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Apollo 100 - Popcorn

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Uploaded by on Apr 26, 2009

Track 1 from Side 2 of Apollo 100's second album "Master Pieces", released in 1972.

Apollo 100 was a short-lived British instrumental studio based group that stayed intact for only two years: 1972 and 1973. There was no vocalist in the band; instead, they had an arranger, Tom Parker, who first got the band together. They had one top ten hit song in the United States with the Johann Sebastian Bach-inspired single "Joy", in 1972. Later that same year, they released Master Pieces, which wasn't as successful, and the band broke up in 1973.

The band members consisted of:
- Zed Jenkins (on guitar)
- Clem Cattini (on drums). Cattini was the drum player for the band Tornados prior to joining Apollo 100.
- Brian Odgers (on bass guitar)
- Vic Flick (on guitar). Among his most noted accomplishments, Flick played the guitar riff for the James Bond Theme song. One of his guitars can been seen at The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, Ohio.
- Jim Lawless (on percussion)


The following is the complete text found on the reverse side of the album cover, as shown in the video:
---------------------------
Mega
M51-5005
Stereo

Apollo 100
Featuring Tom Parker
Master Pieces

Webster's dictionary defines masterpieces as "anything done or made with extraordinary skill." World famous painters Chagall, Cezanne, Matisse, Monet, Raischenberg, Rembrandt and the like turned them out on canvas, while immortal music masters such as Bach, Chopin, Grieg, Tchaikovsky and Wagner "did their thing(s)" in manuscript form. All of which brings us not so subtly to the subject at hand. Apollo 100, the unique-sounding British aggregation that has achieved international recognition through its recorded treatments of classical masterpieces.

Comprised of the cream of Britain's recording studio musicians, Apollo 100 is the brain child of its leader, Tom Parker, a brilliant young arranger-musician. By lacing the basic chamber music sound with overtones of contemporary rock, Parker and Apollo 100 succeeded in capturing the imagination of record buyers everywhere with one of their very first singles releases, "Joy" (Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring from J.S. Bach's Cantata 147).

This album, Apollo 100's second, offers a program featuring old favorites dressed in new form by Beethoven, Chopin and Rossini; plus three exciting originals and the group's unique versions of the current favorites "Nutrocker" (Tchaikovsky revisited), "Amazing Grace", "Telstar", and "Popcorn".

Side One
Amazing Grace (ASCAP) 3:09
Custer's Last Stand (ASCAP) 2:27
Tristesse (ASCAP) 3:14
Opus 5 (ASCAP) 2:52
Valleys (ASCAP) 2:31

Side Two
Popcorn (ASCAP) 2:43
Beethoven 9 (ASCAP) 2:32
Telstar (ASCAP) 3:18
Nutrocker (BMI) 1:53
William Tell (ASCAP) 2:19

A Young Blood Production
Produced by Miki Dallon
By Arrangement with Tara International

Cover Concept: Herb Burnette and Bruce D. Davidson
Art Direction: Herb Burnette; Cover Photo: John Donegan, Pinwheel Studios, Nashville, Tennessee.
Liner: Bruce D. Davidson: Music Media
Special thanks to Lyzon Pictures & Frames, Inc., Nashville, for their cooperation and assistance.

Mega Stereo Records may be played on any present day phonograph equipped with a lightweight tone arm. You will hear excellent sound reproduction on a monaural player and full stereo sound on a stereophonic player. Caution: This or any stereo record should not be played with a worn or damaged needle as it will result in permanent damage to the record.

Printed in U.S.A.
1972 Mega Records & Tapes, Inc.
Nashville, Tennessee 37212
---------------------------

This recording was taken from a vinyl LP record. Apologies for any underlying hum that you might hear, which comes from a faulty connection between my turntable and computer input. I hope to replace the recording with a cleaner version in the future.

== DISCLAIMER ==
NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED!

The music, lyrics, album cover and label artwork appearing in this video belong to the whoever the current copyright holders are, and I have no intention on claiming it as mine. It is provided here for historical purposes, since the album is long out of print.

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Music

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Standard YouTube License

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Uploader Comments (TimothyQStanton)

  • so what are the lyrics?

  • @talthan They only sing the second half of the full lyrics, which I found by googling the phrase: anarchic system popcorn lyrics

  • I've received a notice from YouTube: "You have videos that may contain content that is owned by someone else. Please review these videos." And it links me to this one. Don't be surprised if it disappears. Pure insanity.

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All Comments (29)

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  • there are about 10,000 different versions of this song...with and without lyrics :D

  • "Hot butter" had a hit instrumental version of this song in the 70's.

  • @TimothyQStanton The YT Police should go after people who post movies illegally online. I've found several people who put recent movies on YT.......it's all politics i say. :(

  • @TimothyQStanton Whoever holds these copyrights now probably has no intention whatsoever of re-releasing them commercially. Probably someone out there is buying up copyrights very quietly in hope of playing gotcha games with harmless YouTubers. Putting this track on YouTube is educational: I learned that "Popcorn" actually has lyrics. Down with SOPA. Free the Internet!

  • What great musicians. Took a classical classic and put their own spin on it. Fantastic. I remember it well.

  • according to the world's leading popcorn expert at popcorn-songdotcom, the apollo 100 version is a combination of two anarchic system tracks, the vocal and the instrumental versions. his site has a comprehensive list of what looks to be over 500 cover versions of the song, dating back to the original by gershon kingsley in 1969.

  • while waiting for the movie to start at the theatre this song would play then the lights would go dark...memory lane=0/

  • old skool

  • While this version of "Popcorn" was only an Apollo 100 album track and never a hit, it's pretty good. The original was credited to Hot Butter, which was actually Moog synthesizer player Stan Free. Hot Butter's version, which reached #9 in the summer of 1972, was the very first pop hit ever to be played ENTIRELY on a synthesizer. The single was released as Musicor 1458.

  • I never knew they had a second album. Something new to set my sites on!!!

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