“Time of the Season” is a track by The Zombies, featured on their 1968 album Odessey and Oracle. It was written by keyboard participant Rod Argent and recorded at Abbey Highway Studios in August 1967.
A number of different songs from Odessey and Oracle have been launched as singles previous to “Time of the Season”. Columbia Information supported the album and its singles on the urging of recent A&R Rep, Al Kooper. One of many singles was the uncommercial sounding “Butcher’s Story”, which Columbia thought would possibly catch on as an anti-war assertion, on the time a preferred pattern.
“Time of the Season” was solely launched at Kooper’s urging, after earlier singles flopped, and made its breakthrough in early 1969, over a yr after the band break up up. It reached #3 on the Billboard Scorching 100 in March and #1 in Canada. It didn’t chart within the band’s native Britain, though in mid-1969 it peaked at #2 on the South African hit parade.
The track’s traits embody the distinctive voice of lead singer Colin Blunstone, the memorable bass riff (which is analogous to Ben E. King’s hit “Stand By Me”), and Rod Argent’s fast-paced psychedelic improvisation.
The lyrics are an archetypical depiction of the feelings surrounding the Summer time of Love. It’s well-known for such call-and-response verses as “What’s your identify? (What’s your identify?) / Who’s your daddy? (Who’s your daddy?) / Is he wealthy? (Is he wealthy like me?)” roughly 50 seconds into the monitor. Each stereo and monaural unique releases comprise vocal responses.
In 1998, Large Beat Information launched a CD reissue of Odessey and Oracle containing each the unique stereo and mono variations of “Time of The Season”. It additionally featured a newly remixed alternate model containing instrumental backing beneath the vocals throughout all the refrain.
These instrumental backings had been combined out on the unique 1968 stereo and mono variations to create a cappella vocal sections.
Music critic Antonio Mendez known as it one of many chic songs on Odessey and Oracle.
“Time of The Season” is steadily utilized in popular culture to symbolize the late Sixties. In that sense, it’s featured within the movies 1969, Awakenings, A Stroll on the Moon and Using the Bullet, all of which depict the yr of 1969. “Time of the Season” is performed within the background of The Simpsons episode “D’oh-in Within the Wind”, through which Homer decides to comply with the footsteps of his mom and grow to be a hippie.
Within the South Park episodes “The Mexican Staring Frog of Southern Sri Lanka” and “201” it’s utilized in flashback scenes portraying the Vietnam Conflict. It was additionally featured within the 2005 movie Pricey Wendy, additionally it is referenced within the ultimate phrases of Dick’s letter addressed to Wendy. The track was additionally featured on the HBO collection, Large Love.
The NBC collection American Desires, which depicts the mid and late Sixties in American society, featured the track in its third season episode “So Lengthy, Farewell”. “Inform Her No” and “She’s Not There”, The Zombies’ different main hits within the U.S., have been additionally used within the present; the latter have been included within the collection’ soundtrack.
It is usually frequent for the track to seem in romantic scenes, as within the aforementioned movie 1969. Within the Buddies episode “The One With the Flashback”, the track is performed in a dream sequence the place Rachel fantasizes about Chandler. Within the ultimate scene of the Will and Grace episode “Marry Me A Little”, it’s used to symbolize Grace’s pleasure after marrying Leo.
“Time of the Season” can also be featured in a scene of the 1999 NBC miniseries The ’60s. The track’s utilization on this specific scene was anachronistic, nonetheless, because it was presupposed to painting 1965. The identical is true of the movie Shanghai Knights, which is meant to depict 1887.
“Time of the Season” has been featured in a number of TV commercials, akin to a 1999 Tampax advert set on the Woodstock Pageant, a 2005 Constancy Investments industrial, a 2006 advert for Sprite (through which a refrain of flowers with human faces performs an a cappella model of the track, a 2006 advert for Magners Irish Cider, and a 2008 Crest advert in Mexico.
It was additionally used within the promoting campaigns of Nissan Tiida in Japan (2004), Greece (2007), and Russia (2008).
In sports activities, it was featured in “Free Your Thoughts”, the sixteenth video within the Transworld Skateboarding collection. Throughout the 2006 playoffs, the track was performed in Shea Stadium because the home-team New York Mets took the sector.
The track seems on the online game Karaoke Revolution Presents: American Idol Encore and DJ Hero.
The track seems within the film The Debt launched within the U.S. in August 2011.
The track is frequently performed with a psychedelic video at Las Vegas’ Fremont Road Expertise on a four-block lengthy Viva Imaginative and prescient overhead display screen with a 500,000 watt sound system, the video titled Indicators of Life.
The track was performed in the course of the 2013 supernatural horror film The Conjurin. Wiki