Songs of Protest and Anti-Protest

Songs of Protest and Anti-Protest (released in the United Kingdom as Too Many Mornings) is the debut album by American singer-songwriter Bobby Jameson, credited under the name Chris Lucey.

[4] They discovered Bobby Jameson, a folkie who recorded the Mick Jagger-Keith Richards composition "All I Want Is My Baby" during a venture to England, in 1965.

[4] While discussing the events leading to the album, Jameson recalled he "was twenty years old, flat broke, and unrepresented by counsel or management".

[4] With producer Marshall Leib—previously an associate of Phil Spector—Jameson explored intricate arrangements and somewhat bleak lyricism, which is commonly compared to the sophisticated orchestration found in the psychedelic rock band Love's Forever Changes (1967).

Analyzing Songs of Protest and Anti-Protest, critic Dean McFarlane wrote that it is the "culminating collaged arrangements and schizophrenia that gives this record its wayward charm".