriting talent of rhythm guitarist Mick Bower, was a special blend of R & B and garage rock. These two songs mark their undeniable high-point.
Packaged with the german picture sleeve, an insert (and a label taking off the original Astor one), it’s been given the treatment it deserved.