Ну и ладно. Мне поисковик выдал, что этот альбом переиздавали Radioactive, а также Ascension Records ( Австралия) в 2000 году
А вот тут в блоге написано, что группа работает над вторым альбомом ( сентябрь прошлого года )
http://merepseud.blogspot.com/2006/03/we-people.htmlПро саму группу нашлось вот здесь
http://www.digitalisindustries.com/foxy ... which=1701Fall Out is the new U.S. counterpart to the marvelous new British reissue label, Sunbeam, and their equally aggressive release schedule (four new releases a month) debuts with this lone album (originally issued on Capitol in 1969) from this mysterious quintet of ex-bikers, originally thought to be from Baldwin Park or Fontana, California. Following two ultra-rare garagey singles for the local Flodavieur label, the band landed somoe gigs on L.A.’s Sunset Strip where famed impresario Tim Hudson, manager of The Seeds and Lollipop Shoppe, took them under his wing and got them a deal with Capitol. Hudson hired the legendary David Axelrod to score singer/songwriter Denny Robinett’s moody material, along with some of L.A.’s top session musicians to accompany the band into Capitol’s Hollywood Studios. On hand were the likes of cellist Jesse Ehrlich and violinist William Kurasch from the Los Angeles Symphony Orchestra, who had both contributed to Love’s “Forever Changes” and Frank Zappa’s “Lumpy Gravy” recordings, along with viola player Philip Goldberg (Zappa, The Monkees, Van Dyke Parks), double bassist/tuba virtuoso Red Callender (Louis Armstrong, Nat King Cole, Charlie Parker), and trumpeter Tony Terran (Lou Rawls, Linda Ronstadt, Tim Buckley, Tom Waits). With engineers Rex Updegraft (The Band), Doc Siegel (Buffalo Springfield) and Joe Polito (Glen Campbell) assisting Hudson’s own knob twiddling from the producer’s chair and conductor Sid Sharp (“Pet Sounds”), the stage was set for what could have been a pop/psych masterpiece along the lines of Curt Boettcher’s work with Millennium and Sagittarius. Unfortunately, Axelrod’s wife was injured in a car accident and he departed the sessions after only three tracks were completed. Capitol’s patience and confidence joined Axelrod’s departure and the band were forced to rush through the remaining eight tracks.