The Moth Confesses
The Moth Confesses is the 1969 debut album by The Neon Philharmonic. Described as "A Phonograph Opera," it was inspired, according to the liner notes, by a production of Samuel Barber's Antony and Cleopatra, which Saussy attended after The [New York Times] claimed that it was a terrible opera, and wanted to see what a terrible opera looked like, which he surmised was its deliberate attempt to appeal to a one-time audience. In response, he conceived this album as a condensed opera, with a moth-like protagonist, focused on the "literary theme" of desperation. Saussy did not imagine it could be staged like Tommy, but offered it up as a challenge.
"Brilliant Colors" and "Morning Girl" were both released as singles, while "The New Life Out There" was used to promote the record as a contemporary opera in radio advertisements. "Morning Girl" hit #17 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and was later covered by The Lettermen. Shaun Cassidy covered "Morning Girl, Later" with a few tweaked lyrics and titled it "Morning, Girl." The songs primarily cover the topic of striking out towards a new life when relationships fail for various reasons.
Track listing
All songs written by Tupper Saussy.;Side one
- "Brilliant Colors" – 4:18
- "Cowboy" – 2:18
- "The New Life Out There" – 5:32
- "Morning Girl" – 2:12
- "Midsummer Night" – 5:44
- "Little Sparrow" – 3:16
- "The Last Time I Saw Jacqueline" – 3:42
- "Morning Girl, Later" – 2:31
1995 reissue
Bonus tracks
- "Heighdy-Ho Princess" – 3:23
- "Don't Know My Way Around My Soul" – 2:57
- "Flowers for Your Pillow" – 2:17
- "Clouds" – 2:39
- "Snow" – 3:21
- "To Be Continued" – 2:26
2003 reissue
"The Last Time I Saw Jacqueline" features excerpts from two Johann Sebastian Bach ariosos, including a different section of the one quoted in The Beatles's "Hey Jude", while "Little Sparrow" is actually about Mickey Newbury's stay in Saussy's family's guest room.
Personnel
The Band
- Kenneth A. Buttrey - drums
- Jerry Carrigan - Drums
- Don Gant - vocals
- Dennis Good - Trombone, Brass
- Rufus Long - Flute, Piccolo, Wind
- Pierre Menard - Strings, Concert Master
- Norbert Putnam - Bass, Rhythm
- Tupper Saussy - Conductor, Piano, Harpsichord, keyboards
- Don Sheffield - Trumpet, Brass
- Chuck Wyatt - Flute, Piccolo, Wind
- Chip Young - Guitar, Rhythm
Additional musicians
- Ray Stevens - Rhythm
- George Tidwell - Trumpet, Brass
- Norris Wilson - Rhythm
Technical Staff
- Chris Athens - Mastering
- Don Gant - producer, engineer
- Ronald Gant - engineer
- Bob Irwin - Mastering, Compilation Producer
- Bob McCluskey - producer
- Tupper Saussy - arranger, producer
- Glenn Snoddy - Engineer
Charts
| Year | Chart | Song | Peak Position |
| 1969 | Pop Singles | "Morning Girl" | #17 |
"Morning Girl" was so popular at the time that the reference to Cheerios sparked interest from General Mills to arrange the song for Bobby Bloom as part of a promotion for a premium for a doll called Beautiful Dawn.