[2] They released their two albums (The Moth Confesses and the eponymous The Neon Philharmonic) in 1969, and scored a Top 20 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 chart that year when "Morning Girl"[1] (featuring the Nashville Symphony Orchestra,[1]) hit number 17 on Billboard and number 15 on the Cash Box chart.
[3] The band hit the chart again with "Heighdy-Ho Princess" in 1970, and followed with several non-album singles (see the discography below).
In 1972, they moved to TRX Records and produced another single, "Annie Poor" / "Love Will Find a Way", but disbanded in 1975.
Along with its flipside recording, "So Glad You're a Woman", written by Ray Williams and Ron Demmans (MCA-40158 (MC 4810), 1975), the instrumentation was limited to synthesizers, guitar and drums.
[5][self-published source] Three additional songs, "Better Times," "Jody," and "Letters Crossing", were recorded around the fall of 1970 and remained unreleased until the 2003 collection.