Twenty Sixty Six And Then

The band was formed in the summer of 1971. The name was coined by vocalist Geff Harrison, who adapted it from the old English phrase “1066 and then,” a reference to the Norman conquest of England and the Battle of Hastings. The group existed for only a short period, disbanding in 1972 due to financial difficulties. Their debut album, Reflections on the Future, released by United Artists Records, sold poorly and contributed to the breakup. After the dissolution, several members moved on to other projects: Geff Harrison and guitarist Gagey Mrozeck joined the local band Kin Ping Meh; keyboardist Veit Marvos founded Emergency; and drummer Konstantin Bommarius later played with Abacus and other groups before health issues forced him to stop performing. Bommarius died in an accident in Mannheim in 2014. In 1991, the label Second Battle issued a follow‑up LP titled Reflections of the Past, featuring previously unreleased recordings. When plans arose for a compilation CD, the original master tapes of the debut album were no longer available, but alternative studio‑quality sources were used instead. The resulting release, Reflections!, included five tracks from the second LP and three from the first in alternate versions. The song “At My Home” appears on all three editions.
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At My Home

Time Can’t Take It Away (The Munich Session)

Spring

Autumn

Butterking

I Saw the World (Demo 1970)

The Way That I Feel Today (Studio Live-Version)

Reflections On the Future

Reflections! 1971 Full Album

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