Puneet Varma (Editor)

Act One (Beggars Opera album)

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Released
  
1970

Artist
  
Beggars Opera

Label
  
Vertigo Records

Producers
  
Bill Martin, Phil Coulter

Length
  
41:57

Release date
  
1970

Genre
  
Progressive rock

Recorded
  
De Lane Lea Studios, Holborn, London

Act One (1970)
  
Waters of Change (1971)

Similar
  
Waters of Change, Lose a Life, Pathfinder, From Home to Home, Last Autumn's Dream

Act One is the debut album of the Scottish progressive band Beggars Opera.

Contents

Overview

Variously classified as symphonic rock, progressive rock or proto-progressive rock, Beggars Opera's debut album has been compared to (and sometimes described as "derivative of") works by The Nice and Deep Purple MK I. It was published by Vertigo (which had at the time introduced its legendary "swirl" label) in 1970 and features cover art by the renowned surrealist photographer and artist Marcus Keef (the same that created the covers for Black Sabbath's first three albums). In the same year the band also released a somewhat successful single, "Sarabande", which was not included in the album in its original LP edition, but appears in the CD reissue.

The album includes many elements of symphonic progressive rock, including a number references to classical music (e.g.,Poet and Peasant and Light Cavalry by Franz von Suppé and Grieg's Peer Gynt), an Emerson-esque keyboard section featuring organ and Hammond, complex arrangements, and long suites (most notably "Raymond's Road").

Personnel

  • Martin Griffiths - vocals
  • Alan Park - organ
  • Raymond Wilson - drums
  • Ricky Gardiner - lead guitar
  • Marshall Erskine - bass guitar
  • Songs

    1Poet and Peasant7:13
    2Passacaglia7:06
    3Memory3:58

    References

    Act One (Beggars Opera album) Wikipedia