Wednesday 21 November 2018

The Zombies - Into The Afterlife (2007 Big Beat)



Although the Zombies broke up at the end of 1967, there wasn't a wholly clean break between that era and the time by which Rod Argent and Chris White established themselves with Argent, and Colin Blunstone established himself as a solo artist. For a year or two, they variously wrote, recorded, and produced demos and low-profile official releases as they hatched their next moves, Blunstone even left the music business entirely for a while.

 While some of this material came out under the Zombies name, much of it either remained unreleased or (in the case of Blunstone's recordings) was issued under the pseudonym of Neil MacArthur. The 20-track Into the Afterlife compilation rescues much of this rare material, combining numerous previously unissued demos recorded by the group's primary songwriters (Argent and White) with both sides of all three of the singles Blunstone released as Neil MacArthur.

It also offers a couple MacArthur/Blunstone outtakes, alternate "orchestral" mixes of a few late Zombies tracks, an Italian-language recording of MacArthur's "She's Not There," and even a genuinely live-on-TV 1967 Zombies cover of the Miracles' "Going to a Go-Go." Far from being a barrel-scraping exercise, it shows the musicians to be making interesting music in its own right that often sounded like a natural continuation of what the Zombies had recorded in the late '60s.

Argent handles lead vocals on the Argent/White demos, and while he's not quite as good a singer as Blunstone, he's both good and has a similar style, making those cuts sound pretty close to genuine Zombies tracks. Their songs share many traits with the Zombies' material circa Odessey and Oracle in their baroque melodicism, breathy vocals, and haunting flavor, though with just a tinge of the progressive rock that was starting to emerge at the end of the '60s.
"Telescope (Mr. Galileo)" and "Unhappy Girl" are both standouts in this regard, and "To Julia (For When She Smiles)," the best track on the entire CD, is more than a standout; its delicate combination of quasi-classical balladry and choral backup vocals is every bit the equal of the best tracks on Odessey and Oracle. The Neil MacArthur tracks (including the minor U.K. hit remake of "She's Not There") are more floridly produced orchestrated pop/rock, but also have their silky charms, particularly the cover of Nilsson's "Without Her" and the more understated, acoustic-oriented sad ballad "World of Glass."

Thorough annotation by Zombies expert Alec Palao ices the package, and as none of the tracks appear on the otherwise thorough Palao-compiled Zombies box set Zombie Heaven, this CD is a necessary supplement to that box for fans of the group.(Richie Unterberger, allmusic.com)


Classic pop band and to me nearly all they've done together is great. Enjoy.(Frank)
Flac
mp3@320 
 

5 comments:

  1. Appreciate your efforts here. thanks for the shares.

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  2. What a nice and interesting compilation that is, Frank! Thanks a lot!
    Makes me wonder what could have happened had The Zombies stayed together a decade longer.
    No wonder, indeed, that they didn't make any attempt of rerecording "Time of the Season", one of the Top Ten "Best arranged and played/sung compositions with a haunting atmospheric character" (on my eternal internal list). By the way, other favorites on that list are The Doors' "Riders on the Storm" and The Beach Boys' (no, not "Good Vibrations" or "Heroes and Villains" but) "Surf's Up".

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  3. Oh boy...I have loved the zombies and Argent for over 40 years. I never heard Telescope (Mr. Galileo) before, I found it on YouTube. This one song just thrilled the hell out of me, I must have it. It's the natural followup to Time Of The Season. What is the pw for the archive?

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  4. I found the PW, never mind. Love your blog, check mine out.

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