| | No-Man Returning Jesus CD No-Man Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
The fourth No-Man album proper shows that the duo doesn't simply continue its quality into another decade, but continues its bent for exploration. If not focused on beats and loops this time around, in terms of taking the signifiers of "mature" music -- string accompaniment, delicacy, understatement, and more -- and giving them life and real meaning, No-Man hits another indisputable high with Returning Jesus. Tim Bowness' voice is still a seductive, encompassing flow of words and emotion, while Steve Wilson seems to be ever more the musical polymath in life. With the help of eight guests, including such semi-regulars as Porcupine Tree bassist Colin Edwin, flute/sax player Theo Travis, and Japan veteran Steve Jansen on drums, the two create nine sweepingly elegant pieces. The emphasis throughout is actually on understating rather than piling everything on, a less-is-more approach that suits both the lyrics and the music as a whole. The end result feels like a companion piece to Talk Talk's majestic Laughing Stock, with its blend of jazz experimentalism and heartfelt delivery, and a more overtly pop sensibility thanks to Bowness' delivery. The opening track, "Only Rain," is just spectacular, with fragile synth-string orchestration by Wilson and Ian Carr's trumpet subtly dictating the flow of the piece. "Outside the Machine" equals that particular high in different ways; the overdubbed vocal choir from Bowness is a gentle offset to his own lead, while Wilson's arrangements and his extended instrumental break on guitar and piano are pure treasure. Two cuts resurface from the Carolina Skeletons EP, the title track and "Close Your Eyes," here appearing in an extended version that isn't vastly different from the original, but keeps all the beauty intact. Perhaps the most interesting track of all is the title cut, a minimal combination of ringing percussion and squirrelly keyboards suddenly given a vaster scope via Wilson's guitar and Bowness' rich, wonderful vocals. ~ Ned Raggett
No Man: Tim Bowness (vocals); Steve Wilson (various instruments).Uncut (11/01, p.120) - 4 stars out of 5 - "...This is their tour de force....Just another slice of magic from these unsung heroes..." Mojo (Publisher) (6/01, p.112) - "...It's all about texture and pursuit of beauty...The songs are, inthe main, pithy things that never hit high tempi. Bowness uses them to stretch out engagingly..." No-Man Returning Jesus Songs Returning Jesus Music Review Purchase Returning Jesus CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Porcupine Tree In Absentia CD (2002)
Returning Jesus album
$8.55 There's a breed of (post-1980s) bands with the same degree of grand rock experimentalism as Pink Floyd and Yes, who simultaneously adhere to the concept of concise songwriting. Porcupine Tree is one such band--their sound is a balance of lush ambient textures, charming vocal harmonies, rock & roll directness, and acoustically- and electronically-generated ...
| | No-Man Heaven Taste CD (1996)
Returning Jesus CD music
$13.19 HEAVEN TASTE contains B-sides, rarities and outtakes recorded between 1991 and 1993.
A B-sides and rarities collection, Heaven Taste doesn't take in all the various odds and sods of No-Man's life from the early '90s, but it does make for a handy sampling of some of the best. Most notable of the inclusions is the title track itself, a 22-minute instrumental collaboration with the same Japan-minus-David Sylvian lineup that helped out on Sweetheart Raw. It's an easygoing piece, one that perhaps verges on being merely tasteful rather than being truly stunning at the start -- while Mick Karn's sax work is just fine, it also calls up the specter of smooth jazz in combination with the rhythm and ...
| | Porcupine Tree Deadwing CD (2005)
Returning Jesus music CDs
$9.75 Considering their cinematic scope, it's fitting ...
| | Porcupine Tree Stupid Dream CDs (1999) With DVD; Special Edition
Returning Jesus songs
$15.05 Porcupine Tree's first album for K-Scope/Snapper starts out with a definite bang -- "Even Less," with some of the quartet's biggest, blasting rock epic music yet, yet also shot through with the gentler, acoustic side that makes Porcupine Tree so intimate and lovely. The net result easily calls Yes to mind, but Steven Wilson's not so high-pitched as Jon Anderson and Richard Barbieri completely avoids Rick Wakeman's extreme idiocies -- prog that knows when less is more. With that as a fine signal for the album as a whole, Stupid Dream takes it from there -- Wilson as a songwriter and singer both sounds recharged and more ambitious, while the group collectively pours it on. The loud passages feel truly sky-smashing, the calmer ones perfectly close, and ...
| | Blackfield II CD (2007) Digipak
Returning Jesus album
$12.19 The sophomore release for this melodic duo (actually a five-piece band, but the leads are Steven ...
| | Porcupine Tree Fear Of A Blank Planet CD (2007)
Returning Jesus CD music
$10.79
| | Mark Winkler Hottest Night Of The Year CD (1986)
Returning Jesus music CDs
$12.09 Songwriter/vocalist Mark Winkler was a new voice on the L.A. jazz scene when Hottest Night of the Year was released, but local club fans couldn't resist picking up this album, which was loaded with instrumental support from the city's finest players -- Brian Bromberg, David Benoit, Russ Freeman, Grant Geissman, Emil Palame, Sam Riney, and ...
| | Cecil Brooks, III Hangin' With Smooth CD (1990)
Returning Jesus songs
$6.85
| | Fandango One Night Stand CD (1978) Reissued
Returning Jesus album
$10.65
| | Crist Family Every Step CD (2006)
Returning Jesus CD music
$10.15
| | Revival Horses Of War CD (2007)
Returning Jesus music CDs
$13.85
| | Gegege No Kitaro Vol 2 CD (2008) (Import) Import
$36.89 |
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