Eternity’s Children

With a distinctive sound that successfully combined the band’s Southern roots with sophisticated vocal harmonies, soft psych, bossa nova, and even gospel, Eternitys Children managed to create their own exciting hybrid sound, and in doing so, became one of the most extraordinary and unusual pop bands ever to emerge from the Deep South.

Comprised of lead vocalist and songwriter Linda Lawley, bassist and co-lead vocalist Charlie Ross, drummer Roy Whittaker, guitarist Johnny Walker, and keyboardists Bruce Blackman (who would later found yacht rock favorites Starbuck with whom he composed their classic Moonlight Feels Right”) and Mike Kid” McClain, Eternity’s Children achieved impressive chart successes in several major markets, toured alongside legends such as the Temptations, the Doors, and Spirit, only to find their own great potential eclipsed by bad management and label woes.

Eternity’s Children first came to life in 1966 when Blackman and Whittaker joined Ross in Cleveland, Mississippi’s top local group, the Phantoms. The newly-dubbed Eternity’s Children began working the New Orleans club circuit, wowing audiences in and around the Gulf region with their impressive live show. Dark-haired folk singer and songwriter Linda Lawley soon joined the lineup, resulting in the development of complex vocal harmonies which came to define the band’s sound.

That inventive approach caught the attention of Keith Olsen, a former member of psych rock pioneers The Music Machine and later to become a Multi-Platinum certified producer known for his work with Fleetwood Mac, the Grateful Dead, Ozzy Osbourne, Rick Springfield, and countless others. Olsen brought Eternity’s Children into a Dallas, TX studio where they recorded a pair of tracks that swiftly led to their signing with A&M Records. The band relocated to Los Angeles during the summer of 1967 where they began performing alongside such legends as the Seeds, Country Joe and the Fish, and Three Dog Night, as well as making a heretofore-undocumented cameo in the film The Graduate. But when their A&M single failed to chart nationally, Eternity’s Children were forced to return to Louisiana, prompting Blackman’s departure from the group.

ETERNITY'S CHILDREN

Eternity’s Children self-titled debut record, produced by Keith Olsen and Curt Boettcher, showcases their alluring harmonies and pop songwriting chops. This album saw the group charting with its hypnotic single “Mrs. Bluebird”

With a talented new keyboardist in the fold, Mike The Kid” McClain, Eternity’s Children soon found themselves signed to Tower Records, a new Capitol Records subsidiary with an intriguing roster of artists that included Pink Floyd, the Chocolate Watch Band, Harry Nilsson, and more. Back in Los Angeles, Eternity’s Children returned to the studio to record what became their self-titled debut album, joined once again by Keith Olsen as well as his associate and co-producer, Curt Boettcher, a groundbreaking talent known for producing Along Comes Mary” and Cherish” for the Association as well as his own career-defining work with his sunshine pop supergroup, the Millennium.

Released in 1968, Eternity’s Children was highlighted by the hit single, Mrs. Bluebird,” a gorgeous slice of sunshine pop with a cascading, hypnotic flow that proved the band’s highest-charting success, reaching #69 on the Billboard Hot 100 and #54 on the Cash Box Top 100.

“Possessed of two exceptional lead vocalists and a self-penned hit single, immensely talented, and great-looking to boot, they toured with some of the biggest names in music, and worked with the finest producers and musicians. They transformed the songs they covered – many composed by the industrys top songwriters – and made them their own. Eternitys Children clearly had all the ingredients necessary to conquer the pop world.” – Steve Stanley, producer.

ETERNITY'S CHILDREN

TIMELESS

Eternity’s Children’s  sophomore LP Timeless has the legendary Clarence White on guitar, and features more of the band’s lush harmonies, but this time with soul and country influences sprinkled in. Recorded in Bakersfield and produced by Gary Paxton.

Just one month after the release of Eternitys Children, the group headed up to Bakersfield, CA, where they began tracking what would become their second and final LP, Timeless, this time recording with producer Gary Paxton, best known for the #1 hit, “Alley Oop” by the Hollywood Argyles. Decidedly more soulful than their debut – without losing the bands trademark sweet, stacked-harmony sound – the LP sees Eternity’s Children joined by bluegrass and country rock icon Clarence White (The Byrds, The Kentucky Colonels), who participated not only as a guitarist, but also as a writer, co-authoring the album standout, Natures Child” with Paxtons wife Jan.

Unfortunately, Timeless was pulled from Towers U.S. release schedule for unknown reasons and issued only in an extremely limited pressing in November 1968 on Capitol Canadas 6000 series. Today, on the rare occasion when copies trade hands, its not uncommon for Timeless to fetch in the upper three figures. Indeed, the LP is so scarce, the band themselves thought the recordings remained unreleased until a twofer reissue of Eternitys Children and Timeless was issued on CD in 1999. To this day, none of the members of Eternitys Children have ever seen an original copy of Timeless.

Now these two rare legendary albums are available once again, reissued on LP with audio newly remastered by Dan Hersch. Both LPs come in a gatefold package with liner notes by producer Steve Stanley, punctuated by remembrances from the band, and illustrated with rare photos and memorabilia from their archive. Eternity’s Children‘s infectious pop is waiting to be rediscovered. 


 
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