Zager and Evans
(Read about Zager & Evans after the video)
Zager and Evans was a US rock-pop duo of the late 1960s and early 1970s named after its two members, Denny Zager (born 1944, Wymore, Nebraska) and Rick Evans (born 1943, Lincoln, Nebraska). They are best known for their 1969 hit single "In the Year 2525".
History
Zager and Evans met at Nebraska Wesleyan University,
in 1962 and they were joined by drummer Danny Schindler (later of the
Benders) in the seminal Nebraska band the Eccentrics, until Schindler's
tour of Vietnam in 1965. Evans also left in 1965, and reunited with
Denny Zager in 1968.
As Zager and Evans, the duo were backed by Mark Dalton, also a
Nebraska native, on bass. Their first drummer, Paul Maher, was later
replaced by another Nebraskan, Dave Trupp. Trupp and Dalton were also
the rhythm section in the popular Liberation Blues Band and backed Evans
on some solo demo material prior to Zager and Evans's recording of "In the Year 2525" in 1968.[citation needed]
"In the Year 2525 (Exordium & Terminus)" was written by Richard (Rick) S. Evans.[1] It was registered with the performing rights organization Broadcast Music, Inc.[2] The song warned of the dangers of technology, portraying a future in which the human race
was destroyed by its own technological and medical innovations. The
last stanza of the song suggests mankind undergoes a continuing cycle of
birth, death and rebirth.
"In the Year 2525" hit number one on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1969. It claimed the No.1 spot for six weeks. It also topped the charts in the UK. It was No.1 on July 20, 1969, in the United States, the date of the first manned moon landing, by astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin. It continued to top the charts while the Woodstock Music Festival was going on. It was nominated for a special Hugo Award that same year. It sold over four million copies by 1970 and was awarded a gold disc by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) in July 1969.[3]
The song was originally written in 1964 and recorded and released in
1968 on the Truth Records label. After radio stations in Lincoln and
Omaha turned the record into a regional "break-out" hit record, RCA
Records signed the duo and rereleased the song nationwide. They also
immediately recorded a follow-up album of the same name, again using
Trupp and Dalton as the primary rhythm section. Sales of the original
hit recording (including singles sales, album usage and compilation
inclusions) now total over 10 million units worldwide.[citation needed] The B-side of the original single was "Little Kids", also written by Evans.
Despite the record's massive success, follow-up singles such as "Mr.
Turnkey" (a song about a rapist who nails his own wrist to the jail wall
as punishment for his crime) went largely unnoticed by the public. "In
the Year 2525" was their only Hot 100 entry and sole hit in the U.K.
also.
In Australia, "In The Year 2525" reached No.2, with "Mr.
Turnkey"/"Cary Lynn Javes" (double A-side) reaching No.86 and "Help One
Man Today" reaching No.94 on the RCA label.
After the success of "2525", White Whale Records released a record titled The Early Writings of Zager & Evans and Others,
featuring recordings of the Eccentrics on side one and J.K. and Co. (a
band with no connection to Zager & Evans) on side two. After
releasing two albums on RCA, Zager and Evans moved to Vanguard Records in 1971 for a final record.
Rick Evans would later release an album for Truth Records titled I Need This Song where he duetted with a singer named Pam Herbert.[4] In the late 70s he formed his own label, Fun Records, and released an album titled Fun Songs, Think Songs containing both new material and rerecordings of Zager & Evans material.[5]
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