Music Appreciation
Related: About this forumOn April 19, 1968, the Zombies' "Odessey and Oracle" was released in the UK.
Last edited Fri Apr 26, 2024, 10:51 AM - Edit history (3)
Hat tip, thucythucy for clearing up the timeline. Either George Noory slipped up, or I misheard him. Misheard, most likely, due to a combination of the hour and my failing hearing..
George Noory played part of a song from that album the other night {in 2020, the first time I posted this}. I was not familiar with it, but it turns out to be well thought of.
Coast to Coast Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
A: To find out what songs are played on Coast to Coast AM, just check the nightly Bumper Music list. You can get to it by visiting the corresponding show page (date listed for a show when you click on Shows on the horizontal navigation bar). Once you get to that page, scroll down past the show recap, and you'll see the list. The list is typically posted after the live show airs at 2AM PT/5AM ET.
BUMPER MUSIC
Bumper music from Saturday April 25, 2020
Midnight Express (The Chase)
Giorgio Moroder
Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out
Bruce Springsteen
This Will Be Our Year
The Zombies
{snip}
George Noory started talking about the album, and how it was recorded at Abbey Road
I got to Googling this morning.
List of recordings made at Abbey Road Studios, 1960-1969 {dead link}
There it was. The misspelling makes it a little tougher than usual to find.
Released: 19 April 1968
Recorded: 1 June 7 November 1967
Studio: Abbey Road and Olympic Studios, London, England
Odessey and Oracle is the second studio album by English rock band the Zombies. It was originally released in the UK in April 1968 by CBS Records.
The album was recorded over a period of three months between June and August 1967. The sessions took place at Abbey Road Studios and Olympic Studios in London. It was received indifferently on release. A single from the album "Time of the Season" later became a surprise hit in the United States in early 1969.
The album gradually achieved fame and has since become one of the most acclaimed albums of the 1960s. It was ranked number 100 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. It was voted number 637 in Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums.
{snip}
Release history
Odessey and Oracle was released in the UK on 19 April 1968. Clive Davis, the head of CBS in the US, initially decided not to release the album. However, the US Columbia label had released the single "Care Of Cell 44" on 21 November 1967 to complete indifference.
CBS staff producer Al Kooper had picked up a copy of the album during a trip to London, and when he returned to America and played the album he loved it. He believed it contained three hit singles. At the urging of Kooper the US division of CBS was eventually persuaded to release the album on the little known Date Records subsidiary label in June.
Date released "Butcher's Tale (Western Front 1914)" as a single in the US, feeling that the song's anti-war theme would resonate with record-buyers due to the Vietnam War. The next single, "Time of the Season," slowly gained popularity before finally hitting big on the US charts in 1969. After the song became a hit Date re-released the album with severely cropped artwork. This time the album charted, reaching number 95 in the US. By this time Rod Argent and Chris White were busy with their new band, Argent.
{snip}
Here's the song:
343,534 views Nov 10, 2011
goldenscreen
617 subscribers
From Odessey And Oracle, 1968.
{edited to add:}
115,812 views Oct 24, 2007
sanit999
36 subscribers
the zombies a butcher's tale
Thu Apr 27, 2023: On April 19, 1968, Odessey and Oracle, by the Zombies, was released in the UK.
Mon Apr 27, 2020: On April 19, 1968, Odessey and Oracle, by the Zombies, was released in the UK.
thucythucy
(8,102 posts)and this shout out to a wonderful album, but, at the risk of being a troublesome nitpicker, the album wasn't recorded after the Beatles recorded Abbey Road. June to November 1967 would put its recording just after the release of Sgt. Pepper. Maybe you meant that it was recorded in the studio that would eventually be named "Abbey Road?"
Again, sorry to nitpick, I often "rec." your posts, actually pretty much always rec. them, and always look forward to seeing--and hearing--what you have to offer. It's just that the Beatlemaniac in me notices these little discrepancies.
Best wishes--
mahatmakanejeeves
(57,680 posts)That timeline doesn't work out. I'll make the correction.
Don't worry about "nitpicking." I make corrections every year. Things are always changing.
And good morning.