Mostrando postagens com marcador Camel. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Camel. Mostrar todas as postagens

30.12.19

CAMEL - Breathless (1978-2013) SHM-CD / FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

With Rain Dances, Camel began exploring shorter, more concise songs, but it wasn't until its follow-up, Breathless, that they truly made a stab at writing pop songs. Although they didn't completely abandon improvisational prog rock – there are several fine, jazzy interludes – most of the record is comprised of shorter songs designed for radio play. While the group didn't quite achieve that goal, Breathless is nevertheless a more accessible record than Camel's other albums, which tend to focus on instrumentals. Here, they try to be a straightforward prog rock band, and while the results are occasionally a little muddled, it is on the whole surprisingly successful. by Daevid Jehnzen
Tracklist:
1. Breathless
2. Echoes
3. Wing and Prayer
4. Down on the Farm
5. Starlight Ride
6. Summer Lightening
7. You Make me Smile
8. The Sleeper
9. Rainbow's End

CAMEL - A Live Record (1978-2002) 2CD / SHM-CD / FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

This newly remastered 2 cd set "A Live Record" provides a great retrospective for the early years of progressive rock greats Camel. The set contains portions of live concerts from the years 1974-1977 with an amazing 7 bonus tracks not on the original lp version. The second disk contains an inspired performance of their entire "Snow Goose" lp with the London Symphony Orchestra. "Snow Goose" was arguably the band's best album. The early period of Camel which appeared on their first four albums featured Andrew Latimer on guitar, flute and vocals, Peter Bardens on keyboards and vocals, Doug Ferguson on bass and vocals and Andy Ward on drums and vocals. After their "Moonmadness" album Doug Ferguson left the band to be replaced by bassit Richard Sinclair from Caravan and Mel Collins from King Crimson was also added on saxophone and flute. This early period of the band tended to focus on instrumental material with a few vocals added. After the "Snow Goose" album Decca increased pressure on the band to include more vocals for commercial appeal. Highlights of the disk are many. The "Snow Goose" material mentioned earlier and favorites like "Another Night", "Lady Fantasy", and "Chord Change" are included. Andy Ward's drumming is solid but jazzy at the same time as heard in the great live version of "Lunar Sea" included here. The sweet "Song Within A Song" illustrates what lyrical writers Andrew Latimer and Peter Bardens were. The disk also contains a version of "Liggin" At Louis'" from Peter Barden's solo career. The band were fond of changing tempo and feel during songs as in "Lady Fantasy" when the song starts out soft and slow and later features some vicious guitar work by Latimer. He is one of a number of unsung guitarists from the seventies. His playing while lyrical and not overly flashy remains interesting. He reminds me at times of Jeff Beck during his quieter moments or Andy Powell or Ted Turner from Wishbone Ash with whom Camel sometimes toured. Camel's first four albums are highly recommended especially "Snow Goose" and "Moonmadness". Each of these albums have been remastered with improved sound and bonus tracks. These 4 albums contain more bonus live material from the same concerts featured on this newly remastered version of "A Live Record" not available here due to time constraints. web
Tracklist:
CD1
1. First Light
2. Metrognome
3. Unevensong
4. Skylines
5. A Song Within a Song
6. Lunar Sea
7. Raindances
8. Never Let Go
9. Chord Change
10. Ligging at Louis'
11. Lady Fantasy
CD2
1. Spoken introduction by Peter Bardens
2. The Great Marsh
3. Rhayader
4. Rhayader goes to Town
5. Sanctuary
6. Fritha
7. The Snow Goose
8. Friendship
9. Migration
10. Rhayader Alone
11. Flight of the Snow Goose
12. Preparation
13. Dunkirk
14. Epitaph
15. Fritha Alone
16. La Princesse Perdue
17. The Great Marsh
18. The White Rider
19. Another Night

CAMEL - Nude (1981-2013) SHM-CD / FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

A new, larger version of Camel debuted on Nude, a concept album about a Japanese soldier stranded on a deserted island during World War II and staying there, oblivious to the outside world, for 29 years. More ambitious than the preceding I Can See Your House from Here, Nude is in many ways just as impressive. Although it's a less accessible effort, it has a number of quite intriguing passages, particularly since it boasts heavier improvisation, orchestration, and even some worldbeat influences. It's not as spacy as Camel's earlier progressive rock records, yet it is quite atmospheric, creating its own entrancing world. [A remastered version of Nude was released in 2009, including ten bonus tracks recorded live at the Hammersmith Odeon in 1981 for the BBC Radio 1 program In Concert.] by Daevid Jehnzen
Tracklist:
1. City Life
2. Nude
3. Drafted
4. Docks
5. Beached
6. Landscapes
7. Changing Places
8. Pomp & Circumstance
9. Please Come Home
10. Reflections
11. Captured
12. The Homecoming
13. Lies
The Last Farewell
14. The Birthday Cake
15. Nude's Return

CAMEL - The Single Factor (1982-2013) SHM-CD / FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

Following the ambitious song cycle Nude, Camel attempted their version of an Alan Parsons Project album with The Single Factor. Considering that Parsons was having hits that year with songs like "Eye in the Sky," it's not surprising that Camel tried to capture the same audience, yet their talent didn't lay with pop music – it lay with atmospheric instrumentals and creating detailed soundscapes. Consequently, The Single Factor sounds a little forced and often fails to capture the group's magic, even though there a few strong moments on the record. by Daevid Jehnzen
Tracklist:
1. No Easy Answer
2. You Are the One
3. Heroes
4. Selva
5. Lullabye
6. Sasquatch
7. Manic
8. Camelogue
9. Today's Goodbye
10. A Heart Desire
11. End Peace
12. You Are The One (Edited Version) (bonus track)

CAMEL - Pressure Points : Live in Concert (1984-2009) SHM-CD / FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless


CAMEL - Dust and Dream (1991-2016) SHM-CD / FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

Camel packed up their bags and moved to California, with the dust of a seven-years span of quiet on their backs, and the dream of creative freedom through their own label, Camel Productions, ahead of them. Inspired by the John Steinbeck novel "The Grapes of Wrath" (and one can only hope that Camel's westward move went smoother), Dust and Dreams is exactly the sort of labor of love that makes a private label worth having. Elegiac, literate, largely instrumental in spots, this stuff would make most label executives' eyes glaze over. It's also the sort of finely wrought music that will delight Camel fans who still fondly imagine their band in the Nude. Despite the long absence since Stationary Traveller, many familiar faces return to Camel's ranks: Susan Hoover, Ton Scherpenzeel, Colin Bass, David Paton, and Paul Burgess. Andy Latimer, of course, remains the pivotal figure, writing the songs, taking the vocal leads (his sleepy, deep delivery suggesting a Watersed-down version of Pink Floyd), driving the music with his masterful guitar work. This last point is worth resting at a moment, since Latimer's guitar has grown audibly since we last heard him. While some of the guitar passages are classic Camel (e.g., "Cotton Camp"), Latimer is just as likely to invoke the image of David Gilmour ("End of the Line") and Steve Hackett ("Broken Banks," "Hopeless Anger"). Like Nude, Dust and Dreams initially divides its time between songs and instrumentals before ceding halfway through to purely instrumental music. The 18 tracks are interconnected, separated only by a four-second delay before "End of the Line," effectively marking a first and second act. The introductory "Dust Bowl" is a quiet overture reminiscent of Brian Eno, the closing "Whispers in the Rain" is actually an epilogue (the real curtain comes crashing down on "Hopeless Anger"). If it all sounds like a structured play, that's because Dust and Dreams is. The disc exists as a single work broken into two sections, inextricably bound together in the composer's mind (themes return, specific points of action take place). In retrospect, it's probably a wonder that Nude ever got off the ground, and few studios would have taken a flyer on the equally ambitious Dust and Dreams. Thank goodness Andy Latimer had the fortitude to see this through to completion; it is the mature work of an indomitable dreamer, if a little downbeat. It lacks the immediate melodies of Nude (which many would concede is the better album), but the victories here are harder won and thus to be prized by fans who were still scanning the horizon for the shadow of Camel's tall spirit. by Dave Connolly  

CAMEL - Rajaz (1999-2016) SHM-CD / FLAC (image+.cue), lossless


e.s.t. — Retrospective 'The Very Best Of e.s.t. (2009) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

"Retrospective - The Very Best Of e.s.t." is a retrospective of the unique work of e.s.t. and a tribute to the late mastermind Esb...