Details

Track Listing 1. Show of Strength 2. With a Hip 3. Over the Wall 4. It Was a Pleasure 5. Promise, A 6. Heaven up Here 7. Disease, The 8. All My Colours 9. No Dark Things 10. Turquoise Days 11. All I Want 12. Broke My Neck - (long version) 13. Show of Strength - (previously unreleased, live) 14. Disease, The - (previously unreleased, live) 15. All I Want - (previously unreleased, live) 16. Zimbo - (previously unreleased, live)
| Details | | Producer: | Hugh Jones | | Distributor: | WEA (Distributor) | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Echo & The Bunnymen: Ian McCulloch (vocals, guitar); Will Sergeant (guitar); Les Pattinson (bass); Pete De Freitas (drums). Additional personnel: Leslie Penny (woodwinds). Recorded at Rockfield Studios, Monmouth, England. Originally released on Sire (3569). Includes liner notes by Max Bell. Though it yielded only one minor hit single in the band's native England, HEAVEN UP HERE is considered by many to be the ultimate Echo and the Bunnymen album. The album is drenched in an aura of mystery that is fueled by the swirling, epic sound of guitarist Will Sergeant and drummer Pete De Freitas. The music is so powerful that singer Ian McCulloch's vague, almost nonsensical lyrics take on a profundity. While tracks like "The Disease," a desolate two-chord sound-poem based on a solitary rhythm guitar and a haunting recorder passage, do feature some incisive lyrics, most of McCulloch's words seem intent on reinforcing the dark, brooding atmosphere of the music. The opening "Show of Strength," a soaring song that is driven by one of Sergeant's gripping guitar passages, sets the tone for the album, creating a heroic soundscape that crests with the majesty of "A Promise." The latter is a hypnotic song in which drummer DeFritas showcases his explosive style and McCulloch provides one the most compelling vocal performances of his career. While HEAVEN UP HERE may lack the hit singles that made the Bunnymen alternative-radio favorites throughout the '80s, it is a classic rock album and arguably the Bunnymen's finest hour.
Industry Reviews Ranked #39 in NME's list of The 50 Greatest Albums Of The '80s. NME (09/25/1993)
Ranked #51 in NME's list of the 'Greatest Albums Of All Time.' NME (10/02/1993)
5 stars out of 5 - It transcended the era's sonic specifics and still grips the heart. Mojo (12/01/2003)
4 stars out of 5 - ...[With] strung-out defiance turning to emotionless candour and back to defiance... Q (12/01/2003)
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