T. Rex (album)

T. Rex
Studio album by T. Rex
Released 18 December 1970
Recorded July–August 1970 at Trident Studios, London, England
Genre Rock
Length 37:41
Label
Producer Tony Visconti
T. Rex chronology
A Beard of Stars
(1970)
T. Rex
(1970)
Electric Warrior
(1971)

T. Rex is the fifth studio album by English rock band T. Rex and the first released under that name since changing their name from Tyrannosaurus Rex. It was released on 18 December 1970 by record labels Fly and Reprise. The album marked a further shift from the band's previous folk style to a minimal rock sound.[1]

Content

Although the album was credited to T. Rex, all the recordings (as well as the cover shot) were done when they still were Tyrannosaurus Rex, with the two-man lineup of singer/songwriter/guitarist Marc Bolan and percussionist Mickey Finn, although producer Tony Visconti played bass and recorder on a couple of tracks. "Ride a White Swan" was recorded during the same sessions but did not appear on the album. They officially changed the band name to T. Rex to release that single in October 1970.

Music

The album continued in the vein of the duo's previous album A Beard of Stars, with an even further emphasis on an electric rock sound and the addition of strings on several tracks. Howard Kaylan and Mark Volman, aka "Flo and Eddie", sang backup vocals for the first time on a T. Rex song, "Seagull Woman". They would go on to sing on most of the group's subsequent string of hits.

The album contained electric reworkings of two old Tyrannosaurus Rex songs, one of which, "The Wizard", was originally recorded even earlier than Bolan's pre-T.Rex band John's Children. The second was an electric version of the second Tyrannosaurus Rex single, "One Inch Rock", with an intro of scat-singing by Bolan and Finn. The remaining short songs, however, were new material.

The album was bookended by a track called "The Children of Rarn", which was part of a longer piece known as "The Children of Rarn Suite". A Tolkienesque children's story in several movements, it was recorded only in demo form at the time, although instrumentation was added posthumously by Visconti for its release on the 1998 compilation The Words and Music of Marc Bolan.

Release

T. Rex was released on 18 December 1970 by Fly and Reprise. The sleeve design was unusual, requiring a sideways look to unfold the cover, or to have the artwork sideways to remove the LP.

T. Rex was the album that broke T. Rex in the UK, following the surprise success of the then-recent single "Ride a White Swan" (which reached No. 2 in the charts) and its smash No. 1 follow-up "Hot Love". The album eventually reaching a chart peak of No. 7 and remained on the charts for 25 weeks.[2]

The US version of the LP included "Ride a White Swan" as the last song on the album instead of "The Children of Rarn (Reprise)".

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[3]
Rolling Stonefavourable[4]

In his retrospective review, Mark Deming of AllMusic wrote, "T. Rex is the quiet before the storm of Electric Warrior, and it retains a loopy energy and easy charm that makes it one of Bolan's watershed works."[3]

Track listing

All songs written and composed by Marc Bolan, except as noted. 

Side A
No. Title Length
1. "The Children of Rarn"   0:53
2. "Jewel"   2:46
3. "The Visit"   1:55
4. "Childe"   1:41
5. "The Time of Love is Now"   2:42
6. "Diamond Meadows"   1:58
7. "Root of Star"   2:31
8. "Beltane Walk"   2:38
Side B
No. Title Length
1. "Is It Love?"   2:34
2. "One Inch Rock"   2:28
3. "Summer Deep"   1:43
4. "Seagull Woman"   2:18
5. "Suneye"   2:06
6. "The Wizard"   8:50
7. "The Children of Rarn (Reprise)" (the U.S. version features "Ride a White Swan" in place of this track) 0:36

Personnel

References

  1. Deming, Mark. "T. Rex biography". Allmusic. Retrieved 2 February 2016.
  2. "T. Rex | Artist | Official Charts". Official Charts. Retrieved 8 February 2015.
  3. 1 2 Deming, Mark. "T-Rex – T. Rex | Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards | AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved 8 February 2015.
  4. Everett, Todd (22 July 1971). "[T. Rex review]". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 8 February 2015.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, February 05, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.