Album Reviews
All of the band's classic moments are collected on Crystal Days. A completist's compilation, this four-disc set features lots of unreleased songs, demos and alternate versions, along with witty tributes from Pavement and the Flaming Lips in the liner notes. But most important, Crystal Days suggests that Echo's songwriting, with their evocative lyrics and sweeping Ennio Morricone-esque atmosphere, produced some contemporary standards. McCulloch mentions in the liner notes that he would have loved to hear Sinatra essay Echo's haunting signature "The Killing Moon," and gorgeous epics such as "Ocean Rain" wouldn't have been bad by Ol' Blue Eyes, either. Echo were unafraid to move from tribal drums to orchestras, and the swirling-dervish hit "The Cutter" may be the best pop utilization of Indian strings since fellow Liverpudlians the Beatles got into the mystic. Scrappy live versions of songs by Television, the Doors, the Rolling Stones and Jonathan Richman provide additional peeks into Echo's source lab. The "Sweet Jane" chords of Flowers' "Buried Alive" dovetail nicely with the box set's Velvet Underground covers, and both releases prove that Echo's crystal days haven't shattered yet.
(Posted: Aug 20, 2001)
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- King Of Kings
- Supermellow Man
- Hide and Seek
- Make Me Shine
- It's Alright
- Buried Alive
- Flowers
- Everybody Knows
- Life Goes On
- An Eternity Turns
- Burn For Me
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