Some of these I grew up with, some I heard of but never caught, and some completely “new” bands. Looking forward to exploring your fine list.
Two more early psych bands, the first one unjustly obscure and the second one probably best forgotten:
The Blue Things, from Kansas. Their only album, “Listen and See,” is a hodgepodge of styles and genres, but two songs stand out as early psychedelia classics: “The Orange Rooftop of Your Mind” and “One Hour Cleaners.” Val Stecklein (also spelled Stoecklein) had a brief solo career afterwards. “Grey Life,” with its downbeat proto-emo songs sabotaged by soapy instrumentation, tends to be a love-it or hate-it experience.
The Id. Their album “The Inner Sound of the Id” would be much more enjoyable if it were self-parody, but I think they’re taking themselves seriously. Bad but interesting enough for a listen. “It’s hard to tell whether they’re trying to emulate the early freakiness of the Mothers of Invention, or whether they embody precisely the kind of mediocre California psychedelic bands Frank Zappa viciously satirized on the Mothers’ We’re Only in It for the Money,” Richie Unterberger, AllMusic review.