SiberiaEcho & the Bunnymen
Release Date: 09/20/2005
Original Release:
2005
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 596909_CD
UPC # 711297469721
Label: Cooking Vinyl Records (USA)
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Disc: 1
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Echo & the Bunnymen
Engineer: Hugh Jones; Andrea Wright; Matthew Edge; Hugh Jones; Matthew Edge; Andrea Wright Producer: Hugh Jones; Hugh Jones Distributor: E1 Distribution (USA) Notes: Echo & the Bunnymen: Paul Fleming (keyboards); Peter Wilkinson (bass guitar); Ian McCulloch, Will Sergeant, Simon Finley. Personnel: Ian McCulloch (vocals, guitar); Will Sergeant (guitar); Martin Richardson, Kate Evans (violin); Hillary Browning (cello); Simon Finley (drums); Mimi McCullogh (tambourine). Audio Mixers: Hugh Jones; Matthew Edge. Recording information: Elevator Studios, Liverpool. Photographer: Joe Dilworth. On SIBERIA, Echo & the Bunnymen's first studio album since 2001's FLOWERS, the brooding Liverpool band reunites with producer Hugh Jones, who worked on the post-punk group's revered early-1980s records CROCODILES and HEAVEN UP HERE. Collaborating with Jones, vocalist/guitarist Ian McCulloch and guitarist Will Sergeant avoid the pomp and circumstance of outings such as OCEAN RAIN, giving these new songs a welcome immediacy, most notably on the chiming, poppy "Stormy Weather" and the dreamy "In the Margins." Although McCulloch's deep voice lacks its former range, time has given it a charmingly raspy quality that plays nicely off of Sergeant's signature swirling guitar lines. Easily one of Echo & the Bunnymen's best latter-day albums, SIBERIA wisely nods to the band's classic early output without attempting to duplicate it.
Mojo (Publisher) (p.101) - 3 stars out of 5 - "Together, Ian McCulloch's appealingly weathered voice and Sergeant's serpentine guitar still evoke the mordant heroism of their peak."
Along with Teardrop Explodes and Wah! Heat, Echo & the Bunnymen were part of the early-1980s Liverpool scene that was somewhat misleadingly dubbed "neo-psychedelic." While the Bunnymen bore elements of the Doors' dark, mysterious sound and decidedly abstract lyrics, punk played as much of a role in the development of the band's music as anything else. What marks their sound more than anything else, though, is a soaring, anthemic quality that can be quite affecting. After a lengthy hiatus, the band reunited in the early 2000s to tour and record.
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