The Genuine Imitation Life Gazette | |
Type: | Studio |
Artist: | The Four Seasons |
Border: | yes |
Released: | January 1969 |
Genre: | Psychedelia |
Length: | 44:50 |
Label: | Philips |
Producer: | Bob Crewe, Joe Long[1] |
Prev Title: | New Gold Hits |
Prev Year: | 1967 |
Next Title: | Half & Half |
Next Year: | 1970 |
The Genuine Imitation Life Gazette is a 1969 album by American rock band the Four Seasons. Member Bob Gaudio teamed up with Jake Holmes to create a psychedelic concept album which adjusted the band's stylings to the changing times of the late 1960s.[2] Instead of love songs, the band tackled subjects such as war and racial tension.[3]
The album's packaging was also distinctive, with the cover being stylized as a newspaper and the sleeve containing an eight-page newspaper-like insert that also had specially-done color underground comics strips by Skip Williamson and Jay Lynch.
The first single issued seven months before the album's release (June 1968) was "Saturday's Father" (Philips 40542). It only bubbled under at number 103 on the Billboard Hot 100. A second single with both sides culled from the album, "Idaho" and "Something's on Her Mind," was released in March 1969 as Philips 40597. Both sides barely crept into the Billboard Hot 100, at number 95 and number 98, respectively.[4]
In a review for AllMusic, Donald A. Guarisco says the album "lives up to its reputation as the most bizarre album in the Four Seasons' catalog", describing it as "a concept album that casts a satirical eye on American life." He calls it "relentlessly inventive, skillfully constructed, and never dull" and "a stunning example of the artistry of the Four Seasons at their most ambitious."
The Dangerous Minds web site reports that at a 1970s dinner party Gaudio was told by John Lennon that Genuine Imitation Life Gazette was one of his favorite albums. The same site says that after Frank Sinatra heard the album he hired Gaudio and Holmes to create his album Watertown, to which Valli also assisted.[5]
Joe Long, who was credited as co-producer on the album, considered it his favorite album of the ones he recorded with the Four Seasons.[1] Valli, who initially did not want to record the album and anticipated it would be a career mistake,[6] has also grown to appreciate the record for its uniqueness and the cult following it has earned.[5] Tommy DeVito was adamantly against recording the record[6] and quit the band not long after its release, stating that he had "had it" with the band.[7]
All tracks written by Bob Gaudio and Jake Holmes, except as noted.
Partial credits from AllMusic.[8]
The Four Seasons
Additional musicians