Secrets of the Beehive
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Artist:
David Sylvian
Label: Caroline
Category: Music
Average customer rating:
Format: Limited Edition
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1
UPC: 724359131023
EAN: 0724359131023
ASIN: B0000AQOQW
Release Date: 2003-10-21 |
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Listmania:
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Mixed genre favorites
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Some 80's music favorites
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Welcome To The Darkside of Art Rock
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Fennesz + related
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Beautiful House and Shimmering Pop
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A taste of autumn
Tracks:
- September
- Boy With the Gun
- Maria
- Orpheus
- Devil's Own
- When Poets Dreamed of Angels
- Mother and Child
- Let the Happiness In
- Waterfront
- Promised (The Cult of Eurydice)
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Customer Reviews:
Sylvian's Masterpiece.......2007-03-18
I use the word masterpiece sparingly, but in this case it is the only word to fit. I bought this when it first came out on LP and it was the very first CD I purchased, even before I owned a CD player (I knew I had to have it when I finally purchsed one). It is now some 20 years later and this is still one of the most played recordings in my collection. SECRETS is a masterpiece of mood and images, all held together by Sylvian's aching and brooding voice that pulls you in and wraps itself around you. The songs are more like vignettes, stories about hope and despair, human drama, and the struggles of life. Yes, this is much more like a book of short stories than anything else. Each listening reveals more depth and nuance. While Sylvian has gone on to make other great albums, none have equaled SECRETS in that unknown quality that makes one standout above all others. If you could only have one Sylvian disc, this is the one to have.
Copyright~Michael Bettine
Sylvian's most concise and consistent work.......2006-11-18
If you are looking for a great album to introduce you to David Sylvian, this is arguably his best. A great soundtrack for a crisp autumn day. No matter how many times I've played this, I never get tired of it.
BEST ALBUM EVER - 20 out of 5 stars.......2005-07-09
This album can quite literally put your mind in an altered state. This is a fact. Almost drug-like. The degree of beauty and staggering power that David Sylvian's Secrets of the Beehive offers is simply unavailable elsewhere. Nothing I've ever heard comes close to approaching this gorgeous work of art. Nothing else. Not even close.
In this album, Sylvian's deep/haunting/timeless lyrics are only matched by the awe-inspiring musical atmospheres that they weave through. The sound is very cinematic with its variety of musical textures -- very visual stuff, even before Sylvian's words perfectly augment the scene. Do you really "see" shimmering water during the piano solo in Orpheus? Does the string and piano tag of at the end of September somehow really "sound" like summer ending? Do you "see" a gentle ocean fog and gulls in your mind's eye during Let the Happiness In? Reality check -- I am aware that if you haven't heard Secrets of the Beehive, what I just wrote sounds incredibly stupid, but for those who know this album well, they are probably nodding in recognition. But even those beautiful "visuals" are only tiny little elements of a whole vast world created here. And it only gets better with repeated listening. By the way, that's when you really know it's art -- when not only does it NOT burn-out, but continues to grow deeper everytime you hear it. That is what you get with Secrets of the Beehive.
One major criticism: The record label (once again) insisted on throwing an extra track at the end of this CD (this time it's "Promise" last time it was "Forbidden Colours"). It's kind of like painting a goatee on the Mona Lisa. The original release had only 9 tracks, and ended with the song "Waterfront." This is how the album should be played to achieve its perfect balance and for you to find yourself in a daze when silence arrives after its intended ending line, "...Is our love strong enough?"
If you really want this CD to overwhelm you though, either program your CD player to repeat just the first 9 tracks, or burn a copy on a CD-R with just those 9 original songs -- then set the player to repeat, and prepare to luxuriate in a listening experience to be found nowhere else. And because the original 9 songs make such a short album (just over half an hour), repeated listening in one session is not only recommended, but it is an absolute must. Buy it and ENJOY!
An unequalled masterpiece........2005-04-13
Over the years, when I'm asked to name my favorite album, there's one that I keep coming back to-- David Sylvian's "Secrets of the Beehive". Without a doubt Sylvian's masterwork, this album is breathtaking in its power. Sylvian, with an array of talented musicians (including frequent collaborator Ryuichi Sakamoto who arranged string and horns, guitarist David Torn, trumpeter Mark Isham, bassist Danny Thompson, and drummer as well as ex-Japan bandmate and Sylvian's brother, Steve Jansen), constructed a record of such stunning and fragile beauty that it really must be heard to be appreciated.
The album is all about mood- the selection of instruments largely assists in this-- upright basses, pianos, strings, acoustic guitars, hand drumming, all setting an environment of melancholy and longing-- Sylvian's tenor, having assumed a depth quite any other vocalist, is mesmerizing-- he conveys the mood of the pieces often with a style that seems contradictory to the intent, but somehow it works.
Lyrically, this is also Sylvian's best, and is the kind of material that you talked about when you were in high school and pop lyrics mattered. Somtimes he uses metaphor to great effect (often about oceans and rain), althought much of the time its a direct expression. I'm not going to try and analyze them or discuss why they're great, let me just quote a few moments and you can consider for youself: "we say that we're in love / but secretly wishing for rain" ("September"), "but all the hurdles that fell in our laps / were fuel for the fire and straw for our back" ("Orpheus"), "listen to the waves against the docks / I don't know where they've been / I'm waiting for the skies to open up / and let the happiness in" ("Let the Happiness In").
As far as the tracks themselves, largely its a downbeat affair, but there are islands of hope and excitement, though mostly of longing throughout-- take "Orpheus", a magically uplifting piece-- if Sylvian's lyrics and delivery don't get you, Isham's brilliant and delicate solo certainly will. Ditto for "Let the Happiness In". a melancholy vocal over brass arrangement as Sylvian sings of hope, puncuated again by Isham's horn and eventually underscored by delicate hand percussion that prods without getting in the way. But the mood is primarily dark, from child violence (the eerily prophetic "The Boy With the Gun") to living with (and accepting) substandard lives (the brilliant "When Poets Dreamed of Angels") and near total despair ("Waterfront"). Perhaps though what makes this album so remarkable is that all the tracks are standout-- there's nothing on here thats not just superb.
The 2003 reissue adds to the record "Promise (The Cult of Eurydice)", a delicate little piece largely voice over acoustic gutiar with organ at the bridge that was originally only on the Japanese release only adds to the album. The artwork is beautiful as well, with the album contained in a gatefold digipack, and sonically, its crisp, clear and could have easily been recorded yesterday.
The bottom line is, this album is some of the best music ever recorded. I can't say enough that everyone should hear it. This is essential.
A haunting classic with superior sound quality re-mastered.......2004-06-04
This work came to my attention by coincidence only a few months after its original release 1987. Prior to that, I had enjoyed some of Sylvian's work with Japan. His first two solo albums were, however, somewhat boring. A few tracks on each one were focused but too many lacked direction.
That changed dramatically on Secrets, an album hardly without a misstep. It is for the most parts rather slow and soothing, simple instrumentation, often in an experimental style with jazz elements on some of the tracks. Standout tracks are hard to define, they have changed in my opinion through the years. The lyrics wander between hope and despair, domestic rage to the joy of life.
This is without doubt one of my favourite albums through the years. Listening first to it at the age of 22, I remember vividly the strange emotions the album's contradictions had on me. Despite being anything but a album full of catchy tunes, it struck a chord within me immediately.
I am not alone in that opinion, I was surprised seeing so many people stating similar thoughts on Amazon, given it was a commercial failure. I must admit that I haven't enjoyed any other Sylvian album since in its whole, although Dead Bees On a Cake had some splendid moments and his collaboration with Holger Czukay, Plight and Premonition, provides an ethereal listening experience.
The original CD version had one enormous problem; the hiss in the recording overshadowed often the sound (or lack of it). Listening to that version often made one wish that better care would have been taken of such delicate music. This re-mastered version improves that anomaly to an incredible extent. The sound becomes richer and the whole listening experience becomes more fulfilling.
The CD cover has the same artwork but in the so-called digipak. It is well done. An unnecessary poster (mini one obviously) is also included. Added lyrics or written thoughts about the album would have been welcomed.
A debated change has also been made with the album's final tune. Forbidden Colours has been dropped to be replaced by Promised. For my part, I wish that Promised would have been simply added in the end. The end result is still very satisfying. Those interested in buying this album really should invest in this more expensive version, the sound quality is overwhelmingly better and worth the difference in price.
Music CD:
- Devi ~ Chlo%C3%AB Goodchild
- Celestial Winds I ~ Celestial Winds
- Singing Stones ~ Michael Stearns & Ron Sunsinger
- Fire Journeys ~ Ed Van Fleet
- Beethoven: Forever by the Sea
- Winter Solstice
- Solaris Universalis ~ Patrick Bernhardt
- Tongues ~ Gabrielle Roth & the Mirrors
- Damage ~ David Sylvian, Robert Fripp
- Different Times ~ Laurence Juber
Music CD
Music CD
Music CD
Exitos Tropicales ~ Various Artists
Mal Herido ~ Los Yonic's
Secrets of the Beehive ~ David Sylvian
Magic Flute ~ Panflote
I'm International ~ Maddruzall
Something to Talk About ~ Willie Clayton
En Otra Onda ~ Tito Nieves
Otra Vez ~ Banda Mexicano
15 Canciones Favoritas ~ Los Flamers
Salsoul ~ Joe Bataan