The What-ing What Project? Never, perhaps, has a figure in rock music been simultaneously so famous and so … anonymous.

Alan Parsons, after all, was engineer on Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon and Paul McCartney’s Red Rose Speedway; producer for the Hollies’ ”The Air That I Breathe,” Pilot’s ”Magic” and Al Stewart’s ”Year of the Cat,” among others; a hitmaker in his own right with tracks like ”Eye in the Sky” and ”Games People Play”; and a guy whose instrumental ”Sirius” was the soundtrack to six pro basketball championships for the Michael Jordan-era Chicago Bulls.

Yet Parsons would probably get carded, anyway, if the long-bearded dude wasn’t old enough to be dean of the college of Caring for Magical Creatures. You could blame the behind-the-scenes ennui of studio work, or that his band — the blandly titled Alan Parsons Project — delved into the perhaps too-thoughtful intersections of rock music with literature, fantasy, robotics and psychology. Prog-rock? Nerd-rock was more like it.

Of course, APP would later find prominent mention in the 1996 ”Homerpalooza” episode of The Simpsons cartoon TV series. But, even there, Homer — in recounting the history of transportation/music for his children Bart and Lisa — pokes fun of the group’s essential anonymity: ”Grand Funk Railroad paved the way for Jefferson Airplane, which cleared the way for Jefferson Starship,” Homer says. ”The stage is now set for the Alan Parsons Project, which I believe was some sort of hovercraft.”

So, like, who are these guys? Here are five favorites, hand selected by SomethingElseReviews.com, to get you started …

”I WOULDN’T WANT TO BE LIKE YOU” (I ROBOT, 1977): A nasty little groove, with an even nastier put-down lyric, this is perhaps the definitive performance from the most talented of the Alan Parsons Project’s famous lead-vocalists-by-committee, Lenny Zakatek.

He adds a funky grit that was often missing in prog-rock, both then and now — and it remains a world away from the snoozy soft-rock whisper that Parsons collaborator Eric Woolfson brought to later-period hits like ”Time” and ”Eye in the Sky.” No, Zakatek is all pissed-off venom, and the band matches that with perhaps its most dangerous-sounding intro — starting with an echoing electric keyboard, then a you-talking-to-me bassline and finally a burgeoning guitar signature that sounds like welling anger.

Some days, I still can’t believe this is the same band that later put out the blaringly arid “Don’t Answer Me,” which sounded like Phil Spector on downers. – Nick DeRiso

“(THE SYSTEM OF) DOCTOR TARR AND PROFESSOR FETHER” (TALES OF MYSTERY AND IMAGINATION: EDGAR ALLAN POE, 1976): “Tarr And Fether” is a guitar riff song, which isn’t that big of a deal except that it’s also an Alan Parsons Project song. Which means it’s done with maybe a little more refinement and fussy production, and there’s little time for six-string wankery: this song’s got what must be the world’s shortest guitar solo. But the tune’s got a little funky electric piano countering the riffs and the combination of the two feels just right.

Those familiar with other tracks on APP’s debut will find quotes from “A Dream Within A Dream,” “The Raven” and “The Tell-tale Heart” inserted throughout this song, making it virtually a summation of the ol’ vinyl Side 1. This was also Parsons’ first attempt at some radio action, but it only scraped the bottom of the American Top 40 in 1976. The grand NBA entrance tunes would come a few years later.

As part of Parsons’ fairly big 1987 makeover of the whole Tales Of Mystery And Imagination: Edgar Allan Poe album, the drums punch out more and the cathedral organ is brought up in the mix. Although I’m a little partial to the vintage version, objectively I’d have to admit these were improvements.

Party revelry at the beginning of the song, applause near the end and lines like “keep on handin’ the jug round/All that you need is wine and good company.” Hey, I’m no literary expert but what the hell does that have to do with Poe? Eh, it doesn’t matter. Parsons has been known to rock out a bit once in a while, but he’s never made it as fun as he did here. — S. Victor Aaron

LUCIFER (EVE, 1979): I sat in this glassed-in room, at the local stereo shop, hoping to make my first purchase of a pair of those long-dreamt-of tower-speakers. The guy talked about brand names, and I nodding knowingly — not knowing, of course, but wanting to appear to know. I moved from one to another, listening to the sound envelop me. Over and over, he played ”Lucifier,” an instrumental that certainly seemed like something my parents would hate. Even better, right? ”This song has the depths, and the range, to show you what this speaker can do,” the salesman said.

I had a heard a few radio tracks, by this time, from the Alan Parsons Project. But you could forgive me — or anybody, really — from not knowing who they were and for not recognizing the opening instrumental from their 1979 release Eve. What I remember, even now, was how ”Lucifer” leapt out from this new technology. Those big-box speakers were different, so viscerally different, from the shelf models I had back home.

Oh, I was buying the Technics. The turntable, the receiver, the speakers that came up to my waist. All of it. I lugged it all home, plugged it all in, and listened to this song again, safely ensconced in the woodpanelling of my childhood — but yet forever changed by a world of equalizer settings, pre-set radio-station buttons, a volume knob the size of my fist and, yeah, Alan Parsons. – Nick DeRiso

“THE VOICE” (I ROBOT, 1977): With a wah-wah guitar, a circular bass pulse and dramatic symphony swirls, it might be Alan Parsons circa 1977 but it conjures up the the Temptations or Isaac Hayes, circa 1971. Regardless, this odd hybrid of “Papa Was A Rolling Stone” and “The Theme From Shaft” about being under constant surveillance had a couple of cool things about to go along with the pimped out groove.

For one, it’s got an actual bass solo in the middle (ok, so the lines might have been completely scripted, but still) that’s played amidst these string swirls, a chukka-chukka guitar and handclaps. And then there’s a vocoder growling “he’s gonna get you” finishing the end of the lines sung by a very British-sounding Steve Harley.

A seventies British art-rock outfit trying its hand at a blaxpoitation film song was probably not the fashionable thing to do at a time when that kind of music was starting to go painfully out of style. Today, though, it’s a cool example of early seventies black music … from a mid seventies English group. – S. Victor Aaron

”PASEO de GRACIA (GAUDI, 1987): This was the closing tune on what would become the final Alan Parsons Project, dedicated to the Catalan architect Antonio Gaudi. His life’s work, the Sagrada Familia Cathedral in Barcelona, remains this dramatic enigma — meant to be completed over hundreds of years.

Perfect for Parsons and Co., right? Sounded like a return-to-form in the making, after a few years of doughy radio hits. Too, they had done similar conceptual projects before, notably basing their debut on the works of Edgar Allan Poe — and this was seemed to hold the same depth and complexity. But the times, inevitably, had changed. That’s something you sense APP striving to come to terms with, say, on the misplaced John Miles-sung rocker ”Money Talks.” Only the opener, and this thrilling instrumental closing track, seem to match the grandiosity of their subject’s sweeping vision as well as that of the old Alan Parson’s Project itself.

Parsons and longtime late partner Woolfson, working again alongside orchestral flourishes by Andrew Powell, build a propulsive bed on ”Paseo” for Project veteran Ian Bairnson’s memorably romantic, perfectly proportioned Spanish guitar interludes. Like the record itself, which clocks in at under 39 minutes, this tune ends too soon. But it seemed to return this group to its original intent — just in time, unfortunately, to break up. Woolfson would later be felled by kidney cancer in 2009. — Nick DeRiso


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Something Else! Reviews

Writers from the Something Else! Reviews webzine have also been featured on AllAboutJazz.com, Rock.com, Jazz.com, NPR.com's A Blog Supreme, Blues Revue Magazine, and the NoDepression.com Americana site, among others. We focus on a diverse amalgam of musical obsessions from outposts in Texas, South Carolina, New Hampshire and elsewhere. Contact us at reviews@somethingelsereviews.com.

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