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Tommy Peltier Echo Park (The 70's Sessions) Vinyl LP Indies Due Out 27/03/26

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Tommy Peltier Echo Park (The 70's Sessions) Vinyl LP Indies Due Out 27/03/26

Please note this is a pre-order item due for release 27th March, 2026

Tommy Peltier - Echo Park (The 70's Sessions)

Tracklist:

  1. Oneness
  2. Judee Girl
  3. National Stardom
  4. Flight Of The Dancer
  5. Time After Time
  6. Blue Rose
  7. 10, 000 Greyhounds
  8. A Heartbeat Away
  9. Yellow Beach Umbrella
  10. Here Today
  11. Smile All The While

Tommy Peltier's Echo Park, compiled of unheard tapes from the early/mid-1970s, brings us into contact with a long-extinct creature — equal parts slinky hipster, universal soldier of the heart and snuggly loverman — the light-rockin’ tinseltown troubadour, the likes of which hasn’t been served around Hollywood since 1979! Tommy’s somewhere in the tuneful tradition of Rupert Holmes, Stephen Bishop, Andrew Gold, David Batteau and of course, Captain Fantastic and the Thin White Duke. His soulful songs and high-pitched vocals (he was once called “Tom Rapp on helium”) are paired with the requisite chopsy, jazz-enriched LA players, entrancing the ear with grooves and performances both tasty and sweet. Mixed and mastered with great zest by Jim O’Rourke (he brought new life to recordings of a similar vintage for Judee Sill’s posthumous Dreams Come True back in 2005), Echo Park is an encompassing trip through a whole other time and place.

A trumpet player since childhood, Tommy felt no need for pop music; he’d come of age during the west coast jazz explosion of the 1950s, hearing Gerry Mulligan and Chet Baker’s legendary performances at The Haig Club, just a mile west of MacArthur Park. Inspired by the departures of the Ornette Coleman Quartet, he founded The Jazz Corps in 1963, gigging all around around town, including a residency at Hermosa Beach’s also-legendary Lighthouse. Their sound was captured on a stellar 1967 Pacific Jazz release featuring Roland Kirk. Jazz was his game, but when Tommy injured his side playing lead parts in a big band, he couldn’t blow for long without aggravating it. Something had to give.

$12.07

Original: $40.23

-70%
Tommy Peltier Echo Park (The 70's Sessions) Vinyl LP Indies Due Out 27/03/26—

$40.23

$12.07

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Description

Please note this is a pre-order item due for release 27th March, 2026

Tommy Peltier - Echo Park (The 70's Sessions)

Tracklist:

  1. Oneness
  2. Judee Girl
  3. National Stardom
  4. Flight Of The Dancer
  5. Time After Time
  6. Blue Rose
  7. 10, 000 Greyhounds
  8. A Heartbeat Away
  9. Yellow Beach Umbrella
  10. Here Today
  11. Smile All The While

Tommy Peltier's Echo Park, compiled of unheard tapes from the early/mid-1970s, brings us into contact with a long-extinct creature — equal parts slinky hipster, universal soldier of the heart and snuggly loverman — the light-rockin’ tinseltown troubadour, the likes of which hasn’t been served around Hollywood since 1979! Tommy’s somewhere in the tuneful tradition of Rupert Holmes, Stephen Bishop, Andrew Gold, David Batteau and of course, Captain Fantastic and the Thin White Duke. His soulful songs and high-pitched vocals (he was once called “Tom Rapp on helium”) are paired with the requisite chopsy, jazz-enriched LA players, entrancing the ear with grooves and performances both tasty and sweet. Mixed and mastered with great zest by Jim O’Rourke (he brought new life to recordings of a similar vintage for Judee Sill’s posthumous Dreams Come True back in 2005), Echo Park is an encompassing trip through a whole other time and place.

A trumpet player since childhood, Tommy felt no need for pop music; he’d come of age during the west coast jazz explosion of the 1950s, hearing Gerry Mulligan and Chet Baker’s legendary performances at The Haig Club, just a mile west of MacArthur Park. Inspired by the departures of the Ornette Coleman Quartet, he founded The Jazz Corps in 1963, gigging all around around town, including a residency at Hermosa Beach’s also-legendary Lighthouse. Their sound was captured on a stellar 1967 Pacific Jazz release featuring Roland Kirk. Jazz was his game, but when Tommy injured his side playing lead parts in a big band, he couldn’t blow for long without aggravating it. Something had to give.