Waters of Eden
Waters of Eden is Tony Levin's second solo record, released in 2000. Most songs feature the basic quartet of Levin, Larry Fast, Jerry Marotta and Jeff Pevar. Additional guest musicians appear on most songs.
Waters of Eden | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | ||||
Released | April 11, 2000 | |||
Genre | Jazz fusion, progressive metal | |||
Length | 54:06 | |||
Label | Narada | |||
Producer | Tony Levin, Artie Traum | |||
Tony Levin chronology | ||||
|
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
Allmusic |
Track listing
- "Bone & Flesh" – 6:46
- "Waters of Eden" – 4:50
- "Icarus" – 5:35
- "Gecko Walk" – 4:58
- "Belle" – 4:00
- "Pillar of Fire" – 6:44
- "Boulevard of Dreams" – 6:47
- "Opal Road" – 6:23
- "Utopia" – 8:03
The Japanese release contains a bonus track entitled "From Here to the Stars" and features different cover artwork.
Personnel
- Warren Bernhardt – piano on track 7, engineer
- California Guitar Trio – acoustic guitars on track 2
- Larry Fast – synthesizer (tracks 1, 4, 6, 8, 9), engineer
- Steve Gorn – bansuri flute (tracks 1, 8), engineer
- Pete Levin – synthesizer (track 5)
- Tony Levin – Music Man electric bass (tracks 3, 6), fretless bass, NS electric upright bass (track 6), NS electric cello (tracks 1, 2), engineer
- Jerry Marotta – percussion, drums, Taos drum, engineer
- Jeff Pevar – acoustic guitar (tracks 3, 8), electric guitar (tracks 3, 4, 6, 9), engineer
- David Sancious – synthesizer (tracks 2, 3), piano (track 2), virtual soprano saxophone
- David Torn – acoustic and electric guitars (track 1), electric oud, loops (track 1), drum processing (track 4)
Production
- David Bottrill – Mixing
- Robert Frazza – Engineer
- Brandon Mason – Engineer, Assistant Engineer
- Trevor Sadler – Mastering
- David Tom – Engineer
- Artie Traum – Producer
gollark: That's storing it lossily, thus bad.
gollark: No, digital is better, as you can copy (and store!) a digital signal entirely precisely, compress it nicely, encrypt it, error-correction-code it, send it to people using computers™️, and process it on computers™️ too.
gollark: > Guys, what's the sampling rate of vacuum tubes?They aren't digital devices. They don't have one.
gollark: They, er, convert electrical signals to sound, as far as I can tell, so they're okay.
gollark: Mine are generic cheap Amazon ones.
References
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.