The Alan Parsons Project - Discography -1976-20... Jun 2026
The final studio album generally associated with the Project, Freudiana (1990), was originally conceived as a Woolfson musical and marked a formal divergence: it was credited to Eric Woolfson and later staged as a musical theater piece. The Project effectively dissolved as a distinct recording unit after this period, though Parsons continued working as a solo artist and producer.
The shortest Project album (under 37 minutes), Vulture Culture is direct, punchy, and underrated. It lacks the sweeping orchestras of previous albums, favoring a leaner, guitar-driven sound. "Days Are Numbers (The Traveller)" is a standout, and "Let’s Talk About Me" is a sarcastic jab at self-absorption. The Alan Parsons Project - Discography -1976-20...
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Note: While a 2014 instrumental album titled "The Sicilian Defence" exists, it was released under different circumstances long after the main collaboration concluded. It lacks the sweeping orchestras of previous albums,
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38 on Billboard's Pop Albums chart. The song "(The System Of) Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether" peaked at No. 37 on the Pop Single... (The System of) Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether Try Anything Once
This note requires a brief deviation. Originally recorded as a follow-up to Eve , The Sicilian Defence was deemed too dark and instrumentally aggressive by the label (Arista). It was shelved for 35 years. Consisting of instrumental variations on a single chord progression (like a chess opening), it was finally released in 2014. For completists, it offers a fascinating glimpse into a potential "lost" era; for casual fans, it is a challenging listen.