Nuggets: Journey To The Center Of The Mind by The Amboy Dukes

Before he became Patti Smith’s lead guitarist, Lenny Kaye compiled Nuggets: Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era. Released in 1972, the two-LP set covered American garage rock and psychedelia from the years 1965-1968 and was a major influence on punk rock. Rhino Records reissued an expanded version of the set in 1998, with 118 tracks in total. I’m profiling and rating each of these 118 tracks, working backwards.

Track 88: Journey To The Center Of The Mind by The Amboy Dukes
Release Date: 1968
From: Chicago, Illinois, later based in Detroit, Michigan
Rating: 9/10

JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE MIND – The Amboy Dukes [3:11]
(Ted Nugent/Steven Farmer)
Personnel/JOHN DRAKE: vocals * TED NUGENT: lead guitar * STEVE FARMER: guitar * ANDY SOLOMON: organ * GREG ARAMA: bass * DAVE PALMER: drums
Produced by BOB SHAD
Recorded in Detroit, MI
Mainstream single #684 (5/68); Pop #16

Disc three of Nuggets ends with this epic piece of psychedelia. The Amboy Dukes were led by Ted Nugent, who took the band name from a novel by Irving Shulman. Nugent started his career at the age of 10, and was The Amboy Dukes’ only constant member.

Nugent’s lead guitar is the star attraction in this piece – the song’s a little in the shadow of The Byrds’ ‘Eight Miles High’ as a psychedelic drug epic, but Nugent’s tough and bluesy guitar keeps it thrilling. The music was written by Nugent, while the lyrics were written by rhythm guitarist Steve Farmer. Nugent’s subsequent status as a hardcore Republican is belied by his recording of a psychedelic drug song.

The Amboy Dukes’ second single was “Journey to the Center of the Mind”, which featured lyrics written by the Dukes’ second guitarist Steve Farmer from the album of the same title whose cover features a diverse array of drug paraphernalia. Nugent, an ardent anti-drug campaigner, has always claimed that he had no idea that this song was about drug use.

Wikipedia

‘Journey to the Center of the Mind’ was The Amboy Dukes’ big moment – it reached #16 on the charts. The group’s career faltered, losing key members and they eventually morphed into Nugent’s backing band. Nugent is best-known for his 1977 hit ‘Cat Scratch Fever’. Vocalist John Drake and guitarist Steve Farmer both passed away in the last couple of years, but Nugent survived a bout of Coronavirus.

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38 Comments

  1. Don’t even have to listen to this one. Know it well. I think the word you’re looking for is actually Republican, not Republic. And Nugent is such a hard-core asshole I won’t even feature him on my blog.

      • Generally speaking I don’t try to judge musicians (or any artists) by their lifestyle. If I did I’d very little of any kind of art in my life. But Nugent is, IMHO, a dangerous loudmouth. Hell of a rocker though, I’ll give him that. But his politics are so offensive to me I could never enjoy seeing him. Some people feel that way about Springsteen who is, I think, far more liberal than he actually comes out and says

    • Before this, the only Nugent song I knew was The Beastie Boys’ ‘The Biz vs The Nuge’. I listened to Cat Scratch Fever while writing this. Seems more like a good guitarist than anything else.

  2. Nugent’s explanation of the meaning of the song is so asinine. He always blows it off as self-actualization but its obvious at one point he tried drugs but is in serious denial.

    • I hit reply before completing my comment but you get the gist. Whatever the case, it’s a great song from a band that was otherwise fairly substandard and went through a ton of lineups.

  3. I’ve always liked this song…drug songs don’t bother me in the least…it was the times and there were good songs that came out of it. I didn’t like Ted’s music before I knew he was obnoxious…this one I do like though. . I always try to separate the art and artist…sometimes it’s hard.

    Nugent doesn’t believe in drug use but he didn’t mind underage girls in his past…I guess he is alright with that. Yea I don’t like him at all…like we have discussed before…I don’t like extremists on either side…

        • There has always been a lot of conservative musicians or at least more than you would think. Even going way back. Like Ray Charles and Johnny Cash were big Nixon supporters. I don’t know why Johnny Cash is thought of as a big liberal hero because he was very famously conservative. There’s some rock band guys too but I can’t remember who they all are. Meat Loaf, I know for sure. Kid Rock is a big Republican supporter. One of the Ramones. I can’t remember any more, but I think some heavy metal guys. And a bunch of country musicians.

          • A lot of older country artist were conservative also. Like I said I try to keep all of that apart from the music…extremist liberal and conservative artists though both get on my nerves.

          • Most political music is just a bunch of attitudinizing anyway. I never really thought that musicians had anything worthwhile to say. At least as far as politics goes. All they do is repeat whatever rhetoric happens to be going around at the time. And especially now, since everything is so extreme that the left is even worse than the right, and Liberals are far more likely to make political music than conservatives are. But fortunately I don’t let anyone’s politics really affect my opinion of their music. There’s hardly anyone that I wouldn’t listen to their music just because of their political talk. Once in a while but hardly ever.

          • Joe Strummer was pretty adept, I reckon. Stuff like Washington Bullets. I like some of Jackson Browne’s mid-1980s stuff too.

          • That is the way I try to be…it does get hard at times…a few are just obnoxious like Ted and I would say Madonna at times but if I like something I like something.

          • “Liberals are far more likely to make political music…” Excluding American country music, you’re probably correct. Not only because most rockers tend to be liberal in their politics, but folk-music protest (anti-war, pro-civil rights, pro-union) laid some of the groundwork for today’s rock, and there’s still a vein of that (think Springsteen, Jackson Browne, etc.). Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Pete Seeger, Phil Ochs, Roger McGuinn, Woody and Arlo Guthrie etc. were as important to today’s rock music as Hank Sr. and Ray Charles, in my view.

          • There’s definitely a huge majority of liberals in rock music – Nugent’s particularly unusual given his first hit was psychedelic rock with drug references.

  4. Nice one. It wasn’t a hit in the UK and if I have ever heard it, it was only once on one of the pirate radio stations. Strange era when musicians seemed almost too polite to grasp the new era. I bet the singer was nervous about his Dad hearing it.

    • It can be a bit dangerous with a famous person downplaying Covid or something – I feel like you need to use your fame responsibly. But that guitar tone is great.

      • Well, we need to stop listening to famous people on serious issues. We also need to stop making stupid people famous. And we need to stop making people famous for being famous. Anyway, if he’d just play his guitar and otherwise shut up, it’d be fine.

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