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Talk Talk: Spirit Of Eden

Spirit Of Eden
  • Type: Album
  • Release date: 01/09/1997
  • Label: EMI Records
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Talk Talk don’t really seem to feature in that much musical conversations these days, an almost forgotten '80s rock band, perhaps lumped in many minds along with dinosaurs like Simple Minds, Duran Duran etc, despite No Doubt recently covering their early hit ’It’s My Life’. (Perhaps because No Doubt are hardly bouncing round the nation's conversations these days.) It would be good if history remembered them not just for the hit pop-epics, but also for the much lesser known experimental work which came afterwards, of which 1988s' ’Spirit of Eden’ is perhaps the best example.

The muted Miles Davis-esque solo trumpet intro to 'The Rainbow' sets up the tone for the rest of the record… an ambient soundscape later sliced up with raw distorted guitar. Bluesy piano, clean Fender Twin guitar, sparse tribal drums and filthy raw harmonica bring the song in after two-and-a-half minutes, soon to be joined by Mark Hollis’s voice; imagine Elliott Smith singing over a backdrop of Neil Young and Moe Tucker, but sparser, very much a soundscape rather than a song… even more so than the more instrumental Radiohead stuff and also, since the record isn’t compressed, each inflection of the harmonica cuts into you like it’s being played into your ear. This merges seamlessly into the long ‘Heroin’ style build to the spacious epic chorus of 'Eden', and after two repetitions of the cycle, that dissolves into a loud clean ‘Twin guitar over sparse ambient cymbals before tucking back into the ‘Heroin’ groove again. As before, ’Eden' dissolves into nothing, and from nothing the next track ’Desire’ is formed. Hugely sparse guitar and piano with an almost inaudible shaker forming a backdrop interspersed with the trumpet that we saw at the beginning of the album. The voice arrives with a Hammond underpinning it, subtle and quiet, before kicking with big splashy drums and bass in to another big epic chorus burst, then back to incredibly sparse in a repeat of the cycle before breaking down to a drum and percussion/ raw guitar break that reminds me of the middle section of Jane’s Addiction’s ‘Three Days’ and then raising to a last chorus. Then an actual period of silence before the fourth track ’Inheritance’ is built upon sparse jazzy ride cymbal, brushy snare and piano. A little build up with the addition of an acoustic and some quiet double bass, then the chorus, again underpinned by keys in the form of a harmonium and some synth effects but also Sax, Oboe and Clarinet, which continue on their own meandering passage when the chorus ends, before the Neal Young guitar starts the cycle again.

’I Believe In You’ has the most conventional beginning, with a clear drum beat but still very, very sparse in the way it is built up slowly out of subtle layers. Mark Hollis’s voice is given so much space to operate that you can hear every nuance, just like the fret squeaks on the guitar. After the first passage of vocals a bass guitar mantra appears, reminiscent of the mantra of Talk Talk’s huge hit ’Life’s What You Make It’. Even this, the most conventional song on the record, always stops short of shooting it’s load, preferring to tease and coax, drawing you in and ending up resembling the long hypnotic grooves of Can far more than it resembles the work of an 80s rock band. After another actual gap of silence, the last song 'Wealth' begins with a naked breathed voice over piano. A quiet organ and a louder syllable, before back to the whisper, adding a double bass and acoustic to the backdrop.

Following the hits of 1986’s ’Colour Of Spring’, Talk Talk were given an open budget and no deadline, and they did something more recently echoed by another EMI band, Radiohead, and went left field. The record company were refused access to the recordings until they were complete, and when they were presented with such a blatantly non-commercial record were pretty shocked. Despite huge critical accolades It didn’t sell well, and would be relatively difficult to get hold of if it had not been digitally remastered in 1997. This is an incredibly beautiful and unique record that has been a bit of a trade secret amongst the muso fraternity. The only reference points I can give you are that if you like Miles Davis’s ‘Kind Of Blue’, Neil Young’s soundtrack to ‘Dead Man’, the way Elliott Smith caressed with his voice or the sounds and the and rawness of ‘Velvet Underground and Nico’, you may well fall deeply in love with this album.

  • Talk Talk 9 / 10
  • Talk Talk - Spirit Of Eden

    good review - I'm logging onto Amazon as we speak! Just one point, you say this album was not compressed - is this fact or opinion? Does this mean it was not mastered at all? Very unusual if so.
    • Re: Talk Talk - Spirit Of Eden

      Although Mark Hollis's voice is evidently compressed, and it's quite likely that other individual instruments may have used compression, like the bass, for instance, the album as a whole doesn't sound as if a compressor was inserted across the stereo buss at mix or mastering stage( comparing it to modern rock records which are compressed to buggery as a matter of routine, and that includes modern progressives, such as Radiohead, Muse.)
      It is a relatively unusual sound. I would imagine, since this is a big budget album which would have had access to the best recording/mix/mastering facilities, that this was a creative decision, because by keeping the use of mix compression use to a minimum, it's retained the 'air' around the sounds, and made them really jump out of the speakers, rather than all be squished into all-loud homogeneity.
      • Re: Talk Talk - Spirit Of Eden

        Thanks for an evocative review. This album is one of my 5 favourites.
        • Re: Talk Talk - Spirit Of Eden

          ok my copy came through and, conincidentally, it's gone straight into my top 5 favourite ever albums! thanks for the review.
  • Talk Talk - Spirit Of Eden

    i fuckin' love this record, blew me away when i heard it as i was expecting some dodgy 80s rock rather than the sprwling organic masterpiece that it is. Everyone should own it.

    Couldn't give a toss if it was compressed or not, the fact is it sounds superb....
  • Talk Talk - Spirit Of Eden

    Laughing Stock is also an essential release next to this one.

    God, I love Talk Talk
    • Re: Talk Talk - Spirit Of Eden

      I can't find anywhere I can get hold of it..anyone else know?
  • Talk Talk - Spirit Of Eden

    hmv in oxford street, london have it, also selectadisc in soho, also try amazon...
  • Talk Talk - Spirit Of Eden

    hmv in oxford street, london have it, also selectadisc in soho, also try amazon...
  • Talk Talk - Spirit Of Eden

    this album is amazing, Radiohead stole so many moves from these guys and can..totaly contemporary its influenced so much great music yet still sounds so fucking vital.
  • Talk Talk - Spirit Of Eden

    Legend has it the EMI bod in question cried when he first heard this record. Nobody knows whether it was because of the potentially fruitful career that was dying slowly in his ears, or because of the sheer beauty that "Spirit of Eden" contains.

    This really is one of the best - and most underappreciated - albums ever released. Tim Friese-Green is one of the best producers in history.

    (By the way, I finally picked up the elusive "Laughing Stock" for £15 after years of staring at in HMV in Southampton. I'd never usually pay that much but I had vouchers. It was worth it - another priceless recording that I've hardly stopped listening to since.)
    • Re: Talk Talk - Spirit Of Eden

      great review!i was a bit unsure of talk talk, but screw it, ill buy it and see what its like.nice one.
      • mark hollis - criminally underrated

        the last four album that Hollis has made (his eponymous solo effort in 97/98 I think?) & the last 3 TT albums are all genius. Don't go any further back than Colour of Spring though as it's all parpy synths & tinny drums. It was 1984 to be fair but it's still nasty.