Circles (Gavin Harrison & 05Ric album)

Circles is the second collaborative album by Porcupine Tree drummer Gavin Harrison and multi-instrumentalist, vocalist and extended-range bass player 05Ric. It was released on the Burning Shed record label in 2009.

Circles
Studio album by
Released2009
GenreProgressive rock, jazz fusion, math rock
Length40:20
LabelBurning Shed
ProducerGavin Harrison and 05Ric (GH05)
Gavin Harrison & 05Ric chronology
Drop
(2007)
Circles
(2009)
The Man Who Sold Himself
(2012)

Reception

A review in the December 2009 issue of Drummer Magazine states "Although the music itself is complex, it feels great and retains a sense of space and atmosphere, while Gavin and Ric show themselves to be two of the most inventive musicians around, still retaining the highest level of musicality." [1]

Track listing

  1. "Circles" 4:29
  2. "Source" 5:49
  3. "Last Call" 3:32
  4. "Crisis" 3:42
  5. "Faith" 5:03
  6. "Scar" 4:00
  7. "Break" 4:55
  8. "Beyond The 'A'" 3:56
  9. "Eye" 3:33
  10. "Goodbye" 3:21
All songs written by Gavin Harrison & 05Ric

Personnel

gollark: How fun.
gollark: Excitingly, minoteaur crashes when closing the database if migrating it if and only if it is not run under valgrind.
gollark: I can't point to a particular build/project tooling system which *utterly* doesn't fail for me. makefiles fail unfathomably sometimes, cmake fails unfathomably lots of the time, cargo sometimes runs into bizarre dependency errors, nimble works fine actually but I don't ever install stuff from it, luarocks is no, python has an awful mess, etc.
gollark: > In a typical build system, the dependency arrows go down. Although this is the way they would naturally go due to gravity, it is unfortunately also where the enemy's gate is. This makes it very inefficient and unfriendly. In tup, the arrows go up. This is obviously true because it rhymes. See how the dependencies differ in make and tup:Wow, this sounds like a great build system.
gollark: It's a rough measure of project size/complexity.

References

  1. "CD of the Month". Drummer Magazine, p.98. December 2009.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.