Contemporaneous According to
Lelan Rogers,
The Parable of Arable Land originally sold 50,000 copies when it was first released and sold out its original pressing. At the time, the album was made on 600 dollars.
new wave,
post-punk,
krautrock,
garage punk,
garage-psych,
industrial,
industrial rock, and
post-rock. While the "Free Form Freak-Out" recordings have been described as
free improvisation. At the time, the Red Crayola were invited by UCLA artist Kurt Von Meier to perform at the
Berkeley Folk Festival after he heard demo tapes of their cancelled follow-up album
Coconut Hotel. Red Crayola would perform with guitarist
John Fahey at the festival (which was later released as
Live 1967). Rogers sent a stereo and mono copy of their debut album to the festival's organizer,
Barry Olivier, while stating in a note that the stereo album was "better". Upon the success of the album, he stated: "The record’s an evergreen. It will always make money". In July 1967, the
Berkeley Barb Ed Denson, who was also Fahey's then-manager, briefly reviewed
The Parable of Arable Land in an article about the Berkeley Folk Festival: "Their first LP was released by that strange Houston company International Artists, and it is selling far more than it should be because it looks like a
rock LP and the liner notes, which are deceptive, make it sound sort of like
the mothers or something else which is recognizable". Denson described the Familiar Ugly tracks as "just background noise", and wrote "I like two of the cuts very much: 'War Sucks' and 'The Parable of Arable Land', and no doubt so will you about the third time thru. It took me that long." The
Chicago Seed reviewed the record on July 7, 1968, describing it as "probably the freakiest album ever recorded", with "Hurricane Fighter Plane" having "the freakiest lyrics ever" and the group making the ultimate statement on violence in "War Sucks". The article ends with a request, "highly recommended for listening to when stoned, especially for the amazing channel separation."
Record Mirror wrote about the album in 1978, noting "Transparent Radiation" as "almost a normal song" and comparing
Mayo Thompson's voice to sounding "terribly like
Talking Heads,
David Byrne" and the song as a whole as a "total effect not unlike some
Roxy Music opus, whilst "War Sucks" was spoken briefly about as an "odd
raga weaving in and out".
Retrospective In a retrospective review,
Pitchfork critic Alex Linhardt praised
The Parable of Arable Land as "one of the most visionary album[s]" of 1967,
AllMusic remarked that "
The Parable of Arable Land exists on a plane all its own; if art-damaged noise rock began anywhere, it was on this album." In 2004, writer Steve Taylor noted the album's guitar work as a forerunner to the "more textural style later adopted by many of the post-punk bands, notably the likes of
Andy Gill of the
Gang of Four". Music critic
Richie Unterberger described "Hurricane Fighter Plane" as being "one of the closest American approximations of
Syd Barrett-era
Pink Floyd. The album was ranked number 18 on the ''
NME's
2013 list "Top 100 Cult Albums to Hear Before You Die", Spin
described "Transparent Radiation" as "the great-grandfather of the Spacemen 3/Spiritualized interstellar exploration division" and noted that "Hurricane Fighter Plane" had been covered many times. Record Collector'' described the album as "Texas nutters Red Crayola weave their wigged-out songs around freeform blasts". In 2014,
Dallas Observer stated "
Parable of Arable Land, remains one of rock's most radical statements: thirteen tracks of art-ravaged pop and improvisational thunder that foresaw, not only all of DIY, noise and
jazz rock, but also the blistering ferocity of
Iggy Pop and the oblique eccentricities of
Captain Beefheart".
BrooklynVegan wrote in 2017, "It is a mesmerizing piece of work that is still startling to this day. Some have called it the American version of
Piper at the Gates of Dawn which I wouldn’t say is too far fetched. Way ahead of its time." == Track listing ==