Saturday, July 1, 1978

Alan Parsons Project Pyramid released

Pyramid

Alan Parsons Project


Released: June 1978


Peak: 26 US, 40 UK, 25 CN, 16 AU Click for codes to charts.


Sales (in millions): 0.5 US


Genre: progressive rock lite


Tracks:

Click on a song title for more details.
  1. Voyager [2:24]
  2. What Goes Up… [3:31]
  3. The Eagle Will Rise Again [4:20]
  4. One More River [4:15]
  5. Can’t Take It with You [5:06]
  6. In the Lap of the Gods [5:27]
  7. Pyramania [2:45]
  8. Hyper-Gamma-Spaces [4:19]
  9. Shadow of a Lonely Man [5:34]


Total Running Time: 37:46


The Players:

  • Alan Parsons (producing, engineering)
  • Eric Woolfson (keyboards, executive producing)
  • Ian Bairnson (guitar, backing vocals)
  • David Paton (bass, acoustic guitar, backing vocals)
  • Stuart Elliott (drums, percussion, backing vocals)
  • Colin Blunstone, Dea Ford, Jack Harris, John Miles, Lenny Zakatek (vocals)
  • Andrew Powell (orchestral arrangements)
  • Duncan Mackay (keyboards)

Rating:

3.709 out of 5.00 (average of 18 ratings)


Awards:

(Click on award to learn more).

About the Album:

“The theme of this album deals, as the title suggests, with the remaining wonder of the ancient world” DV and “man's fascination with superstition and its powers,” AM specifically “the ‘pyramid power’ fad that was around in the mid-'70s (the pet rock having proven to be a bust by then). DV “Lacking the wit and melodic appeal of…I Robot, the Alan Parsons Project's third studio-rock oratorio” RS is “an average bit of material.” AM “Where I Robot was constructed on a nifty riddle – it's cinematic space rock flaunted the technology its scenario cautioned against – Pyramid uses the mystery of the pyramids as a jumping-off point for some bombastic musings on the vanity of human wishes and the passing of all things.” RS

“While not a stellar album, Pyramid completes the task of musically explaining its concept. Its short but slightly compelling nature grows after a few listens, but the album…isn’t a necessity.” AM


Notes:

A 2008 reissue added demos and alternate versions.

Voyager

Alan Parsons Project

Writer(s): Alan Parsons, Eric Woolfson

Vocals: NA (instrumental)


Released: Pyramid (1978)


Peak: -- Click for codes to charts.


Sales (in millions): --


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): -- radio, -- video, 10.89 streaming


About the Song:

“The instrumental Voyager opens things up, and its provocative style sets the tone for the album's supernatural mood.” AM The song “builds up the intensity by adding instruments as the piece progresses, then brings the mood back down in order to meld with the first vocal track,” DV “What Goes Up…”

What Goes Up…

Alan Parsons Project

Writer(s): Alan Parsons, Eric Woolfson

Vocals: David Paton


Released: single (9/23/1978), Pyramid (1978)


B-side: “Hyper-Gamma-Spaces”


Peak: 87 BB, 20 CL, 1 DF Click for codes to charts.


Sales (in millions): --


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): -- radio, -- video, 4.23 streaming

Awards:

(Click on award to learn more).

About the Song:

The “bright-sounding,” AM “What Goes Up...” feels like it “is sung by a pharaoh and a skeptic in the time of the building of the pyramids, and questions about whether these would truly be structures to last for the remainder of time (‘If all things must fall / Why build a miracle at all / If all things must pass / Even a pyramid won't last’).” DV

The Eagle Will Rise Again

Alan Parsons Project

Writer(s): Alan Parsons, Eric Woolfson

Vocals: Colin Blunstone, Dean Ford


Released: Pyramid (1978)


Peak: 40 DF Click for codes to charts.


Sales (in millions): --


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): -- radio, -- video, 3.99 streaming


About the Song:

“What Goes Up…” and “The Eagle Will Rise Again, sung by Colin Blunstone,” AM are two “of the highlights here.” AM “As the life of the pharoah begins to ebb away, as heard on [the latter] the first image of Egyptian mythology comes forth in the image of the phoenix. The gentleness [and] vocal delivery” DV “of this track impresses.” DV

One More River

Alan Parsons Project

Writer(s): Alan Parsons, Eric Woolfson

Vocals: Lenny Zakatek


Released: Pyramid (1978)


Peak: 36 DF Click for codes to charts.


Sales (in millions): --


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): -- radio, -- video, 1.36 streaming


About the Song:

“The religious connotations continue on the more uptempo One More River, as the pharoah makes his way towards his soul's final journey towards the river Styx.” DV

Can’t Take It with You

Alan Parsons Project

Writer(s): Alan Parsons, Eric Woolfson

Vocals: Dean Ford, Colin Blunstone


Released: Pyramid (1978)


Peak: 47 CL, 18 DF Click for codes to charts.


Sales (in millions): --


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): -- radio, -- video, 1.70 streaming


About the Song:

Can't Take It With You “shows our hero having second thoughts after discovering he must leave his earthly possessions behind. Too late for him, he eventually will have to board the boat for his jouney on the river Styx.” DV This “lesson-learning [song] teaches that our souls are our most important asset, in typical Parsons-type charm.” AM

In the Lap of the Gods

Alan Parsons Project

Writer(s): Alan Parsons, Eric Woolfson

Vocals: NA (instrumental)


Released: B-side of “Pyramania” (UK, June 1978), Pyramid (1978)


Peak: -- Click for codes to charts.


Sales (in millions): --


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): -- radio, -- video, 2.24 streaming


About the Song:

The instrumental In the Lap of the Gods “prepares us for a shift in theme…where the attention shifts from our now-deceased pharoah to a gentleman in 1978 England who is caught up - maybe a little bit too much - in ‘pyramid power.’ The belief was that anything under a pyramid would be positively affected by the pyramid's mystical power.” DV

Pyramania

Alan Parsons Project

Writer(s): Alan Parsons, Eric Woolfson

Vocals: Jack Harris


Released: single (UK, June 1978), Pyramid (1978)


B-Side: “In the Lap of the Gods”


Peak: 45 CL, 11 DF Click for codes to charts.


Sales (in millions): --


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): -- radio, -- video, 2.80 streaming


About the Song:

“This manic belief in the unknown is the basis of” DV “the anxiety-ridden” AM Pyramania, “a cute, peppy number which is enjoyable to listen to – though, as the song lets us know, our new hero's fascination with pyramids is causing unhappiness at home with the wife.” DV This song “enhances the album's concept the best, accompanied by some excitable keyboard playing and a friendly middle.” AM

Hyper-Gamma-Spaces

Alan Parsons Project

Writer(s): Alan Parsons, Eric Woolfson

Vocals: NA (instrumental)


Released: B-side of “What Goes Up…” (9/23/1978), single (EU, January 1979), Pyramid (1978)


Peak: -- Click for codes to charts.


Sales (in millions): --


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): -- radio, -- video, 2.70 streaming


About the Song:

A

Shadow of a Lonely Man

Alan Parsons Project

Writer(s): Alan Parsons, Eric Woolfson

Vocals: John Miles, Colin Blunstone


Released: Pyramid (1978)


Peak: -- Click for codes to charts.


Sales (in millions): --


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): -- radio, -- video, 2.48 streaming


About the Song:

“Following another instrumental (Hyper-Gamma-Spaces), our hero finds himself losing everything that mattered to him – in this case, his wife – on Shadow of a Lonely Man. Like the pharaoh looking to achieve immortality and lost everything he had accumulated, the modern-day man loses love and everything that mattered in this life and left him a shell of what he used to be.” DV

Resources/References:


Related DMDB Pages:


First posted 3/24/2008; last updated 9/27/2025.

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