Originally Posted By: PeterF
Guys,

Really really good, enjoyed everything about this one.

Specifically:
Some very tasty playing by Scott with some lovely effects and very atmospheric
Ray's bass propels the song along and adds a great "live" feel to the recording
Some of Roberts best vocals and a suitably impressive lyric.

Top notch.

Peter


Peter,
We very much appreciate all those positive comments!


Originally Posted By: Al-David
Howdy All ...

I think Ray summed up the song pretty dang good. A bit "out there", but in the best of ways. It all sounds good to mre. Ray's bass line drives it very nicely. The laidback vocal adds a contrasting mystery to the ethereal music.

A really cool song!

Wishing all of the best. Be safe ...

Alan


Thank you Alan!

Originally Posted By: Deej56
Robert (and Ray),

Rich and haunting—some great internal rhymes in the lyrics that make this resonate. And the production is stellar—got no nits, no suggestions—really hangs together. That lead guitar is particular is just perfect,. One of my favorites from Spirit Level.

All my best,

Deej


Deej,
I think this is the first SL song to feature Scott`s lapsteel as a solo instrument; he`s really developed and I`m glad it`s being noticed.
Many thanks for your listen and thoughtful comments.

Originally Posted By: floyd jane
Spirit Level.

Coolness abounds!

An awesome Spirit Level sound. Scott has never sounded better - excellent fills and leads. Ray's bass sounds great - punchy and driving. Drums are cool. Guitars all sound good.

Robert's vocal is strong (I thought it was just a little "too buried").

Your lyrics always shine in these Rock productions. Excellent.

This is the Complete Package. A great listen.

fj


Floyd,
Thanks for that; I agree Ray`s bass goes well with those heavy toms.
I really enjoyed the lyric write on this one (a combination of reading some early Arthur C Clarke and remembering how caught my young imagination was by the 60`s space missions; they took over from Cowboys and Indians as roleplay themes).
I heard the vocal about right playing the song loud, which seemed what was required by the genre.

Robert