By now, you’re probably know for my love of Gentle Giant
since 2002. With Steven Wilson handling the new mixes and 5.1 mix he’s done
with The Power and the Glory back in
2014, Octopus in 2015, and now this
year the release of the Three Piece
Suite, it’s going to be quite a very interesting experience to discover
these 10 tracks that cover the first three albums when Phil Shulman was in the
band before departing to start a family after the release of their fourth album, Octopus.
The first three albums (Gentle
Giant, Acquiring the Taste, and Three
Friends) were originally released on the Vertigo label from 1970 to 1972
and the band formed out of the ashes of Simon Dupree and the Big Sound. The
band wanted to move away from their pop/psychedelic sound into something that
was complex, multi-part vocal arrangements, heavier, classical, and different
time signatures.
The ten tracks came from the limited availability of the
surviving multi-track tapes that Steven worked on by using Logic as the
software and Universal Audio plug-ins while cleaning up the sound of bringing
some clarity and information from the instrumental pieces that are on here.
I’ve mentioned this many times, Steven is not trying to re-write history, but
to honor and stay true to the original mixes as much as he can while bringing a
different perspective on them.
Not everyone is going to like what he does on the classic
albums on the 5.1 mixes, but it gives a sight on what was buried in those
multi-tracks. You have the opening track Giant
which begin with the lyrics “The
birth of a realization/the rise of a high expectation.” It gives Derek’s
vocals coming in front as he sings after the rising organ sound from Kerry
Minnear, rumbling bass by Ray, and the booming drums done by Martin Smith.
The piece has this nod to Frank Zappa as if he was watching
them just being in awe of what they’re accomplishing by doing a stop-and-go
moments from the beginning and in the end section where it comes to an abrupt
halt. The mysterious melody tones between, guitar, bass, and piano on The House, The Street, The Room is very
clear in the remix as the song deals with scoring drugs while the nod to the
story of The Life of Gargantua and of
Pantagruel on Pantagruel’s Nativity, Minnear’s
vocals shine followed by the Mellotron and the vocalizations between Derek’s
haunting momentum and Gary’s riffs send a chill down my spine along with the
xylophone and tambourine which is very clear, is mesmerizing.
Schooldays which
almost as if it was recorded during the One
Size Fits All-era, paints a retrospective looking back at the time the band
remember their days as young man in school as both Phil Shulman and Kerry Minnear’s
reverb vocals go back and forth followed by Calvin Shulman’s cameo vocals in
the second half of the story. Gary Green for me, he’s been overlooked in the
history of the Progressive Rock movement during its golden-era. He never gets
the recognition he deserves.
When you listen to the 12-bar blues shuffle at the end
section of Why Not? He mixing both
Jazz, Classical, and the Blues rolled into one. From its rocking riffs with a
Blackmore-sque style to the climatic end to delve into the Blues Rock momentum
with Kerry’s organ in hot pursuit, he is powerful and the band give him a
chance to come in front to deliver the goods from Wilson’s remix on the track
along with the reverb midsection part of classical turned hard rock effects of Peel the Paint.
Three Friends is a
symphonic ending of the suite which you can imagine on their third album comes
full circle. It has some of the King Crimson-sque vibes between Malcolm
Mortimore’s drumming, Gary’s guitar, Vocalizations, and the Mellotron coming to
bring everything to know that the road to moving forward is not always easy,
but remembering the good times that you had as a youth.
The bonus track contains Freedom’s
Child which originally appeared in the 2-CD set, Under Construction 20 years ago, has not only a ballad, but with a
country, soul, and touching composition that Minnear wrote. It is not only a
beautiful song, but you could tell that the Shulman brothers already went
through that passage through their Simon Dupree years and wanted to do
something to move beyond the singles. And the 7-inch edit that Wilson did on
the acoustic eerie reflection turned mind-blowing composition, Nothing At All.
The liner notes are done by Innerviews: Music Without Borders writer Anil Prasad including
interviews with the band, Steven Wilson, and Tony Visconti who produced the
first two albums. Anil has also done the liner notes for the 2015 reissue of Octopus and of course Levin Brothers, but I’m off-topic. It’s
a great history covering the first three albums and it shows how much
appreciation they had working on these albums.
The DVD/Blu-Ray contains short films of the ten tracks which
include the construction of a building in New York on Giant done by Yael Shulman, Noah Shulman doing an amazing animated
storytelling with Peel The Paint, Lior
Wix’s animation of a young woman looking at the river of reflecting back with Nothing At All, The pictures of the
adventures of Gargantua and Pantagruel from the Pantagruel’s Nativity lyric video that I could imagine Terry
Gilliam would one day do a film of, and pictures of the band members as they
were young reflecting on Schooldays.
It also contains the first three albums in its original mix
with a flat transfer and instrumental versions of the songs. You could tell
watching these animated and live action music videos is almost as if Gentle
Giant were carrying the torches of Disney’s Fantasia
and bringing it to life done the right way possible. Let’s hope next year
Steven does a 5.1 mix of their seventh studio album, Free Hand. And in the words of Francois Rabelais, “I go to seek a great perhaps.”
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