ÍøÆغÚÁÏ

Tomorrow

Tomorrow

Tomorrow

11 SONGS • 35 MINUTES • FEB 01 1968

  • TRACKS
    TRACKS
  • DETAILS
    DETAILS
TRACKS
DETAILS
1
My White Bicycle
03:20
2
Colonel Brown
02:53
3
Real Life Permanent Dream
03:20
4
Shy Boy
02:27
5
Revolution
03:49
6
The Incredible Journey of Timothy Chase
03:21
7
Auntie Mary's Dress Shop
02:48
8
Strawberry Fields Forever
04:01
9
Three Jolly Little Dwarfs
02:25
10
Now Your Time Has Come
04:56
11
Hallucinations
02:37
℗© 2015 Parlophone Records Ltd, a Warner Music Group Company

Artist bios

In the early days of British psychedelia, three bands were consistently cited as first-generation figureheads of the London-based underground sound: Pink Floyd, the Soft Machine, and Tomorrow. Pink Floyd became superstars and the Soft Machine influential cult legends, but Tomorrow is mostly remembered (if at all) for featuring Steve Howe as their lead guitarist in his pre-Yes days. Actually, Tomorrow was nearly the equal of the two more celebrated outfits. Along with the early Floyd and Soft Machine, they shared a propensity for flower-power whimsy. Though they were less recklessly innovative and imaginative, their songwriting was accomplished, with adroit harmonies, psychedelic guitar work, and adventurous structures and tempo changes. They never succumbed to mindless indulgence or jamming; indeed, their tracks were rather short and tightly woven in comparison with most psychedelic bands. A couple singles (especially "My White Bicycle") were underground favorites, but the group only managed to record one album before breaking up in 1968. Lead singer Keith West, even before the breakup, had a number two British hit with "Excerpt From a Teenage Opera," which helped inspire Pete Townshend's Tommy. Drummer Twink joined the Pretty Things and, later, the Pink Fairies. ~ Richie Unterberger

Read more
Customer reviews
5 star
0%
4 star
25%
3 star
75%
2 star
0%
1 star
0%

How are ratings calculated?