Vintage Sounds Of 70's Orchestra Songs Of The Seventies Vinyl LP 1972 Capitol
Vintage Sounds Of 70's Orchestra Songs Of The Seventies Vinyl LP 1972 Capitol
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Vintage 1972 easy listening album "Songs Of The Seventies," an instrumental pop and orchestral LP performed by Sounds Of The 70's Orchestra and arranged and conducted by William Loose on Capitol Records.
12" black vinyl record, 33 RPM SQ quadraphonic LP with black and magenta Capitol Special Markets center labels reading "QUADRAPHONIC SQ System" and "Songs Of The Seventies" plus catalog numbers QL-6774, QL-1-6774, and QL-2-6774, housed in its original Realistic-branded cardboard sleeve featuring a close-up portrait cover on the front and album notes on the back.
Packaging is designated "A Collector's Limited Edition" on the back cover and includes a plain translucent paper inner sleeve with center cutout; back-panel text explains the Capitol SQ QUADRAPHONIC playback system and notes that the disc was custom made for Radio Shack, a Tandy Corporation company, in the United States.
Tracklist Side One: I Don't Know How To Love Him (from the rock opera "Jesus Christ, Superstar"), For All We Know, You've Got A Friend, One Less Bell To Answer, Rose Garden.
Tracklist Side Two: Variations On A Theme Of Erik Satie, It's Impossible, Theme From "Love Story," Here Comes That Rainy Day Feeling Again, It's Too Late.
Label and sleeve credits list William Loose as arranger and conductor, Ernest K. Dominy as producer, Carson Taylor as quadraphonic engineer, and Capitol Records and Malivue Music copyright information dated 1972; see jacket, label, and inner-sleeve photos for additional artwork, credits, and quadraphonic playback notes.
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