Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta 1968. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta 1968. Mostrar todas as mensagens
segunda-feira, 5 de janeiro de 2026
terça-feira, 21 de outubro de 2025
sexta-feira, 5 de setembro de 2025
SAM SKLAIR: "GUMBOOT DANCE"
Original released on LP RCA Victor 38 030
(SOUTH AFRICA, 1968)
sábado, 30 de agosto de 2025
VAN MORRISON: "Astral Weeks"
Original released on LP Warner Bros WS 1768
(UK, November 1968)
He confesses as much in the title track: "If I ventured in the slipstream/Between the viaducts of your dream/Where immobile steel rims crack/And the ditch in the back roads stop/ Could you find me?/ Would you kiss-a my eyes/... To be born again...." Morrison doesn't reach out to the listener, but goes deep inside himself to excavate and explore. The album's centerpiece is "Madame George" a stream-of-consciousness narrative of personal psychological and spiritual archetypes deeply influenced by the road novels of Jack Kerouac. The climactic epiphany experienced on "Cyprus Avenue" paints a portrait of place and time so vividly, it fools listeners into the experience of shared - but mythical - memory. "The Way Young Lovers Do" is the most fully-formed tune here. Its swinging jazz verses and tight rhythmic choruses underscore a simmering, passionate eroticism in Morrison's lyric and delivery. "Astral Weeks" is a justified entry in pop music's pantheon. It is unlike any record before or since; it mixes together the very best of postwar popular music in an emotional outpouring cast in delicate, subtle, musical structures. (William Ruhlmann in AllMusic)
segunda-feira, 11 de agosto de 2025
sábado, 9 de agosto de 2025
CREAM: "WHEELS OF FIRE"
Original released on Double LP Polydor
582 031 2 (mono) / SPDLP 2 (stereo)
(UK, 1968-08-09)
terça-feira, 8 de julho de 2025
sábado, 29 de março de 2025
quinta-feira, 6 de março de 2025
THE ZOMBIES: "ODESSEY AND ORACLE"
Original Released on LP CBS D-63280
(UK 1968, April 19)
"Odessey and Oracle" was recorded in 1967 after the Zombies signed to the CBS label, and was only the second album they had released since 1965. As their first LP, "Begin Here", was a collection of singles, "Odessey" can be regarded as the only true Zombies album. While their first album included several cover versions, "Odessey" consisted entirely of original compositions by the group's two main songwriters, Rod Argent and Chris White. The famous misspelling of "odyssey" in the title was the result of a mistake by the designer of the LP cover, Terry Quirk (who was the flatmate of bass player Chris White). The group began work on the album in June 1967. Some songs were recorded at EMI's Abbey Road Studios, where earlier in the year the Beatles had recorded "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" and Pink Floyd recorded "The Piper at the Gates of Dawn". This was the first time Abbey Road would be used for an independently produced (non-EMI) release. By the time the recording was finished, in late 1967, the Zombies were effectively disbanded, due to lack of financial success. "Odessey and Oracle" was released in the UK in April 1968 and in the United States in June. The single "Time of the Season" became a surprise hit in early 1969, and Columbia Records (in the United States) re-released "Odessey" in February, with a different album cover that severely cropped the original illustration.
(UK 1968, April 19)
The gap in time between the UK and US record release dates owes to the Zombies having not prepared a stereo mix initially, a condition the American label insisted on. At the urging of Al Kooper and Columbia / Epic / Date records, Argent and White spent their accrued royalties to book studio time and remix the album for stereo specifically for that US release. However, the one song "This Will Be Our Year" was not mixed into stereo in 1969 owing to a "missing" horn overdub not on the original multitrack tape. Since its release the LP has come to be regarded as one of the greatest of all pop albums, with indelible melodies, complex harmonies, and an air of nostalgia and longing that makes it comparable to such albums as Love's "Forever Changes" and the Beach Boys' "Pet Sounds". In 2002, Rolling Stone placed "Odessey" in 80th place on their list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.
sexta-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2025
MARIANNE's "My Songs of the Sixties"
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