In the summer of 1968, 18-year-old Genesis P-Orridge (then Neil Andrew Megson) met with friends in a modest attic space to experiment with sound. The result was "Early Worm," a collection of recordings that captured the burgeoning creativity of an artist who would later become a key figure in avant-garde music. Pressed onto a single acetate in 1969, these sessions showcase a fearless exploration of noise, improvisation, and tape experimentation, reflecting influences from psychedelia, Fluxus, John Cage, and beatnik Bohemia. "Early Worm" is a testament to P-Orridge's early commitment to pushing musical boundaries. The album's raw and unfiltered soundscapes offer the listener a rare glimpse into the formative moments that would eventually lead to the formation of COUM Transmissions, Throbbing Gristle, and Psychic TV. Remastered and presented in a limited-edition vinyl pressing, with liner notes written by Genesis Breyer P-Orridge that evoke the zeitgeist of the UK underground of the late 1960s. "If nothing else, (Early Worm) revealed that P-Orridge's approach to music was defiantly left-field from the start: noise, improvisations, and tape experiments that sounded a little like a more chaotic version of psychedelic folkies like the Incredible String Band." The Guardian