Jon Anderson In The City Of Angels Rar File

|
Why Does The Devil Call Our People Afrikan (prod. By Jon Glass).
To be elegible for this price, Add to CartWhile many Jon Anderson fans knew he had it in him to do something very light and airy and perhaps even without vocals (Olias of Sunhillow essentially led the way), the fact that it's something this light and airy is likely to come as a bit of a shock. Anderson presents the listener with a soundscape made up of long, sustained notes and drifting chords, a construction in which the few melodies present take minutes to work through - there's far more in common with the Hearts of Space catalog here than with much of Anderson's prior work, though the Vangelis influence is to be felt, too (especially on the quarter-hour 'New Eire Land'). Another surprise is the mainly instrumental nature of the album - Anderson takes very few vocals. Daughters Deborah and Jade pitch in along the way without much incident. On the whole, Angels Embrace sounds something like a lost Jon & Vangelis album, or Brian Eno in a frothy mood, and just like good background music for meditation, spiritual navel-gazing, and general situations where the alpha waves need a decent boost.© Steven McDonald /TiVo. Your browser does not support the audio element. Album DescriptionWhile many Jon Anderson fans knew he had it in him to do something very light and airy and perhaps even without vocals (Olias of Sunhillow essentially led the way), the fact that it's something this light and airy is likely to come as a bit of a shock.
Anderson presents the listener with a soundscape made up of long, sustained notes and drifting chords, a construction in which the few melodies present take minutes to work through - there's far more in common with the Hearts of Space catalog here than with much of Anderson's prior work, though the Vangelis influence is to be felt, too (especially on the quarter-hour 'New Eire Land'). Another surprise is the mainly instrumental nature of the album - Anderson takes very few vocals. Daughters Deborah and Jade pitch in along the way without much incident. On the whole, Angels Embrace sounds something like a lost Jon & Vangelis album, or Brian Eno in a frothy mood, and just like good background music for meditation, spiritual navel-gazing, and general situations where the alpha waves need a decent boost.© Steven McDonald /TiVoAbout the album. 1 disc(s) - 7 track(s).
Total length: 00:48:22. Main artist:. Composer:. Label:. Genre. © 1997 Higher Octave Music, Inc.
℗ 1997 Higher Octave Music, Inc.Why buy on Qobuz. Stream or download your musicBuy an album or an individual track. Or listen to our entire catalogue with our high-quality unlimited streaming subscriptions. Zero DRMThe downloaded files belong to you, without any usage limit. You can download them as many times as you like.
Choose the format best suited for youDownload your purchases in a wide variety of formats (FLAC, ALAC, WAV, AIFF.) depending on your needs. Listen to your purchases on our appsDownload the Qobuz apps for smartphones, tablets and computers, and listen to your purchases wherever you go.