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SYLVIAN, DAVID - EVERYTHING AND NOTHING


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ARTIST:
TITLE:
Everything And Nothing
LABEL:
CATNO:
6504857
FORMAT:
Vinyl record
DESCRIPTION:
3x12" LP Compilation - 1st Time On Vinjyl - First time on vinyl for David Sylvian’s 29-track career-spanning compilation from 2000. Features key songs from Japan and Rain Tree Crow, as well as David’s Virgin Records solo years. Also includes key collaborations with Ryuichi Sakamoto, Robert Fripp and Alesini and Andreoni.

Alongside the remixes of “Ghosts” and “Bamboo Houses”, the album features tracks such as the beautiful ‘Ride’ from the ‘Secrets of the Beehive’ sessions, two dobro pieces written with Bill Frizell and “Cover Me with Flowers” from the ‘Dead Bees On A Cake’ sessions, plus the classic “Some Kind of Fool’ taken from Japan’s sessions for ‘Gentleman Take Polaroids’.

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£42.99
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CUE
MP3
a1
The Scent Of Magnolia (5:36) – David Sylvian
a2
Heartbeat (Tainai Kaiki II) - Remix ( 5:17) – Ryuichi Sakamoto & David Sylvian
a3
Blackwater (4:22) – Rain Tree Crow
a4
Albuquerque (Dobro #6) (1:22) – David Sylvian
a5
Ride (8:00) – David Sylvian
b1
The Golden Way – Remix (5:54) – David Sylvian, Alesini & Andreoni
b2
Ghosts – Remix (3:47) – David Sylvian & Japan
b3
Pop Song (4:30) – David Sylvian
b4
Every Colour You Are (4:44) Rain Tree Crow
b5
Godman (3:58) – David Sylvian
c1
God’s Monkey (4:09) – David Sylvian & Robert Fripp
c2
Let The Happiness In (5:37) – David Sylvian
c3
I Surrender (9:24) – David Sylvian
c4
Thoroughly Lost To Logic (1:17) – David Sylvian
d1
Jean The Birdman (4:12) – David Sylvian & Robert Fripp
d2
Cover Me With Flowers (6:33) David Sylvian
d3
The Boy With The Gun (5:15) – David Sylvian
d4
Riverman (4:56) – David Sylvian
d5
Aparna & Nimisha (Dobro #5) (0:56) – David Sylvian
e1
Midnight Sun (4:02) – David Sylvian
e2
Orpheus (4:48) – David Sylvian
e3
Some Kind Of Fool -2000 (7:31) – David Sylvian & Japan
e4
Cries And Whispers (2:33) – Rain Tree Crow
e5
Wanderlust (6:41) – David Sylvian
f1
Laughter And Forgetting (2:33) – David Sylvian
f2
Buoy- Remix (5:15) – Mick Karn Featuring David Sylvian
f3
Weathered Wall – Remix (5:43) – David Sylvian
f4
Bamboo Houses – Remix (5:21) - David Sylvian & Ryuichi Sakamoto
f5
Come Morning- Remix (3:56) – David Sylvian, Alesini & Andreoni

Last FM Information on David Sylvian

Please note the information is done on a artist keyword match and data is provided by LastFM.
David Sylvian (born David Alan Batt, February 23 1958, in Beckenham, Kent, UK) is an English singer, musician and composer who first rose to fame as the lead vocalist and main songwriter of the band Japan, and whose subsequent solo career has been influenced by a variety of musical styles and genres, including jazz, ambient music and electronic music. Japan, which also included Mick Karn, Rob Dean, Richard Barbieri and Sylvian's brother Steve Jansen, started out as a confusing hybrid rock/sleaze outfit in the mould of David Bowie and The New York Dolls. Their music quickly evolved as, at least to begin with, they drew heavily on the influence of Roxy Music's art rock stylings. Their visual image developed in parallel and the band were (unwillingly) tagged as forerunners of the New Romantic movement. Japan recorded five studio albums between March 1978 and November 1981. Their biggest hit single, the minimalist Ghosts, which reached the Top 5 in the UK charts in 1982, was a clear pointer to Sylvian's future direction. After a successful tour, the band split in late 1982, and Sylvian embarked upon a solo career. Around the time of Sylvian's first solo album he collaborated with 坂本龍一 (Ryuichi Sakamoto) on the soundtrack music for the Nagisa Oshima film Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence (1983), which produced a Top 20 hit single, Forbidden Colours. Sylvian's debut solo album, the jazz and ambient-influenced Brilliant Trees (1984), met with critical acclaim and yielded the single Red Guitar, another Top 20 hit. Guest artists included Jon Hassell and Holger Czukay. His follow-up was an instrumental EP Alchemy which cemented his drift away from commercial pop The EP was in turn followed by the double album Gone to Earth (1986), which flouted convention (and perhaps commercial wisdom) by featuring one record of songs (predominantly atmospheric ballads) and one consisting almost entirely of ambient instrumental tracks. Guest artists included guitarists Robert Fripp and Bill Nelson. His third album, Secrets of the Beehive (1987), was more acoustic and oriented towards somber, emotive ballads laced with string arrangements by 坂本龍一 (Ryuichi Sakamoto). It yielded one of Sylvian's most well-received songs, Orpheus, and was supported by his first solo tour, 1988's "In Praise of Shamans". Sylvian's touring band included ex-Japan bandmates Jansen and Barbieri along with trumpeter Mark Isham, bassist Ian Maidman and guitarists David Torn and Robbie Aceto. Never one to conform to commercial expectations, Sylvian then collaborated on several ambient music projects with artists including Holger Czukay and Russell Mills. In 1991, a highly-anticipated Japan reunion (excluding Rob Dean) ended in acrimony. Sylvian insisted on calling the project and the album Rain Tree Crow, to the dismay of both his label Virgin Records (who were hoping for a hit "comeback" album) and his former bandmates. Guitarists Bill Nelson, Phil Palmer and Michael Brook augmented the quartet for the recording of the album. In late 1991, Robert Fripp approached Sylvian and asked him to be part of a new King Crimson. Sylvian declined and instead suggested they work on a future collaboration resulting in the release of The First Day. A period of relative musical inactivity followed, during which time Sylvian moved to the United States. Eventually in 1999, Sylvian released Dead Bees on a Cake. It showed the most eclectic influence of all his recordings, ranging from soul music to jazz fusion to Eastern spiritual chants, and most of the songs' lyrics reflecting Sylvian's inner peace with his marriage (to the wonderful poet/singer Ingrid Chavez), family and beliefs. Guest artists included longtime friend 坂本龍一 (Ryuichi Sakamoto), as well as Talvin Singh, Marc Ribot, Kenny Wheeler and Bill Frisell. Sylvian parted ways with Virgin and launched his own independent label, Samadhi Sound. Sylvian experimented alone with treated sounds made from his guitar and computer. The results were recorded during February of 2003. A few months later, he released the album Blemish. The disc was stark in its sound and content. The lyrical subject matter dealt primarily with the impending dissolution of Sylvian's marriage. In 2005 The Good Son vs The Only Daughter was released, which was comprised of remixes of tracks from Blemish. With the conclusion of "A Fire In The Forest Tour" in 2004, work resumed on a joint project between Sylvian and Jansen. Yet the course of the album took on a completely new tone after Sylvian decided to add keyboardist/vibraphonist/programmer Burnt Friedman to the proceedings and make him an equal partner in the collaboration. The band name of Nine Horses was adopted and the CD, titled Snow Borne Sorrow, was released in October of 2005. The sound was a return to more traditional avenues for Sylvian after the radical departure he took with Blemish. Elements of avant-garde jazz, pop, folk and electronic music were all blended together Nine Horses' Money For All EP was released in 2006, which included new material as well as Burnt Friedman remixes of songs selected from their first disc. News on Sylvian's website was released in March stating that "We're preparing for the release of David’s new album Manafon. It’s a powerfully bold, uncompromising work featuring contributions from Evan Parker, John Tilbury, Keith Rowe, Christian Fennesz, Otomo Yoshihide, and many more." David Sylvian's official website: www.davidsylvian.com Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.