Dream Within a Dream [Instrumental] - Alan Parsons, Parsons, Alan [1]
The Raven - Alan Parsons, Parsons, Alan [1]
The Tell-Tale Heart - Alan Parsons, Parsons, Alan [1]
The Cask of Amontillado - Alan Parsons, Parsons, Alan [1]
(The System Of) Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether - Alan Parsons, Parsons, Alan [1]
The Fall of the House of Usher: Prelude [Instrumental] - Alan Parsons, Parsons
The Fall of the House of Usher: Arrival [Instrumental] - Alan Parsons, Parsons
The Fall of the House of Usher: Intermezzo [Instrumental] - Alan Parsons, Parsons
The Fall of the House of Usher: Pavane [Instrumental] - Alan Parsons, Parsons
The Fall of the House of Usher: Fall [Instrumental] - Alan Parsons, Parsons
To One in Paradise - Alan Parsons, Parsons, Alan [1]
The Raven [Original Demo][*] - Alan Parsons, Woolfson, Eric
Edgar [Demo of an Unreleased Track][#] - Alan Parsons, Woolfson, Eric
Orson Welles Radio Spot [*] - Alan Parsons, Parsons, Alan [1]
Interview with Alan Parsons and Eric Woolfson [1976][*] - Alan Parsons, Parsons, Alan [1]
Track Listings (15) - Disc #2
A Dream Within a Dream [1987 Remix][Instrumental] - Alan Parsons, Parsons, Alan [1]
The Raven [1987 Remix] - Alan Parsons, Parsons, Alan [1]
The Tell-Tale Heart [1987 Remix] - Alan Parsons, Parsons, Alan [1]
The Cask of Amontillado [1987 Remix] - Alan Parsons, Parsons, Alan [1]
(The System Of) Dr. Tarr and Professor Fether [1987 Remix] - Alan Parsons, Parsons, Alan [1]
The Fall of the House of Usher: Prelude [1987 Remix] - Alan Parsons, Parsons
The Fall of the House of Usher: Arrival [1987 Remix] - Alan Parsons, Parsons
The Fall of the House of Usher: Intermezzo [1987 Remix] - Alan Parsons, Parsons
The Fall of the House of Usher: Pavane [1987 Remix] - Alan Parsons, Parsons
The Fall of the House of Usher: Fall [1987 Remix] - Alan Parsons, Parsons
To One in Paradise [1987 Remix] - Alan Parsons, Parsons, Alan [1]
Eric's Guide Vocal Medley [*] - Alan Parsons, Parsons, Alan [1]
Orson Welles Dialogue [*] - Alan Parsons, Parsons, Alan [1]
Sea Lions in the Departure Lounge: Sound Effects and Experiments [*] - Alan Parsons, Parsons, Alan [1]
GBH Mix: Unreleased Experiments [#][*] - Alan Parsons, Woolfson, Eric
2007 digitally remastered two CD Deluxe Edition of the debut album from the Alan Parsons Project. featuring the original 1976 mix of the album, the 1987 remix and eight previously unreleased bonus tracks! Recorded at Abbey... more » Road in 1975 and released in 1976, the idea for the Project came from manager and writer Eric Woolfson, who saw his role as an auteur, bringing together some of the greatest talents in music to bring to life Poe?s sinister, gothic tales. Enlisting the white-hot production whiz-kid Alan Parsons, fresh from his work with Wings and Pink Floyd, the duo set about making dreams reality. The album remains a singular, compelling work and can be seen as a bridge between Pink Floyd?s Dark Side Of The Moon and Jeff Wayne?s War Of The Worlds. Universal.« less
2007 digitally remastered two CD Deluxe Edition of the debut album from the Alan Parsons Project. featuring the original 1976 mix of the album, the 1987 remix and eight previously unreleased bonus tracks! Recorded at Abbey Road in 1975 and released in 1976, the idea for the Project came from manager and writer Eric Woolfson, who saw his role as an auteur, bringing together some of the greatest talents in music to bring to life Poe?s sinister, gothic tales. Enlisting the white-hot production whiz-kid Alan Parsons, fresh from his work with Wings and Pink Floyd, the duo set about making dreams reality. The album remains a singular, compelling work and can be seen as a bridge between Pink Floyd?s Dark Side Of The Moon and Jeff Wayne?s War Of The Worlds. Universal.
Definitive version of "Tales of Mystery and Imagination"
Wayne Klein | My Little Blue Window, USA | 10/07/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"The definitive edition of "Tales of Mystery and Imagination" has finally been released. While I liked the 1987 remix with Orson Welles' narration, I prefer the 1976 version because that's the version I grew up listening to. Alan Parsons has gone back and remastered the original analog tapes for this edition for the 1976 and the 1987 from the digital remix tape for that edition as well.
This edition does lack the dynamic range of the original CD (and record for that matter)and does suffer from some compression issues but the content is still five star material. If you want the original mix of the album and can't find the Mo-Fi, this is the way to go just be aware that this is louder than the older editions.
Although the bonus tracks are hardly essential, it does show where Eric Woolfson (who came up with the concept, was an essential part of the Alan Parsons Project--as Parsons pointed out it could as easily have been called the Eric Woolfson Project but Parsons was better known, Woolfson acted as Parsons manager and co-wrote the bulk of the material with him except for one song that Woolfson wrote solo)developed many of the ideas that ended up on the final album. The first disc is the 1976 edition and the 1987 is the second with each having bonus tracks. Some of the bonus tracks consist of Welles' unused narration, the radio spots, a compilation of Eric's guide vocals for each track, various sound experiments and Eric's original demos for "The Raven" and "Edgar" (which wasn't used). We also get a very good 8 minute interview that says much of what is written in the booklet.
The booklet has all the lyrics (and much of the original artwork from the 1976 booklet), credits, mention of what's different about each track (some were just digitally remixed while others have additional instruments recorded or new guitar solos). There's also an essay about the making of the album, biographies of both Parsons and Woolfson as well as a brief mention of what each of the musicians are best known for outside of their contributions to the APP.
A good remaster and the definitive combination of BOTH versions of the album, I'd highly recommend this edition to fans who missed out on purchasing the Mofi Gold Version that is currently selling for nearly $100.00."
Finally......
R. St Pierre | Fairhaven MA | 07/17/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I have three copies of the Mobile Fidelity version of this CD from 1994 (because it's so great and I got a couple of them used), but aside from that, you couldn't get the 1976 version of this album on CD until now. I'm amazed that it took so long to release this version. The remastering job that was done on this entire package is amazing, and the booklet and photos show how much care was put into this edition. Doesn't matter whether you prefer the '76 or '87 versions, they both sound phenominal.
As for me, I prefer the '76 version because it sounds much more haunting, especially "Fall of the House of Usher". I would never argue with what Orson Welles' narration brought to the newer version, it's great. I just feel that the older version was more organic and more intense. This is one of those albums to put on headphones after midnight and listen start to finish. It doesn't even seem like separate songs, it's one whole piece with so many different moods that set up each other.
For example, after the "Prelude" to "Fall of the House of Usher", cracks of thunder, an ominous organ, and then a deceptively pleasant melody for "Arrival", and then Intermezzo, which sounds eerie enough itself before "Pavane". This is such a gentle piece with mainly harpsichord and harp that sets up and gradually segues into the brutal "Fall". This part is so much more frightening on the '76 version, and part of it is due to the way it begins creeping through in the last 30 seconds of "Pavane". I'm sure you'll get a chill from "Fall", especially if you've closed your eyes and imagined the story of the "Fall of the House of Usher" through each part. Finally, after that, "To One in Paradise", which sounds like Poe's biography in four minutes. Or, as Eric Woolfson put it, an epitaph.
With some Alan Parsons fans who are only familiar with the albums from "I Robot" on, you might not know about this one because it was originally issued on another label and took so long to be released on CD (at least, the original version was). Also, it didn't really have any hit singles, even though a couple were released and didn't chart all that high. Don't miss out on this new reissue. In addition to getting both versions, you get some great bonus tracks that feature an informative interview with Parsons and Woolfson, some demos, and the great original Orson Welles voice parts.
Finally, I need to take a minute here. Kudos to a classic rock station in Kansas City, I think it was KYYS. I was there in 2004, and they not only played "System of Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether", but they played the original version!"
ABSOLUTELY SUPERB EDITION
BOB | LOS ANGELES, CA | 07/02/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"
This set caps the re-release of the first four AP-supervised remastered titles (three more to follow in September '07, and the final three in December).
For this edition, for the first time on CD, we finally get the original 1976 mix of the album that started it all. While I definitely prefer the '87 remix, there are passages in the original I also enjoy, so it's great to finally be able to compare the two, especially in glorious, remastered form.
In the additional material, there are two excellent spoken-word pieces: One, Orson Welles' entire original recitation, sans music/effects, and also a very enjoyable 8+ minute 1976 radio interview with AP and EW.
The booklet is a wonderful, detailed labor of love, with a great essay.
If you're an APP fan, this is an absolute must-own."
A masterpiece reimagined...
William M. Feagin | Upstate New York, USA | 09/17/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"The very concept might be daunting to most musicians...but then, Alan Parsons and Eric Woolfson aren't (and never were) most musicians. For a first effort from such an outfit, they don't come much better or more ambitious than Tales of Mystery & Imagination. Putting works of literature to music is a task not everyone is up to--Camel attempted something like this with Paul Gallico's novel "The Snow Goose," but their work was entirely instrumental (and gave the record company fits for that very reason, although it has truly stood the test of time). Here, the APP adapt the words of these works as lyrics; we hear Alan Parsons through Vocoder on "The Raven" along with Leonard Whiting (actor best known for his role as Romeo in Franco Zeffirelli's filmed version of "Romeo and Juliet" from 1968) delivering that poem detailing the events of a "midnight dark and dreary." We get Arthur Brown's ("Fire," his big from 1968) tortured delivery of "The Tell-Tale Heart," and the quieter (yet no less tortured) John Miles on the always-chilling "The Cask of Amontillado." "The Fall of the House of Usher" is the true tour de force here, a genuinely scary piece of music. Both that track and the album opener "A Dream Within a Dream" are plenty chilling even without Orson Welles' narrative on the original 1976 album, but Welles' narrative adds something that is undeniably dramatic and certainly adds to the atmosphere on the 1987 remix.
Add here the 8 bonus tracks--4 on each disc--that give some insights into the creative process behind the album, and you've got a Deluxe Edition truly worthy of that appellation. Highly recommended."
A Worthy Packaging of One of the Most Unique Albums Ever Rec
Parrish A. Highley | Somewhere I've Never Travelled | 11/20/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"What makes the first "Project" so great is that there had been nothing like it before and there has yet to be anything quite like it since. When I asked Alan Parsons how he saw his artistic legacy, he replied that his partnership with Eric Woolfson was somewhat trend-setting at the time. There had been producing songwriters like Lee Hazelwood who would write material for Nancy Sinatra to sing, but the concrete partnership between a producer and a songwriter was a bit of an oddity in 1975. The result was the first "producers' album" (please note the location of the apostrophe) in modern recording history. Eric Woolfson's affinity for not only the prose and poetry of Edgar Allan Poe but for the author's humanity as well culminates in the closing epic To One In Paradise which was written and sung from the point of view of troubled writer himself.
When I listened to the demos that Eric Woolfson created on his own prior to meeting Alan Parsons, it occured to me just how fortuitous their then-friendship would become. The songs that Woolfson composed were catchy, clever, and even witty at times, but they lacked a much needed refinement to make them appeal to a larger audience. The bonus material in this deluxe edition is every bit a testament to Parsons' ability to hone a diamond in the rough as it is to Woolfson's songwriting prowess. As an ardent fan of both artists, I'm just really thankful these two gentlemen bumped into each other in the cafeteria at Abbey Road and managed to see eye to eye.
The original liner notes from 1976 failed to mention The Fall Of The House Of Usher: Prelude was Andrew Powell's orchestral arrangement of an unfinished composition by none other than Claude Debussy called "La chute de maison Usher" from the French. Parson's liner notes from the 1987 remaster corrected this oversight, but these new liner notes focus almost entirely on the artistic identity of The Alan Parsons Project. I wonder if any casual fan would even bother to read these, but ardent fans certainly will. In short, I think a schism can be avoided if one considers how similar the artistic identity here mirrors the artistic identity of the works of William Shakespeare. Many, like myself, believe Edward de Vere, the 17th Earl of Oxford, actually wrote the Sonnets, Histories, and Tragedies while William Shakespeare wrote the comedies that together comprise the Shakespearean canon. However, that analogy falters somewhat in that the identity of Edward de Vere was genuinely hidden from the rest of the world whereas Eric Woolfson's was not.
For those reluctant to spend the sum necessary to purchase the Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab release of the original 1976 mix, this package does offer a nice alternative. Most audiophiles will almost certainly prefer the dynamic range of the aforementioned MFSL release as well as the 1987 remix, but for those who listen to music on smaller portable systems, in the car, or on headphones this version will likely be more than satisfactory. While I do wish that this deluxe edition was available on Sony's Super Audio CD, I'm not about to give up hope that it may someday. To hear this work of art in quadraphonic surround with the Orson Welles narrations occupying the center channel would be a A Dream Within A Dream come true!
Largely misunderstood by the vacuous music press of the day, Tales of Mystery and Imagination gained the recognition it so richly deserved over time. That this work of art would be so bedevilled with such bad press seems almost too appropriate given all the misconceptions that surrounded Poe throughout his life and even more so after he died. I would strongly recommend any ardent fan of The Project also take a look at Eric Woolfson's finest musical Poe: More Tales of Mystery & Imagination for a closer look at the man who would become the single most influential writer that America ever produced."