Jonathan Livingston Seagull (album)

Jonathan Livingston Seagull
Soundtrack album by Neil Diamond
Released 1973
Recorded 1973
Genre Film soundtrack
Length 43:29
Label Columbia
Producer Tom Catalano
Neil Diamond chronology
Rainbow
(1972)Rainbow1972
Jonathan Livingston Seagull
(1973)
Serenade
(1974)Serenade1974
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Rolling Stone(mixed)[1]
Allmusic[2]

Jonathan Livingston Seagull is the Grammy Award winning soundtrack album to the 1973 American film Jonathan Livingston Seagull, recorded by singer-songwriter Neil Diamond and produced by Tom Catalano. The album was released on Columbia Records, Diamond's debut for that label after his contract with MCA Records' Uni subsidiary had expired, and grossed more than the film itself. It was Diamond's ninth studio album, and his first album after his successful 1972 live album Hot August Night. It won the 1974 Grammy as Best Original Score Written for a Motion Picture or a Television Special.

Track listing

Side one
No.TitleLine notesLength
1."Prologue"And here begins our story – the sky, the sea, the flock.3:19
2."Be"Introduction of Jonathan – his flight and fall.6:28
3."Flight of the Gull"Jonathan is carried to the heights of ambition, and to near catastrophe.2:23
4."Dear Father"Battered, and near death, Jonathan asks for reasons.5:12
5."Skybird"Returning home to show what he has learned, his acrobatics only serve to anger the flock elders. He is put on trial, and forever…outcast.1:12
6."Lonely Looking Sky"Alone and adrift.3:12
Side two
No.TitleLine notesLength
1."The Odyssey (Be – Lonely Looking Sky – Dear Father)"And so begins a journey, an odyssey, a test of the spirit.9:28
2."Anthem""Transcend, purify, glorious."3:03
3."Be"Jonathan returns to teach the flock.1:06
4."Skybird"The lesson2:18
5."Dear Father"Rebuked again by the elders, Jonathan attempts to rally the flock.1:14
6."Be"Recapitulation and farewell to Fletcher3:26

Charts and certifications

Personnel

Orchestra

References

Preceded by
Goats Head Soup by The Rolling Stones
Australian Kent Music Report number-one album
January 28 - February 24, 1974
Succeeded by
Goodbye Yellow Brick Road by Elton John
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