Jump to content

Aerial Pandemonium Ballet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Qwerfjkl (talk | contribs) at 16:20, 13 April 2021 (contemorary->contemporary - Fix a typo in one click). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Aerial Pandemonium Ballet
Remix album by
ReleasedJune 1971
Recordedlate 1966-1968 (new vocals and remix, 1971)
GenrePop, Rock, Remixes
Length29:58
LabelRCA Victor
ProducerHarry Nilsson
Rick Jarrard
Harry Nilsson chronology
The Point!
(1970)
Aerial Pandemonium Ballet
(1971)
Nilsson Schmilsson
(1971)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]

Aerial Pandemonium Ballet is a 1971 album by Harry Nilsson, and one of the first-ever remix albums, years before they became commonplace in the late 1970s and 1980s onwards.

Background

With the successes of "Everybody's Talkin'" and The Point! creating demand for Nilsson recordings, a reissue of his first two RCA Victor albums (Pandemonium Shadow Show and Aerial Ballet), then out of print, was considered. Nilsson thought that his early albums already sounded a bit dated by 1971. So he went back into the studio with the master tapes, remixed, tweaked, and re-recorded vocals, and came up with a new consolidation that he titled Aerial Pandemonium Ballet.

Aerial Pandemonium Ballet includes four songs from Pandemonium Shadow Show ("1941", "Without Her", "River Deep - Mountain High", and "Sleep Late, My Lady Friend") and eight songs from Aerial Ballet ("Daddy's Song", "Good Old Desk", "Don't Leave Me", "Mr. Richland's Favorite Song", "Together", "Everybody's Talkin'", "One", and "Bath").

The songs from Pandemonium Shadow Show not included in Aerial Pandemonium Ballet are "Ten Little Indians", "Cuddly Toy", "She Sang Hymns Out of Tune", "You Can't Do That", "She's Leaving Home", "There Will Never Be", "Freckles", and "It's Been So Long". The songs from Aerial Ballet not included in Aerial Pandemonium Ballet are "Little Cowboy", "I Said Goodbye to Me", "Little Cowboy (Reprise)", "Mr. Tinker", and "The Wailing of the Willow".

Reception

Robert Adels, in the June 24, 1971 edition of the Philadelphia Daily News stated that the album was "the most senstive stuff he's ever recorded." [2] The Richmond Review called the album "lively".[3]

A less positive contemporary notice came from John Laycock of the The Windsor Star, who stated that while "Everybody's Talkin'" and "1941" didn't "need any help", "nothing could save some of the others" and "If nothing else, this patchwork shows how wise he's been to stick to wit and whimsy in his more recent stuff.”[4] More recently, Stephen Thomas Erlewine on allmusic.com describes the result as "just old tunes presented in slightly new, slightly off-putting ways."

Track listing

All music and lyrics by Harry Nilsson except where noted

  1. Introduction – :09
  2. "1941" – 2:37 (slowed down track & remixed)
  3. "Daddy's Song" – 2:07 (new vocals, guitar/piano/out of sync)
  4. "Mr. Richland's Favorite Song" – 2:07 (new bg vocals & remixed)
  5. "Good Old Desk" – 2:30 (slowed down track & remixed)
  6. "Everybody's Talkin'" (Fred Neil) – 2:42 (dumped second voice & remixed)
  7. "Bath" – 1:50 (re-EQ'd original tracks)
  8. "River Deep – Mountain High" (Phil Spector, Jeff Barry, Ellie Greenwich) – 3:57 (new vocals & remixed)
  9. "Sleep Late, My Lady Friend" – 2:37 (remixed)
  10. "Don't Leave Me" – 2:12 (remixed)
  11. "Without Her" – 2:08 (new vocals & remixed)
  12. "Together" – 1:37 (new vocals, edited out bridge & remixed)
  13. "One" – 2:18 (remixed and significantly edited - the original was 2:50)
  14. Closing – :20

References

  1. ^ https://www.allmusic.com/album/r63377
  2. ^ Adels, Robert (24 June 1971). "Record Review". Philadelphia Daily News. Philadelphia, PA. Retrieved 21 January 2012 – via newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ "The Music Box". Richmond Review. 1971-08-07. Retrieved 2021-01-21.
  4. ^ Laycock, John (1971-07-17). "Off the Cuff". The Windsor Star. Retrieved 2021-01-21.