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Scott McKenzie - Voice of Scott McKenzie

Voice of Scott McKenzie
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Album Details: Voice of Scott McKenzie

Release Date:01/01/1967
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Track List: Voice of Scott McKenzie

  1. San Francisco (Be Sure to Wear F...
  2. Like an Old Time Movie
  3. Twelve Thirty
  4. No, No, No, No, No
  5. Celeste
  6. Rooms
  1. Don't Make Promises
  2. Reasons to Believe
  3. It's Not Time Now
  4. What's the Difference (Chapter 1)
  5. What's the Difference (Chapter 2)

Pro Reviews: Voice of Scott McKenzie

  • All Music Guide

    There was more to Scott McKenzie than "San Francisco," though this album came out so long after that single peaked on the charts that few people ever bothered to buy it. There's nothing here quite like the title song, and none of the rest captures a magical mood or moment the way that the single did, though there is some very pretty music. McKenzie's rendition of Donovan's "Celeste" has a languid beauty, while his version of John Sebastian and Zal Yanovsky's "It's Not Time Now" is a more standard, rhythmic folkrock piece. For reasons perhaps best known to himself, however, McKenzie's voice doesn't have as much range or flexibility on those two numbers as it seemed to show on "San Francisco." But when he does one of his originals, his expressiveness blooms, and he stays fairly strong on all of the rest. That includes Tim Hardin's "Reason to Believe" (one of the better renditions that song has ever received) and "No, No, No, No, No," a hookladen piece about sexual pursuit and frustration... with an exquisite orchestral accompaniment behind a lean, punchy acoustic band sound; and Hardin's haunting, cautionary "Don't Make Promises." Still, the songs that McKenzie does best here are the John Phillipsauthored works beyond the title cut, those include "Like an Old Time Movie" and "TwelveThirty." The latter has a poignancy here that the more familiar version by the Mamas the Papas misses; one gets the illusion of a personal confessional, so closely does McKenzie seem to embrace the lyric. Some of his singing is still a bit too bland, but overall this would have been a promising first effort, had McKenzie been of more of a mind to follow it up quickly. The album was later repackaged in England as San Francisco, with a different song order, and has been reissued by Sony U.K. under that title. - Bruce Eder, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Scott McKenzie

McKenzie, born Philip Blondheim, began his career in a very cleancut folk group called the Journeymen. After recording some solo work, he met up with former Journeyman and thenMamas the Papas member John Phillips, who cowrote "San Francisco (Be Sure to Wear Some Flowers in Your Hair)" with him. Its catchy melody and innocent, wideeyed hippie altruism gave McKenzie a To... Read more