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The Age of Aquarius is ever a-dawning for Sean O'Hagan and co., as the sixth High Llamas album floats rapturously higher in the rarified atmospheres of giddy Euro film soundtracks. The High Llamas continue their evolution from Beach Boys-influenced song structures to serpentine, mostly instrumental Sunday drives, wending through frothy homages to '60s composers like Francis Lai. Most of the vocals are of the "la la la" variety, though actual lyrics do pop briefly into the songs. Harmonies (featuring Stereolab's Mary Hansen) predominate over O'Hagan's sung melodies. More so than on previous Llama trips, the arrangements are kept spare, with vintage electronics generating a lighter-than-air feeling that the 5th Dimension would have envied. Belying the record's 39-minute running time (a chunk taken up by the old Llama trick of repeating one bar endlessly at the end), the songs melt into one another, so the mind's-eye images of mini-skirted, kohl-eyed dancing stewardesses flow uninterrupted. Buzzle Bee is space-age shiny and streamlined, too cool for orch-poppy kid stuff but effervescent enough to mark a gradual shift from the Llamas' Bacharach/Wilson-worship of old. Deborah Orr, Barnes & Noble