Close | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | August 4, 1969 | |||
Recorded | May – July 1969, Capitol Records Studios | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 34:53 | |||
Label | Capitol | |||
Producer | Vic Briggs | |||
Sean Bonniwell chronology | ||||
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Singles from Close | ||||
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Close is a solo album by American rock musician Sean Bonniwell, credited under the moniker T. S. Bonniwell, who had been the creative force behind the innovative garage rock band The Music Machine. The album was released on August 4, 1969, by Capitol Records (see 1969 in music).[1] It marked a total departure from Bonniwell's rebellious protopunk period with The Music Machine, to a soft rock crooning style. In addition, the album blended folk rock and orchestrated influences, and was inspired by Bonniwell's stints in the pre-Music Machine groups, the Wayfarers and the Ragamuffins, along with his desire to be more poetically inclined. The song,"Where Am I to Go", was released as a single ahead of the album, but failed to chart. Like its attendant single, Close was also somewhat commercially unsuccessful, and was the last recording by Bonniwell for the next 20 years.[1][2]