Air Conditioning

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (14 ratings)
Air Conditioning album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 45:04

Write a Review 3 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Just as good as I remembered

ianj

In college in the UK when this first came out........memories!!

user avatar

Live

aluap345

Saw Curved Air live in Boston way back when. Finally got the album and will probably get the others.

user avatar

Contagious

zoot_the_muppet

Of the three Curved Air albums available here, I find 'Second Album' the best. BUT, I must admit, all 3 albums are not what they seem. At first listen, they are quirky yet strangely beautiful. Then for some silly reason, once they finish, you want to hear them all over again, and the second and third and fourth times through, they get better and better. I had never heard of this band but downloaded all 3 albums just based on the 30-second snippet. I'm glad I did. Now I wish eM would bring on more from Curved Air's catalogue.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

In its initial vinyl form, Curved Air’s debut album is one of the prog rock movement’s most prized artifacts — not for the music (for that, it goes without saying, is flawless), but for the picture-disc format which had never previously graced a 12″ rock record. A glimmering of that sought-after magnificence lives on, of course, in the artwork which has graced every subsequent release, this Collectors’ Choice reissue included. Sadly, however, no other attempt is made to replicate the original jewel; indeed, beyond a straightforward dub of the album, Air Conditioning’s American CD debut is something of a disappointment. No bonus tracks, no liner notes, no remastering — nothing, in fact, beyond one of the finest classical rock fusions of the age. Curved Air were an unwieldy beast at the best of times, an uneasy liaison between Sonja Kristina’s rampant rock sensibilities and her bandmates’ undisguised virtuosity. Keyboard player Francis Monkman, in particular, led the group into some genuinely uncharted territory — it was he who named the group after a Terry Riley composition; he who consumed side two of each album for a series of wild experiments, most of which incorporate acoustic folk, free form jazz, and a hefty dose of Vivaldi. Not that this was a bad thing. Indeed, Air Conditioning rates among the great debut albums of 1970s rock, a hybrid whose breathless audacity stands in starkly good-natured contrast to the po-faced noodlings of the genre’s other leading progenitors. Even in full, fanciful flight (the instrumental “Rob One” or the sawing discordant “Vivaldi”), you can hear the band enjoying themselves, as Darryl Way’s violin soars to pitches unknown to rocking man, the immortally named Florian Pilkington-Miksa conjures brand new rhythms from his percussive arsenal and Monkman. Well, Monkman is as Monkman does, but even when you know what’s going to happen next, a frill or a flourish still leaps out to surprise you. Kristina, meanwhile, possesses one of the most distinctive voices of the age, a virtue which is apparent from the moment she enters on the opening “It Happens Today.” Hints of Grace Slick enter her delivery during the Airplane-like “Stretch,” but it’s a fleeting comparison. By the time you hit “Propositions,” all echoed riffs and space age synth, Curved Air don’t sound like anything else on earth. You do, however, notice how many subsequent bands sound a lot like them. – Dave Thompson

more »