Journey To The Centre Of The Earth

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Journey To The Centre Of The Earth album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 4   Total Length: 40:08

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The album that introduced me to Wakeman

ChetBakerFan

I found this album not too long after it came out, and was intrigued. I love science fiction, I love being told a story, and I was just beginning to love Rock (as opposed to AM Pop), so it seemed perfect. I devoted many evenings to this, just lying there on my bed listening to the (then) other-worldly moog passages, the insightful orchestrations, the great vocals, and David Hemmings' narration. This is a great idea, and a great album as well. One of the most important live albums of the 1970s. Plus you won't have to get up and flip the record in the middle of the story like I did. ?

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They Say All Music Guide

Journey to the Centre of the Earth is one of progressive rock’s crowning achievements. With the help of the London Symphony Orchestra and the English Chamber Choir, Rick Wakeman turns this classic Jules Verne tale into an exciting and suspenseful instrumental narrative. The story is told by David Hemmings in between the use of Wakeman’s keyboards, especially the powerful Hammond organ and the innovative Moog synthesizer, and when coupled with the prestigious sound of the orchestra, creates the album’s fairy tale-like climate. Recorded at London’s Royal Festival Hall, the tale of a group of explorers who wander into the fantastic living world that exists in the Earth’s core is told musically through Wakeman’s synthesized theatrics and enriched by the haunting vocals of a chamber choir. Broken into four parts, the album’s most riveting segment, entitled “The Battle,” involves Wakeman’s most furious synthesized attack, churning and swirling the keyboards into a mass instrumental hysteria. With both “The Journey” and “The Forest,” it’s the effective use of the strings and percussion section of the London Symphony Orchestra that causes the elements of fantasy and myth to emerge from the album’s depths. The gorgeous voice of Ashley Holt is effectively prominent, and some interesting guitar work via Mike Egan arises occasionally but meritoriously amidst the keyboard fervor. The whole of Journey to the Centre of the Earth still stands as one of the most interesting conglomerations of orchestral and synthesized music, and it is truly one of Wakeman’s most flamboyant projects. [The album was issued digitally in 1988.] – Mike DeGagne

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