Eurythmics - In the Garden
Facts
| Artist(s) | Eurythmics |
| Studio | Legacy/RCA/Sony BMG |
| Release Date | November 15, 2005 |
| UPC Code | 828765611428 |
| Buy this item | $18.98 at Amazon.com As of Nov 29 19:03 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 11 to 14 days, Original recording remastered, Extra tracks, Original recording reissued |
About Eurythmics - In the Garden
This edition has been digitally re-mastered from the original master tapes by Eurythmics mastermind Dave Stewart, with input from collaborator Annie Lennox. In addition, there are five bonus tracks: a mixture of b-sides, remixes, and previously unreleased material (notably a cover of Rick Astley's "Take Me To Your Heart"). The packaging is a six-panel digipack redesign orchestrated by Laurence Stevens Design, the firm who art-directed all the original releases, while the thick booklets contain rare photos and insightful, new sleeve notes. Amazon.com
Tracks
- English Summer
- Belinda
- Take Me to Your Heart
- She's Invisible Now
- Your Time Will Come
- Caveman Head
- Never Gonna Cry Again
- All the Young (People of Today)
- Sing-Sing
- Revenge
- Le Sinestre
- Heartbeat Heartbeat
- Never Gonna Cry Again
- 4/4 in Leather
- Take Me to Your Heart
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User Reviews
Average user review:| What an amazing album |
| Eurythmics at their best |
| Eurythmics best album! Was downhill from here |
This album was before Annie Lennox started with her never ending, soulful ranting and wailing, (see destroyed versions of some of these songs on their 1983 concert video release). Just listen to the opening track, the haunting "English summer", followed by the wonderful upbeat failed single "Belinda", to the moody and wonderful "Take me to your heart". Just amazing. A real highlight is the agressive "Caveman head", in which Annie sings with a very deadpan tone with all sorts or distant shouting in the background.
Thankfully, this new reissue has the excellent B side of the singles, which were only previously available on pricey used vinyl. "Le sinistre" is a definite horror movie, and "Heartbeat heartbeat" is a fast, punchy, short song that remains my favorite Eurythmics B side. The reissue also includes 3 of the 4 live B sides from the "This is the house" 12" single, all of which are very good, (though why they left one off is bewildering to me).
The remastering of the CD is pretty good, though in truth I think my original CD sounded a bit better. With this reissue, along with the 'Sweet Dreams' reissue, you can hear some occasional bits of stereo fluctuation, which could be caused by the aging tapes or so-so tape trasfer equipment during the remastering. The booklet is amazing, containing many rare session photos that just show how wonderfully bizarre Dave and Annie were at this time.
Unfortunately, nothing from this album has ever been represented at all on the bands 'Greatest hits' CD's. Granted, it wasn't a big success, but at least the inclusion of one of the singles would give a better overall representation of their career. Instead you get all of that "Sisters are doing it for themselves" garbage.
Eurythmics continued making some interesting music on their next two albums 'Sweet dreams' and 'Touch', but those awful funky vibes were starting to come through, and once they dumped the electronic percussion for the dreadful 1985 album 'Be yourself tonight', it was all over with the rare exception of the occasional decent song.
This unique and wonderful album would definitely be one of my Desert Island choices - I'll never tire of it. It's definitely in my top 5 all-time favorite albums. August 27, 2006
| Haunting early album now enhanced |
This experimental, avant-garde album gave no indication of the Eurythmics' subsequent melodic pop direction and mega stardom. It fits in more with the work of late 70s experimentalists like Brian Eno, Holger Czukay and is not commercial at all. Sometimes it even sounds like the later Cocteau Twins or the more ethereal type of world music.
This direction is all the more odd in the light of Lennox and Stewart's previous band, the brilliant but underrated pop group The Tourists. In The Garden is a very atmospheric work and does contain at least two classics: the intricate Belinda with its cascading guitar textures, mournful drone and oriental backing vocals building up to a scorching climax is quite impressive, as is She's Invisible Now, a sorrowful song with a haunting countdown effect.
English Summer is replete with crickets & other nature sounds, whilst Your Time Will Come also has a catchy melody. The bonus tracks are all quite experimental and a bit disappointing but Eurythmics completists will be pleased. People who like Delerium, Rose Chronicles, the above-mentioned German artists, Brian Eno's My Life In The Bush Of Ghosts, Deep Forest etc. will certainly enjoy it.
June 11, 2006
| Spellbinding debut album |
From the first track, you can tell this wasn't going to be a commercially viable record to release. It sounds somewhat cold, dislocated and out of place. Even though there's more guitars on this album than any other Eurythmics song I've heard, it feels a lot more colder than those songs! This can be due in part to Conny Plank's production work which is always interesting without fail.
What Plank seems to have melded together is a stunning mixture of exotic influences melded to a strictly European sensibility and within that a certain Britishness. Even though in the liner notes it says the band felt themselves more European than British, within the music there still retains that sense of Britishness but without any of the negative aspects, and the embracing of European influences clearly help this album fluorish.
Annie's voice on this album is, for the most part, very subdued and wistful. It compliments the music very well which takes on very dreamy and exotic tones while at the same time, giving a sense of being disenchanted with all around them. Very few can make an album that sounds like that and even fewer make it sound as interesting as it does, so it's all credit to Annie and Dave for orchestrating an album as good as this.
I could go on about the cover too but that would be pretty pointless. To cut it short, I feel it compliments the album. It looks of it's time too but in a good way.
Tracks like Take Me To Your Heart, Caveman Head and Never Gonna Cry Again have a sense of enchantment and disenchantment while Sing-Sing ( which is sung in French ) only encaptures the sense of dreamy wonder that is sometimes forgotten in music. Of the extra tracks Heartbeat Heartbeat and 4/4 In Leather should also get a mention for being frenetically paced that seriously test those dancing shoes but perhaps not as overtly as anything that would follow.
Overall, this album is one of a kind, one which the band has never repeated and perhaps no one could attempt to duplicate this album as the amount of intricate details in the album is simply spellbinding! June 4, 2006
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