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Gone to Earth
 
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Gone to Earth [Extra tracks] [Limited Edition] [Original recording reissued] [Original recording remastered]

~ David Sylvian
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Audio CD (29 Sep 2003)
  • Number of Discs: 2
  • Format: Extra tracks, Limited Edition, Original recording reissued, Original recording remastered
  • Label: Virgin
  • ASIN: B0000AQOQQ
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 125,449 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.


Disc 1:

Samples
Song Title Time Price
Listen  1. Taking The Veil (2003 Digital Remaster) 4:40£0.69
Listen  2. Laughter And Forgetting (2003 Digital Remaster) 3:18£0.69
Listen  3. Before The Bullfight (2003 Digital Remaster) 9:21£1.89
Listen  4. Gone To Earth (2003 Digital Remaster) 3:06£0.69
Listen  5. Wave (2003 Digital Remaster) 9:11£1.89
Listen  6. River Man (2003 Digital Remaster) 4:54£0.69
Listen  7. Silver Moon (2003 Digital Remaster) 6:19£0.69
Listen  8. River Man (Remix) (2003 Digital Remaster) 4:24£0.69
Listen  9. Gone To Earth (Remix) (2003 Digital Remaster) 1:56£0.69
Listen10. Camp Fire: Coyote Country (Remix) (2003 Digital Remaster) 3:46£0.69


Disc 2:

Samples
Song Title Time Price
Listen  1. The Healing Place (2003 Digital Remaster) 5:34£0.69
Listen  2. Answered Prayers (2003 Digital Remaster) 3:10£0.69
Listen  3. Where The Railroad Meets The Sea (2003 Digital Remaster) 2:52£0.69
Listen  4. The Wooden Cross (2003 Digital Remaster) 5:05£0.69
Listen  5. Silver Moon Over Sleeping Steeples (2003 Digital Remaster) 2:22£0.69
Listen  6. Camp Fire: Coyote Country (2003 Digital Remaster) 3:51£0.69
Listen  7. A Bird Of Prey Vanishes Into A Bright Blue Cloudless Sky (2003 Digital Remaster) 3:16£0.69
Listen  8. Home (2003 Digital Remaster) 4:33£0.69
Listen  9. Sunlight Seen Through Towering Trees (2003 Digital Remaster) 3:02£0.69
Listen10. Upon This Earth (2003 Digital Remaster) 6:30£0.69


Product Description

CD Description

Sylvian's career since leaving new wave art-rockers Japan has been an eclectic one to say the least, yielding successful collaborations with luminaries such as Can's Holger Czukay, Italy's Arturo Stalteri, trumpeter Jon Hassell, and, as here, prog guitarists Robert Fripp and Bill Nelson. GONE TO EARTH is Sylvian's masterpiece of understatement, a quiet, contemplative recording of variable moods, environmental contrasts, and introspective moments.
In this best of all synergistic worlds, Sylvian's chums produce some of their most remarkable moments on record. Fripp's contributions, veering from the angelic ("Taking the Veil") to the hypnotic ("Gone to Earth") are as original as anything he's previously committed to tape. Bill Nelson outdoes himself on the provocative "The Healing Place", generating a repeating guitar fragment suggestive of eternal melancholia. Also on hand are Japan members Richard Barbieri, whose febrile atmospheres enhance the already beguiling surroundings, and percussionist Steve Jansen, whose deft touches provide the song's organic anchors when necessary. These human tone-tacticians raise GONE TO EARTH to an even higher level of artistry.

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Customer Reviews

13 Reviews
5 star:
 (9)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
 (1)
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars 1986's double album reissued, 28 May 2006
By Jason Parkes "We're all Frankies'" (Worcester, UK) - See all my reviews
(TOP 10 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Gone to Earth (Audio CD)
David Sylvian was clearly unhappy with the teenybop audience he found in the later years of Japan and tags like `the most beautiful man in the world.' Relationships in Japan became problematic, Sylvian was rumoured to have taken up with Mick Karn's girlfriend and was tiring of the band format - Japan having lost guitarist Rob Dean and Sylvian composing bandless-songs like "Ghosts" and "Nightporter." After a few singles with Yellow Magic Orchestra's Ryuichi Sakamoto, Sylvian experimented and eventually released Brilliant Trees that remains a watershed. 1985 saw him advance the ambient-directions of that record with Steve Jansen, Holger Czukay & Jon Hassell (this work is collected on Alchemy: An Index of Possibilities). Gone to Earth was the swift follow-up, a double album whose first disc is another seven-track vocal album and whose second disc offers an ambient/instrumental work. This reissue, like the 2003-reissue replaces the dubious one-disc version released before.

The album, whose title must emanate from the Powell/Pressburger film of the same name (was that from a novel?), found Sylvian collaborating with a group of revered musicians including Robert Fripp, Philip Palmer, B.J. Cole, Kenny Wheeler, John Taylor, and Bill Nelson. Observant souls will note that brother Jansen is present, as well as another former member of Japan, Richard Barbieri. In the next year, Barbieri, Jansen and Sylvian would all work with Mick Karn on the Dreams of Reason Produce Monsters album. The album as a whole feels like an advance on the climes of Brilliant Trees and is a record that sounds like a blend of Eno's On Land, Miles Davis' In a Silent Way, Scott Walker's Scott 4, and Robert Wyatt's Ruth is Stranger Than Richard. In 1980s terms it belongs to a group of albums that include Harold Budd's Lovely Thunder, Budd-Fraser-Guthrie-Raymonde's The Moon and the Melodies, Talk Talk's Spirit of Eden, and The Blue Nile's A Walk Across the Rooftops. It is perhaps an overblown, over-ambitious album, but one I still listen to after all these years...

The first disc of songs begins and ends on the two singles released, "Taking the Veil" and "Silver Moon". Ironically, these are the least successful tracks - the former is a wonderful guitar-driven slice of ambience, but there's not much in terms of a song. "Silver Moon" just doesn't gel for me either, it sounds like it's going to come to life, perhaps as a relative/progression of "Red Guitar" but it just feels a bit formless. Like Sylvian wanted to be Bryan Ferry but felt more Brian Eno; it's not helped by the presence of B.J. Cole, which just makes you think of The Walker Brothers' "No Regrets" - which wipes the floor with it! The rest is far greater - "Laughter and Forgetting" (a title that nods to a great novel by Milan Kundera) employs pianist John Taylor (who would work with Sylvian a few years later on the Pop Song -single) and flugelhorn from Kenny Wheeler. A gorgeous ballad that suggests the territory Sylvian would explore on the following year's "September", it eventually gives way to the epic "Before the Bullfight." This song is very much a fan's favourite and sounds like an epic extension of a song like 1984's "Nostalgia."

The title track is a collaboration with Robert Fripp, dirge-like Frippertronics collide with spoken word samples - it feels slightly sinister and suggests the bleak territory of Sylvian's divorce-album Blemish. Fripp and Sylvian would regroup in the 1990s and advance their collaboration over a few tours and the albums The First Day and Damage. The highlights of this disc come next, the sublime duo "Wave" and "River Man" - mind-blowing soundscapes that exploit Sylvian's collaborators perfectly. Fripp and Sylvian would deservedly return both of these songs to on both versions of Damage.

The second disc returns the original half of the album that was delegated to a few tracks on the initial single-disc version of this album. This works wonderfully as a stand-alone ambient album, continuing Sylvian's ambient career, from Alchemy: An Index of Possibilities, to the Czukay-collaborations (Flux & Mutability, Plight & Premonition), to the more recent Approaching Silence. Gorgeous soundscapes that leave you gasping for the greatest adjectives, and what evocative titles! : "Where the Railroad Meets the Sea" (quoted as a line on the lost Fripp/Sylvian b-side "Endgame"), "Camp Fire Coyote Country", & "Sunlight Seen Through Towering Trees." An album to play alongside Budd's Lovely Thunder, Eno et al's Apollo Soundtracks, and Dead Can Dance's Within the Realms of a Dying Sun.

Gone to Earth has dated wonderfully, sounding like a precursor of late period Talk Talk and showing how Radiohead should fuse the ambient, avant, and jazz. Sylvian followed it with the Walkeresque Secrets of the Beehive, though returned to this territory with the Rain Tree Crow-project, the Fripp-collaboration and parts of Dead Bees on a Cake and snow borne sorrow. An album well worth investigating, if not a masterpiece on the scale of Beehive or Trees. A bargain twin-set at this price and in this remastered form.
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20 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Re-mastered solo album number 2., 25 Feb 2004
By Milt Ingarfield "milt_fm" (Arbroath, Scotland) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Being the follow-up to a critically acclaimed debut solo album was never going too be easy, not only did Mr Sylvain rise to the challenge he took the a big risk and released a double album.
One disc of 7 vocal tracks, and the other disc a selection of 10 ambient instrumentals this was the form that the album took when originally released on cassette and vinyl.

But when this album was issued originally on C.D. only all the vocal tracks and some of the instrumental tracks were issued on the C.D.
Up until now the only available way to get all the tracks on C.D. was on the “Weather box” box set.

For me this is one of my favourite albums by Sylvain this is because of the superb guitar work of Robert Fripp, Bill Nelson and B.J. Cole on pedal steel guitar.
These musicians really come to the fore on the second disc of this set adding texture, space and atmosphere to the pieces.

Now with this re-issue not only have all the tracks been restored the sound quality has been improved greatly by the excellent renovation work of Tony Cousins at “Metropolis” and added bonus tracks have been added to the first disc of the set.
A feature to notice on this disc is that there is a small gap of time before the bonus tracks start. I think this is to give the listener an impression of how the original album sounded before the addition of the extra tracks.

For my own personal taste I would have preferred the extra tracks not to be included but to be on a separate disc all together, but that’s a minor point.
The improvement in sound quality and presentation more than make up for any personal quibble I may have with this re-issue.

Another feature of note is the packaging, now the album is in an 8-panel digipak sleeve and the credits for the album now come on the back of a fold-out poster booklet.

David himself has supervised all the redesigning of the artwork, with the assistance of long-time Sylvain photographer Yuka Fujii.
This for me was a must “have” in my music collection.

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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Still one of my most played albums, 9 Dec 2003
By R. Appleby (Bangkok) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
If you haven't listened to much David Sylvian this is a great CD to start your collection with. It features an impressive mix of instrumentals and vocals that range from the very accessible 'Wave' to the somewhat more experimental (for the time) 'Gone to Earth' of the title. Expect lots of timeless, dreamy ambient sounds to chill out to (whatever that means), some occasional darkness and just enough experimentation to stretch your perceptions. I bought my first copy on vinyl more years ago than I care to remember and this current incarnation still sounds every bit as fresh. Unfair to end the review without a nod to the other notable musicicians who contributed to the Album, particullarly Robert Fripp.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Words fail me
I was lucky to have been into Japan and David Sylvians solo work for a few years before I eventually got round to buying back in 1991 on long play casette! Read more
Published 14 days ago by N. Styles

4.0 out of 5 stars A Rich Mise-en-Scene
This is Sylvian's second album, originally released in sumptuous colours in a gatefold sleeve in 1986, which the CD cannot really match. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Nicholas Casley

3.0 out of 5 stars Not his best
A few great tunes - you can hear the origins of some of his best stuff in a handful of tracks, but I'm not too keen on the country and western styles used on a few, and one or two... Read more
Published 9 months ago by M. Wiltshire

5.0 out of 5 stars His finest work...
This albums conjures up so many memories for me going back to the late 80s in my late teens, dark winter nights in the rain listening to this on my walkman, the times I would... Read more
Published 18 months ago by Donkey Rhubarb

5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant!
Everyone should own this cd!
Everything about it is bang on!
Booming drums on before the bullfight sound ace! Read more
Published on 22 Jun 2007 by PhilthyPhil

5.0 out of 5 stars A light of empathy
Gone to earth reflects David Sylvians ability to change a everyday song into something spectacular. His use of japanese musicians and unusual background sounds blend into one to... Read more
Published on 6 Jan 2007 by Waterman

4.0 out of 5 stars A monumental work of extraordinary beauty
This started off as an instrumental work (what was originally disc 2 on vinyl). Virgin wanted songs, so Sylvian gave 'em songs - and boy what songs they were. Read more
Published on 7 Jan 2004 by Timothy Hooper

5.0 out of 5 stars Finally, the CD version covers the complete album
This is by far the best Sylvian album. Although the other solo pieces contain brilliant songs (especially nostalgia from brilliant trees) this is --as a whole-- an amazing album... Read more
Published on 4 Nov 2003 by pimmy71

5.0 out of 5 stars Laughter and 'Never Forgotten...'
This is a sensuous and absorbing album. From the Russell Mills cover art to the lush, layered sounds and lyrics. Read more
Published on 30 Aug 2003 by Jem Boughey

4.0 out of 5 stars Reissue of 1986's double album.
Gone to Earth (whose title comes from either a 1950 Powell&Pressburger film or a Barclay James Harvest album)was the epic double album which followed Sylvian's initial solo works... Read more
Published on 25 Jul 2003 by Jason Parkes

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