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Neon Philharmonic - The Moth Confesses (Reissue) (1969/1995)

Neon Philharmonic - The Moth Confesses (Reissue) (1969/1995)

BAND/ARTIST: Neon Philharmonic

Tracklist:

1. Brilliant Colors
2. Cowboy
3. The New Life Out There
4. Morning Girl
5. Midsummer Night
6. Little Sparrow
7. The Last Time I Saw Jacqueline
8. Morning Girl, Later

Bonus Tracks:
9. Heighdy-Ho Princess
10. Don't Know My Way Around My Soul
11. Flowers for Your Pillow
12. Clouds
13. Snow
14. To Be Continued

Line-up:
Kenneth A. Buttrey - drums
Jerry Carrigan - Drums
Don Gant - vocals
Dennis Good - Trombone, Brass
Rufus Long - Flute, Piccolo, Wind
Pierre Menard - Strings, Concert Master
Norbert Putnam - Bass, Rhythm
Tupper Saussy - Conductor, Piano, Harpsichord, keyboards
Don Sheffield - Trumpet, Brass
Chuck Wyatt - Flute, Piccolo, Wind
Chip Young - Guitar, Rhythm

Such was the influence of psychedelic music in the late '60s that even pop-based acts like the 5th Dimension, Kenny Rogers, and the Association felt obliged to put in their two cents' worth. Such was the case with the Neon Philharmonic, which was primarily a vehicle for songwriter/arranger/keyboardist Tupper Saussy. Also featuring singer Don Gant, the group had an easygoing, not-too-memorable Top 20 pop hit in mid-1969, "Morning Girl." Their debut album, The Moth Confesses, was a much stranger piece of work, sounding something like Jimmy Webb on acid. For all of its ambitious orchestral arrangements and operatic lyrical reach, it has dated in the most embarrassing and silly of fashions, sounding like the aural equivalent of the middle-class accountant who decides to take acid with his kids in a misguided attempt to get with it.

The Nashville-based Saussy's primary credit prior to the Neon Philharmonic was his contributions to The Swinger's Guide to Mary Poppins, which featured jazz renditions of songs from the children's film. This, and even the "Morning Girl" single, weren't exactly the sort of resumé credits that led one to expect an ambitious song cycle. That's what he cooked up with The Moth Confesses, however, though the bloated arrangements, Gant's white-bread vocals, and the overwrought, sentimental lyrics came closer to Rod McKuen than Van Dyke Parks. The NH did manage another album, as well as a few singles, and were active as late as 1975. Gant was a session vocalist before dying in the mid-'80s. Saussy, as befitting a man with such unpredictable interests, became an anti-tax activist, going underground to avoid Federal authorities in the 1980s.




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  • tommy554
  •  wrote in 18:39
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thanks for lossless.
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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 14:02
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Many thanks for lossless.