Aerial Ballet

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Aerial Ballet
Aerial Ballet cover
Studio album by Harry Nilsson
Released 1967 Nov.8
Recorded 1967 Nov.8
Genre Pop Music
Length 25:15
Label RCA Victor
Producer(s) Rick Jarrard
Professional reviews
Harry Nilsson chronology
Pandemonium Shadow Show
(1967)
Aerial Ballet
(1968)
Skidoo (soundtrack)
(1968)


Aerial Ballet is an album by Harry Nilsson released in 1968.

Aerial Ballet was Nilsson's second album for RCA Victor, and was titled after the highwire circus act of his grandparents. It consists almost entirely of songs written by him, including "One", which would later become a Number One hit for Three Dog Night. (The song's opening line, "One is the loneliest number", is a common phrase to this day, but very few people know who coined it.) The title of the album has been given by Joey Kramer as the inspriation for Aerosmith's name and wings motif.

Ironically, the most familiar track from Aerial Ballet is its one cover song, Fred Neil's "Everybody's Talkin'". Although not a hit at the time of this album's release, this song was subsequently selected for use in the Oscar-winning film Midnight Cowboy and became one of Nilsson's biggest hits as a performer. Another song, "Little Cowboy", later featured in The Courtship of Eddie's Father, was written by Nilsson's mother.

The original opening number for Aerial Ballet was "Daddy's Song", but this track was removed (apparently without Nilsson's awareness) after the first copies were issued, because The Monkees had recorded a cover version to be featured in their film Head, and had paid $35,000 for exclusive rights to the song. The CD reissue restores "Daddy's Song" (with the Monkees' contract long expired) to its rightful place in the lineup.

When Nilsson visited the Beatles in London during 1968, John Lennon played Nilsson "Revolution" and selections from the (then-upcoming) 'White Album', and Nilsson in turned played Lennon (who had spent thirty-six hours listening to Nilsson's first album) a demo cut of this record.

[edit] Track listing

  1. "Daddy's Song" (Nilsson) – 2:19
    About Nilsson's own experience, as a child of divorced parents. The Monkees bought exclusive rights to the song during 1968, which was featured in their movie Head, and was deleted from this album after the first run of copies. It was returned to the lineup for the CD reissue.
  2. "Good Old Desk" (Nilsson) – 2:22
    Guest-starring on Playboy After Dark, Nilsson told host Hugh Hefner the song was really about its initials... "G-O-D". Even though Nilsson later admitted that he was just joking around, it is still commonly believed that the song actually is about God.
  3. "Don't Leave Me" (Nilsson) – 2:18
  4. "Mr. Richland's Favorite Song" (Nilsson) – 2:12
    A rags-to-riches to has-been story of a pop singer. Mr. Richland worked in music publishing, and liked this song best of the album selection.
  5. "Little Cowboy" (Nilsson) – 1:20
    A lullaby by Nilsson's own mother, as he sings in the intro.
  6. "Together" (Nilsson) – 2:08
  7. "Everybody's Talkin'" (Fred Neil) – 2:41
  8. "I Said Goodbye to Me" (Nilsson) – 2:13
    A veiled song about suicide.
  9. "Little Cowboy - reprise" (Nilsson) – 0:49
  10. "Mr. Tinker" (Nilsson) – 2:41
  11. "One" (Nilsson) – 2:50
    Possibly the most covered original song of his entire catalogue, "One" is a fairly straightfoward song about loneliness and the desperation it brings. Three Dog Night covered it in 1969 with a completely different arrangement, bringing it to #1 on the charts. Aimee Mann and Jon Brion covered it again in 1994 as an homage to Nilsson's original and the Three Dog Night version for the tribute album "Everyone Sings Harry"
  12. "The Wailing of the Willow" (Nilsson/Smith) – 1:57
    Nilsson was teamed with a co-writer.
  13. "Bath" (Nilsson) – 1:44
    An innocent-sounding song, about coming home from an overnight visit to a brothel.