The music and backing vocals were provided by English group, the Art Movement on all tracks except for "Penny Arcade", which was a studio recording and was released as a single in 1969, peaking at No.
The second single, "Break My Mind", was Orbison's last Australian chart success during his lifetime, reaching #24 in March 1970.
Orbison and the Art Movement turned the Batley Variety Club in West Yorkshire, England into a recording studio.
This was done by calling in a mobile studio truck that had all the gear in it and running the cords into the area in which they wanted to record.
Bruce Eder of AllMusic said that the album "he made a series of studio recordings encompassing some of the same oldies, mostly in a rock & roll vein, including "Help Me Rhonda," "Money," and "Land of 1,000 Dances," that were part of his concert set, broken up by originals such as the highly charged and exciting "Down the Line.