Here's an excellent piece of 1965 garage psyche by Pink Floyd before they were Pink Floyd.
The band were then performing under the name The Tea Set, it's members being Syd Barrett, Bob Klose, Roger Waters, Richard Wright, and Nick Mason.
Actually you wonder whether what appeared as a rather daft name 'Tea Set ' was in fact disguised slang for the growing popularity of 'weed' in the 60's, "Tea" was certainly used as a synonym in the 50's by a beatnik generation. Then again it wouldn't be unlikely the imaginative world of Syd Barrett had actually been doing a parody to the idea of Englishness, they being preoccupied with the drink for most occasions.
The song "Lucy Leave" written by Barret is one of five songs recorded in early 1965 by The Tea Set and hasn't had an official release to this day although a bootleg did appear with the song and is still circulating on the web (like here).
The song itself has since grown a further reputation by Floyd freaks in suggesting that Syd had written it about LSD. "Lucy" being another name for 'LSD' goes back to 1967 and Lennon's 'Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds', despite his vigorous claims it wasn't anything to do with the hallucinogenic.
Unlikely then that Syd had intended the song to be about acid when "Lucy Leave" had been written 2 years before Lennon's song appeared on Sgt Pepper's. Furthermore the song was originally known as "Lucy Lea in Blue Tights" so unless Syd liked his trips dressed up in them one can assume it was more likely about a demanding girlfriend.
But some folk claim it was about a bad trip and they will pursue the LSD link because well... it's Syd.
Judge the lyrics for yourself -
.
Leave, when I ask you to leave, Lucy
Please, far away from me, Lucy
Oh, go little girl
Seen, is (oh so) broken up about you, Lucy
Mean, treat me and done me harm, Lucy
Been, in love with you and your charms, Lucy
Oh, go little girl
I'm in love with you, Lucy
You got my heart
You got my heart, oh no!
You tear me apart
You just won't let me go
You hold on so tight, so tight I just can't breath
Now Lucy leave, Lucy
So regardless of all the innuendo what you do get is great piece of early garage psyche in "Lucy Leave" with the added bonus of the B side "(I'm a) King Bee" which was written by blues musician Slim Harpo where The Tea Set set about it in a most unusual way for 1965. This copy of the recording is regarded as the clearest out there, and that includes the bootleg.