Maybe Tomorrow - The Iveys


Vinyl L.P • Apple Records • AP-8719.
1969 • Japan • Red Vinyl.


Contraportada.

Disc side 1.

Disc side 2.

Labels.



The Iveys



Liner notes:


Side One
SEE-SAW, GRANPA (Pete) *
BEAUTIFUL AND BLUE (Tom) *
DEAR ANGIE (Ron)
THINK ABOUT THE GOOD TIMES (Mike)
YESTERDAY AIN'T COMING BACK (Pete/Tom)
FISHERMAN (Tom) *

Side Two
MAYBE TOMORROW (Tom)
SALI BLOO (Pete)
ANGELIQUE (Tom)
I'M IN LOVE (Pete)
THEY'RE KNOCKING DOWN OUR HOME (Pete) *
I'VE BEEN WAITING (Pete)


Produced by Tony Visconti
* Produced by Mal Evans
Photo by Peter Asher


The Iveys came to Apple in search not of fame and riches or success - which rewards they are discovering slowly and with increasing exhilaration-but to find a young energy source and a warm environment. That their yearnings brought them what they looked for was due partly to Apple's affection for four very nice kids and partly to the band's pop skills. They were not, nor are they now adventurous innovators, but they are ready, they are ready to be.

The Iveys can sing and they play tight, rich stuff, write it too; they can write anything. They are lovely lads, Mike Gibbins, Ron Griffiths and Pete Ham coming from Swansea, and one Tom Evans from Liverpool. They have a manager, Bill Collins, who is their mother, their father and their favourite son. For them all Apple feels love and admiration.

You will see why, or rather you will hear why, when the youth and honesty of this album is introduced to your sensibilities.

The Iveys offer you themselves, their writing and their music, for this, their first album is "all their own work".

                    DEREK TAYLOR '69



Advert.

1 comment:


  1. Maybe Tomorrow is the debut album by British rock band Badfinger. Maybe Tomorrow is the only release under the band's original name as The Iveys. It was issued in 1969 on the Apple label in Japan, West Germany and Italy.

    Although the album was scheduled to be released worldwide, the release in the US and UK at that time was halted without explanation. Many reasons for halting the album have been suggested by the band and Apple employees, but the most common theory is that Apple's newly hired president, Allen Klein, stopped all non-Beatle releases on Apple until he could examine the company's finances, which were in disarray at the time.

    A majority of the album's songs were later issued as Badfinger songs on the Badfinger album Magic Christian Music.

    ReplyDelete

Write your comments here, they will be reviewed (to avoid spam) and published shortly.

We do not have music or video downloads... Thanks!

Rockronologia presenta...