The Birthday Party was the first album by The Idle Race, a psychedelic pop band, released in 1968 (see 1968 in music).
This quasi-concept album was the first to be composed almost entirely of songs by a young Birmingham guitarist/singer named Jeff Lynne. The LP came in a gatefold sleeve, the first of its kind since the Beatles' Sgt Pepper and the Rolling Stones' Their Satanic Majesties Request albums. The inside sleeve art included a mock birthday feast attended by many British Celebrities, including most of the Radio 1 disc jockeys, the Beatles, the Duke of Windsor, actor Warren Mitchell in his role as Alf Garnett, and group leader Jeff Lynne as an eight-year-old schoolboy. In the U.S. the cover art was different with a rather psychedelic-styled paisley pattern behind the band.
While warmly received by critics, the record failed to chart in the U.K. or the U.S.
The album was re-issued in 1976 by Liberty on their budget-price label Sunset, although in a non-gatefold sleeve with different design, to capitalise on Electric Light Orchestra's success. A further re-issue came in 2014 by Parlophone, as the Liberty back catalogue had long since been acquired by EMI Records, for Record Store Day, in a limited edition on gold vinyl.
Video The Birthday Party (The Idle Race album)
Track listing
All tracks composed by Jeff Lynne; except where indicated
- "Skeleton and the Roundabout" - 2:26
- "Happy Birthday" (Patty Hill, Mildred J. Hill) - 0:23
- "The Birthday" - 3:00
- "I Like My Toys" - 2:12
- "Morning Sunshine" - 1:48
- "Follow Me, Follow" - 2:48
- "Sitting in My Tree" - 1:59 (mono)
- "On With the Show" - 2:22
- "Lucky Man" - 2:38
- "(Don't Put Your Boys In The Army) Mrs. Ward" - 2:14
- "Pie in the Sky" (Dave Pritchard) - 2:23
- "The Lady Who Said She Could Fly" - 2:22
- "End of the Road" - 2:09
Maps The Birthday Party (The Idle Race album)
Personnel
- Jeff Lynne - vocals, guitar, piano
- Dave Pritchard - guitar, vocals
- Greg Masters - bass guitar, vocals
- Roger Spencer - drums, vocals
Source of the article : Wikipedia