My Mother’s Records

“Also Sprach Zarathustra (2001)” is one of those oddities in my mother’s record collection, maybe not quite as off-the-wall a choice for her as the Status Quo single or Rugby Songs album she had but trippy jazz-fusion instrumentals weren’t usually her bag either. I can see why she liked it though, it’s cool and elegant … Continue reading “My Mother’s Records”


“Also Sprach Zarathustra (2001)” is one of those oddities in my mother’s record collection, maybe not quite as off-the-wall a choice for her as the Status Quo single or Rugby Songs album she had but trippy jazz-fusion instrumentals weren’t usually her bag either. I can see why she liked it though, it’s cool and elegant and groovily cosmic without being too far out there — if they had the expression back then it would have been called “chill out” music.

This was a big hit for Brazilian ivory-tinkler (and future Kool & The Gang producer) Eumir Deodato in 1972 and, of course, is a cover of the Richard Strauss tune used in 2001: A Space Odyssey which had blown everyone’s minds a couple of years before. Oddly enough, even though my mother usually hated science fiction films (she thought they were “unrealistic” which, I know, is kind of the point of them) she actually liked 2001 which is about the most difficult and hardcore mainstream SF film there is, even more light years away from being her usual cup of tea than this record is. But we watched it on television together once and though I imagined she’d think it was like watching paint dry when it was over she said to me “that was good, wasn’t it?” Maybe she was secretly doing drugs and had been tripping out on the couch during the “Beyond The Infinite” sequence without me noticing.

Download: Also Sprach Zarathustra (2001) – Deodato (mp3)

3 thoughts on “My Mother’s Records”

  1. This is where your mother’s records and mine coincide, Lee.

    I’d just turned 15 when it was a hit in the UK (May 1973) and it was added to my then small collection alongside other “oddities” like Isaac Hayes’ Shaft and Armed and Extremely Dangerous by First Choice!

    Obviously dipping into a few genres to start with!

    Phil

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  2. I still have the vinyl version of the album, and we used it as a demo in the hi-fi retail business then. This guy came close to being a musical parody but somehow kept pulling it off (he did funked-up versions of Glen Miller and Gershwin songs as well that also don’t wear well but are still fun to listen to when no one’s around). His “2001/Also Sprach Z) was pretty high up on the US charts I remember.

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