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CD - Remastered / Bonus Tracks
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| CD - Bonus Tracks | $29.99 |
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Released in 1984, Ocean Rain may not have been Echo & the Bunnymen's most successful album (see their 1987 eponymous "grey album"), but their fourth LP was indeed their crowning achievement, representing a softening of their post-punk angst and their continued openness to new sounds. It's all on display on "The Killing Moon," which singer Ian McCulloch modestly describes as "the best song ever written" in the liner notes. That may be a slight exaggeration, but there's no denying the song's dramatic and enchanting mood, carried by McCulloch's pining, philosophical lyric, sweeping strings, and a sweet tangle of psychedelic guitars. Other high points include orchestrally lush, musically optimistic songs such as "Silver" and "Crystal Days," the noisy acoustic guitars on "My Kingdom," and the elegiac, album-closing title track. Part of Rhino's deluxe Echo reissue series, this 2004 edition adds eight bonus cuts, starting with the Doors-reminiscent B-side "Angels and Devils," colored by tambourine and harpsichord. Also included are five songs recorded for the film Life at Brian's: All are low-key recordings with an emphasis on acoustic instruments. A version of the Beatles' "All You Need Is Love" displays the Bunnymen's reverence for the band that ushered the sitar into pop music -- while an alternate "Killing Moon" bares the song's strengths even without all the sweeping strings. Two live tracks, from a May '84 concert in their hometown of Liverpool, cap off the album on a fine note, Ian & the boys performing at the very apex of their artistic powers. Twenty years on, it's still breathtaking. Lydia Vanderloo, Barnes & Noble