Conspiracy Of Owls
Conspirazione Di Civette
Some records slip out of circulation and into legend, whispered about, passed from hand to hand, remembered by the people who heard them at just the right moment. Conspiracy of Owls is one of those records: a glowing, deeply personal kind of psych-pop, where space rock haze, bubblegum pop innocence, and classic rock warmth are ltered into something unmistakably its own. At the center of it all is Bobby Harlow: songwriter, producer, founding member of Detroit's cult heroes The Go. Harlow has that rare gift: the ability to take the building blocks of familiar music and reshape them into something gently strange, deeply melodic, and emotionally disarming. His writing here draws from Let It Beera Beatles intimacy, Syd Barrett's dreamy logic, and the Beach Boys' late-period harmonies, but never feels like imitation. It's not pastiche; it's memory, reimagined. The record moves with a quiet, radiant condence: songs that shimmer like they've always existed, melodies suspended in that golden AM-radio half-light. It's music that feels nostalgic without being backwards-looking, filled with love for what once was, but guided by curiosity rather than revivalist instinct. For me, this album became more than music. It was the soundtrack to my twenties, to long drives across America while on tour with my band, cheap motels when lucky, desert highways at dusk, the sense that everything was still possible. This record held all of that: freedom, wonder, innocence, distance, and the first quiet recognitions of who you are becoming. For those who already know: welcome back. For those hearing it for the first time: you've found this record at exactly the right moment. For Fans of: The Beatles (Let It Be era) Syd Barrett The Beach Boys ELO Big Star The Go.