The Time Machine (Alan Parsons album)
1999 studio album by Alan Parsons From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1999 studio album by Alan Parsons From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Time Machine is the third solo album by English rock musician Alan Parsons.
The Time Machine | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | September 1999 | |||
Genre | Progressive rock | |||
Length | 51:50 | |||
Label | Miramar | |||
Producer | Alan Parsons | |||
Alan Parsons chronology | ||||
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Singles from The Time Machine | ||||
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While the sound of this album is similar to some of the soft, ethereal tracks by the Alan Parsons Project, none of the writing or performance credits in the sleeve notes go to Alan Parsons, except for one short and simple instrumental part on "Temporalia" (the other instrumentals were written by drummer Stuart Elliott and guitarist Ian Bairnson), the Japanese bonus track "Beginnings" which also features his voice, and organ on "No Future in the Past"; his relation to the album is almost exclusively as producer.
This section needs additional citations for verification. (October 2022) |
The themes of time, time travel, and memory of the past had been suggested by Parsons as subject matter for the second Alan Parsons Project album,[2] but writing partner Eric Woolfson favoured a purely futuristic theme of robotic beings eventually displacing the human race, which eventually resulted in the album I Robot.
"Temporalia" features a narration by professor Frank Close on the idea of the universe itself acting as a sort of time machine; this is an extract of "Equinox – The Rubber Universe" (a film directed by Storm Thorgerson and with background music by Parsons). "Press Rewind" ponders what a person might do if they were able to reverse time, and change decisions they had made. "Out of the Blue" relates to a time traveller from the future. "Call Up" is about great people from history and, according to Ian Bairnson, "the effect they would have on the World right now, if they were here".[3] "Ignorance Is Bliss" talks about how sad people are in comparison to ancient and simpler times, and the possibility of change for good to a simple way of life. "Rubber Universe" is named after the aforementioned film about the expansion of the universe and the search for the Hubble constant.
"The Call of the Wild" talks about a future when mankind will be one without any separation (ethnicities, faith, nations, etc.). The melody of this song is a variation of the traditional Irish folk song "She Moves Through the Fair". "No Future in the Past" talks about avoiding repeating past mistakes. "The Very Last Time" is a song about people that have gone and never been seen again. The song was written about Bairnson's recently deceased dog, Gemma. "Far Ago and Long Away" is a play on words, as in relativity space = time, so "far away" = "far ago" and "long ago" = "long away".
The album cover has several images related to time and popular time-travel icons, including a photography camera, a clock mechanism, a police box as a reference to the TARDIS in Doctor Who, a wormhole-like tunnel effect from the opening sequence, a DeLorean sports car referring to the Back to the Future series, and a child playing with a model ship from the Star Trek franchise.
The video promo of "The Time Machine"[4] was completely made (3D modeling, animation and rendering) by Ben Liebrand and was released on 1 September 1999. It includes two designs created by Storm Thorgerson (Hipgnosis UK) and translated by Liebrand into a 3D composition. He made everything in four weeks using Softimage 3D Extreme.
Bonus tracks
On the Japanese release, "The Time Machine" is named "H.G. Force" (a reference to H. G. Wells).
"Dr. Evil" (edit) is a remix of "The Time Machine" that features the voice of Mike Myers from the second Austin Powers movie, The Spy Who Shagged Me, in which the Alan Parsons Project is mentioned. It is available on most releases which feature a bonus track. The title track was also released as a single with more remix variants.[5] "Beginnings" is available only on the Japanese release, which does not include the "Dr. Evil" remix.[6]
Chart (1999) | Peak position |
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Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[7] | 27 |
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[8] | 98 |
Chart (2021) | Peak position |
---|---|
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[9] | 29 |
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