Jay Darrow & The Musical Theatre - A Revolutionary Revelation (1970)

Artist: The Musical Theatre
Title: Revolutionary Revelation
Year Of Release: 1970
Label: Janus Records
Genre: Proto-Progressive Rock, Funk Rock, Psychedelic
Quality: Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 28:49
Total Size: 160 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Revolutionary Revelation
Year Of Release: 1970
Label: Janus Records
Genre: Proto-Progressive Rock, Funk Rock, Psychedelic
Quality: Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 28:49
Total Size: 160 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Revolution
02. We Want
03. Computer World
04. You Only Reap What You Sow
05. Reflections in the Life of an Assassin
06. There Must Be a Better Way of Life
07. A Love Pill
08. Before the Apple
09. I've Seen God in Many Places
10. A Revolutionary Revelation
The 1960's (and yes 1970 is part of the 1960's) produced plenty of weird records and plenty of cheesy records, but those musical excursions that combine the weird & cheesy are a rarer lot. This is certainly one of them. So what is the record about? Well according to thel liner notes, "This album attempts to explain in musical form, not only what the youth of today are against but also what they are for....It is a musical expression against the war, racism, violence, poverty, the destruction of our natural environment, inequality, puritanism, and the imbalance of power." Now listening to it for the first time you might miss this. You might mistakenly believe that the record was made to cash in on disgruntled youth who might be fooled into thinking this album expresses their concerns, such as their desire for a "love pill" and their belief that a lack of compassion for minority groups caused Lee Harvey Oswald to become an assassin. And so you might think that what you're hearing is the counterculture filtered through the psyche of an aging, pseudo-hipster, record producer who assumes the voice of a nameless, all-wise, Socratic questioner. But you'd obviously be wrong, or maybe not. It is really difficult to capture the weirdness of this one in a couple paragraphs, so you should really listen to it yourself and decide how serious of a piece of musical theater (I'm sorry, theatre) this is.