Blue Afternoon Explained

Blue Afternoon
Type:studio
Artist:Tim Buckley
Cover:Tim Buckley Blue Afternoon Cover.jpg
Released:24 November 1969
Recorded:1969
Genre:
Length:40:47
Label:
Producer:Tim Buckley
Prev Title:Happy Sad
Prev Year:1969
Next Title:Lorca
Next Year:1970

Blue Afternoon is the fourth studio album by Tim Buckley, released in November 1969. It is Tim Buckley's first self-produced record and his debut for Herb Cohen and Frank Zappa's label Straight Records. The album used the same group of musicians as Happy Sad (1969) with the addition of drummer Jimmy Madison. It presaged Buckley's most experimental work on his subsequent two albums.[1]

Several tracks on Blue Afternoon are songs Buckley had intended to record on earlier albums but had not completed. "Chase the Blues Away" and "Happy Time" are numbers he had worked on in the summer of 1968 for possible inclusion on Happy Sad and demos can be heard on the Rhino label's Works in Progress album.

Blue Afternoon, like Starsailor, was re-released as a stand-alone album on CD format only once in the United States, in 1989 on the Enigma Retro label. It was then later re-issued by Warners/Rhino Records UK in 2011 as part of the Original Album Series box set,[2] with Buckley's four LPs released on Elektra Records, and again in 2017 by Rhino as part of the collection Tim Buckley - The Complete Album Collection, featuring his first 7 albums plus a re-release of Works in Progress.

Track listing

All tracks are written by Tim Buckley.

Personnel

Technical

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Martin . Chilton . 24 November 2021 . Blue Afternoon: A New Creative Dawn for Tim Buckley . Thisisdig.com . 7 April 2023.
  2. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20111205133956/http://www.rhino.co.uk/store/products%2Coriginal-album-series_39812.htm . 5 December 2011 . Original Album Series . Rhino.com . 7 April 2023.