When I was interning at a music magazine in 2015, there was plenty of down time when there wasn’t much going on. If there wasn’t any down time, there was a lot of opportunity to put on a playlist while I was sorting through computer files or writing a blog of some sort. It was during those times that the song ‘Joy of a Toy Continued’ by Kevin Ayers appeared in my Discover Weekly playlist. It’s one of the happiest sounding songs I know. From that I went on to listen to Ayers’ album that the song takes its name from (or vice versa, I’m not sure, it’s also the name of a song by his former group Soft Machine). For a while Joy of a Toy was my go-to album. Ayers’ vocals reminded me of Nick Drake and the music sounded like everything was taking place at the circus. That feeling was probably aided by the cover art. It’s very fun, quick, wacky in places.’The Lady Rachel’ is one of its highlights.
The track has a very ominous sound to it. It’s backed by a majority of minor chords in its verses. There are no drums in there which adds to the song’s crawling and creepy feel, led by a very melodic bassline that jumps up and down and goes all over the place. Despite that, the track is about the titular character climbing up the stairs to her bedroom, going to sleep and having a surreal dream where she finds a castle in a box and heads into it after the castle’s moat speaks to her. The subject matter is quite innocent in a way. A girl goes to sleep and has a strange dream. Nothing wrong with that. But it’s the juxtaposition of that with the eerie music that makes it such a great listen.
Too bad I hadn’t heard the album sooner. I’m not able to speak at length about ‘The Clarietta Rag’ and ‘Eleanor’s Cake (Which Ate Her)’. I’m way past those letters. The former is another of my favourites from the album. The latter is a beautiful tribute to Eleanor Barooshian of 60s group The Cake who split up in 1968.