Only Visiting This Planet | ||||
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Studio album by Larry Norman | ||||
Released | 1972 | |||
Recorded | AIR Studios, London | |||
Genre | Christian rock | |||
Label | Verve | |||
Producer | Rod Edwards, Roger Hand and Jon Miller | |||
Larry Norman chronology | ||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
Only Visiting This Planet is the title of an album recorded by Larry Norman in 1972. The album was selected as the second album in CCM Magazine's The 100 Greatest Albums in Christian Music.[2]
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On 8 September 1972 Norman began recording his second studio album,[3] Only Visiting This Planet,[4] the first album in a projected trilogy,[5][6] in Beatles producer George Martin's AIR Studios at 214 Oxford Street, London.[7] Only Visiting This Planet, often ranked as Norman's best album,[8] "mixed his Christian message with strong political themes", and "was meant to reach the flower children disillusioned by the government and the church" with its "abrasive, urban reality of the gospel".[8] In a 1980 interview, Norman explained its purpose:
Only Visiting This Planet is the first part of the trilogy, and represents the present. On the front cover, I find myself standing in the middle of New York City, with buildings and traffic pressed around me and my hand on my head kind of saying, What is going on in this life? Is this really earth?, and the back cover is me visiting the site of a previous civilisation with its own monoliths, not skyscrapers, but amazing, architecturally sound structures just the same. The Druids apparently constructed Stonehenge to help them observe or worship the sun, and their civilisation is now as dead as will someday be New York. And I'm just standing there, looking around, wondering what happened to kill off this culture and reduce its entire recorded history to a few standing structures.[9]
On 6 January 1973 Norman was one of three named as Best New Male Artist of the year by Cashbox.[10] By February 1973 songs from Only Visiting This Planet had been recommended by Billboard for "heavy Top 40 airplay",[11] and were being played on WVVS-FM, KSHE-FM, and WKTK-FM.[12] In 1990 CCM magazine voted Only Visiting This Planet as "the greatest Christian album ever recorded".[13]
After a tour of South Africa in June and the UK in July,[14] and the release in July of his "Why Should the Devil Have All the Good Music?", a songbook featuring some of Norman's songs from both Upon This Rock and Only Visiting This Planet.[15]
In the song "Reader's Digest" Norman sings the following verse: "Dear John, who's more popular now? I´ve been listening to some of Paul's new records. Sometimes I think he really is dead." (see Paul is dead) "Who's more popular now?" makes reference to John Lennon's famous claim that the Beatles were more popular than Jesus. The album features prog-rock bassist and Asia frontman, John Wetton on bass guitar.
This album was supposed to be number six in a series of fourteen albums, as mentioned on the inner sleeve of "Something New Under The Son" (albums number nine through fourteen have not been released, see part II). A three-LP boxed set containing albums #6, #7 & #8 and titled The Compleat Trilogy (as mentioned on the insert of the Street Level reissue of "Only Visiting This Planet") has never been released.
All tracks composed by Larry Norman
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