Rehearsals for Retirement

Rehearsals for Retirement is Phil Ochs's sixth album, released in 1969 on A&M Records.

Rehearsals for Retirement
Studio album by
ReleasedMay 16, 1969
Recorded1968–69
StudioA&M Studios, Los Angeles
GenreFolk rock
Length38:54
LabelA&M
ProducerLarry Marks
Phil Ochs chronology
Tape from California
(1968)
Rehearsals for Retirement
(1969)
Greatest Hits
(1970)

Background

Recorded in the aftermath of Ochs's presence at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago (where Ochs claimed to have witnessed the symbolic "death of America") it is often considered to be the darkest of Ochs's albums, exemplified not just by the lyrical matter but also by its cover: a tombstone sardonically proclaiming that Ochs had died in Chicago.[1]

Rehearsals for Retirement saw Ochs exploring folk rock, incorporating orchestral accompaniments and electric guitar into his music.[2] According to English studies scholar David Pichaske, songs such as "Pretty Smart on My Part" and "The Scorpion Departs but Never Returns" functioned as "art-protest songs". The former was written from the perspective of a John Birch Society member who is paranoid of switchblade-toting thieves, foreign operatives, dissident hitchhikers, and dominant, large-breasted women, and acts on this paranoia by killing them and others with a rifle and his friends from the NRA. Pichaske interpreted the narrative as a psychological analysis finding insecurity to be the source of violence in the United States. The latter song used the 1968 disappearance of the Scorpion nuclear submarine as an allegory for a modern "Lost Generation" who abandon the U.S. in response to the Vietnam War.[3]

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[4]
The Village VoiceB[5]

Rehearsals for Retirement was the poorest-selling of all of Ochs's albums released during his lifetime, having been deleted from the A&M Records catalog before sales of 20,000 units had occurred.

Reviewing for The Village Voice in 1969, Robert Christgau said the musical arrangements are "excellent and work for [Ochs'] voice". While observing "some predictable bummers", Christgau highlighted two flashes of greatness with "The Scorpion Departs But Never Returns" and "Another Age".[5]

Track listing

All songs by Phil Ochs.

Side one

  1. "Pretty Smart on My Part" – 3:18
  2. "The Doll House" – 4:39
  3. "I Kill Therefore I Am" – 2:55
  4. "William Butler Yeats Visits Lincoln Park and Escapes Unscathed" - 2:55
  5. [Untitled] (commonly called "Where Were You in Chicago?") – 0:29
  6. "My Life" – 3:12

Side two

  1. "The Scorpion Departs but Never Returns" – 4:15
  2. "The World Began in Eden and Ended in Los Angeles" – 3:06
  3. "Doesn't Lenny Live Here Anymore?" – 6:11
  4. "Another Age" – 3:42
  5. "Rehearsals for Retirement" – 4:09

Personnel

gollark: It isn't exactly very safe or performant, though.
gollark: I don't want to do that, but you could if you wanted to.
gollark: Or that.
gollark: Hook up its memory cells to real memory space?
gollark: So not really.

References

  1. Schumacher, Michael (1996). There But for Fortune: The Life of Phil Ochs. New York: Hyperion. pp. 201, 204, 211. ISBN 978-0-7868-6084-5.
  2. Chase, Gilbert (1992). America's Music, from the Pilgrims to the Present. 432. University of Illinois Press. p. 626. ISBN 0252062752.
  3. Pichaske, David (1994). "Phil Ochs". In De Leon, David (ed.). Leaders from the 1960s: A Biographical Sourcebook of American Activism. ABC-CLIO. p. 424. ISBN 0313029172.
  4. "Rehearsals for Retirement > Review". AllMusic. Retrieved December 15, 2011.
  5. Christgau, Robert (July 10, 1969). "Consumer Guide (1)". The Village Voice. Retrieved October 21, 2017.

Further reading

  • Möhle, Christine (2017). Trials and Tragedies: Phil Ochs and His Rehearsals for Retirement. Hamburg: Tredition. ISBN 978-3-7439-3963-9.
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