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Andy Partridge, Harold Budd - Through The Hill album

Andy Partridge, Harold Budd - Through The Hill album

  • Performer: Andy Partridge
  • Genre: Electronic
  • Title: Through The Hill
  • Released: 1994
  • Style: Minimal, Ambient
  • MP3 version size: 1859 mb
  • FLAC version size: 1467 mb
  • Other: DTS AA RA APE AUD MIDI MIDI
  • Rating: 4.8
  • Votes: 277

Description

Listen to Andy Partridge & Harold Budd Radio featuring songs from Through the Hill free online. Слушать бесплатное интернет-радио, спорт, музыку, новости, разговорное и подкасты. События в прямом эфире, трансляции игр NFL, MLB, NBA, NHL, университетских команд и матчи Премьер-лиги.

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Andy Partridge appears courtesy Virgin Records. All Saints Records 1994. Issued in a jewel case with four page booklet (inner two pages are blank white). The booklet contents three separate two-folded inserts. All is enveloped by a golden paper band.

Instruments – Andy Partridge, Harold Budd. Liner Notes – Mark Prendergast. Lyrics By – Andy Partrdige. Read By – Harold Budd. Written-By – Andy Partridge, Harold Budd. 모. Recorded and mixed at Chipping Norton Studios, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, England, February 1994.

Sounding much more like a Harold Budd album than anything ever released by Andy Partridge (of XTC), these ambient pieces are lush, spacious environments populated by Budd's watery keyboards and Partridge's heavily processed, angular guitar lines.

Overview (current section).

Listen to Through The Hill in full in the this site app. Play on this site. Manufactured and marketed by Rykodisc Inc. under exclusive license.

Through the Hill is a collaboration album with Andy Partridge that doesn't really set itself apart from anything else or establish itself as anything better than any albums already in Harold Budd's discography. This album is very light and airy, much like Harold Budd's earlier classic The Plateaux of Mirror, and in fact only seems distinguishable from that album because this time around there is more instrumentation. Despite this, the familiar deep reverb effect on the music and monotonous composition style make it seem like a "part 2" of the aforementioned album.