Published on Feb 19, 1999
You probably missed the best album of 1993. I’m not a betting
man, but given how many music fans there are out there and how many
copies of
Try Anything Once were sold, you probably didn’t buy
one.
Your loss. I completely admit to being a huge Alan Parsons fan;
I was hooked by “Eye In The Sky” in 1982, and over the eleven
albums that the Alan Parsons Project did between 1976 and 1987, I
thought they were the best thing going in symphonic rock. In my
opinion (and let’s face it, that’s what I give here) they beat
bands like Pink Floyd hollow. Their career was rocky at best,
signed to a record company that didn’t appreciate them and unable
to achieve the breakout success they deserved. When
vocalist/collaborator Eric Woolfson and Parsons parted ways in 1987
after
Gaudi, I mourned.
And I still remember the day in 1993 I walked into a record
store and saw listed on their new releases an Alan Parsons album. I
think I grabbed a clerk in a head lock and cried, my voice full of
surprise and wonder, “Is that a
new Alan Parsons CD?” And lo, I wasn’t disappointed. Two
weeks later, I was there when they opened to take
Try Anything Once home with me.
This is Parsons without Woolfson but with the rest of the
Project, including guitarist Ian Bairson and drummer Stuart Elliot
— and if I can express heresy, it’s better. While Eric Woolfson
was an excellent singer and a good lyricist, the fact he was the
lead vocalist on several of the Project’s biggest hits meant Arista
kept trying to make him sing, and therefore put constant pressure
on the band for more soft rock hits like “Time” and “Eye In The
Sky.” Without that pressure, Parsons and his band proved to be more
adventurous, more lyrical, and deeper, a multi-layered sound that
bears repeated listening and exploration; good enough, in fact,
that it was promoted as “The CD To Test The Limit Of Your Sound
System.”
The weakest track on the CD, “The Three Of Me,” is still
good… and after it’s out of the way, it just gets better.
“Turn It Up” has a surprising edge to it, laced with Bairnson’s
precise guitar, and to me there is no better proof that Ian
Bairnson is underappreciated as a guitarist and a musician. The CD
flows seamlessly from track to track, hitting multiple styles and
feels, weaving together a full colour picture of moments of
transition and rites of passage.
(To the Projectologist who will argue that Alan Parsons says
TAO has no theme, unlike the Project’s CDs; tough. I think
he’s fibbing.)
But Parsons hits the gold full center with two tracks, strong
and powerful enough to leave one breathless. “Mr. Time” is an
ominous, throbbing, complex paean to death and immortality
(reminiscent of “You Can’t Take It With You” from the Project’s
Pyramid). “Oh, Life” is in many ways a triumphant denial of
the same theme, bringing the CD full circle as its closing track.
Special note should go to David Pack’s vocals on the last, from a
near whisper at the beginning to defiance and power at the end.
Very few CDs make me shudder. This one does.
Parsons has continued recording since this return, with 1995’s
Live CD and 1997’s
On Air, but this was when he came back and hit the ground
running with a vengeance. Anyone with any interest in symphonic
rock, stop thinking that the sound died in 1979; get out and
appreciate recent work from one of the masters of the genre.