If this is 1972, then Ty Segall is the ginger Peter Pan of Prog, the friendly and amicable person bringing this dilute and highly-technical art form to the masses. But this is 2012, forty years beyond, and Ty Segall is not coming from the same entended psyche as the prog masters of before, who took their cues from the endless blues jams of '68 in America and the dainty, wordy tea-time tributes on the English side of the pond. Instead, of course, Mr. Segall has had the punch of garage-punk to...
Impose Magazine — If this is 1972, then Ty Segall is the ginger Peter Pan of Prog, the friendly and amicable person bringing this dilute and highly-technical art form to the masses. But th... more info