Earthrise (album)

Earthrise is a concept album originally released in 1985[1] (USA 1984),[3] written by former Electric Light Orchestra (ELO) member Richard Tandy and David Morgan, both from Birmingham, UK. Morgan also wrote songs for 1960s band The Move. The album was inspired by the iconic photo of the earth taken during the Apollo 8 mission.[4]

Earthrise
Studio album by
Released1985[1]
Recorded1981–1983[2]
StudioRidge Farm, Sussex, England; RJ Jones, London, England; Chipping Norton, Oxford, England; Jarm East, London, England; Grimm Doo West, Birmingham, England
GenreRock
Length44:58
LabelFM-Revolver
ProducerDave Morgan, Richard Tandy, Steve Lipson

Richard Tandy and David Morgan chronology
Earthrise
(1985)
The B.C. Collection
(1987)
2011 Special Edition

The album's story is about a space explorer who longs to return to his one love on Earth, only to eventually find that true love has always been with him inside. The album's synthesizer-heavy rock sound is similar to ELO's 1981 album Time. Although the album was well received by ELO fans,[5] it was not a commercial success, largely due to the absence of marketing.[2] Rock Legacy released a remastered special edition on CD in 2011.

On November 9, 2019, to commemorate the 50th year of the moon landings, the Royal Birmingham Conservatoire performed an orchestral version of Earthrise with Tandy and Morgan.[6]

Track listing

The track order of the original 1986 release, on LP and cassette with the FMRevolver label, is:

Original track listing

Side one
No.TitleLength
1."Earth Rise"2:06
2."Under the Blue"1:17
3."Asteroid"1:57
4."Suddenly"3:34
5."Escape from the Citadel"2:47
6."Caesar of the Galaxy"2:44
7."One Thousand Worlds"3:30
8."Spaceship Earth"4:35
Side two
No.TitleLength
1."Zero Zero"3:07
2."The Third Planet"2:33
3."Ria"2:48
4."Princeton"6:00
5."Pictures in My Pillow"4:00
6."The Secret"3:54
Total length:44:58

CD issue

The remastered CD, released on 18 August 2011, contains the following tracks, some of which are previously unreleased or bonus.

No.TitleLength
1."Spaceship Earth"4:32
2."Earth Rise"1:52
3."Under the Blue" / "Asteroid"3:12
4."Starclipse" / "Purpose"3:36
5."Escape from the Citadel"2:45
6."One Thousand Worlds"4:01
7."The Third Planet"2:29
8."Suddenly"3:32
9."Princeton"5:21
10."Wheels"2:05
11."Caesar of the Galaxy"3:00
12."The Secret"3:49
13."Zero Zero" (plus 29 seconds of silence added)3:07
14."Pictures in My Pillow"4:03
15."Ria" (instrumental + backing vocals)3:11
16."Starclipse" (outmix)2:59
Total length:54:04

Personnel

Personnel list for the 1986 album.[7][8]

Earthrise

  • Richard Tandy - keyboards, bass guitar, guitar, producer
  • Dave Morgan - keyboards, vocoder, vocals, guitar, producer
  • Haydon James Simpson / Jim Simpson - drums, guitar, on "Zero Zero"
  • Tony Clarkin - guitar on "Ria"
  • Bob Wilson - guitar
  • Martin Smith - guitar on Secret (uncredited on re-issue)[3]
  • Shirley Miller - backing vocals on "Princeton"
  • Carl Wayne - vocals on "Princeton"
  • Kevin Peek - guitar on "Princeton"
  • Richard Bailey - keyboards, guitar on "Princeton"
  • Graham Preskett - keyboards, string arrangements on "Princeton"
  • David Bellinger - keyboards on "Spaceship Earth"
  • Brian Badhams - bass guitar on "Princeton"
  • Mike Giles - drums on "Princeton"

Production

  • Steve Lipson - engineer, producer
  • Chris Bellman - mastering

References

  1. "Tandy & Morgan/ The Tandy Morgan Band". Revolver Records. Retrieved 31 October 2020.
  2. "Earthrise - Tandy Morgan". Rock Legacy. 13 April 2011. Archived from the original on 19 January 2012. Retrieved 20 October 2020.
  3. "Earth Rising". Earthrise. 20 January 2012. Archived from the original on 20 January 2012. Retrieved 31 October 2020.
  4. "Earthrise". grimmdoo. Retrieved 31 October 2020.
  5. "Former ELO Guitarist Unveils Magnificent 'Seven'". giggingni. 19 June 2019. Retrieved 31 October 2020.
  6. "conservatoire". grimmdoo. Retrieved 31 October 2020.
  7. Earthrise (liner notes). Tandy and Morgan. Straight Ahead. 1986.CS1 maint: others (link)
  8. Earthrise (back cover). Tandy and Morgan. Straight Ahead. 1986.CS1 maint: others (link)
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