** 2026 Stock ** Originally released in 1973 on the Bacillus/Bellaphon label, From Books and Dreams captures Message at the moment their British‑German chemistry crystallised into something dark, heavy and unusually narrative. Often likened to a harder, leaner Nektar stripped of organ excess, the album stretches classic early‑’70s hard rock into a feverish prog cycle, threading literary dread and dream‑logic through riffs, sax lines and Mellotron shimmers. Its four tracks - essentially a continuous flow of “sleep,” “dreams” and “nightmares” bookended by short tableaux - move like a single bad dream you’re in no hurry to wake from.
The line‑up here is key: vocalist and saxophonist Tom McGuigan, guitarist Allan Murdoch, bassist Horst Stachelhaus and drummer Günther Klingel. McGuigan’s voice sits right on the edge between bluesy grit and theatrical paranoia, a perfect match for lyrics that lean into psychic unease and surreal imagery. His sax, sometimes doubled by faint Mellotron colour, gives the band a nervy urban edge, cutting across the heavier guitar passages rather than simply reinforcing them. Murdoch’s guitar, meanwhile, swings from Sabbath‑thick riffing to nimble, almost fusion‑like spirals, keeping the music agile even at its most oppressive.
The opening miniature “Sleep!” (often mis‑titled “Sleer” in early sources) acts as a portal, a brief incantation before the 12‑plus minutes of “Dreams and Nightmares (Dreams)” pull the listener into the album’s main trance. Here Message work in long arcs: slow‑boil introductions, tidal dynamic swells, sudden drops into near‑silence, and recurring motifs that feel like images reappearing in altered form. Rather than the showy time‑signature games of some contemporaries, the band focus on a kind of narrative pacing; everything feels geared toward sustaining tension and releasing it in thick, fuzzed‑out climaxes.
“Turn Over!” sits at the midpoint like a jolt of semi‑concise urgency, compressing the record’s mood into a tighter, four‑minute blast that still leaves room for crooked turns and instrumental side‑glances. The closing pair, “Sigh” and “Dreams and Nightmares (Nightmares),” deepen the descent, letting the rhythm section drag the groove into swampier, slower terrain while guitar and sax sketch increasingly fraught shapes over the top. The sense is less of a concept album in the strict sense and more of a continuous psychic environment - you can drop the needle almost anywhere and still feel submerged in the same uneasy, book‑born universe.
Later reissues have highlighted just how dense and forward the production is for its era, with the guitars and bass recorded hot enough to flirt with distortion while still leaving space for McGuigan’s reeds and the occasional Mellotron swells. The 180‑gram vinyl pressings and gatefold presentations of recent years underline the music’s cult status, framing it as a lost cornerstone of early ’70s Euro‑prog that should appeal to fans of Nektar, early Eloy, and the more psychedelic corners of heavy rock who crave a little more narrative strangeness with their riffs. From Books and Dreams ultimately stands as a compact but potent statement: four tracks, one long, disquieting journey from the edge of sleep into the thick of nightmare, and back again not quite unchanged.