Hollywood Dream | ||
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Studio album by Thunderclap Newman | ||
Released | October 1970[1] | |
Genre | Rock, art rock, psychedelic pop[2] | |
Length | 47:51 / 68:33 | |
Language | English | |
Label | Track Records (UK) Atlantic Records (US) MCA Records (US) Polydor Records (CD version) |
|
Producer | Pete Townshend | |
Singles from Hollywood Dream [1] | ||
|
Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [3] |
Robert Christgau | (B-)[4] |
Music-News | [5] |
Consumable Online | (favourable)[6] |
Hollywood Dream was a 1970 album by Thunderclap Newman, their first and only album release.
Contents |
The album was produced by The Who's guitarist and songwriter Pete Townshend, who was also responsible for the band's initial formation.[7] Townshend helped the group to obtain a recording contract with Track Records, a company formed by Kit Lambert and Chris Stamp, who were managers of The Who. Townshend also played bass on the album, credited under the pseudonym "Bijou Drains", although the later CD releases do not credit him.[7][8] Track Records licensed the recordings to Atlantic Records for initial release in the U.S.
The groups first single "Something in the Air", was a UK number 1 hit and is the song for which Thunderclap Newman are best known.[2][9] The single also reached #25 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the U.S. The album was recorded after the initial U.K. success of the first single.
The album as originally released in 1970 opened with "Hollywood", with the title track, an instrumental by young guitarist Jimmy McCulloch, appearing toward the end of Side 2. The album then culminated in a reprise of "Hollywood" (featuring a miscellany of instruments including soprano saxophones, glockenspiel, sleigh bells, a Japanese battle cymbal and a Chinese temple block) and finally "Something in the Air".
In the mid 1970s the album was reissued in the U.S. with different cover art by MCA Records. The CD release in 1991 moved "Something in the Air" to become the opening track. It also added the single versions of "Something In The Air" (the single version's mix differed from the album version), "Accidents" and "The Reason", and the three non-album B-sides as bonus tracks.
"Something in the Air" makes a brief appearance in the 1969 film The Magic Christian starring Peter Sellers and Ringo Starr. It also appears on the accompanying soundtrack LP.
All songs written by John Keen unless otherwise stated.
For this release, "Something in the Air" became the opening track and the album was augmented by the A and B sides of the singles released by Thunderclap Newman.