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1984 (Anthony Phillips album)

1984 is the sixth studio album by English musician and composer Anthony Phillips, released in June 1981 on RCA Records. The album marks a change in musical style for Phillips as it is synthesiser-oriented compared to most of his previous albums which focused on more folk and acoustic music. After the music had been recorded, Phillips named the album after George Orwell's dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949).

1984
Studio album by
ReleasedJune 1981
Recorded14 August 1980–January 1981
StudioSend Barns, Woking, Surrey
GenreProgressive rock
Length41.26
LabelRCA
ProducerAnthony Phillips
Anthony Phillips chronology
Singles from 1984
  1. "Prelude '84"/"Anthem 1984"
    Released: 10 July 1981[1]

Background edit

In June 1980, at the time of the release of Private Parts & Pieces II: Back to the Pavilion, the second in his Private Parts & Pieces album series, Phillips was still under contract with the US-based independent label Passport Records but without one in the UK as his deal with Arista Records had come to an end with the release of Sides in 1979.[2] During this time he was considering ideas for his next studio album; one that particularly interested him the most was a recording which would combine classical-influenced synthesizer sounds with mechanical rock rhythms.[2][3] He wished to incorporate a rhythm throughout in an effort to avoid the composition having a "background music" feel,[2] and, as he recalled, a take on being reminded by record companies at the time that music had to have a rhythm to it, so he thought of such an album but "disguise it with some classical bits on top".[4] One source of inspiration to write in this style originated when Phillips added two synthesisers to his collection two years prior, the Polymoog and ARP 2600, but felt he had not used them effectively on Sides. An album with both featured as the main instruments became attractive to him; looking back on the project, it "was actually a challenge".[2] One reason was because of the difficulty of keeping the oscillator on the ARP 2600 in tune to produce a sound he desired, resulting in the instrument sounding "flat" in some sections.[5]

Writing edit

Phillips originally planned to present 1984 as three instrumental pieces, one of which was a Polymoog piece from the Sides recording sessions that was left unused. A second featured a 12-string guitar that was also left off.[6] He then considered using them to produce a "quick instrumental album", but the project grew after he persuaded his manager, Tony Smith, that it was the right time to make an instrumental album with a large scale piece of music because he had wished to do one since his first album, The Geese & the Ghost (1977).[6] Phillips put the initial two pieces aside, and started work on one keyboard-based composition that he described as a "modern, short five minute piece" which he expanded upon to become the basis of the "1984" suite.[6] As he went through his musical ideas for the track, he questioned whether the arrangements had any form to them, and whether they confirmed to a particular convention of compositional form, but he dismissed the idea and carried on writing as he saw fit.[6] Creating a keyboard heavy album made Phillips improve his technique, as the technology available at the time of recording did not allow for corrections to be made afterwards using computer software. The ARP 2600 was a difficult keyboard for Phillips to play as the model would not play the next note if he had stumbled while playing a fast sequence, causing him to start again.[7]

In May 1980, two months prior to recording material for 1984, Phillips recorded two pieces around the synthesiser and drum machine and gave them the working titles "Instrumental Single" and "Strings & Drums". The basic parts of each were put down quickly; Phillips estimated no longer than three to four hours. After he had decided upon the album's direction, Phillips felt both tracks fitted the theme and became "Prelude '84" and "Anthem 1984", respectively.[2] The latter half of "1984 Part 2" features Phillips's vocals fed through a vocoder, which he incorporated during the process of adding the overdubs.[2]

Though the album borrows the name, and artwork depicting imagery, from George Orwell's dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949), Phillips clarified that the only real connection between the album and the story was that the book had "a nice title". He named the album late in the production stage, after the music had been recorded. He wanted a title that had a sense of drama behind it, as opposed to a more "dreamy" one. After deciding on 1984 as the title, Phillips revisited the composition and "nastied the music up in one or two places".[6]

Recording edit

1984 was recorded from 14 August 1980 to January 1981 at Send Barns, Phillips's recording facility set up at his parents’ house in Woking, Surrey. It was put down on 8-track Ampex tape.[8][2][9] The first parts put down were the drum machine and percussion tracks[5] with assistance from Phillips's friend Richard Scott, who is credited in the liner notes for helping with production and engineering. Scott also listened to rough mixes of the tracks that Phillips had completed for feedback. The keyboards were recorded after, and the basic tracks had been put to tape by January 1981.[8] Phillips then decided that music needed further parts and overdubs, but there was insufficient space on the 8-track recording. The recorded parts were then transferred onto 24-track tape at Atmosphere Studios in London where recording engineer Chris David painstakingly reassembled the various sections of the piece by hand, cutting pieces of tape off when required.[2] David then made a master tape, making more edits for 1984 than any other studio project he had worked on as Phillips had recorded the album in sections between 20 and 60 seconds in length, "more or less in order which helped with the assembly", but he recalled mistakes made and a restart in the process. To track what parts were recorded onto which track, David recalled a "film-style cue sheet approach" to avoid losing place.[2] David's efforts for 1984 required him to cut short his honeymoon in Kenya.[2] Phillips used a Roland CR-78 drum machine,[8] and borrowed percussion instruments from Phil Collins.[5] He arranged a session with Morris Pert to record the percussive sections, all of which were put down in one day.[2][5] It was then mixed at Atmosphere Studios in February and March 1981.[8]

Artwork edit

The album is the first of Phillips's albums not to feature artwork by Peter Cross. Instead, the change in style of music is represented in the sleeve design, replacing the more detailed, fantasy-inspired, and hand drawn illustrations for a dark and more minimalist feel designed by Under the Stairs Productions.[8] Phillips felt Cross's style would not have fit the musical direction of the album.[6] The cover depicts an open small cage with a black background, a reference to the cage affixed to the head of Winston Smith, the protagonist in Nineteen Eighty-Four when he is taken to Room 101. The album's liner notes includes the line: "Peter Cross is on holiday with Ralph Bernascone",[8] part of a running joke in whereby "Ralph Bernascone" is mentioned in the liner notes of several of Phillips' albums.

Release edit

When Phillips first presented 1984 to Smith, he remembered Smith saying "It works", before leaving the room. Smith then approached management at RCA Records with the aim of the label releasing other material from Phillips and presented 1984 to them after, which it liked and agreed to put out with an advance, without which Phillips would not have been able to purchase a new home.[2] RCA also agreed to release 1984 to several European markets, for which "Prelude '84" was released as the lead single in the UK and Spain.[2] Phillips was surprised that such a major label agreed to release it.[10]

Reception edit

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [11]

Alan Coulthard gave a positive review of the "Prelude '84" single in Record Mirror, writing: "It's about time that the ex-Genesis guitarist received the attention his undoubted talent warrants, and this release is surely the one to bring him to a wider audience". He went on to describe the track's "powerful" and "moody, spherical tones" which he could appreciate out of context to the rest of the album or the novel itself.[12] In the US, Joan Tortorici Ruppert wrote a positive review in the Illinois Entertainer. She thought that despite being a "compact instrumental story", the album avoids falling into "any of the normal traps" and displays Phillips's "keyboard savvy" which results in a "lean and tidy effort". Ruppert continued: "'1984' moves from 'Prelude' to 'Anthem' without excessive drama; the themes don't make themselves particularly obvious. But you do travel from an energetic, mechanized, non-frantic ambience to a slow, emotionally thick resolution, a peaceful, yet somehow melancholy shift during the last few moments". She wondered what Phillips had in mind while writing the piece, but such "mystery adds much to the enjoyment".[13] In a review published in Boston Rock, reviewer Marc English commented on the flow of the album, that "Basic themes are embellished and then transposed into other forms causing the album to literally flow from beginning to end". He noted the music is "far from Orwellian", it is "sprightly, almost happy music". English concluded that 1984 was perhaps meant to be more optimistic in nature with electronic instruments of the day, which he then wrote: "Sounds good to me".[14]

Jim Aikin for Keyboard magazine praised the "solid" album which he thought displayed elements of "the quasi-orchestral Genesis mold", with "highly dramatic riffs" and "consistently excellent and sometimes spectacular" orchestration which maintains the listener's interest. Aikin suggested 1984 could have been named "something more original".[15] The Las Vegas Sun published a review from Dennishee Askew, who recognised Phillips's exploration outside the boundaries of progressive rock music. She praised "some brilliant ensemble movements that blend in and out of subtle melodies" and the "crispy produced" music, "arranged in a fashion that takes the monotony out of their long journey from beginning to end".[16] Ron Kress hailed 1984 in the Princetown Spectrum, pointing out that Phillips had undergone a change in musical direction, abandoning "the path of his initial five albums and journeys into percussive, electronic fantasy". He thought the album creates a "pseudo-cinematic effect", and rated it "the best electronic album to date".[17]

Reissues edit

In July 2007, a remastered 2-disc version of 1984 was released in Japan by Arcangelo Records with a limited edition mini vinyl sleeve. A standard jewel case version was released by Voiceprint Records in June 2008. Both releases contained a bonus disc with a new stereo mix from the original 8-track masters. Dann had the original reels sent to FX in Acton, London for processing where they were baked and transferred onto digital format where a new mix was constructed.[9] The set also contains music Phillips recorded for the 1981 UK television series Rule Britannia: Pictures of a People Like Us which was recorded at the same time as 1984; "Ascension", a track rediscovered on the original multi-track tapes during the research for the reissue; and the 16-minute demo of "Poly Piece", originally written for inclusion on Sides and considered for inclusion for 1984 in the formative stages of the album. It contains a booklet with extensive liner notes by Jonathan Dann.

On 24 June 2016, Esoteric Recordings released a 3-disc Deluxe Edition of 1984 with new stereo and 5.1 surround sound mixes, the latter on DVD, plus a disc of the bonus tracks included in the 2007 reissue. Also included is a poster and a 16-page booklet with photos and Dann's essay.[18]

Track listing edit

All tracks written by Anthony Phillips.[8]

Side one
No.TitleLength
1."Prelude '84"4:19
2."1984 Part 1"19:06
Side two
No.TitleLength
1."1984 Part 2"15:28
2."Anthem 1984"2:27
2007 and 2016 reissue bonus CD[2]
No.TitleLength
1."Prelude '84" (Early Stage Mix)4:26
2."Ascension"5:16
3."1984 – Part One" (Early Stage Mix)12:49
4."Rule Britannia Suite"
  • i) "Sally Theme"
  • ii) "Science & Technology"
  • iii) "Respect"
  • iv) "Church"
  • v) "Military"
  • vi) "Power in the Land"
7:41
5."1984 – Part Two" (Early Stage Mix)4:25
6."Anthem 1984" (Early Stage Mix)2:08
7."Poly Piece" (Demo)16:39

Personnel edit

Credits are taken from the 1981 sleeve notes.[8]

Music

  • Anthony Phillips – keyboards, Roland CR-78 drum machine, occasional guitar, basic percussion
  • Richard Scott – basic percussion, effects, vocal ideas
  • Morris Pert – percussion (tympani, tambourine, gong, congas, bell tree, vibraslap, marimba, vibes)

Production

  • Anthony Phillips – production, engineering
  • Richard Scott – production and engineering assistant
  • Chris David – engineering, vocoder manipulation
  • Anita David – vocoder manipulation
  • Under the Stairs Productions – cover design
  • Ray Staff – disc cutter at Trident Studios
  • Hit & Run Music Publishing – publishing

References edit

  1. ^ "45cat - Anthony Phillips - Prelude '84 / Anthem 1984 - RCA - UK - RCA 102".
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Dann, Jonathan (1981). 1984 [2016 Deluxe Edition] (Booklet essay). Anthony Phillips. Esoteric Recordings. pp. 7–11. ECLEC 32550.
  3. ^ Stump, Paul (1997). The Music's All that Matters: A History of Progressive Rock. Quartet Books Limited. p. 313. ISBN 0-7043-8036-6.
  4. ^ Cherry Red Interview 2014, 18:07–18:52.
  5. ^ a b c d Hewitt, Alan (15 October 2016). "To remix or not to remix that is the question..." The Waiting Room Online. Retrieved 5 August 2018.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Parkin, Geoff (1982). "1984 and all that". AnthonyPhillips.co.uk. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
  7. ^ Cherry Red Interview 2014, 19:06–19:36.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h 1984 (Media notes). Anthony Phillips. RCA Records. 1981. RCA LP 5036.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  9. ^ a b "The Geese & The Glenfiddich Revisited". The Waiting Room Online. April 2008. Retrieved 5 August 2018.
  10. ^ Cherry Red Interview 2014, 19:38–20:08.
  11. ^ Thompson, Dave. 1984 at AllMusic
  12. ^ Coulthard, Alan (18 July 1981). "Anthony Phillips: Prelude '84 (RCA)". Record Mirror. Retrieved 23 April 2018 – via AnthonyPhillips.co.uk.
  13. ^ Ruppert, Joan Tortorici (November 1981). "Anthony Phillips: 1984 (Passport)". Illinois Entertainer. Retrieved 23 April 2018 – via AnthonyPhillips.co.uk.
  14. ^ English, Marc (5 November 1981). "Anthony Phillips - 1984 (Passport, LP)". Boston Rock. Retrieved 24 April 2018 – via AnthonyPhillips.co.uk.
  15. ^ Aikin, Jim (October 1981). "Anthony Phillips, "1984"". Keyboard. Retrieved 24 April 2018 – via AnthonyPhillips.co.uk.
  16. ^ Askew, Dennishee (23 August 1981). "Anthony Phillips "1984", written and arranged by Anthony Phillips". Las Vegas Sun. Retrieved 24 April 2018 – via AnthonyPhillips.co.uk.
  17. ^ Kress, Ron (14 October 1981). "1984 - Anthony Phillips - Passport". Princetown Spectrum. Retrieved 24 April 2018 – via AnthonyPhillips.co.uk.
  18. ^ "1984 – Anthony Phillips". Amazon.co.uk. Retrieved 23 April 2018.

Sources

  • Powell, Mark (2014). Interviews – Anthony Phillips 2. Cherry Red TV. Retrieved 23 April 2018.

1984, anthony, phillips, album, 1984, sixth, studio, album, english, musician, composer, anthony, phillips, released, june, 1981, records, album, marks, change, musical, style, phillips, synthesiser, oriented, compared, most, previous, albums, which, focused, . 1984 is the sixth studio album by English musician and composer Anthony Phillips released in June 1981 on RCA Records The album marks a change in musical style for Phillips as it is synthesiser oriented compared to most of his previous albums which focused on more folk and acoustic music After the music had been recorded Phillips named the album after George Orwell s dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty Four 1949 1984Studio album by Anthony PhillipsReleasedJune 1981Recorded14 August 1980 January 1981StudioSend Barns Woking SurreyGenreProgressive rockLength41 26LabelRCAProducerAnthony PhillipsAnthony Phillips chronologyPrivate Parts amp Pieces II Back to the Pavilion 1980 1984 1981 Private Parts amp Pieces III Antiques 1982 Singles from 1984 Prelude 84 Anthem 1984 Released 10 July 1981 1 Contents 1 Background 2 Writing 3 Recording 4 Artwork 5 Release 5 1 Reception 5 2 Reissues 6 Track listing 7 Personnel 8 ReferencesBackground editIn June 1980 at the time of the release of Private Parts amp Pieces II Back to the Pavilion the second in his Private Parts amp Pieces album series Phillips was still under contract with the US based independent label Passport Records but without one in the UK as his deal with Arista Records had come to an end with the release of Sides in 1979 2 During this time he was considering ideas for his next studio album one that particularly interested him the most was a recording which would combine classical influenced synthesizer sounds with mechanical rock rhythms 2 3 He wished to incorporate a rhythm throughout in an effort to avoid the composition having a background music feel 2 and as he recalled a take on being reminded by record companies at the time that music had to have a rhythm to it so he thought of such an album but disguise it with some classical bits on top 4 One source of inspiration to write in this style originated when Phillips added two synthesisers to his collection two years prior the Polymoog and ARP 2600 but felt he had not used them effectively on Sides An album with both featured as the main instruments became attractive to him looking back on the project it was actually a challenge 2 One reason was because of the difficulty of keeping the oscillator on the ARP 2600 in tune to produce a sound he desired resulting in the instrument sounding flat in some sections 5 Writing editPhillips originally planned to present 1984 as three instrumental pieces one of which was a Polymoog piece from the Sides recording sessions that was left unused A second featured a 12 string guitar that was also left off 6 He then considered using them to produce a quick instrumental album but the project grew after he persuaded his manager Tony Smith that it was the right time to make an instrumental album with a large scale piece of music because he had wished to do one since his first album The Geese amp the Ghost 1977 6 Phillips put the initial two pieces aside and started work on one keyboard based composition that he described as a modern short five minute piece which he expanded upon to become the basis of the 1984 suite 6 As he went through his musical ideas for the track he questioned whether the arrangements had any form to them and whether they confirmed to a particular convention of compositional form but he dismissed the idea and carried on writing as he saw fit 6 Creating a keyboard heavy album made Phillips improve his technique as the technology available at the time of recording did not allow for corrections to be made afterwards using computer software The ARP 2600 was a difficult keyboard for Phillips to play as the model would not play the next note if he had stumbled while playing a fast sequence causing him to start again 7 In May 1980 two months prior to recording material for 1984 Phillips recorded two pieces around the synthesiser and drum machine and gave them the working titles Instrumental Single and Strings amp Drums The basic parts of each were put down quickly Phillips estimated no longer than three to four hours After he had decided upon the album s direction Phillips felt both tracks fitted the theme and became Prelude 84 and Anthem 1984 respectively 2 The latter half of 1984 Part 2 features Phillips s vocals fed through a vocoder which he incorporated during the process of adding the overdubs 2 Though the album borrows the name and artwork depicting imagery from George Orwell s dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty Four 1949 Phillips clarified that the only real connection between the album and the story was that the book had a nice title He named the album late in the production stage after the music had been recorded He wanted a title that had a sense of drama behind it as opposed to a more dreamy one After deciding on 1984 as the title Phillips revisited the composition and nastied the music up in one or two places 6 Recording edit1984 was recorded from 14 August 1980 to January 1981 at Send Barns Phillips s recording facility set up at his parents house in Woking Surrey It was put down on 8 track Ampex tape 8 2 9 The first parts put down were the drum machine and percussion tracks 5 with assistance from Phillips s friend Richard Scott who is credited in the liner notes for helping with production and engineering Scott also listened to rough mixes of the tracks that Phillips had completed for feedback The keyboards were recorded after and the basic tracks had been put to tape by January 1981 8 Phillips then decided that music needed further parts and overdubs but there was insufficient space on the 8 track recording The recorded parts were then transferred onto 24 track tape at Atmosphere Studios in London where recording engineer Chris David painstakingly reassembled the various sections of the piece by hand cutting pieces of tape off when required 2 David then made a master tape making more edits for 1984 than any other studio project he had worked on as Phillips had recorded the album in sections between 20 and 60 seconds in length more or less in order which helped with the assembly but he recalled mistakes made and a restart in the process To track what parts were recorded onto which track David recalled a film style cue sheet approach to avoid losing place 2 David s efforts for 1984 required him to cut short his honeymoon in Kenya 2 Phillips used a Roland CR 78 drum machine 8 and borrowed percussion instruments from Phil Collins 5 He arranged a session with Morris Pert to record the percussive sections all of which were put down in one day 2 5 It was then mixed at Atmosphere Studios in February and March 1981 8 Artwork editThe album is the first of Phillips s albums not to feature artwork by Peter Cross Instead the change in style of music is represented in the sleeve design replacing the more detailed fantasy inspired and hand drawn illustrations for a dark and more minimalist feel designed by Under the Stairs Productions 8 Phillips felt Cross s style would not have fit the musical direction of the album 6 The cover depicts an open small cage with a black background a reference to the cage affixed to the head of Winston Smith the protagonist in Nineteen Eighty Four when he is taken to Room 101 The album s liner notes includes the line Peter Cross is on holiday with Ralph Bernascone 8 part of a running joke in whereby Ralph Bernascone is mentioned in the liner notes of several of Phillips albums Release editWhen Phillips first presented 1984 to Smith he remembered Smith saying It works before leaving the room Smith then approached management at RCA Records with the aim of the label releasing other material from Phillips and presented 1984 to them after which it liked and agreed to put out with an advance without which Phillips would not have been able to purchase a new home 2 RCA also agreed to release 1984 to several European markets for which Prelude 84 was released as the lead single in the UK and Spain 2 Phillips was surprised that such a major label agreed to release it 10 Reception edit Professional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllMusic nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 11 Alan Coulthard gave a positive review of the Prelude 84 single in Record Mirror writing It s about time that the ex Genesis guitarist received the attention his undoubted talent warrants and this release is surely the one to bring him to a wider audience He went on to describe the track s powerful and moody spherical tones which he could appreciate out of context to the rest of the album or the novel itself 12 In the US Joan Tortorici Ruppert wrote a positive review in the Illinois Entertainer She thought that despite being a compact instrumental story the album avoids falling into any of the normal traps and displays Phillips s keyboard savvy which results in a lean and tidy effort Ruppert continued 1984 moves from Prelude to Anthem without excessive drama the themes don t make themselves particularly obvious But you do travel from an energetic mechanized non frantic ambience to a slow emotionally thick resolution a peaceful yet somehow melancholy shift during the last few moments She wondered what Phillips had in mind while writing the piece but such mystery adds much to the enjoyment 13 In a review published in Boston Rock reviewer Marc English commented on the flow of the album that Basic themes are embellished and then transposed into other forms causing the album to literally flow from beginning to end He noted the music is far from Orwellian it is sprightly almost happy music English concluded that 1984 was perhaps meant to be more optimistic in nature with electronic instruments of the day which he then wrote Sounds good to me 14 Jim Aikin for Keyboard magazine praised the solid album which he thought displayed elements of the quasi orchestral Genesis mold with highly dramatic riffs and consistently excellent and sometimes spectacular orchestration which maintains the listener s interest Aikin suggested 1984 could have been named something more original 15 The Las Vegas Sun published a review from Dennishee Askew who recognised Phillips s exploration outside the boundaries of progressive rock music She praised some brilliant ensemble movements that blend in and out of subtle melodies and the crispy produced music arranged in a fashion that takes the monotony out of their long journey from beginning to end 16 Ron Kress hailed 1984 in the Princetown Spectrum pointing out that Phillips had undergone a change in musical direction abandoning the path of his initial five albums and journeys into percussive electronic fantasy He thought the album creates a pseudo cinematic effect and rated it the best electronic album to date 17 Reissues edit In July 2007 a remastered 2 disc version of 1984 was released in Japan by Arcangelo Records with a limited edition mini vinyl sleeve A standard jewel case version was released by Voiceprint Records in June 2008 Both releases contained a bonus disc with a new stereo mix from the original 8 track masters Dann had the original reels sent to FX in Acton London for processing where they were baked and transferred onto digital format where a new mix was constructed 9 The set also contains music Phillips recorded for the 1981 UK television series Rule Britannia Pictures of a People Like Us which was recorded at the same time as 1984 Ascension a track rediscovered on the original multi track tapes during the research for the reissue and the 16 minute demo of Poly Piece originally written for inclusion on Sides and considered for inclusion for 1984 in the formative stages of the album It contains a booklet with extensive liner notes by Jonathan Dann On 24 June 2016 Esoteric Recordings released a 3 disc Deluxe Edition of 1984 with new stereo and 5 1 surround sound mixes the latter on DVD plus a disc of the bonus tracks included in the 2007 reissue Also included is a poster and a 16 page booklet with photos and Dann s essay 18 Track listing editAll tracks written by Anthony Phillips 8 Side oneNo TitleLength1 Prelude 84 4 192 1984 Part 1 19 06 Side twoNo TitleLength1 1984 Part 2 15 282 Anthem 1984 2 27 2007 and 2016 reissue bonus CD 2 No TitleLength1 Prelude 84 Early Stage Mix 4 262 Ascension 5 163 1984 Part One Early Stage Mix 12 494 Rule Britannia Suite i Sally Theme ii Science amp Technology iii Respect iv Church v Military vi Power in the Land 7 415 1984 Part Two Early Stage Mix 4 256 Anthem 1984 Early Stage Mix 2 087 Poly Piece Demo 16 39Personnel editCredits are taken from the 1981 sleeve notes 8 Music Anthony Phillips keyboards Roland CR 78 drum machine occasional guitar basic percussion Richard Scott basic percussion effects vocal ideas Morris Pert percussion tympani tambourine gong congas bell tree vibraslap marimba vibes Production Anthony Phillips production engineering Richard Scott production and engineering assistant Chris David engineering vocoder manipulation Anita David vocoder manipulation Under the Stairs Productions cover design Ray Staff disc cutter at Trident Studios Hit amp Run Music Publishing publishingReferences edit 45cat Anthony Phillips Prelude 84 Anthem 1984 RCA UK RCA 102 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Dann Jonathan 1981 1984 2016 Deluxe Edition Booklet essay Anthony Phillips Esoteric Recordings pp 7 11 ECLEC 32550 Stump Paul 1997 The Music s All that Matters A History of Progressive Rock Quartet Books Limited p 313 ISBN 0 7043 8036 6 Cherry Red Interview 2014 18 07 18 52 a b c d Hewitt Alan 15 October 2016 To remix or not to remix that is the question The Waiting Room Online Retrieved 5 August 2018 a b c d e f Parkin Geoff 1982 1984 and all that AnthonyPhillips co uk Retrieved 22 April 2018 Cherry Red Interview 2014 19 06 19 36 a b c d e f g h 1984 Media notes Anthony Phillips RCA Records 1981 RCA LP 5036 a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link a b The Geese amp The Glenfiddich Revisited The Waiting Room Online April 2008 Retrieved 5 August 2018 Cherry Red Interview 2014 19 38 20 08 Thompson Dave 1984 at AllMusic Coulthard Alan 18 July 1981 Anthony Phillips Prelude 84 RCA Record Mirror Retrieved 23 April 2018 via AnthonyPhillips co uk Ruppert Joan Tortorici November 1981 Anthony Phillips 1984 Passport Illinois Entertainer Retrieved 23 April 2018 via AnthonyPhillips co uk English Marc 5 November 1981 Anthony Phillips 1984 Passport LP Boston Rock Retrieved 24 April 2018 via AnthonyPhillips co uk Aikin Jim October 1981 Anthony Phillips 1984 Keyboard Retrieved 24 April 2018 via AnthonyPhillips co uk Askew Dennishee 23 August 1981 Anthony Phillips 1984 written and arranged by Anthony Phillips Las Vegas Sun Retrieved 24 April 2018 via AnthonyPhillips co uk Kress Ron 14 October 1981 1984 Anthony Phillips Passport Princetown Spectrum Retrieved 24 April 2018 via AnthonyPhillips co uk 1984 Anthony Phillips Amazon co uk Retrieved 23 April 2018 Sources Powell Mark 2014 Interviews Anthony Phillips 2 Cherry Red TV Retrieved 23 April 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1984 Anthony Phillips album amp oldid 1166563499, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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