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CD - Remastered
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| CD | $49.99 |
| CD - Special Edition | $12.19 |
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Roxy Music was one of the most stylish, intelligent, and slyly funny bands on London's early-'70s glam-rock scene. But keyboardist and conceptualist Brian Eno departed after only two albums to embark on what has turned out to be a wild and often unpredictable solo career. Though his music is fairly austere these days, Eno was at his most clever and flamboyantly odd on his solo debut, Here Come the Warm Jets. Anticipating the coming punk era, the new wave sounds to follow, and the electronica of today, Here Come the Warm Jets contains some of the most exuberant and hardest-rocking moments of Eno's career; it's an album of remarkable depth, full of sonic surprises and furious wordplay that reward careful listening. There have been a few bands over the years brave enough to cover such classic Eno tunes as "Baby's on Fire," but none has quite been able to recapture the power of his synthetically altered vocals, siren-like guitars, buzzing wall of noise, and various "treated" instruments. Twenty-five years later, Here Come the Warm Jets has lost none of its ability to delight, confound, and, most of all, inspire. Michael Hill, Barnes & Noble