Wake Up...It's Tomorrow
Wake Up...It's Tomorrow is the second studio album by the American psychedelic rock band Strawberry Alarm Clock, released in early 1968 by Uni Records.[1][2] The album comprises twelve tracks, blending dreamy pop-psych elements with jagged guitars, organs, and layered choral harmonies characteristic of the late-1960s flower power era.[3][2] Key singles include "Tomorrow," which peaked at number 23 on the Billboard Hot 100 despite limited promotion, and "Sit with the Guru," reaching number 65.[1][4] Notably, it features "Pretty Song from Psych-Out," the theme for the 1968 cult film Psych-Out, written by band members Ed King and Lee Freeman.[4] Recorded at TTG Studios with enhanced production resources from Uni, the album reflects the band's evolving creativity following their debut Incense and Peppermints, though internal tensions over songwriting and direction were emerging.[4] Tracks like "Nightmare of Percussion" and the three-part "Black Butter" suite showcase experimental psychedelia, while "Soft Skies, No Lies" and "Sitting on a Star" highlight sophisticated vocal arrangements by Howard Davis.[4][3] Despite critical appreciation for its ambitious scope—"the most ambitious musical statement of the band's career," as noted by reissue label Sundazed—the album did not chart, hampered by delayed distribution and label disinterest.[3][1] It has since been reissued multiple times, cementing its status in psychedelic rock history.[1]Production and recording
Development and songwriting
Following the breakthrough success of their debut single "Incense and Peppermints" in 1967, Strawberry Alarm Clock began developing material for their second album, Wake Up...It's Tomorrow, in late 1967 amid a stable lineup featuring core members such as guitarist Lee Freeman and keyboardist Mark Weitz.[4] This transitional period allowed the band to explore more ambitious compositions, building on their initial psychedelic foundations while navigating pressures to replicate their earlier hit.[4] The songwriting process emphasized collaboration among band members, often occurring in informal subgroups that fostered creative contributions.[4] Guitarist Ed King and drummer Randy Seol played pivotal roles in melody and rhythmic development, respectively, drawing from the band's evolving interest in psychedelic experimentation.[4] This included incorporating Eastern motifs, such as sitar-like elements, and dreamlike narratives reflective of the era's countercultural influences, which infused tracks with a sense of ethereal exploration.[4][5] Key songs emerged from these dynamics, with "Tomorrow" showcasing targeted member input. "Tomorrow" arose from contributions by Ed King and Mark Weitz, where King handled primary melody crafting and Weitz added harmonic layers, resulting in a psychedelic pop piece that captured the band's transitional energy.[4] The instrumental "Nightmare of Percussion," credited to George Bunnell, Howard Davis, and Randy Seol, originated as an outgrowth of early 1968 jam sessions focused on percussive improvisation, highlighting Seol's leadership in rhythmic experimentation.[4] These efforts, spanning into early 1968, underscored the band's shift toward more cohesive yet innovative psychedelic expressions.[4]Studio sessions and engineering
The recording sessions for Wake Up...It's Tomorrow took place at TTG Studios in Hollywood, California, spanning late 1967 and early 1968 under producers Bill Holmes and Frank Slay.[6][4][2][7] The band faced a tight schedule driven by pressure from Uni Records to capitalize on the success of their debut, with many songs written and only minimally rehearsed directly in the studio; this resulted in the 12-track album being completed in under two months.[4] Keyboardist Mark Weitz was absent from some sessions due to illness and contributed his keyboard parts via overdubs.[4] Engineering emphasized multi-tracking to achieve layered vocals, including three- and four-part harmonies arranged by Howard Davis, which contributed to the album's intricate psychedelic textures.[4] Psychedelic effects were prominent, such as backward tapes incorporated into "Soft Skies, No Lies".[4] Innovations during overdubs included the integration of sitar, lending Eastern psychedelic elements to the sound.[4]Musical content
Style and influences
Wake Up...It's Tomorrow exemplifies sunshine pop-psychedelia, incorporating baroque elements through sophisticated vocal harmonies and orchestral flourishes, while blending in folk-rock undertones via Byrds-like arrangements.[4][8] The album's sonic palette features ethereal, echoing vocals polished by arranger Howard Davis, reverb-heavy guitars delivering sustain-laden solos, and modal scales drawing from raga influences to evoke a futuristic, otherworldly atmosphere.[4][8] The band's style was shaped by key influences from the era's psychedelic vanguard, including the Beach Boys' harmonic complexity—gleaned during a joint tour that exposed them to Transcendental Meditation—and the Beatles' experimental phase, as seen in Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, which informed their layered productions.[9][5][6] Additionally, the emerging West Coast psych scene, particularly Love's innovative songcraft, contributed to the album's fusion of flower-pop and fuzzed-out garage elements.[4][6] Distinctive tracks highlight these traits, such as the title track "Tomorrow," which progresses from acoustic introspection to electric swells capped by Ed King's blistering guitar solo, underscoring the album's psychedelic futurism.[4] Compared to their debut Incense and Peppermints, which leaned on raw garage-rock and quick raga-psych recordings, Wake Up...It's Tomorrow marks a shift toward more ambitious cohesion, with tighter studio performances at TTG Studios fostering a concept-like unity absent a rigid theme.[4][8]Track analysis
The album Wake Up...It's Tomorrow features a deliberate sequencing that builds a narrative arc through its psychedelic soundscape, beginning with the experimental intensity of "Nightmare of Percussion" and progressing to more melodic and introspective pieces before culminating in the experimental closer, the three-part "Black Butter" suite. This flow shifts from chaotic percussion-driven openings to dreamy, harmony-rich interludes, creating a sense of progression from disorientation to resolution, with recurring psychedelic effects like sitar, backwards tape, and fuzzed guitars enhancing the transitional dynamics. Most tracks clock in under three minutes, prioritizing tight pop-psych structures over extended improvisations, which contributes to the album's cohesive yet varied energy.[4][8] "Nightmare of Percussion," the opener, establishes the album's experimental edge with its dark, percussion-heavy arrangement and Howard Davis's deep, ominous vocals, evoking a nightmarish intensity through layered rhythms and psychedelic tension without traditional verse-chorus forms.[4] "Tomorrow," positioned early on side A, serves as an effervescent psych-pop highlight with echoing vocals by Mark Weitz, a soulful guitar solo from Ed King, and Association-style harmonies, its lyrics contemplating temporal change—"Tomorrow things won't be the same / Tomorrow life would be a different game"—while affirming present-moment connection amid uncertainty.[4][10] This track's trippy yet accessible hooks underscore the album's blend of introspection and propulsion.[11] Mid-album, "They Saw the Fat One Coming" introduces a pensive mood with acoustic guitar, bluesy influences, hand percussion, sitar accents, and Byrdsian vocal harmonies, delivered in a soft, spoken-poem style that builds to a notable guitar solo; its dark lyrics depict a crying stranger inciting town-wide discomfort, violence, and collective madness, adding a layer of surreal social commentary.[4][8] Similarly, "Curse of the Witches" contrasts upbeat, plucky major-key melodies with wild percussion, feedback-laden psychedelic guitar, synthesizers, and tumbling xylophones in shifting time signatures, its cheery sound masking grim drug-inspired lyrics about witchcraft accusations, a daughter's burning at the stake, familial loss, and ensuing loneliness.[8][12] "Sit with the Guru" brings Eastern philosophical motifs with its raga-like middle-eastern horn flourishes and meditative structure, reflecting the era's psychedelic interest in spirituality and altered states.[4] "Pretty Song from Psych-Out," a haunting psych-pop entry, functions as the theme for the 1968 film Psych-Out, featuring strong harmonies and trippy instrumentation that evoke communal hippie dreams and hallucinatory escapism.[4][11] The "Black Butter" suite, closing the album, showcases the band's experimental psychedelia through its multi-part structure incorporating backwards tapes, modal scales, and layered effects, creating an otherworldly descent that ties into the album's themes of altered consciousness.[4] Thematic motifs recur across the record, including time's inexorable shift in "Tomorrow," dreamlike psychedelia in tracks like "Soft Skies, No Lies" and "Sitting on a Star," and surreal, often dark imagery of societal alienation or mystical visions in "They Saw the Fat One Coming" and "Curse of the Witches," tying the songs into a cohesive exploration of altered consciousness.[4][8]Release and reception
Commercial performance
Wake Up...It's Tomorrow was released in June 1968 by Uni Records, building on the momentum from the band's debut single "Incense and Peppermints," which had topped the Billboard Hot 100 in late 1967.[13] The album's lead single, "Tomorrow," issued in December 1967, peaked at No. 23 on the Billboard Hot 100 in February 1968, providing initial promotional drive.[1][14] A follow-up single, "Sit with the Guru," released in July 1968, reached No. 65 on the same chart later that year.[4][15] Despite this, the album itself failed to enter the Billboard 200.[4] Sales were aided by FM radio airplay in psychedelic strongholds but limited by distribution challenges and evolving musical preferences following the Summer of Love era.[4] The record found greater traction in California's psychedelic scene, where the band originated, supplemented by promotional tours across the U.S., including the Midwest.[4]Critical response
Upon its release in 1968, Wake Up...It's Tomorrow received limited contemporary press coverage.[4] Common retrospective praises center on the album's melodic invention and intricate vocal layering, which elevated its psych-pop sound beyond typical teenybopper fare. AllMusic awarded it 4 out of 5 stars, lauding its dreamy psych-pop qualities.[16] These elements showcased the band's growth in sophistication, with Howard Davis's arrangements drawing comparisons to The Association's polished style.[4] Criticisms often focused on a perceived lack of cohesion relative to the more unified debut Incense and Peppermints, as the album's stylistic shifts between flower-pop and heavier psychedelia felt disjointed to some.[4] In the 1990s, reappraisals during the psych revival positioned Wake Up...It's Tomorrow as an underrated gem of late-1960s psychedelia. Music historian Richie Unterberger emphasized its musical ambition and overlooked creativity, noting how internal band tensions and promotion issues overshadowed its strengths, making it a cult favorite for its innovative vocal and instrumental textures.[4]Personnel and credits
Band members
The core lineup of Strawberry Alarm Clock responsible for Wake Up...It's Tomorrow consisted of five primary members, all emerging from the Los Angeles garage rock scene in the mid-1960s. Formed originally as Thee Sixpence in Glendale, California, the group had stabilized by the time of the album's recording in 1967–1968, with no major personnel shifts during the sessions following the departure of bassist Gary Lovetro after their debut. Most members were in their late teens to early twenties, reflecting the youthful energy of the Sunset Strip and broader Southern California psych-rock milieu.[4][17]| Member | Instrument(s) | Role in Album |
|---|---|---|
| Ed King (born September 14, 1949) | Lead guitar, vocals | Delivered prominent lead guitar solos on tracks like "Tomorrow" and "Pass Time with the Sac," contributing to the album's psychedelic textures; also handled some bass parts.[4][18] |
| Lee Freeman (born November 8, 1949) | Rhythm guitar, vocals | Provided rhythmic foundation and harmonica accents; co-wrote several tracks, emphasizing the band's harmonic pop influences.[4][17] |
| Mark Weitz (born November 18, 1945) | Keyboards, vocals | Led keyboard arrangements on psychedelic cuts like "Tomorrow," which he co-wrote; his slightly older perspective from New York roots added compositional depth.[4][19] |
| George Bunnell (born June 9, 1949) | Bass, vocals | Took over bass duties post-Lovetro, anchoring the rhythm section on all tracks; contributed vocals to enhance the group's layered sound.[4][20] |
| Randy Seol (born September 7, 1949) | Drums, percussion, vocals | Drove the percussion with innovative fills and mallet-like effects on songs such as "Nightmare of Percussion," supporting the album's experimental edge.[4][21] |