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The Zodiac: Cosmic Sounds is a 1967 collaborative concept album on the theme of the signs of the Zodiac.It was issued by Elektra Records in and featured early use of the Moog synthesizer by Paul Beaver, with music written by Mort Garson, words by Jacques Wilson, and narration by Cyrus Faryar.
Non-album single "Peace Sign" - Remixes of "Peace Sign" 1994 — 64 — Peace Sign "—" denotes releases that did not chart. Related albums. 1970s: ...
"Signs" was originally a 1970 B-side to the relatively unsuccessful single "Hello Melinda Goodbye" (#55 Canada), first put out on MGM Records. Re-released on Lionel Records in 1971 as the A-side, "Signs" reached No. 4 in Canada and No. 3 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart. Billboard ranked it as the No. 24 song for 1971. It became a gold record.
Good-byes and Butterflies is a studio album by Canadian rock band the Five Man Electrical Band. [2] The album includes the band's biggest hit, "Signs," which peaked at #3 on the Billboard Hot 100. [3] [4] The album was released in 1970, and then re-released in 1971 with different cover art. The album reached #52 in the Canadian RPM Magazine ...
The post The 50 Best Live Albums of the 1970s appeared first on SPIN. Skip to main content. Subscriptions ... Sign in. Mail. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to ...
The narrator protagonist of "Uneasy Rider" is a long-haired marijuana smoker driving a Chevrolet with a "peace sign, mag wheels, and four on the floor."The song is a spoken-word description of an interlude in a trip from a non-specified location in the Southern United States to Los Angeles, California.
The album And it Came to Pass was reviewed in issue 12 of the German magazine, Hi Fi Sterophonie which was published in December, 1970. It received 7 for musikalische bewertung (musical rating), 7 for repertoirewert (repertoire value), 8 for aufnahme-, klangqualität (recording and sound quality), and 7 for oberfläche (surface).
The Five Man Electrical Band (known as The Staccatos from 1963 to 1968) [1] is a Canadian rock band from Ottawa, Ontario.They had many hits in Canada, including the top 10 entries "Half Past Midnight" (1967) (as The Staccatos), "Absolutely Right" (1971) and "I'm a Stranger Here" (1972). [2]