by Richie Unterberger
Tomorrow's sole album was a solid effort, with quite a few first-rate tracks. &My White Bicycle& was one of the first songs to prominently feature backward guitar phasing, &Real Life Permanent Dream& has engaging English harmonies and sitar riffs, &Revolution& is an infectious hippie anthem, and &Now Your Time Has Come& features intricate riffing from Steve Howe. &Hallucinations,& with its irresistible melody, gentle harmonies, and affectingly trippy lyrics, was perhaps their best track. The more self-conscious English whimsy -- populated by jolly little dwarfs, Auntie Mary's dress shop, colonels, and the like -- is less successful, although the band's craftsmanship is strong enough to avoid embarassment. [The 1986 reissue of this album features detailed liner notes and the worthy B-side &Claremont Lake,& though unfortunately Keith West's sappy but influential &Excerpt from a Teenage Opera& was deleted.]