Greatest Hits (Phil Ochs album)
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Greatest Hits | ||
Studio album by Phil Ochs | ||
Released | February 1970 | |
Recorded | late 1969 | |
Genre | Folk, Country, Rock, Orchestral | |
Length | 37:43 | |
Label | A&M | |
Producer(s) | Van Dyke Parks and Andrew Wickham | |
Professional reviews | ||
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Phil Ochs chronology | ||
Rehearsals For Retirement (1969) |
Greatest Hits (1970) |
Gunfight At Carnegie Hall (1975) |
Greatest Hits was Phil Ochs' seventh and final studio album. Contrary to its title, it offered ten new tracks of material, mostly produced by Van Dyke Parks, and was released in 1970. Focusing more on country music than any other album in Ochs' canon, it featured an impressive number of musicians, including members of The Byrds and Elvis Presley's backing group alongside mainstays Lincoln Mayorga and Bob Rafkin. His lyrics at their most introspective, only one political song appeared, "Ten Cents A Coup", strung together from various anti-war rallies, and the least serious song he released in his lifetime.
Among the introspective tracks was "Chords of Fame", lambasting Bob Dylan's popularity, while sort of wishing for his own popularity to rise. "Boy In Ohio" saw Ochs pining for his childhood and "Jim Dean of Indiana" was a tale of James Dean's life, a tribute to him, written after Ochs had visited Dean's grave. "No More Songs" was the most telling of the tracks, as Ochs would release but five more studio tracks in his lifetime after 1970, never completing another studio album.
[edit] Track listing
- "One Way Ticket Home" (P. Ochs, – 2:40)
- "Jim Dean of Indiana" (P. Ochs, – 5:05)
- "My Kingdom For A Car" (P. Ochs, – 2:53)
- "Boy In Ohio" (P. Ochs, – 3:43)
- "Gas Station Women" (P. Ochs, – 3:31)
- "Chords of Fame" (P. Ochs, – 3:33)
- "Ten Cents A Coup" (P. Ochs, – 3:14)
- "Bach, Beethoven, Mozart and Me" (P. Ochs, – 5:05)
- "Basket in the Pool" (P. Ochs, – 3:40)
- "No More Songs" (P. Ochs, – 4:31)
[edit] Participants (partial list)
- Phil Ochs - guitar, piano, vocals
- Van Dyke Parks - producer, keyboards
- Andrew Wickham - co-producer ("Gas Station Women" and "Chords of Fame" only)
- Clarence White - guitar, backing vocals
- Laurindo Almeida - guitar
- James Burton - guitar
- Bob Rafkin - guitar, bass
- Chris Ethridge - bass
- Kenny Kaufman - bass
- Gene Parsons - drums
- Kevin Kelley - drums
- Earl Ball - piano, arrangements
- Lincoln Mayorga - keyboards
- Mike Rubini - keyboards
- Richard Rosmini - pedal steel, harmonica
- Ry Cooder - mandolin
- Don Rich - fiddle
- Gary Coleman - percussion
- Tom Scott - tenor saxophone
- Bobby Bruce - violin
- Anne Goodman - cello
- Merry Clayton, Sherlie Matthews and Clydie King - backing vocals
- Bobby Wayne and Jim Glover - harmony vocals
- Bob Thompson - arrangements