
Into The Afterlife
More Info
Ten years is a long time for a compilation to come to fruition. Such is the case with INTO THE AFTERLIFE. I had originally planned this collection of post-Zombies pieces to be issued shortly after the release in October 1997 of âZombie Heavenâ, almost as a fifth disc, especially as some tracks on âAfterlifeâ had been contenders for inclusion on the box. In the event it has taken the best part of a decade to gather the appropriate clearances but I think you will agree that it has been well worth the wait.
This is technically not a Zombies album, though it does contain performances by Colin Blunstone, Rod Argent, Chris White, Hugh Grundy and Paul Atkinson, together and separately. As 1968 dawned, with the imminent dissolution of the five friendsâ partnership after seven years together, it seemed that for some of the quintet at least, the Zombies had been a magical but ultimately fleeting adventure. âAfterlifeâ is, essentially, what the members of the Zombies did next. It documents the relatively brief but murky period between the end of the group, and the establishment of long term music careers by its main protagonists: two years that were also highlighted by the sudden re-emergence of the Zombies âbrandâ as a major commercial force, thanks to the belated and quite unexpected American success of the final single Time Of The Season and the groupâs brilliant swansong, âOdessey & Oracleâ.
It draws from three different sets of repertoire: Rod and Chrisâ demos en route to the formation of Argent, pop experiments that on the one hand are markedly different to what these two exemplary writers had done in the past, yet bear the classy hallmark of the âOdesseyâ songbook; the augmented Zombies material that the duo prepared for the aborted âR.I.Pâ album; and the small cache of recordings Colin made as Neil MacArthur, including his revamp of Sheâs Not There which charted in the spring of 1969. Virtually everything on âAfterlifeâ has not been reissued before, and over half has never been available anywhere.
The demos provide a chance to hear fabled lost songs such as Unhappy Girl and To Julia, which were deemed inappropriate for the direction the band Argent would take, as well as the embryonic versions of much-loved tunes like She Loves The Way They Love Her. The personnel utilised for the demo sessions was a dry-run for Rodâs planned new group, including Jim Rodford on bass and Hugh Grundy on drums. We also hear a rare Chris White vocal on Mr Galileo. The enviable harmonies of messrs Argent and White are also to the fore on the âorchestralâ mixes of vintage Zombies outtakes re-dressed for âR.I.P.â, remixed so as to showcase both the overdubbed vocals and Mike Vickersâ expert string and horn arrangements.
Perhaps the most interesting aspect of âAfterlifeâ are the Neil MacArthur sides, which are rarely discussed even by diehard fans of Colin Blunstone. Though they were unrelated to Chris and Rodâs concurrent activities and, as Colin himself explains in the sleeve notes, it was a most uncertain period in the singerâs career, these are some great performances from one of the most distinctive voices in British pop. Overseen by producer Mike Hurst, we feature all six tracks originally released on three Deram singles in 1969, including exemplary versions of Nilssonâs Without Her and Billy Veraâs Donât Try To Explain, and Hurstâs own World Of Glass. A special bonus was the discovery in the producerâs vault of two unreleased cuts from the sessions, including Colinâs absolutely gorgeous rendering of the Buffalo Springfieldâs Hung Upside Down. The arrangements are all late 60s British record-making at its classiest.
Last but not least, there are a couple of continentally-flavoured bonus cuts: the super-rare Italian language version of Sheâs Not There, and Going To A Go Go, performed live by the Zombies on French TV in late 1966. Though it consists of live rave-ups, bare-boned demos and commercial items aimed squarely at the charts, âInto The Afterlifeâ actually hangs together in an oddly satisfying manner, a cohesion that could be expected of few others in pop at the time. As the last Zombies single of the 60s postulated, If It Donât Work Out: a lot of whatâs here indeed did not âwork outâ, but most other artists should be as lucky to have ephemera of this calibre to throw away.
Tracklist
01 She's Not There - Neil MacArthur
02 Hung Upside Down - Neil MacArthur
03 Unhappy Girl - Rod Argent & Chris White
04 She Loves The Way They Love Her - Rod Argent & Chris White
05 Telescope (Mr Galileo) - Rod Argent & Chris White
06 Walking In The Sun - The Zombies
07 Without Her - Neil MacArthur
08 Twelve Twenty Nine - Neil MacArthur
09 It Never Fails To Please Me - Rod Argent & Chris White
10 I Could Spend The Day - Rod Argent & Chris White
11 I Know She Will - The Zombies
12 Don't Try To Explain - Neil MacArthur
13 World Of Glass - Neil MacArthur
14 To Julia (For When She Smiles) - Rod Argent & Chris White
15 If It Don't Work Out - The Zombies
16 Never My Love - Neil MacArthur
17 It's Not Easy - Neil MacArthur
18 Telescope (Mr Galileo) - Chris White & Argent
19 Going To A Go Go (Live) - The Zombies
20 Ma Non E'giusto - Neil MacArthur
More Info
Ten years is a long time for a compilation to come to fruition. Such is the case with INTO THE AFTERLIFE. I had originally planned this collection of post-Zombies pieces to be issued shortly after the release in October 1997 of âZombie Heavenâ, almost as a fifth disc, especially as some tracks on âAfterlifeâ had been contenders for inclusion on the box. In the event it has taken the best part of a decade to gather the appropriate clearances but I think you will agree that it has been well worth the wait.
This is technically not a Zombies album, though it does contain performances by Colin Blunstone, Rod Argent, Chris White, Hugh Grundy and Paul Atkinson, together and separately. As 1968 dawned, with the imminent dissolution of the five friendsâ partnership after seven years together, it seemed that for some of the quintet at least, the Zombies had been a magical but ultimately fleeting adventure. âAfterlifeâ is, essentially, what the members of the Zombies did next. It documents the relatively brief but murky period between the end of the group, and the establishment of long term music careers by its main protagonists: two years that were also highlighted by the sudden re-emergence of the Zombies âbrandâ as a major commercial force, thanks to the belated and quite unexpected American success of the final single Time Of The Season and the groupâs brilliant swansong, âOdessey & Oracleâ.
It draws from three different sets of repertoire: Rod and Chrisâ demos en route to the formation of Argent, pop experiments that on the one hand are markedly different to what these two exemplary writers had done in the past, yet bear the classy hallmark of the âOdesseyâ songbook; the augmented Zombies material that the duo prepared for the aborted âR.I.Pâ album; and the small cache of recordings Colin made as Neil MacArthur, including his revamp of Sheâs Not There which charted in the spring of 1969. Virtually everything on âAfterlifeâ has not been reissued before, and over half has never been available anywhere.
The demos provide a chance to hear fabled lost songs such as Unhappy Girl and To Julia, which were deemed inappropriate for the direction the band Argent would take, as well as the embryonic versions of much-loved tunes like She Loves The Way They Love Her. The personnel utilised for the demo sessions was a dry-run for Rodâs planned new group, including Jim Rodford on bass and Hugh Grundy on drums. We also hear a rare Chris White vocal on Mr Galileo. The enviable harmonies of messrs Argent and White are also to the fore on the âorchestralâ mixes of vintage Zombies outtakes re-dressed for âR.I.P.â, remixed so as to showcase both the overdubbed vocals and Mike Vickersâ expert string and horn arrangements.
Perhaps the most interesting aspect of âAfterlifeâ are the Neil MacArthur sides, which are rarely discussed even by diehard fans of Colin Blunstone. Though they were unrelated to Chris and Rodâs concurrent activities and, as Colin himself explains in the sleeve notes, it was a most uncertain period in the singerâs career, these are some great performances from one of the most distinctive voices in British pop. Overseen by producer Mike Hurst, we feature all six tracks originally released on three Deram singles in 1969, including exemplary versions of Nilssonâs Without Her and Billy Veraâs Donât Try To Explain, and Hurstâs own World Of Glass. A special bonus was the discovery in the producerâs vault of two unreleased cuts from the sessions, including Colinâs absolutely gorgeous rendering of the Buffalo Springfieldâs Hung Upside Down. The arrangements are all late 60s British record-making at its classiest.
Last but not least, there are a couple of continentally-flavoured bonus cuts: the super-rare Italian language version of Sheâs Not There, and Going To A Go Go, performed live by the Zombies on French TV in late 1966. Though it consists of live rave-ups, bare-boned demos and commercial items aimed squarely at the charts, âInto The Afterlifeâ actually hangs together in an oddly satisfying manner, a cohesion that could be expected of few others in pop at the time. As the last Zombies single of the 60s postulated, If It Donât Work Out: a lot of whatâs here indeed did not âwork outâ, but most other artists should be as lucky to have ephemera of this calibre to throw away.
Tracklist
01 She's Not There - Neil MacArthur
02 Hung Upside Down - Neil MacArthur
03 Unhappy Girl - Rod Argent & Chris White
04 She Loves The Way They Love Her - Rod Argent & Chris White
05 Telescope (Mr Galileo) - Rod Argent & Chris White
06 Walking In The Sun - The Zombies
07 Without Her - Neil MacArthur
08 Twelve Twenty Nine - Neil MacArthur
09 It Never Fails To Please Me - Rod Argent & Chris White
10 I Could Spend The Day - Rod Argent & Chris White
11 I Know She Will - The Zombies
12 Don't Try To Explain - Neil MacArthur
13 World Of Glass - Neil MacArthur
14 To Julia (For When She Smiles) - Rod Argent & Chris White
15 If It Don't Work Out - The Zombies
16 Never My Love - Neil MacArthur
17 It's Not Easy - Neil MacArthur
18 Telescope (Mr Galileo) - Chris White & Argent
19 Going To A Go Go (Live) - The Zombies
20 Ma Non E'giusto - Neil MacArthur
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More Info
Ten years is a long time for a compilation to come to fruition. Such is the case with INTO THE AFTERLIFE. I had originally planned this collection of post-Zombies pieces to be issued shortly after the release in October 1997 of âZombie Heavenâ, almost as a fifth disc, especially as some tracks on âAfterlifeâ had been contenders for inclusion on the box. In the event it has taken the best part of a decade to gather the appropriate clearances but I think you will agree that it has been well worth the wait.
This is technically not a Zombies album, though it does contain performances by Colin Blunstone, Rod Argent, Chris White, Hugh Grundy and Paul Atkinson, together and separately. As 1968 dawned, with the imminent dissolution of the five friendsâ partnership after seven years together, it seemed that for some of the quintet at least, the Zombies had been a magical but ultimately fleeting adventure. âAfterlifeâ is, essentially, what the members of the Zombies did next. It documents the relatively brief but murky period between the end of the group, and the establishment of long term music careers by its main protagonists: two years that were also highlighted by the sudden re-emergence of the Zombies âbrandâ as a major commercial force, thanks to the belated and quite unexpected American success of the final single Time Of The Season and the groupâs brilliant swansong, âOdessey & Oracleâ.
It draws from three different sets of repertoire: Rod and Chrisâ demos en route to the formation of Argent, pop experiments that on the one hand are markedly different to what these two exemplary writers had done in the past, yet bear the classy hallmark of the âOdesseyâ songbook; the augmented Zombies material that the duo prepared for the aborted âR.I.Pâ album; and the small cache of recordings Colin made as Neil MacArthur, including his revamp of Sheâs Not There which charted in the spring of 1969. Virtually everything on âAfterlifeâ has not been reissued before, and over half has never been available anywhere.
The demos provide a chance to hear fabled lost songs such as Unhappy Girl and To Julia, which were deemed inappropriate for the direction the band Argent would take, as well as the embryonic versions of much-loved tunes like She Loves The Way They Love Her. The personnel utilised for the demo sessions was a dry-run for Rodâs planned new group, including Jim Rodford on bass and Hugh Grundy on drums. We also hear a rare Chris White vocal on Mr Galileo. The enviable harmonies of messrs Argent and White are also to the fore on the âorchestralâ mixes of vintage Zombies outtakes re-dressed for âR.I.P.â, remixed so as to showcase both the overdubbed vocals and Mike Vickersâ expert string and horn arrangements.
Perhaps the most interesting aspect of âAfterlifeâ are the Neil MacArthur sides, which are rarely discussed even by diehard fans of Colin Blunstone. Though they were unrelated to Chris and Rodâs concurrent activities and, as Colin himself explains in the sleeve notes, it was a most uncertain period in the singerâs career, these are some great performances from one of the most distinctive voices in British pop. Overseen by producer Mike Hurst, we feature all six tracks originally released on three Deram singles in 1969, including exemplary versions of Nilssonâs Without Her and Billy Veraâs Donât Try To Explain, and Hurstâs own World Of Glass. A special bonus was the discovery in the producerâs vault of two unreleased cuts from the sessions, including Colinâs absolutely gorgeous rendering of the Buffalo Springfieldâs Hung Upside Down. The arrangements are all late 60s British record-making at its classiest.
Last but not least, there are a couple of continentally-flavoured bonus cuts: the super-rare Italian language version of Sheâs Not There, and Going To A Go Go, performed live by the Zombies on French TV in late 1966. Though it consists of live rave-ups, bare-boned demos and commercial items aimed squarely at the charts, âInto The Afterlifeâ actually hangs together in an oddly satisfying manner, a cohesion that could be expected of few others in pop at the time. As the last Zombies single of the 60s postulated, If It Donât Work Out: a lot of whatâs here indeed did not âwork outâ, but most other artists should be as lucky to have ephemera of this calibre to throw away.
Tracklist
01 She's Not There - Neil MacArthur
02 Hung Upside Down - Neil MacArthur
03 Unhappy Girl - Rod Argent & Chris White
04 She Loves The Way They Love Her - Rod Argent & Chris White
05 Telescope (Mr Galileo) - Rod Argent & Chris White
06 Walking In The Sun - The Zombies
07 Without Her - Neil MacArthur
08 Twelve Twenty Nine - Neil MacArthur
09 It Never Fails To Please Me - Rod Argent & Chris White
10 I Could Spend The Day - Rod Argent & Chris White
11 I Know She Will - The Zombies
12 Don't Try To Explain - Neil MacArthur
13 World Of Glass - Neil MacArthur
14 To Julia (For When She Smiles) - Rod Argent & Chris White
15 If It Don't Work Out - The Zombies
16 Never My Love - Neil MacArthur
17 It's Not Easy - Neil MacArthur
18 Telescope (Mr Galileo) - Chris White & Argent
19 Going To A Go Go (Live) - The Zombies
20 Ma Non E'giusto - Neil MacArthur











