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Our Time in Eden
(CD, 1992)

Primary Artist: 10,000 Maniacs

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$7.98
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Format: CD
Sep 1992
Record Label: Elektra Entertainment
Recording Type: Studio
UPC: 075596138529
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Track Listing
1. Noah's Dove
2. These Are Days
3. Eden
4. Few and Far Between
5. Stockton Gala Days
6. Gold Rush Brides
7. Jezebel
8. How You've Grown
9. Candy Everybody Wants
10. Tolerance
11. Circle Dream
12. If You Intend
13. I'm Not the Man

Details
Producer:Paul Fox
Distributor:WEA (Distributor)
Recording Type:Studio
Recording Mode:Stereo
SPAR Code:n/a

Album Notes
10,000 Maniacs: Natalie Merchant (vocals, piano); Rob Buck (guitar, sitar, banjo, mandocello); Dennis Drew (accordion, piano, organ, keyboards); Steve Gustafson (bass); Jerome Augustyniak (drums, percussion).
Additional personnel: Mary Ramsey (violin, viola); Bruce Dukov, Ralph Morrison (violin); Pamela Goldsmith (viola); Larry Corbett (cello); Kim Laskowski, Atsuko Sato (bassoon); Charles Fleischer (harmonica); Maceo Parker (alto saxophone); Alfred "Pee Wee" Ellis (tenor saxophone); Fred Wesley (trombone); Paulinho Da Costa (percussion).
Recorded at Bearsville Studios, Bearsville, New York.
On their fifth album, 10,000 Maniacs adopt a lush, full sound that more thoughtfully integrates Natalie Merchant's vocals with the rest of the band. The balance also allows her the option to rise above the mix to far greater effect. Throughout the album, keyboardist Dennis Drew shines, especially on "Gold Rush Brides" and on the title track, where his playing adds tremendous depth to Merchant's tales of loss and loneliness.
On both "Few & Far Between" and "Candy Everybody Wants," James Brown's horn section brings a previously absent Motown flavor to the Maniacs' folk-rock sound. The rhythm section provides an extremely sturdy backbone for Robert Buck's subtle guitar playing and understated violins on "Stockton Gala Days," EDEN's standout track. "Jezebel" concludes with a powerful, soaring string section after a long introduction that pairs Drew's keyboards with Merchant's vocals. "The sound you're hearing, the sound you're fearing is the hate that parades up and down our streets," announces Merchant over the distorted guitars of "Tolerance"'s chorus, offsetting the much sweeter-sounding verses. The album ends on the chilling notes of "I'm Not the Man," a wrongfully accused man's first-person narrative set to plaintive viola.

Industry Reviews
4 Stars - Excellent - ...[a] gripping new album, infus[ed] with a provocative, unnerving power...[singer] Merchant's voice provides continual sensual pleasure...the Maniacs are far less restrained, though no less disciplined...
Rolling Stone (10/01/1992)

Recommended - ...it's not hard to drink half a bottle of red wine and go all weepy-eyed at EDEN'S soft revelations about the sadness in life and the joy in the moment...
Spin (11/01/1992)

4 Stars - Excellent - ...Natalie Merchant's yearning has never been more keenly pitched, nor set in tunes of such exquisite yet pensive refulgence...an album which will yield more secrets with each play...
Q (11/01/1992)


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