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🎙️ The Found Sound Archive Presents: Mirrors and Echoes — The Album That Almost Was Originally recorded: Summer 1966 | Released: Barely. In the summer of 1966, five young misfits from Chula Vista calling themselves The Apostrophes entered a borrowed garage studio armed with secondhand amps, a Farfisa organ, and far more poetry than sense. The result was Mirrors and Echoes — a swirling blend of jangly surf guitars, beat poetry, and early psychedelia that predated the San Francisco sound by months. Signed by a short-lived local imprint called Orchid Slab Records, the band was on the verge of something big. Promotional 45s were pressed. A glowing write-up in Cheetah Magazine called them “the Byrds if the Byrds had been bitten by a radioactive Arthur Rimbaud.” A national deal was rumored with Coral Records. But then came “The Incident.” Details are murky. Some say bassist Renny Fuzz was caught trespassing at a local naval station during an “audiomagnetic field test.” Others claim the master tapes were partially erased when guitarist Lionel Kratz attempted to “charge them with cosmic vibrations.” Orchid Slab folded within a week. Only 700 copies of Mirrors and Echoes were ever distributed — all to Woolworth’s stores in the greater San Diego area. Most were returned, unsold. Fewer than 20 are known to still exist today. But now, unearthed from a sealed crate in the back of a defunct AM radio station in El Cajon, Mirrors and Echoes returns — imperfect, haunting, and unmistakably ahead of its time. 🎧 Audio Restoration Notice Due to the fragile and degraded nature of the original source material, the sound quality of this recording may vary throughout. To preserve its spirit and enhance its listenability, we’ve employed the latest advancements in AI-assisted audio restoration and generative enhancement. Every crackle, hiss, and warble tells part of the story — but where the tape wore thin, the machine listened carefully and filled in the gaps… respectfully. This version represents our best attempt to honor the original while bringing it back to life for modern ears. Enjoy the past, restored — The Found Sound Archive