Sign up to receive special offers and exclusives
Search
Home & GardenBooksCell Phones & Service
Keyword Search: Whitney Houston
HomeKeyword Search: Whitney Houston
 
 
In the Garden
View larger imageEmail a friend

Alternate Views:

 
 
 

In the Garden  (Audio CD) 
by Eurythmics

In Stock
Availability: Usually ships in 1 business days
Only 5 left in stock, order soon!
Our Price: $7.98 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25.

Note: Item may be sold and shipped by another company. Learn more.
Description:

This edition has been digitally re-mastered from the original master tapes by Eurythmics mastermind Dave Stewart, with input from collaborator Annie Lennox. In addition, there are five bonus tracks: a mixture of b-sides, remixes, and previously unreleased material (notably a cover of Rick Astley's "Take Me To Your Heart"). The packaging is a six-panel digipack redesign orchestrated by Laurence Stevens Design, the firm who art-directed all the original releases, while the thick booklets contain rare photos and insightful, new sleeve notes.

Product Details:
Audio CD Release Date: November 15, 2005
Studio: Legacy/RCA/Sony BMG
Number Of Discs: 1
Format: Original recording remastered, Extra tracks, Original recording reissued
Average Customer Rating: based on 9 reviews
Track Listing:
1. English Summer
2. Belinda
3. Take Me to Your Heart
4. She's Invisible Now
5. Your Time Will Come
6. Caveman Head
7. Never Gonna Cry Again
8. All the Young (People of Today)
9. Sing-Sing
10. Revenge
11. Sinestre [*]
12. Heartbeat Heartbeat [*]
13. Never Gonna Cry Again [Live][*]
14. 4/4 in Leather [Live][*]
15. Take Me to Your Heart [Live][*]
 
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:4.0
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:

4A great suprise!  Mar 14, 2009
I was alittle hesitite to listen to this cd when I first heard about it. A reviewer on youtube said this album was a really good, and if anybody liked pop music you should get it. I was skeptical and decided to listen to it on my long drive back from college. Wow, was I surprised! This album really seems to be a head of its time and doesnt date itself. Annie Lennox's vocals are really great on this album. This album is def. an underground, have to be a complete 80's music fan to buy this cd. But it's def. worth it to anybody that's a good fan of rock music. It could def. be released today, and it would do pretty good on the charts, in my opinion. All the tracks seem to be effortless and easy to listen to!

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:

5Eurythmics at their best  Apr 25, 2007
Basically, if you like the entire "Sweet Dreams" album, you'll probably like this one too. There aren't any "mega hits" on the album, but still there are a few songs that are among my favourite songs on my ipod. A haunting album, if you're a Eurythmics fan it is a must-have.

1 of 2 found the following review helpful:

4Haunting early album now enhanced  Jun 11, 2006
This dreamy, avant-garde album of 1981 gave little indication of the Eurythmics' subsequent melodic pop direction that led them to mega stardom for most of the decade. It more closely resembles the work of 1970s experimentalists like Howard Devoto, Brian Eno and German artists like Can. Sometimes it even sounds like the later Cocteau Twins or the more ethereal varieties of world music. The poetic imagery and melodies are superb but it's as if Lennox & Stewart went out of their way to avoid popular appeal.

This direction is all the more odd in the light of Lennox and Stewart's previous band, the brilliant but underrated pop group The Tourists with their catchy tunes. In The Garden is a highly atmospheric work and contains at least two classics. The first is the rousing Belinda - to which Holger Czukay contributes French horn - with its cascading guitar textures, mournful drone and oriental backing vocals soaring to a scorching climax. She's Invisible Now is the second, an eerie, mournful song with a haunting spoken countdown.

English Summer is replete with chirping crickets, distant voices & traffic sounds, whilst Take Me To Your Heart & Your Time Will Come both have strong melodies. The problem is that the delivery is too subdued and understated to be immediately appealing. 'Heart' has a vague eastern feel owing to Czukay's "Thai stringed instrument." Anne's vocals on 'Your Time' are particularly arresting. The voice samples and found sounds on Caveman Head create a striking, other-worldly air.

The album's melancholia is particularly evident on the lament All The Young People Of Today, a slow song with muffled vocal samples and tortured guitar parts. The French track Sing-Sing's oneiric mood is interrupted by animal & metallic sounds. The mid-tempo Revenge, a lyrical gem, concluded the original album; it contains truly bizarre sound effects including normal and demented laughter. With its ticking clock and brooding sax, Le Sinistre amply lives up to its title.

In contrast, Heartbeat Heartbeat is urgent and uptempo, whilst the live version of Never Gonna Cry Again with its lilting beat is far more varied and appealing than the studio version. Of the other two live recordings, 4/4 In Leather is buoyant and percussive; Take Me To Your Heart which is introduced by a spoken introduction in French, concludes the album. People who like Magazine, The World of Skin, the Neo-Psychedelia of the 1990s like Rose Chronicles, the above-mentioned German avant-gardists, Brian Eno's My Life in the Bush of Ghosts, etc. will appreciate In The Garden.

Beautiful photographs of Lennox & Stewart enhance the fold-out digipack & the booklet that contains a brief bio by Phil Savidge that focuses on the band's history, style & influence as well as the track listing and information on the musicians, photographers & designers. The sound is crystal clear, revealing the depth and intricacy of the complex vocal & instrumental textures.



5 of 5 found the following review helpful:

4Spellbinding debut album  Jun 04, 2006
This album is something really interesting. Given how everyone remembers Eurythmics for songs such as Sweet Dreams, There Must Be An Angel.... and so on, we have the idea that they were a pop band first and foremost and of course, for the most part that is right. They were. They were an extremely good pop band too. Not something I'd readily pick up mind. There have been some songs which have been great and some that are vapid nonsense. I, for one, cannot stand There Must Be An Angel which showcases Annie Lennox's vocals to extremely good affect but the song has nothing to add to it. But this album is different. Very much within the sound and texture of the album. It's not what you'd expect.

From the first track, you can tell this wasn't going to be a commercially viable record to release. It sounds somewhat cold, dislocated and out of place. Even though there's more guitars on this album than any other Eurythmics song I've heard, it feels a lot more colder than those songs! This can be due in part to Conny Plank's production work which is always interesting without fail.

What Plank seems to have melded together is a stunning mixture of exotic influences melded to a strictly European sensibility and within that a certain Britishness. Even though in the liner notes it says the band felt themselves more European than British, within the music there still retains that sense of Britishness but without any of the negative aspects, and the embracing of European influences clearly help this album fluorish.

Annie's voice on this album is, for the most part, very subdued and wistful. It compliments the music very well which takes on very dreamy and exotic tones while at the same time, giving a sense of being disenchanted with all around them. Very few can make an album that sounds like that and even fewer make it sound as interesting as it does, so it's all credit to Annie and Dave for orchestrating an album as good as this.

I could go on about the cover too but that would be pretty pointless. To cut it short, I feel it compliments the album. It looks of it's time too but in a good way.

Tracks like Take Me To Your Heart, Caveman Head and Never Gonna Cry Again have a sense of enchantment and disenchantment while Sing-Sing ( which is sung in French ) only encaptures the sense of dreamy wonder that is sometimes forgotten in music. Of the extra tracks Heartbeat Heartbeat and 4/4 In Leather should also get a mention for being frenetically paced that seriously test those dancing shoes but perhaps not as overtly as anything that would follow.

Overall, this album is one of a kind, one which the band has never repeated and perhaps no one could attempt to duplicate this album as the amount of intricate details in the album is simply spellbinding!

5 of 6 found the following review helpful:

4A Clever Debut & Lots of Experimentation  Mar 09, 2006
Okay, the album itself is really special for me, for I just love "Belinda", "English Summer", "Revenge", "Take me to your heart" and "Sing Sing". The other songs have always been weird, although not quirky enough to turn me off. Ever since buying the CD in the mid '90s, I'v always loved those songs. The cover was quite bizarre, yet i liked it...and I didn't know where or when this album came out. I finally chose to purchase the CD though, after a few months. Ironically, the first moment I saw the album cover art, I thought it was a bootleg or a joke. And, considering none of the songs made it as "Hits", I just didn't know what to make of this album. It was just too bizarre compared to the following 7 albums. Boy, was I surprised when I played "ITG" for the first time!

"ITG" has always been my 3rd most favorite Eurythmics album to date, and I himmed & hawwed about getting the Deluxe Remastered Edition since news of the re-releases came out. Last week, I put it in my amazon shopping basket and finally bought it. First and foremost, I adore digipack CDs, not only because they're usually remastered, but because of the unusual differences (artwork or hidden tracks) well...at least in or on most of them, somehow or other.

About the bonus tracks...I'm not impressed, for they leave nothing to the imagination. The sound quality isn't the greatest, although the bonus songs are remastered as well. I expected much, much more than this. On a happier vibe, the unseen photos are a hoot! Just what I was expecting. I've seen 2 of them before, but in a smaller size, in and among various Eurythmics/Annie Lennox sites. Very nice! And I love the bio of the "ITG" album. Despite the ups and downs Eurythmics have endured as a duo, they've thrived & flourished over the past 25 years. "ITG" is made up of experimental sounds and lots of background noise, but less vocals. Fortunately, they picked themselves up where "ITG" didn't do too well, and came up with a quirkier 2nd album.

Back to the bonus tracks...they're just too weird & experimental. Even though they were recorded 25 years ago, I think we're entitled to something from the studio, rather than live. And really...where was the applause at the end of "Take me to your heart" (Track 15)? Must've been a live recording in the studio...rather than on stage at a concert. Otherwise, the fans were very quiet...or shocked? All 5 bonus tracks sound like demos. Although Annie's voice has always been strong, the live recordings just don't do her justice. Thank God she's been playing around with all kinds of songs during her solo career! I can't say I hate the bonus songs. "Le Sinestre", is dark and would make a nice intro to a Eurythmics songs. Sounds more like an intro than a song itself, considering it's only a bit over 2 minutes in length. Would fit really nice on the "1984-For the Love of Big Brother" soundtrack. Perhaps "Le Sinestre" was just 3 years too premature & ahead of its time?

Tracklist:
01- English Summer - 04:00
02- Belinda - 03:58
03- Take Me To Your Heart - 03:32
04- She's Invisible Now - 03:27
05- Your Time Will Come - 04:30
06- Caveman Head - 03:56
07- Never Gonna Cry Again - 03:02
08- All The Young (People Of Today) - 04:11
09- Sing - Sing - 04:03
10- Revenge - 04:31
Bonus Tracks
11- Le Sinestre (Taken From "Never Gonna Cry Again" 7") - 02:44
12- Heartbeat Heartbeat (Taken From "Belinda" 7") - 02:03
13- Never Gonna Cry Again (Live) - Taken From "This Is The House" 12") - 04":36
14- 4/4 In Leather (Live) - Taken From "This Is The House" 12" - 03:05
15- Take Me To Your Heart (Live) - Taken From "This Is The House" 12" - 04:57

Features:
- Glossy Gatefold Digi-Pack Packaging
- Silver disc with red titling
- 20 page glossy bio/photo booklet housed inside inner right flap
- Booklet doesn't feature lyrics to songs
- FBI Anti-Piracy Warning
- Project Manager: Charlie Stanford at Blue Cube Consultancy
- Music Consultant: Neal Wickens
- Sleeve Notes: Phill Savidge
- Remastered by: Ian Cooper at Metoroplis Studios, London
- Design & Art Direction: Laurence Stevens / LSD Studio
- www.eurythmics.com

The overall ound/remastering quality (on the 10 album songs) is amazing and I noticed many little things much clearer this time, than on the original recording. Although the bonus songs don't do much for me, I'm happy to have bought the item because it's different and I love the photos & bio, as well as the clear, crispness of the studio recordings.

 
 
Bestsellers
Groundhog Day (15th Anniversary Special Edition) [Blu-ray]Groundhog Day (15th Anniversary Special Edition) [Blu-ray]
Bill Murray is at his wry, wisecracking best in this riotous romantic comedy about a weatherman caught in a personal time warp on the worst day of his life. Teamed with a relentlessly cheerful producer (Andie MacDowell) and a smart-aleck cameraman (C ...
List Price: $28.95
Our Price: $12.99
You Save: $15.96 (55%)
Add to Cart
Across the Universe [Blu-ray]Across the Universe [Blu-ray]
Across the Universe, from director Julie Taymor, is a revolutionary rock musical that re-imagines America in the turbulent late-1960s, a time when battle lines were being drawn at home and abroad. When young dockworker Jude (Jim Sturgess) leaves Live ...
List Price: $38.96
Our Price: $14.99
You Save: $23.97 (62%)
Add to Cart
Underworld Trilogy (Underworld / Underworld: Evolution / Underworld: Rise of the Lycans) [Blu-ray]Underworld Trilogy (Underworld / Underworld: Evolution / Underworld: Rise of the Lycans) [Blu-ray]
Normal 0 false false false EN-US X-NONE
List Price: $92.95
Our Price: $47.99
You Save: $44.96 (48%)
Add to Cart
Web business powered by Amazon WebStore



About Us   Contact Us   Privacy Policy   Shipping Policy
Free Shipping on Orders $25 and Up!

Copyright ©2009 SONY MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT. All rights reserved.