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Images (The Walker Brothers album)

Images
WalkerBros Images.jpg
Studio album by The Walker Brothers
Released March 3, 1967
Genre
Length 54:15 (Expanded CD)
Label Philips
Producer John Franz
The Walker Brothers chronology
The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore
(1966)
Images
(1967)
No Regrets
(1975)
Singles from Images
  1. "Experience"
    Released: May 1967
  2. "Everything Under the Sun"
    Released: June 1967
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 3/5 stars

Images is the third album by the American pop group The Walker Brothers. Released in 1967 the album reached number six on the UK Albums Chart. It was the last of their trio of 1960s albums. They would not record together again until 1975's No Regrets. It can also be considered the group's final "genuine" album as a group in the sense that the following two albums, No Regrets and Lines, would not only change musical direction, but would also not include any original material. For their final album Nite Flights, the members did not perform as a band but rather contributed tracks consisting of the member's own solo material.

The group's musical accompaniment was directed by Reg Guest and produced by John Franz. Receiving good to mixed reviews the album was first released in both Mono and Stereo LP formats in March 1967. The album was later released on CD having been remastered and expanded in 1998. The sleeve notes were written by Alan Freeman.

Images received good to mixed reviews from the majority of critics. Richie Unterberger writing retrospectively for AllMusic called the album "as wildly uneven as their other pair. Affecting pop/rock ballads and operatic crooner vehicles were interspersed with absolutely inappropriate up-tempo blue-eyed soul (always a weak point for the group) and rock covers". Unterberger rates Scott Walker's contributions noting that they "[exhibit] a growth that foreshadowed some of the more ambitious aspects of his early solo albums". He also described John Walker's "I Can't Let It Happen to You" as "one of The Walker Brothers' best songs, and undoubtedly the best thing John Walker contributed to their records".


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