Tim Buckley - Goodbye And Hello FLAC

Tracklist
| 1 | Phantasmagoria In TwoWritten-By – Buckley | 3:29 |
| 2 | Once I WasWritten-By – Buckley | 3:22 |
| 3 | I Never Asked To Be Your MountainWritten-By – Buckley | 6:02 |
| 4 | Morning GloryWritten-By – Beckett, Buckley | 2:52 |
| 5 | Pleasant StreetWritten-By – Buckley | 5:15 |
| 6 | HallucinationsWritten-By – Beckett, Buckley | 4:55 |
| 7 | Knight-ErrantWritten-By – Beckett, Buckley | 2:00 |
| 8 | Carnival SongWritten-By – Buckley | 3:10 |
| 9 | No Man Can Find The WarWritten-By – Beckett, Buckley | 2:58 |
| 10 | Goodbye And HelloWritten-By – Beckett, Buckley | 8:38 |
Versions
| Category | Artist | Title (Format) | Label | Category | Country | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EKS-7318 | Tim Buckley | Goodbye And Hello (LP, Album, Son) | Elektra | EKS-7318 | US | 1967 |
| 4M 132 | Tim Buckley | Goodbye And Hello (LP, Album, RE, Gat) | 4 Men With Beards | 4M 132 | US | 2005 |
| EKS-7318 | Tim Buckley | Goodbye And Hello (LP, Album, Gat) | Elektra | EKS-7318 | US | 1967 |
| EKS-74028 | Tim Buckley | Goodbye And Hello (LP, Album, RE) | Elektra | EKS-74028 | US | Unknown |
| R1 318, 081227937867 | Tim Buckley | Goodbye And Hello (LP, Album, Mono, RE, Gat) | Rhino Records , Elektra | R1 318, 081227937867 | Europe | 2017 |
Credits
- Bass – Jim Fielder, Jimmy Bond
- Congas, Percussion – Carter C.C. Collins
- Design [Cover Design] – William S. Harvey
- Drums – Eddie Hoh
- Guitar – Brian Hartzler, John Forsha
- Guitar [Six-string], Twelve-String Guitar, Slide Guitar [Bottleneck Guitar], Kalimba, Vibraphone [Vibes] – Tim Buckley
- Kalimba, Tambourine – Dave Guard
- Lead Guitar – Lee Underwood
- Liner Notes [Back Cover] – LB
- Liner Notes [Inside Gatefold] – Larry Beckett
- Mixed By – Bruce Botnick
- Organ, Piano, Harmonium – Jerry Yester
- Photography By [Cover] – Guy Webster
- Photography By [Liner] – David Gahr
- Piano, Harmonium, Harpsichord – Don Randi
- Producer [Production Supervisor] – Jac Holzman
- Recorded By [Recording Director] – Jerry Yester
Notes
Gold Elektra label
Label Variation: different spacing between the lines in the bottom-center text.
All selections © Copyright 1967 Third Story Music, BMI
All lyrics © copyright Third Story Music, 1967.
Recorded in Los Angeles, June, 1967
Recording first published August 1967
Barcodes
- Matrix / Runout (Side A label): EKL-318-A
- Matrix / Runout (Side B label): EKL-318-B
- Matrix / Runout (Side A runout, etched): ELK 318A (SON)
- Matrix / Runout (Side B runout, etched): EKL 318B (SON)
- Rights Society: BMI
Companies
- Record Company – Elektra Records
- Copyright (c) – Third Story Music
- Pressed By – Sonic Recording Products, Inc.
Video
Album
Goodbye and Hello is the second album by Tim Buckley, released in August 1967, recorded in Los Angeles, California, in June of the same year. The album was later re-released on January 22, 2001, in a compilation with debut album Tim Buckley by WEAElektra. In 2005 a 180-gram version of the LP was released on the label Four Men With Beards and is being distributed by City Hall Records. The album was recorded during June 1967 in Los Angeles, and produced by Jerry Yester and Jac Holzman. Goodbye And Hello - Tim Buckley. Лента с персональными рекомендациями и музыкальными новинками, радио, подборки на любой вкус, удобное управление своей коллекцией. Текст песни: The antique people are down in the dungeons Run by machines and afraid of the tax Their heads in the grave and their hands on their eyes Hauling their hearts around circular free to Tim Buckley Goodbye and Hello No Man Can Find The War, Carnival Song and more. 10 tracks 42:41. Goodbye and Hello is the second album by Tim Buckley, released in August 1967, recorded in Los Angeles, California in June of the same year. The album was later re-released on January 22, 2001 in a compilation with debut album Tim Buckley by WEAElektra. In 2005 a 180 gram version of the LP was released on the label Four Men With Beards and is being distributed by City Hall Records. The album was recorded during June 1967 in Los Angeles, and produced by Jerry Yester and Jac Holz. Goodbye And Hello. Tim Buckley - Goodbye And Hello 1967. To favorites 4 Download album. Listen album. Tim Buckley. Songs in album Tim Buckley - Goodbye And Hello 1967. Tim Buckley - No Man Can Find The War. Tim Buckley - Carnival Song. Tim Buckley - Pleasant Street. Tim Buckley - Hallucinations. Tim Buckley - I Never Asked To Be Your Mountain. Tim Buckley - Once I Was. Tim Buckley - Phantasmagoria In Two. Tim Buckley - Knight-Errant. Tim Bu. Goodbye and Hello. Often cited as the ultimate Tim Buckley statement, Goodbye and Hello is indeed a fabulous album, but it's merely one side of Tim Buckley's enormous talent. Recorded in the middle of 1967 in the afterglow of Sgt. Pepper, this album is clearly inspired by Pepper's exploratory spirit. More often than not, this helps to bring Buckley's awesome musical vision home, but occasionally falters. Not that the album is overrated it's not, it's just that it is only one side of Buckley. The finest songs on the album were written by him alone, particularly Once I Was&q. Goodbye and Hello 2006 Remaster. 44: 1967 10 Songs. Pop listing. All songs written by Tim Buckley, except where noted. A-side No Man Can Find the War Larry Beckett, Buckley 2:58 Carnival Song 3:10 Pleasant Street 5:15 Hallucinations Beckett, Buckley 4:55 I Never Asked to Be Your Mountain 6:02 B-side Once I Was 3:22 Phantasmagoria in Two 3:29 Knight-Errant Beckett, Buckley 2:00 Goodbye and Hello Beckett, Buckley 8:38 Morning Glory Beckett, Buckley 2:52. Goodbye and Hello was released when Tim Buckley was 20 years old. Recorded during the Summer of Love, theres quite a lot of psychedelia here, which makes it a much more ambitious effort than his debut released only one year before. Half of the songs were co-written with his friend and lyricist Larry Beckett who also wrote the liner notes. Although it wasnt a huge success, it peaked at 171 on the Billboard charts. This was considerably better than his first album, which didnt chart at all. On the other hand, its very well regarded by both critics and fans alike in fact, many consider






















