Segunda-feira, 30 de Abril de 2012
Jon Anderson - Olias Of Sunhillow 1976
Inspired by the artwork of Roger Dean and the writings of Ver Stanley
Alder, Jon Anderson developed an entire story around the idea of an
interstellar exodus from Sunhillow, writing this album around the
narrative (named for the spaceship's architect, Olias). The idea may
seem overly ambitious, but Anderson fills the record with enough magical
moments to delight fans of Yes' mystic side. The music is written and
performed almost entirely by Anderson, who dubs vocals, plays guitar and
harp, and adds percussion and the occasional synthesizer to flesh out
his ideas so that at no point does the music lose its spellbinding
effect for lack of sonic detail. Olias of Sunhillow is faithful to the
spirit of Yes, though decidedly more airy than that band's visceral
style -- its closest comparison would be Fragile's "We Have Heaven" or
Going for the One's "Wonderous Stories" (which was clearly influenced by
this record) on the vocal tracks, and Vangelis on the instrumental
tracks. Although the album is effective in its entirety, "Sound Out the
Galleon," "Olias (To Build the Moorglade)," and "Solid Space" are some
of the more memorable excerpts. The arrangements incorporate elements of
the four tribes of Sunhillow, the most noticeable being Oriental
elements that prefigure Vangelis' own China (especially on the opening
"Ocean Song"). While there are several songs that could have easily fit
in Yes' own catalog, and the lyrics continue to mine the mystical
musings that Yes fans had come to enjoy, Olias of Sunhillow is not the
missing Yes album some might hope it to be, though it does deliver on
the promise that the Jon & Vangelis collaborations seemed to hold.
If possible, pick up the LP version of this release, since the packaging
is stunning and features terrific artwork by Dave Roe. AMG.
listen here
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