The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter was the third album by the Scottish psychedelic folk group, The Incredible String Band. The record was written at Temple College in Balmore outside Glasgow, which was owned by a vet with five children named Mary Stuart. Living with the working mother were a motley mix of mountaineers, folk musicians and Tibetan monks in exile. ISB's Mike Heron recalled to Mojo: "It suited Mary as it meant there were people to look after the kids – they're all on the cover photo of The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter, which was taken outside the cottage – when she went to work."
Released in March 1968 on Elektra Records, The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter was both a critical and financial success peaking at #5 on the UK Albums Chart and #161 on the Billboard Top LP's listings in America, becoming the group's highest charting album in both countries.
Regarding the title, ISB's Robin Williamson told Mojo in 2017: "There was a book by 19th century American writer Ambrose Bierce called The Monk and the Hangman's Daughter, but I didn't know it at the time. I came up with the title to mark the emergence from death and flowering of a new era, with the hangman as the war generation and ours as the daughter."
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