Gong - Angel's Egg (Radio Gnome Invisible, Pt. 2)

Gong - Angel's Egg (Radio Gnome Invisible, Pt. 2)
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Album Details

Title: Angel's Egg (Radio Gnome Invisible, Pt. 2)
Artist: Gong
Release Date: 1973
Re-Released On: 11/22/2000
Label: Blue Plate, Jvc Victor
Album Type(s): lyrics/libretto
UPCs: 017046166225, 4988002408528
Genre: Rock
Styles: Experimental Electronic, Prog-Rock, Psychedelic, Experimental, Space Rock, Experimental Rock, Alternative/Indie Rock, British Psychedelia, Canterbury Scene, Freakbeat, Art Rock
Moods: Ambitious, Difficult, Intense, Irreverent, Provocative, Theatrical, Whimsical, Playful, Quirky, Trippy, Cerebral, Druggy, Meandering, Relaxed, Sprawling
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 5
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Other Side of the Sky
  2. Sold to the Highest Buddha
  3. Castle in the Clouds
  4. Prostitute Poem
  5. Givin My Love to You
  6. Selene
  7. Flute Salad
  8. Oily Way
  9. Outer Temple
  10. Inner Temple
  11. Percolations
  12. Love Is How y Make It
  13. I Never Glid Before
  14. Eat That Phone Book Coda
  15. Ooby-Scooby Doomsday or the D-Day Dj's Got the D.D.T. Blues

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2000CDJvc Victor61173
------CDBlue PlateCAROL-1662-2

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Album Review

The companion piece to The Flying Teapot, Angel's Egg is not your usual progressive rock album. Very quirky, with many, mostly brief compositions, the album is a tad less spacy than Teapot, with just a few psychedelic-inspired lyrics, and it's very technically adept. Angel's Egg opens with a true space rock cut (one of the few on the album), filled with the usual Gilli Smyth space whispering and Daevid Allen voicings, then leads into the cleverly titled "Sold to the Highest Buddha," with Steve Hillage and Didier Malherbe prominent figures. The instrumental "Castle in the Clouds" finds Hillage coming into his own, with a sound identical to his solo work. "Givin' My Love to You" sounds like a bar song, with no music and a cluster of seemingly drunken fellas trying to sing. The instrumental "Flute Salad" gives way to "Oily Way," a showcase for Malherbe's jazzy flute. "Inner Temple," an instrumental space rock track, moves along with a jazz edge, provided by Malherbe's sax. The final three tracks are the real highlights on Angel's Egg. "I Never Glid Before" is a fantastic prog rock tune, replete with blistering Hillage solo, primo Allen lyrics and vocal, and the precise percussion of new bandmember Pierre Moerlen. This eclectic composition travels through several movements and time changes, and comes across as a perpetually progressing piece. The imaginative and jazzy "Eat That Phone Book Coda" brings the album to a close. ~ David Ross Smith, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Giorgio GomelskyDirector
GongProducer