Pandemonium Shadow Show

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Pandemonium Shadow Show album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 36:14

eMusic Review 0

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Ben Fong-Torres

eMusic Contributor

06.30.09
Harry Nilsson, Pandemonium Shadow Show
2008 | Label: RCA Records Label

It's easy enough to see why the Beatles were enamored of Nilsson. His debut album was a one-man show of love of the Fab Four in its Sgt. Pepper's mode. There's the circus barker, the French horns, the production values, the harkening back to the kind of music hall tunes McCartney favored ("1941"), the crafty songwriting and the strong harmonies. The topper is a deft mash-up of Beatles tunes in "You Can't Do That." But there's also his faithful rendition of "She's Leaving Home," his classical, shades-of-"Yesterday" tune, "Without Her." His rave-up of "River Deep, Mountain High" sounds out of place. But I, for one, am glad it's there.

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AN OUTSTANDING REVIEW CD

tx1950

If you have not had a chance, get a copy or at least preview it. This is Nilsson at his very best. Great producion, selection of songs, terrific arangements and superb production Buy it, you will be greatly pleased.

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One Great Debut

Murgatroyd

Maybe one of the most staggering debut albums of all time in fact. An explosion of pure talent, emotion, ambition, humor and, yes, hubris. It's the blueprint for his subsequent checkered career. Four stars only because he had yet higher heights to climb...

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I love Nilsson

bigdoc13

If Harry were still around,I'm sure he would still be writing great songs for us to enjoy.

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Icon: Harry Nilsson

By Ben Fong-Torres, eMusic Contributor

Born in Brooklyn in 1941 and raised in Los Angeles, Harry Edward Nelson III became Nilsson in the mid '60s, when he began writing and performing - singing and playing piano and guitar. He recorded for RCA, an American musical institution, long before it became BMG. The Beatles were among his early fans, and he loved the vintage sounds out of Tin Pan Alley. But he was an outsider, a renegade, a natural indie. He established himself… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Harry Nilsson’s debut album, Pandemonium Shadow Show, was notoriously loved by the Beatles, and it’s easy to see why. This is the only record of its time that feels akin to Sgt. Pepper, and in some ways, it’s every bit as impressive. Nilsson works on a much smaller scale, leaning heavily on whimsy yet cutting it with sardonic humor and embellishing it with remarkable song and studiocraft; it’s as if McCartney and Lennon were fused into the same body. Pandemonium can’t help but feel like a cheeky show of strength by a remarkably gifted imp, spinning out psychedelic fantasias and jokes and trumping his idols by turning out a cover of “She’s Leaving Home” (recorded ten days after Sgt. Pepper’s release) that rivals the original. Beneath all the light playful melodies (“There Will Never Be” is swinging London, L.A. style) or glorious laments (he rarely equaled “Sleep Late, My Lady Friend”), there are serious strains: the lyrics of “Cuddly Toy” are as unsettling as the melody catchy, the circus-stomp “Ten Little Indians” is a darkly addictive retelling of the Ten Commandments, and “1941″ is quietly heartbreaking beneath its jaunty cabaret. Throughout it all, Nilsson impresses with his humor, cleverness, and above all, how his songwriting blossoms under his shockingly inventive studiocraft. Psychedelic pop albums rarely came better than this, and it remains a thorough delight. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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