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About this product
Product Identifiers
Record LabelRlgm, Real Gone Music
UPC0848064012535
eBay Product ID (ePID)27048596931
Product Key Features
FormatRecord
Release Year2021
GenreSoundtrack
ArtistToomorrow / O.S.T.
Release TitleToomorrow (Music from the Harry Saltzman/Don Kirshner Film)
Dimensions
Item Height0.18 in
Item Weight0.50 lb
Item Length12.34 in
Item Width12.20 in
Additional Product Features
Number of Tracks12
Country/Region of ManufactureUnited States
Tracks1.1 You're My Baby 1.2 Taking Our Own Sweet Time 1.3 Toomorrow (Inst.) 1.4 Let's Move On 1.5 Walkin' On Air (Inst.) 1.6 If You Can't Be Hurt 2.1 Toomorrow 2.2 Walkin' On Air 2.3 Spaceport 2.4 Happiness Valley 2.5 Let's Move On 2.6 Goin' Back
Number of Discs1
NotesLimited purple colored vinyl LP pressing. Includes insert. Long before she was Sandy, the good girl of Rydell High, or Kira, the Olympian muse of the roller disco Xanadu, Olivia Newton-John was just plain Livvy, the girl singer with dreams of the big time in the 1970 sci-fi movie musical Toomorrow. This little-known motion picture was the brainchild of music impresario Don Kirshner and Harry Saltzman, best known for co-producing the first nine James Bond films with Albert R. Broccoli. And Toomorrow wasn't just the movie's title. After a lengthy talent search, Kirshner and Saltzman assembled the band Toomorrow, whom the music mogul modestly described as 'the best-looking total group that ever existed.' Why the misspelling? As drummer Karl Chambers put it in the film itself, 'I dig it! We're too much, we're too morrow!' At least Kirshner thought so - he had visions of Toomorrow achieving the success of his previous creations the Monkees and the Archies, and enlisted the aid of songwriters Mark Barkan and Richie Adams (along with composer Hugo Montenegro) for the movie's bubblegum-meets-rock tunes. But, weighed down by legal problems surrounding Saltzman, and a premise - Toomorrow was going to save a race of aliens called the Alphoids from an existence-threatening 'sterility of sound - that was silly even by late-'60s B-movie standards, the movie went nowhere. The soundtrack, however, boasting the nascent superstar Newton-John, has attained serious cult status over the years, with the original record commanding prices that are truly from outer space.