🎷 AotW: CTI Lou Christie: Lou Christie (Three Brothers Records THB 2000)

All the CTI releases
1689470809185.pngLou Christie: Lou Christie

Three Brothers Records THB 2000
Released 1974

Also released on CD (1998) with the album title Beyond the Blue Horizon/Hey Cajun containing four bonus tracks.

A1: Saddle The Wind / 3:30​
A2: Wilma Lee And Stoney / 2:32​
A3: Blue Canadian Rocky Dream / 4:20​
A4: You Were The One / 2:46​
A5: Beyond The Blue Horizon / 3:46​
B1: Good Mornin' / Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah / 3:15
B2: Hey You Cajun / 2:34​
B3: Mack The Knife / 3:30​
B4: Sunbeam / 2:25​
B5: Morning Rider / 3:20​

Backing Vocals – Cassandra Morgan, Frank Romeo, Ralph Landis
Banjo, Dobro – Paul Prestopine*
Bass – Tony Levin, Walter Yost
Design – Bob Ciano
Drums – Buddy Saltzman
Engineer, Engineer [Remix Engineer] – Carmine Rubino, Shelly Yakus
Fiddle – Larry Packer (2), Russell George
Guitar – Don Thomas (2), Madison Mason
Keyboards – Tony Romeo
Mastered By – Tom Rabstenek
Photography By – Duane Michals
Producer, Arranged By – Tony Romeo
Steel Guitar – Eric Weissberg, Marc Harowitz*
Synthesizer [Electrocomp] – Walter Sear
Synthesizer [Moog] – Tony Romeo
Vocals – Lou Christie

Recorded at The Record Plant.


Three Brothers Records was a very short-lived subsidiary label of CTI Records, which existed to release only this album and a handful of 45 RPM singles. You can read more about Christie and the label at the CT Produced blog.


1689470750237.png


Amazon product ASIN B00000DI01

Not available via Qobuz. Album is out of print and not available via streaming services.




Fan-created playlist of the complete album, containing fan-contributed YouTube videos:

 
The song "Beyond The Blue Horizon" was in the 1988 movie "Rainman" starring Dustin Hoffman & Tom Cruise!! Also former Monkees the late Michael Nesmith & The First National Band did the song from 1970 "Magnetic South" on RCA.
 
In 1978, Lou Christie did a song called "B---h Of Fantasy" & can be found on "Greatest Hits, Vol. 2" on Varese CD.
 
Here's a terrific song--"Escape"--by Lou Christie that I remember so well from the summer of 1967, which has the feel of jazz and was heard on easy listening station KDEO AM.

 
Here's a terrific song--"Escape"--by Lou Christie that I remember so well from the summer of 1967, which has the feel of jazz and was heard on easy listening station KDEO AM.


A little guitar would help accentuate that song.
 
Back
Top Bottom