The tower that is shown so prominently on the cover of this record is the bell tower of the cathedral in Seville, Spain. It is called the Giralda, after the rotating weather vane on top. It was built by the Almohad dynasty of Moorish rulers, in 1171. When it was built it was the highest minaret in the world, at 65 meters. When the city was taken over by the catholic rulers, the tower was converted to that faith. Over time other features were added, like a renaissance style belfry. In 1987 it was added to the Unesco World Heritage list.
Similar towers have been built all over the world. Sometimes outright replicas, like in Kansas City, but usually just references. Towers like the San Fransisco Ferry Building, the Wrigley Building in Chicago, the Seven Sisters in Moscow and the Palace of Culture and Science in Warsaw, Poland.
Joaquin Rodrigo composed his Sones en la Giralda in 1963, inspired by the tower. It was a wedding present for the harpist Marisa Robles. She married in 1958, what happened there?