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ECHO & THE BUNNYMEN - Siberia

| MusicOMH.com | | There's something of a back to the future feel for Siberia, Echo & The Bunnymen's ninth album and their first in four years. Hugh Jones, producer of the original line-up's second album Heaven Up Here, is back behind the desk and the sound is discernably pre-U2. No surprise then that both U2 and Coldplay have cited Ian McCulloch's band as amongst their influences....full text |
| | Spin | | It might seem that with Siberia, Echo and the Bunnymen's first release in four years, the post-punk Liverpudlians were trying to rehash the glories from their prodigious 1980-1987 period. They recruited Hugh Jones, the studio vet behind their 1981 hit Heaven Up Here, and they even culled darkly lush anthems that sound lifted straight from that release. While "Stormy Weather" and "Parthenon Drive" showcase how the Bunnymen still masterfully channel gloom-filled angst into subtle psychedelia, the rest of the tracks demonstrate how the band have embraced maturation....full text |
| | Times Online | | Reunions are typically mixed affairs, varying between joyous nostalgia and sobering disappointment. But the Bunnymen’s comeback single, Nothing Lasts Forever (1997), was a shot of reawakened brilliance. If their previous albums fell well short of that renaissance, Siberia’s lead-off single, Stormy Weather, and three quarters of their first album in four years show the Bunnymen can still resemble a force of nature rather than a business arrangement....full text |
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ECHO & THE BUNNYMEN lyrics |
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