X
Help AllMusic with a subscription

Asking For Your Help

Advertising is no longer able to cover our operating costs.

If you are a longtime visitor of AllMusic and want to see the site continue, please donate by becoming an AllMusic Subscriber.

H.P. Lovecraft

Short-lived Chicago psych band who released two LPs in the late '60s before spinning off into the funk-influenced Lovecraft.

Read Full Biography

STREAM OR BUY:

Active

1960s

Formed

Disbanded

Genre

Set Your Streaming Service

Suggest Streaming Links

To Set Your Preferred Streaming Service, Log In to Your AllMusic Account

To Submit Streaming Links, Log In to Your AllMusic Account

Log In

Don't have an Account?

H.P. Lovecraft Biography by Richie Unterberger

Featuring two strong singers (who often sang dual leads), hauntingly hazy arrangements, and imaginative songwriting that drew from pop and folk influences, H.P. Lovecraft was one of the better psychedelic groups of the late '60s. The band was formed by ex-folky George Edwards in Chicago in 1967. Edwards and keyboardist Dave Michaels, a classically trained singer with a four-octave range, handled the vocals, which echoed Jefferson Airplane's in their depth and blend of high and low parts. Their self-titled 1967 LP was an impressive debut, featuring strong originals and covers of early compositions by Randy Newman and Fred Neil, as well as one of the first underground FM radio favorites, "White Ship." The band moved to California the following year; their second and last album, H.P. Lovecraft II, was a much more sprawling and unfocused work, despite some strong moments. A spin-off group, Lovecraft, released a couple LPs in the '70s that bore little relation to the first incarnation of the band.

AllMusic Uses Cookies