Producer – Andrew Wickham (tracks: C4), Arthur Garson (tracks: A4, D3), Jac Holzman (tracks: A8 to B6), Larry Marks (tracks: C1, D1, D4), Mark Abramson (tracks: A8 to B6), Paul Rothchild (tracks: A1 to A3, A5 to A7), Phil Ochs (tracks: A4, C2, C3, C5, D3), Van Dyke Parks (tracks: C4, D2, D5)
Barcodes
Matrix / Runout (A Side Hand-Etched Runout): AM SP 4933 (INT) SPAIN △21600 SPAIN
Matrix / Runout (B Side Hand-Etched Runout): AM SP 4934 (INT) SPAIN △21600-X SPAIN
Matrix / Runout (CA Side Hand-Etched Runout): AM SP 4935 (INT) SPAIN △21601 SPAIN
Matrix / Runout (D Side Hand-Etched Runout): AM SP 4936 (INT) SPAIN △21601-X SPAIN
Matrix / Runout (A & B Sides, Label): AMLH 64599
Matrix / Runout (C & D Sides, Label): AMLM 64599
Rights Society: SGAE
Other (Depósito Legal): M-27962-1977
Other (Depósito Legal): M-30006-1977
Other (Permiso Nº): 7053
Companies
Distributed By – Discos Epic
Printed By – Indugraf Madrid, S.A.
Video
Album
Chords of Fame - Phil Ochs. Лента с персональными рекомендациями и музыкальными новинками, радио, подборки на любой вкус, удобное управление своей коллекцией. Chords Of Fame was a 2-LP compilation of folksinger Phil Ochs' career, compiled by his brother shortly after Ochs' death in 1976. Released on A&M Records, it compiled tracks Ochs had recorded for both that label and Elektra Records. The compilation included several rarities: An electric version of I Ain't Marching Anymore, released as a single in the UK in 1966. Both sides of a 1974 single: Power and the Glory, recorded with a fife and drum corps. Compiled by noted music archivist Michael Ochs who was also Phil Ochs' brother and manager, Chords of Fame is a peerless overview of Phil Ochs' career in music, from his early days as a singing journalist penning topical numbers like Draft Dodger Rag and I Ain't Marchin' Anymore to the deeply personal introspection of his later work, as typified by. No More Songs and Jim Dean of Indiana. Of all the protest singers who emerged from the Greenwich Village scene of New York City in the early 1960s, few -then or in retrospective - were as by: Alberto Montalbano By Phil Ochs, E I found him by the stage last night D A He was breathing his last breath E A bottle of wine and a cigarette D A Was all that he had left, I c. by Phil Ochs. Difficulty: intermediate. 1 contributor total. Download Pdf. Listen free to Phil Ochs Chords Of Fame I Ain't Marchin' Anymore electric, One More Parade and more. 24 tracks 93:12. Phil Ochs - I Ain't Marching Anymore. Phil Ochs - One More Parade. Phil Ochs - Draft Dodger Rag. Phil Ochs - Here's To The State Of Richard Nixon. Phil Ochs - The Bells. Phil Ochs - Bound For Glory. Phil Ochs - Too Many Martyrs. Album: Phil Ochs' Greatest Hits 1970. Get the Sheet Music License This Song . songfacts . Phil Ochs was a transgressive folk singer who in the early '60s was a contemporary of Bob Dylan. But as Dylan moved away from protest music, Ochs embraced it, setting them on opposite paths in terms of popularity. Ochs felt that music of the '60s was of lasting value, as opposed to what he saw in the '70s. Speaking with Bruce Pollock, he explained: You take a whole life, whether it's 10 years or 60 years and say, what has this person done, what has he accomplished, if anything He's now dead, what has he left behind him of value . Band Name Phil Ochs. Album Name Chords of Fame. Type Compilation. Released date 1976. Labels A And M Records. Music StyleFolk Rock. Members owning this album0. I Ain't Marchin' Anymore Electric. One More Parade. Pleasures of the Harbor Live. Tape From California. Chords of Fame. The War is Over. Jim Dean of Indiana. Power and the Glory. Flower Lady. No More Songs. Buy this album. Chords Of Fame. Phil Ochs. Album Greatest Hits. Chords Of Fame Lyrics. I found him by the stage last night - he was breathing his last breath A bottle of wine and a cigarette was all that he had left I can see you make music 'cause you carry a guitar God help the troubadour who tries to be a star. So play the chords of love, my friend, play the chords of pain If you want to keep your song Don't, don't, don't, don't play the chords of fame