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September 7, 2001
ALL IS DREAM
By DARRYL STERDAN
ALL IS DREAM Mercury Rev (V2/BMG) The lights go down; the curtains part; the orchestra comes in with a swelling, heroic flourish, then fades away as our story begins: "I dreamed of you on my farm," croons our narrator in nasal, Neil Young tones over a romantic piano melody and fluttering violins. "I dreamed of you in my arms. But dreams are always wrong." Welcome to the latest lush production of space-pop artistes Mercury Rev, whose own bio could be a movie in itself. Once a noisy art-chaos ensemble -- ironically formed to create soundtracks for various members' films -- the constantly shifting group has slowly evolved into an ornate post-psychedelic ensemble a la Flaming Lips (guitarist Jonathan Donahue's one-time band). And All is Dream, their fifth album and long-overdue followup to 1998's brilliant and lovely Deserter's Songs, is their most ambitious and fully formed work to date -- an album that redefines cinematic with a stunning aural tapestry of psychedelic guitar-driven swirl, post-rock daring, string-based orchestral grandeur and heart-tugging romanticism. All is Dream was to be produced by '60s legend Jack Nitzsche, who died shortly before recording began. Even without his presence -- but doubtlessly with the presence of his spirit -- they have created a stirring masterpiece destined for critics year-end lists (including ours). And that's your happy ending. (More on:Mercury Rev) Track Listing
1. Dark Is Rising
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