Elegy (The Nice album)

Elegy was the final official album release by the Nice, Keith Emerson having moved on to Emerson, Lake & Palmer, Lee Jackson to Jackson Heights and Brian Davison to Every Which Way. It consists of live versions of songs from earlier releases and a cover of "My Back Pages". Released after the Nice had disbanded, the album achieved number 5 in the UK album chart.[2]

Elegy
Live album by
ReleasedApril 1971
Recorded19–20 December 1969
VenueFillmore East, New York City
GenreProgressive rock
Length39:27
LabelUK: Charisma CAS 1030
US: Mercury SR 61324
France, Germany: Philips
ProducerThe Nice
The Nice chronology
Five Bridges
(1970)
Elegy
(1971)
Autumn '67 - Spring '68
(1972)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

"Hang on to a Dream" and "America" were recorded live at Fillmore East, New York during the group's 1969 tour.

Cover art

The UK edition came in a gatefold sleeve. It was designed by Hipgnosis (Storm Thorgerson and Aubrey Powell), well known as designers of album covers for Pink Floyd and other progressive rock bands. The front and back covers show a Sahara desert scene with a line of fifty red footballs (credited to Mettoy Playcraft) receding towards a distant dune. The inside of the cover shows, in the distance, a mesa or plateau; in front is a gravelly landscape strewn with memorabilia of the Nice such as older album covers, publicity shots, press releases and a scrapbook of press cuttings.

Track listing

Side one

  1. "Hang On to a Dream" (Live) (Tim Hardin) – 12:43
  2. "My Back Pages" (Bob Dylan) – 9:12

Side two

  1. "Third Movement, Pathetique" (Group Only) (Tchaikovsky; arranged by The Nice) – 7.05
  2. "America" (Live) (Leonard Bernstein, Stephen Sondheim, The Nice)  – 10:27
CD release 1990

The CD release 1990 contains six additional bonus tracks taken from 1972 compilation Autumn '67 - Spring '68 and the length of the original four tracks is slightly different.

  1. "Hang On to a Dream" (Live) (Tim Hardin) – 12:42
  2. "My Back Pages" (Bob Dylan) – 9:10
  3. "Third Movement, Pathetique" (Group Only) (Tchaikovsky; arranged by The Nice) – 7;05
  4. "America" (Live) (Bernstein, Sondheim, The Nice)  – 10:17
  5. "Diamond-Hard Blue Apples of the Moon" (Emerson, Jackson) – 2:46
  6. "Dawn" (Davison, Emerson, Jackson) – 5:05
  7. "Tantalising Maggie" (Emerson, Jackson) – 4:19
  8. "Cry of Eugene" (O'List, Emerson, Jackson) – 4:30
  9. "Daddy Where Did I Come From?" (Emerson, Jackson) – 2:46
  10. "Azirial" (Emerson, Jackson) – 3:46

"Azrial" had been the B-side of the single release "The Thoughts of Emerlist Davjack," and "Diamond-Hard Blue Apples of the Moon" that of "America."

The arrangement of "My Back Pages" was inspired by Keith Jarrett's 1968 Vortex recording of the song but the majority is Emerson's creation. The performance is in two parts with the first featuring piano and the second featuring Hammond organ.
2009 Digital Remaster

The 2009 Digital Remastered CD contains only two additional bonus tracks and the length of the original four tracks is slightly different.

  1. "Hang On to a Dream" (Live) (Tim Hardin) – 12:41
  2. "My Back Pages" (Bob Dylan) – 9:12
  3. "Third Movement, Pathetique" (Group Only) (Tchaikovsky; arranged by The Nice) – 7;07
  4. "America" (Live) (Bernstein, Sondheim, The Nice)  – 10:22
  5. "Country Pie" (BBC Radio 1's "Sounds of the Seventies") (Bob Dylan) – 4:57
  6. "Pathetique (Symphony No. 6, 3rd Movement)" (BBC Radio 1's Sounds of the Seventies) (Tchaikovsky; arranged by The Nice) – 6:59

Personnel

The Nice


gollark: Krist doesn't actually stop the admins from adding money to people's accounts arbitrarily, as it's centralized, but it's not been done yet.
gollark: KristPay just connects to the krist node. It's paid for via donations to SC.
gollark: Krist effectively just unconditionally trusts the node, so SC and basically everyone use the krist.ceriat.net one.
gollark: Unless that got fixed.
gollark: It is also really hard and has one long-standing bug which you have to manually patch.

References

  1. "allmusic ((( Elegy > Overview )))". www.allmusic.com. Retrieved 3 October 2009.
  2. "The Official Charts Company – The Nice – Elergy". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 3 October 2009.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.