Green Tambourine | ||||
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Studio album by The Lemon Pipers | ||||
Released | February 1968 | |||
Recorded | Cleveland Recording Studios, Cleveland, Ohio Olmstead Recording Studios, New York |
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Genre | Psychedelic pop, bubblegum pop | |||
Length | 37:39 | |||
Label | Buddah BDM-1009 (mono)/BDS-5009 (stereo) | |||
Producer | Paul Leka | |||
The Lemon Pipers chronology | ||||
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Allmusic |
Green Tambourine is the first album by the American band The Lemon Pipers. It was released in early 1968 (see 1968 in music) after the band's bubblegum single of the same name had topped the charts in the US.
The album revealed the wide division between the musical tastes of the band and the commercial demands of the band's label, Buddah Records. Five bubblegum tracks written by Brill Building songwriters Paul Leka and Shelley Pinz shared space on the album with folk-rock ("Ask Me If I Care"), blues-rock ("Straglin' Behind," "Fifty Year Void") and psychedelic tracks ("Through With You," running over than nine minutes and bearing influences of The Byrds, particularly their John Coltrane-infused song "Eight Miles High"). Leka was the album's credited producer.
"Turn Around Take a Look" and "Green Tambourine" were released as singles in advance of the album. "Rice is Nice" was released by Buddah as a single after the album's release.
The album's liner notes, written by Buddah General Manager Neil Bogart, described the band as "five very intelligent young men with a solid sound and a real interest in all kinds of music. They perform folk ballads, soul, psychedelic, blues, country and western and write much of their own material."