Gone To Earth | ||||
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Studio album by Barclay James Harvest | ||||
Released | October 1977 | |||
Recorded | March to June 1977 Strawberry Studios, Stockport |
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Genre | Progressive Rock | |||
Length | 39:50 | |||
Label | Polydor Records | |||
Producer | Barclay James Harvest, David Rohl | |||
Barclay James Harvest chronology | ||||
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Gone To Earth is an album by the English rock group Barclay James Harvest released in 1977. It reached #30 in the UK charts, but in Germany it peaked at #10 and stayed for 197 weeks in the German album charts. It is on rank #6 of the longest running albums in the German album charts. Only the My Fair Lady soundtrack and albums by Simon & Garfunkel (Greatest Hits), The Beatles (1962-1966), Pink Floyd (Wish You Were Here), and Andrea Berg (Best Of) spend more weeks in the charts. It was the band's largest selling album, eventually selling more than a million copies worldwide.
Hymn (often misinterpreted as Christmas song but actually a song against the dangers of drug use and dedicated to musicians like Jimi Hendrix, Paul Kossoff and Janis Joplin)[1] was a successful turntable hit at German radio stations in the late 1970s.
Poor Man's Moody Blues was written after a journalist angered the band by referring to Barclay James Harvest as a poor man's Moody Blues. Shortly after, guitarist John Lees wrote a song that reminded him of the Moody Blues song Nights in White Satin, and decided to use the journalist's phrase as the song title.
Other songs on the album deal with subjects like ended relationships (Friend of Mine), alienation (Leper's Song) the exploitation of animals for their fur (Spirit on the Water.), and the space race (Sea of Tranquility).
The original LP version of this album, designed by Maldwyn Tootill, featured die-cut outer cover and full-color inner album sleeve. On one side of the inner sleeve was an owl (as shown in the picture); on the other side was a picture of a sunset. The inner sleeve could be reversed so that either side would be displayed through the die cut.
The album's title, Gone To Earth, refers to the fox hunter's cry used to indicate that the quarry has returned to its lair.
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