*** Welcome to piglix ***

Wish You Were Here (Badfinger album)

Wish You Were Here
WYWH.jpg
Studio album by Badfinger
Released November 1974
Recorded 9 April–7 May 1974
Caribou Ranch, Nederland, Colorado; AIR Studios, London
Genre
Length 36:00
Label Warner Bros.
Producer Chris Thomas
Badfinger chronology
Badfinger
(1974)Badfinger1974
Wish You Were Here
(1974)
Airwaves
(1979)Airwaves1979
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 4/5 stars
Encyclopedia of Popular Music 4/5 stars

Wish You Were Here is the sixth album by rock band Badfinger and their third consecutive album produced by Chris Thomas. It was recorded in the spring of 1974 at Colorado's Caribou Ranch and released in November of that year on Warner Bros. Records. Wish You Were Here was the second and last album the band released on the Warner's label.

Although the album received a favourable review in Rolling Stone magazine and is sometimes considered to be the band's best work, it was withdrawn from record stores in early 1975, seven weeks after release, because of a lawsuit between Warner music publishing and Badfinger's management. The album's abbreviated manufacturing run and short tenure on the market has made the original LP relatively rare.

Before being recalled, Wish You Were Here had time enough to chart, peaking at number 148 in the United States. In the 1990s it was re-released in CD format in Japan and Germany only. The album was eventually issued on CD in the US in 2007. Many of the tracks have appeared on Badfinger compilation albums.

After completing Wish You Were Here, Pete Ham decided to quit Badfinger; he was replaced by keyboardist/guitarist Bob Jackson. However, after Warner's indicated that it would drop the band if Ham quit, he agreed to return, and Badfinger completed a tour as a five-piece group. Following this tour, Joey Molland resigned from the band.

The next Badfinger release was the Molland–Evans reunion album Airwaves in 1979. Ham, Evans, Gibbins and Jackson recorded an album titled Head First in December 1974 before Pete Ham hanged himself in April 1975. The latter album was the band's seventh and last with the original Ham–Evans–Gibbins nucleus that dated back to the late 1960s, when the group was known as the Iveys. Head First was not released until 2000, however, because of further lawsuits between Warner Bros. and Badfinger's management.

Dan Matovina, Without You: The Tragic Story Of Badfinger.


...
Wikipedia

...