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Happiness Is The Road
 
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Happiness Is The Road [CD]

Marillion Audio CD
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (52 customer reviews)
Price: £8.99 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Music

Image of album by Marillion

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Biography

Marillion are one of the UK music scene’s best kept secrets; purveyors of soulful, powerful, and often deeply-moving music, with a long-standing reputation for blistering live shows which have earned them an impressive and faithful global fanbase.

Steve "h" Hogarth fronts the band (original lead-singer, "Fish", having departed in 1988).
A former member of The Europeans and some-time collaborator… Read more in Amazon's Marillion Store

Visit Amazon's Marillion Store
for 97 albums, 6 photos, discussions, and more.

Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this with Afraid of Sunlight: Remastered £6.67

Happiness Is The Road + Afraid of Sunlight: Remastered
Price For Both: £15.66

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Product details

  • Audio CD (2 Feb 2009)
  • Number of Discs: 2
  • Format: CD
  • Label: EMI
  • ASIN: B001P7YD1E
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (52 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 39,502 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Disc: 1
1. Dreamy Street
2. This Train is my Life
3. Essence
4. Wrapped Up in Time
5. Liquidity
6. Nothing Fills the Hole
7. Woke Up
8. Trap the Spark
9. A State of Mind
10. Happiness is the Road
See all 12 tracks on this disc
Disc: 2
1. Thunder Fly
2. The Man from the Planet Marzipan
3. Asylum Satellite #1
4. Older than Me
5. Throw Me Out
6. Half the World
7. Whatever is Wrong with You
8. Especially True
9. Real Tears for Sale

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
25 of 27 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
About this time of year, people (at least, the people who do this kind of thing) tend to start compiling their list of albums of the year, and everyone else gets ready to throw things at them. I don't do album of the year lists... but Marillion have just released their fifteenth studio album, Happiness Is The Road, and in doing so may just have released the record of their lives.

Now, as any Marillion fan knows, the difficulty in turning people onto the band isn't because their music is difficult to listen to or no longer relevant to any but a small audience, but in getting them to listen to the music in the first place. In a world where Coldplay, Snow Patrol and others sell millions of units through a combination of delicate sentiment and epic bombast, and where Bono and Dave Gilmour still only have to burp into a mic to make the top ten, there's no real reason that Marillion can't be two, three, four times bigger than they are.

Happiness Is The Road, comprising two separate albums, Essence and The Hard Shoulder, should by rights be the album that does the trick... but then we've thought that before, with the sublime 2004 double album Marbles and back in 1995 with the incomparable Afraid Of Sunlight (an album so good even most of the mainstream critics couldn't fault it). Even with these points of comparison, Happiness Is The Road is genuinely fantastic stuff, playing to all of Marillion's many strengths in 2008 and precious few of their weaknesses. If you're after cathartic widescreen angst, we have 'Real Tears For Sale', and 'Half The World', 'Especially True' and 'A State Of Mind' provide soaring, dynamic pop, while the heartfelt epic is ably represented by the stunning title track and the quixotic 'The Man From The Planet Marzipan'.

But this is to be expected from Marillion - they've made their name on the above formula, if you can call it that. What continues to delight about Happiness Is The Road is the nuance, the oddness, the left field. The deliriously Motownesque 'Nothing Fills The Hole'... the off-kilter pop of 'Throw Me Out', recalling David Byrne... the gorgeously elegiac 'Trap The Spark', which manages to pull off the Flaming Lips' brand of existential whimsy as if covered by Sigur Ros... the dub groove to 'Happiness Is The Road' itself, with a sudden and jaw-dropping John Williams-style orchestral section sitting behind the middle eight, just where a guitar solo would ordinarily be... the Bollywood strings gradually building in every chorus to 'Woke Up'... the fact that 'Especially True' can suck you in by sounding like a poppier Editors until the final ninety seconds, which descend into the kind of wall of churning guitar you might hear on a Queens Of The Stone Age record.

Lyrically, this is the most consistently uplifting Steve 'h' Hogarth has ever been - not surprising, when the first CD, Essence, has as its theme redemptive self-discovery. He's clearly had four or five epiphanies since 2007's more downbeat Somewhere Else, and it shows, his unforced clarity of vision marking almost all of Happiness Is The Road's nineteen songs - upbeat but not shallow, giving us depth without being pompous. The results are exhilarating, and often inspirational, no more so than in the title track, with the bridge "your mind will find a way to be unkind to you somehow... but all we really have is happening to us right now."

It's a testament to the unique position Marillion find themselves in that, fifteen albums and thirty years on from their beginnings, they still sound entirely like themselves while evolving and changing on every album. That's why 'Real Tears For Sale' sounds a little off closing The Hard Shoulder... recalling a Marillion of sixteen, seventeen years ago, it sits oddly with the remainder of Happiness Is The Road. But it's a halfhearted complaint when the results are so damn good, probably the most viciously self-excoriating lyric h has ever recorded ("even whores don't kiss with tongues"), as he berates himself for turning every good and bad thing that's ever happened to him into words for more songs, comparing this selling of himself to the vagaries of celebrity culture, setting out his market stall with pieces of his life to pay the bills. It's circular logic - he's just written a song about it - but undeniably powerful. I just think maybe it belonged on Somewhere Else... 'The Man From The Planet Marzipan', with its fey, arch depiction of our world seen through truly alien eyes, seems a better fit to finish this truly remarkable album. But as quibbles go, it's a ridiculously minor one. This is a masterpiece.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
These guys have done it again, after the superb Marbles and excellent Somewhere Else they have surpassed themselves yet again.
This album is sublime from the opening track on the first CD - Essence to the last track on the 2nd CD - The Hard Shoulder there are no duff tracks or fillers just brilliantly crafted moving prog rock music.
Support these guys and buy this album - they richly deserve all the success it brings them.
Heres looking forward to album 16!!!
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15 of 17 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
Not content with just releasing their 15 studio album, Marillion, the music industries biggest secret have instead produced two sublime albums under the titles of Essence and The Hard Shoulder. Volume 1 is a concept album linked by the theme of "what is life all about" which begins with the thoughtful, reflective Dreamy Street before segueing into This Train Is My Life - a track which is one of a handful in my life that reduced me to tears. Through the volume one title track Essence (genuinely unique and inspiring) through to the glorious rousing Wake Up and the potential career highlight of Happiness is the Road itself I was taken on a genuinely uplifting journey of discovery with each band member performing at the height of there powers.Buy this album, cuddle up with a loved one and share the journey together: happiness ain't at the end of the road, Happines IS the Road.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Oh Dear!
Boring! Where's the rock amd emotion! All one paced, SLOW! More of a pop band now, won't waste my money buying anymore cd's from this band!
Published 3 months ago by Ian Fieldhouse
Sublime stuff.
One of their best yet! Musically its a feast of aural textures and will surely stand the test of time.
Published 5 months ago by A. KELLY
Battling double album syndrome...
This is a good album. It's that there's too much material for it to be truly great. (Name a double album where every track is brilliant....none! Read more
Published 10 months ago by PD Flood
Oh Dear....
Firstly I would like to give a bit of background on my relationship with Marillion. I was a huge fan of the Fish era growing up in the 80s, Fugazi and Script remain to this day... Read more
Published 17 months ago by mark burniston
Very superficial
Two cd's, lots of tracks and 75% are poor and sound like the sort of tracks that get stuck on albums as "bonus" tracks. Nothing near the quality of Fish era Marillion. Read more
Published on 8 Sep 2009 by S. Kemp
What a shame!
Oh dear! After the none event of the last offering, Somewhere Else, I was rather expecting something a bit special this time but have been hugely disappointed. Read more
Published on 4 Jun 2009 by R. Middleton
Happiness is happiness
Ive followed Marillion ever since the beginning, and found their post-Fish output very mixed. Marbles + Brave are brilliant. This album + volume 2 have blown me away. Read more
Published on 30 May 2009 by P. D. Fox
Come on lads! You can do better than this!
Marillion's 'Happiness is the Road' is one of those albums which you put on when you're feeling quietly mellow and needing a doze. Read more
Published on 15 April 2009 by Adrian M. Liley
Modern and fresh!
Well, Marillion is still a perfect kept secret for mainstream radio listeners and chart-junkies. For people looking for high quality rockmusic this album is a must. Read more
Published on 5 April 2009 by Markus Dick
Disapointing
Firstly I haven't heard every album and wont compare this release to anything involving Fish(13th star is awesome though). Read more
Published on 22 Mar 2009 by I. M. Rhodes
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