Rain Tree Crow - Rain Tree Crow (1991)seeders: 2
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Rain Tree Crow - Rain Tree Crow (1991) (Size: 63.22 MB)
Description
Artist....: Japan
Title.....: Rain tree crow Rel. Date.: 1991 Type/Genre: Rock Size......: 105mb Format....: mp3 Bitrate...: 320 * * ******************************************************************************** * * Tracks: 1. Big Wheels in Shanty Town 2. Every Colour You Are 3. Rain Tree Crow 4. Red Earth (As Summertime Ends) 5. Pocket Full of Change 6. Boat's for Burning 7. New Moon at Red Deer Wallow 8. Blackwater 9. Reassuringly Dull Sunday 10. Blackcrow Hits Shoe Shine City 11. Scratchings on the Bible Belt 12. Cries and Whispers Rain Tree Crow was the name used by the successful English New Wave band Japan (excluding Rob Dean) when they briefly reformed for this one-off project, which would be their final album. It was the first time all four members of the band, David Sylvian, Steve Jansen, Mick Karn and Richard Barbieri, collaborated on a project since the compilation of the 1983 live album Oil on Canvas. The majority of the material on their eponymous album was written as a result of group improvisations (aside from 'Blackwater'). There were no pre-rehearsals and the music that emerged was a hybrid of atmospheric ambient ballads in the style of lead singer David Sylvian's contemporaneous albums and more dissonant experimental styles that sometimes echoed the work of Tom Waits and King Crimson. The album was mostly recorded at Miravel Studios, France, between September 1989 and April 1990. All members of the band aside from Sylvian wished to retain the Japan moniker which was last used when the band split in December 1982. However, Sylvian levered increasing artistic and production control over the project (including his insistence on using the RTC name, much to the other member's bemusement and annoyance), to the point where the recording developed from a band effort into a what was essentially another Sylvian solo project, leaving the other members as mere sessioners for the front man. Blackwater was released as the album's only cut and just missed the Top 60 in the UK singles charts in March 1991. The album itself was, in general, critically acclaimed by the music press and reached the Top 25 in the UK albums chart. Sharing Widget |