Mirage

Mirage Artist: Camel
Label: Polygram Int'l
Category: Music


Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
Format: Import
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1


UPC: 042282061324
EAN: 0042282061324
ASIN: B000006XDR


Release Date: 1999-01-12

Mirage


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Tracks:

  1. Freefall
  2. Supertwister
  3. Nimrodel/The Procession/The White Rider
  4. Earthrise
  5. Lady Fantasy: Encounter/Smiles For You Lady Fantasy

Similar Items:

  1. Moonmadness
  2. The Snow Goose
  3. Camembert Electrique

Album Description

1989 reissue on Decca of their 1974 album for Gama. Five tracks, including 'Freefall' and 'Supertwister'.

Album Details

This 1974 release from the progressive rockers Camel features the 12 minute, 46 second opus 'Lady Fantasy: Encounter/Smiles for You'. The track 'Nimrodel / the Procession / the White Rider' is based on the J.R.R. Tolkien's Gandalf the Sorcerer character (From the book 'Lord of the Rings').

Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars Catchy but non-essential prog rock album.......2003-01-03

Camel is a second-tier progressive rock band, built around Andy Latimer's guitar and flute, and (in the early days) Pete Bardens' keyboards. They'll never make you forget Genesis or Yes, and they don't "rock out" much, but they have a way with melody, texture, and mood.

This 1974 album, their second, is never less than pleasant but never compelling. Three songs have brief vocal segments, but the album is mostly instrumental. The first two songs are the weakest of the five pieces here. "Freefall" is generic 70s prog-rock, except for some Allman-esque guitar harmonies in the middle segment. "Supertwister" is a slight instrumental that plays with a 5/8 riff and gives Latimer a flute workout. "The White Rider" suite, a tribute to Tolkien's Gandalf character, is entertaining except for a marching band interlude near the start. "Earthrise" is the catchiest piece on the album, an instrumental that gives Bardens a chance to shine. "Lady Fantasy" is a 12-minute epic, the showpiece of the album, and gives you an idea why there are some diehard Camel fans. For whatever reason, the last movement of the song sounds just like Caravan, especially Bardens' organ solo (Caravan's Sinclair cousins later served stints in Camel). Overall, this is about as good as an album can be without getting a "very good" ranking, and that's because the peaks just aren't high enough. There are AT LEAST six cuts on "The Snow Goose" (and even three on "Nude") that I like better than anything on "Mirage".

(1=poor 2=mediocre 3=pretty good 4=very good 5=phenomenal)

5 out of 5 stars By far one of Camel's best.......2001-11-05

Camel's self-entitled 1973 debut sounds like a band not sounding very confident, but their followup, Mirage found the band in a much improved form. Back in 1972, there was a live recording that was later released in 1992 called On the Road 1972. On that disc shows Camel in a rather raw and aggressive form. They even played "Lady Fantasy" and "White Rider" which later ended up on Mirage (the reason I can tell those early versions were from '72 was Peter Bardens still had his VCS-3 synth, while on Mirage the VCS-3 was gone in favor of the Minimoog). Mirage, of all the studio Camel albums I have ever heard is the one that best captures the raw excitement and energy of the On the Road 1972 disc. When you hear "Freefall" and "Lady Fantasy", you're basically treated with some of Camel's most hard rocking material. "Supertwister" is the first Camel song to feature Andy Latimer flutework, and the song was actually in honor of the Dutch progressive rock band Supersister who themselves had released a handful of albums in the early 1970s on Polydor. Mirage has two different covers. There's one that pokes fun of the Camel cigarette pack, and another with Camel as a dragon, done in a '70s sci-fi fashion. I happen to like the latter better, but for humorous purposes, the cigarette pack cover is pretty silly. Mirage does receive lots of hype in the prog community, and the album is often regarded as a Camel fan favorite, and it's really not hard to see why. If you're a prog rock junkie and this is not in your collection, then you need to get yourself a copy.

5 out of 5 stars Mellowing out nicely.......2001-09-10

I love the melodies on this album, and from reading other reviews that seems to be the overall concensus. I love bands that focus on melody, i believe it is the most important factor in music; there must be a good melody. But they're melody is stressed in instrumentation rather than human voice. It's very hypnotic and mellow sounding, nothing like Yes or the keyboard work from Tony Banks, i wouldn't call it progressive as far as virtuosity goes. It's progressive for it's themeatical and chordal development, very much like classical music, but with rock and roll instruments. After listening to Mirage i am very much looking forward to getting their most popular album "The Snowgoose".

4 out of 5 stars In the shadow of Focus.......2001-08-24

Camel were not widely noticed until the release of their third album, THE SNOW GOOSE. The standard line in the history books is to blame this on audience confusion with another band, Frampton's Camel. Perhaps a more honest explanation would be to say that Camel's first two albums just weren't sufficiently distinctive. Certainly the first album, sensibly called CAMEL, isn't much good. MIRAGE was a lot better. The band were beginning to find their own voice, although at times they sounded a lot like Focus. (The lead instrument line-ups of guitar, flute and keyboards were identical.) And when Focus wasn't at the top of their minds, Andy Latimer could sound a lot like his axe hero, Hank Marvin of the Shadows. Throughout their career, Camel's principal message was "Rock can be quite nice, really". Camel's inoffensive niceness was an antidote to the vigours of Sabbath, Zeppelin and punk. Many of us who went through a Camel phase in the 70s, mistaking their surface attractions and frequent time-signature changes for music that actually meant something. I bought nearly all their 70s LPs. I saw them on the MIRAGE tour -- although the concert adverts used the Camel-as-railroad cover art from the debut album. These were the days when concert tickets cost less than a dollar, and I would imagine that over 95% of the audience at the gig had never heard a note of Camel music before attending. But Camel's mixture of hackneyed rock riffs and sugary flute/organ duets went down well with the audience, all of whom were 13-to-18-year-olds. Many of us bought the LPs, but frankly didn't miss them when we had to sell them a couple of years later because we were hard up. Such is the transitory appeal of Camel. John Tracy's detailed inlay notes for the 1989 CD give almost too much information about the pre-history of the band. We do not need to see the names of all those musicians from Surrey who never made it big. I live in the Leatherhead/Guildford area which Tracy describes, and even this knowledge of the locale does not enhance my appreciation of the sleeve notes. The CD has been nicely remastered, though I'd like to hear more clarity from the bass and drums. The introductory march on track #3, the Nimrodel suite, contains the clearest hints of the direction the band would take with their next album, THE SNOW GOOSE. The final track, 'Lady Fantasy', is a 12-minute epic, a concert rabble-rouser which just about succeeds in concealing the joins between the separate segments which in other Camel tunes often seemed bolted on. Unlike some, I wouldn't describe Camel as 'progressive'. Their music was too likeable on first hearing, which I believe excludes them, by definition, from the category of progressive rock bands. If you like this album, you should also enjoy THE SNOW GOOSE and MOONMADNESS, together with Greenslade's BEDSIDE MANNERS ARE EXTRA. But you should be aiming for FOCUS III, which defined the genre and has never been bettered.

5 out of 5 stars

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