Planet P Project

Planet P Project is a pseudonym used by American rock musician Tony Carey for his science-fiction themed, progressive rock/space rock music. Carey has released six albums under the Planet P Project name: Planet P (1983, later retitled Planet P Project), Pink World (1984), Go Out Dancing, Part I (1931) (2005), Go Out Dancing, Part II (Levittown) (2008), Go Out Dancing, Part III (Out in the Rain) (2009) and Steeltown (2013). Music videos for singles from the first albums received heavy to moderate airplay on MTV, when originally released. Pink World was originally a two-record set, released on bright-pink-colored vinyl.

Planet P's most well known singles were "Why Me?" (a sweeping, energetic romp about outer space and isolation), and the downbeat "Static". Go Out Dancing, Part I (1931) is the first of the trilogy, with part two titled Go Out Dancing, Part II (Levittown) and part three as Go Out Dancing, Part III (Out in the Rain).

The project's name was inspired from the fictional "Planet P" in Robert A. Heinlein's book Starship Troopers.

History

"Planet P Project" is a pseudonym used by rock musician Tony Carey to distinguish his more progressive and experimental music from his pop-oriented rock releases.

Tony Carey before Planet P Project

Tony Carey signed his first recording contract in the early 1970s with his band Blessings, though the band never finished recording an album.[1] Carey successfully auditioned as the keyboardist for Ritchie Blackmore's band Rainbow and played with the band for two years.[2] He recorded one studio album with Rainbow, the highly acclaimed Rising, and live concert material from two world tours was subsequently released as two double LPs and a six-disc CD box set.

Carey left Rainbow in 1977 and moved to Germany in 1978. He co-owned Hotline recording studio in Frankfurt, West Germany, with producer Peter Hauke, and he spent many hours over the next five years with his friend and recording engineer Nigel Jopson, recording as he wanted, often working twenty-hour days. As Carey states, he suffered the consequences of excessive drug use during this period.[3] He recorded all of his early albums at that studio. He released his first solo album, In the Absence of the Cat, in 1982, on the indie label X-Records.[4] Carey released his second solo album, I Won't Be Home Tonight, on the Rocshire label in 1982, along with the single (and music video) "West Coast Summer Nights". The title track was also released as a single.

1983: Planet P Project

Carey was signed to Geffen Records for his third solo album (later to be released as Some Tough City), but he had a great deal of music written that didn't fit the style of that album. He was able to sign a second record deal with Geffen to record and release that material under the Planet P Project pseudonym. He released his first album under the name Planet P Project in 1983, called Planet P Project (originally titled Planet P). Planet P Project received modest reviews (e.g., ref[5] and[6]). The album, however, contained the more highly acclaimed song "Why Me", which was released as Planet P Project's first popular single, reaching #64 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart and #4 in the magazine's Top Rock Tracks chart. According to Carey, the video for "Why Me" made a "slight impact on early MTV."[3] Tom Demalon, writing for MTV, was less modest:

With heavy exposure of the accompanying video on MTV, the single "Why Me?" clicked at album rock outlets, climbing into the Top Ten while it also managed to crossover over onto the pop charts.[7]

"Why Me" was described in Billboard by Cleveland's WEBN-FM program director, Denton Marr, as "unusual, eclectic, and very entertaining."[8] The song was one of 30 songs to be included in the 1995 MTV compilation album MTV Class of 1983.[9]

1984: Pink World

In 1983 and 1984, Carey recorded his third solo album, Some Tough City, and his second Planet P Project album, Pink World. A dispute with the label arose when, according to Carey, Geffen's representative was not satisfied with the lyrics to "A Fine, Fine Day" and "The First Day of Summer", both of which would later be released as singles, from the album Some Tough City, and Carey refused to rewrite them.[3] The Pink World album was recorded with minimal input from Geffen, and the finished product was not well received by the label. Carey had this to say about the response from Geffen:

I delivered Pink World [to Geffen], and the shit REALLY hit the fan. Some of the comments that filtered back to me were "unreleasable" and "this kid's crazy." And some bad ones, too. Long story short, I got traded like a baseball player to MCA Records, which went ahead and released both of these records.[3]

In late 1984 MCA released Planet P Project's double LP rock opera, Pink World, which peaked at #121 on The Billboard 200. The single "What I See" reached #25 on Billboard's Top Rock Tracks. Both the double LP and the single were released on pink vinyl.[10][11] A single music video, titled Pink World (though the song "Pink World was not included in the video), which featured two songs from the Pink World album, "What I See" and "Behind the Barrier", remained in power rotation or active rotation for ten weeks on the network.[12]

21-year hiatus and return of Planet P Project

Given the relative success of Some Tough City, Carey focused his attention on recordings to be released under his own name. However, after a 21-year hiatus, Carey resurrected the Planet P Project name for a trilogy of albums collectively called Go Out Dancing (G.O.D.). The albums were 1931 (2005), Levittown (2008), and Out In The Rain (2009).

After officially dismantling "Planet P Project" in 2009 with the 3rd & final part to the "G. O. D." trilogy, "Out In The Rain", Carey again revived the project with the release of "Steeltown" in 2013, this time merging his solo career name with the project's name ("Tony Carey's Planet P Project"). "Steeltown" is based on Norway & its history, after Carey played and travelled there extensively, both as a solo artist, and with a band consisting of mostly Norwegian musicians. Influenced by the occupation years of World War II and the way Norway as a nation handled this, the work is also a statement about the eternal religious conflicts world wide. In 2013, Carey announced plans to tour with "Tony Carey's Planet P Project" in the near future.[2]

In 2014 a box set of the three Go Out Dancing cd's was released, 'the G.O.D.B.O.X.', which included an earlier bootleg of promotional recordings for the project.

Discography

Music videos

Music videos were made for "Why Me?" and "Static", as well as Pink World. (The Pink World video combined two songs from the Pink World album, "What I See" and "Behind the Barrier", and the video itself bore the title Pink World.) Carey does not physically appear in any of these videos. As of June 2010, there had been no videos made for songs from the most recent albums.

References

  1. Carey, Tony. "Tony Carey Biography". truebeliever.de. Retrieved July 24, 2014.
  2. 1 2 Rohman, Ashiqur. "Interview with former Rainbow keyboardist Tony Carey". http://indianmusicmug.com. Retrieved July 24, 2014. External link in |website= (help)
  3. 1 2 3 4 Carey, Tony. "CD Liner Notes, Pink World [Definitive Edition]". Retrieved July 17, 2014.
  4. Carey, Tony. "In the Absence of the Cat". truebeliever.de. Retrieved July 24, 2014.
  5. "First Time Around". Billboard. 95 (13): 61. March 26, 1883.
  6. Demalon, Tom. "Planet P Project Planet P Project". AllMusic. Retrieved 30 July 2014.
  7. Demalon, Tom. "About Planet P Project". MTVartists. MTV. Retrieved July 23, 2014.
  8. Marr, Denton (March 12, 1983). "Out of the Box: AOR". Billboard. 95 (10): 23. Retrieved 30 July 2014.
  9. Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "Various Artists MTV Class of 1983". AllMusic. Retrieved 30 July 2014.
  10. Fiorani, Sam. "Records You Never Heard: Planet P". The High Fidelity Report. The High Fidelity Report, Dec 1, 2013. Retrieved July 20, 2014.
  11. "Planet P Project What I See". discogs.com. discogs.com. Retrieved July 22, 2014.
  12. "Billboard Magazine Archive". Billboard. 96(48) - 97(9). Retrieved July 19, 2014.

External links

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