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Anoraknophobia
 
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Anoraknophobia

MarillionAudio CD
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (92 customer reviews)


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Biography

Marillion are one of the UK music scene’s best kept secrets; purveyors of soulful, powerful, and often deeply-moving music, with a long-standing reputation for blistering live shows which have earned them an impressive and faithful global fanbase.
Steve "h" Hogarth fronts the band (original lead-singer, "Fish", having departed in 1988).
A former member of The Europeans and some-time collaborator… Read more in Amazon's Marillion Store

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Product Details

  • Audio CD (May 15, 2001)
  • Original Release Date: 2001
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Sanctuary Records
  • ASIN: B00005CC5A
  • Also Available in: Audio CD  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (92 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #170,219 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

 

Customer Reviews

92 Reviews
5 star:
 (46)
4 star:
 (21)
3 star:
 (16)
2 star:
 (6)
1 star:
 (3)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (92 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I really wanted to hate this one, December 13, 2001
By 
Jeff Hodges (Denton, TX United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Anoraknophobia (Audio CD)
I had every reason to. Although I have bought and enjoyed all of the Hogarth-led Marillion albums, none of them have ever stood up to the work that was done when Fish was in the band. Brave came close, and I really thought that was thier swan song. The albums they made after that just never came off as convincingly as the early work. I was excited when I head that ".com" was thier "return to form", but after listening to it ping-pong back and forth between poorly executed pop and formulaic prog I swore up and down I would never buy another Marillion album again.

However, "Anoraknophobia" was created in a groundbreaking fashion. It was funded mostly by fan preorders through the internet, which theoretically released Marillion from any sort of record company meddling. The idea was that Marillion was to make the album that Marillion wanted to make based on the faith of thier fans. I find it ironic that upon its' completion, the band's press releases regarding this album bordered on insulting to the average Marillion fan. Dressed in too-geeky black-rimmed glasses and hooded sweats, the band begged the world to distance them from the progressive rock label that they obviously feel has plagued them, even though thier fans love them for the work that they have done in that genre. Who do they think that they were talking to? I was the one with a pair of headphones in High School desprately trying to get my friends to see what I saw in ther music.

But, insulted and cynical, I bought the album. The band begged me to "forget what I know about them and just listen", so I did, and I thought that my review here would be my ulimate revenge.

But they were right.

I hate to admit it, but "Anoraknophobia" ranks among one of the best albums I have bought this year. It won me over. Without a doubt, it is my favorite Marillion-H album to date, and for the first time ever I am not thinking about "Clutching at Straws" or "Misplaced Childhood" as a reference. Its sound is so far removed from those albums that it is not fair to really compare them.

And yet comparisons are fair. If Marillion really wanted to distance themselves from thier past so badly, why continue under the same name? Those albums were made over fifteen years ago, and they had an impact on me then. It is possible that "Anoraknophobia" has had (or is having) the same impact on me now. I won't be able to say for sure for another fifteen years. Are they trying to make a point about labels - in particular the label "progressive"? Probably. Regardless, I like "Anoraknophobia" a lot. Overall, the album is as passionate, aggressive, and beautiful as anything that ever happened under Fish, and in all honesty is probably better than anything that he has put out in a LONG time. Personal favorites include "When I Meet God" (probably the centerpiece of the album), "Map of the World" (which sounds like what Rush has been attemping to do in recent years), "Quartz" (GREAT bass work), "This is the 21st Century" (GREAT guitar work - both characteristic and unique), "Fruit of the Wild Rose", and "If My Heart Were a Ball It Would Roll Uphill".

On almost every one of Marillion-H's albums, there is at least one (if not more) embarassingly adolescent "rocker"-tune that sticks out like a sore thumb and mars the album's potential excellence. A few examples are "Season's End's" "Hooks in You", the title track from "Holidays in Eden", and from "Brave", "Paper Lies" and "Hard as Love", etc, etc. A similar example does really exist on "Anoraknophobia". The only song I could poke holes in would be "Separated Out", but only because the guitar riff from it reminds me of the "Mony mo-mo-Mony" part of Billy Idol's cover of "Mony, Mony", and somewhere in there I think I hear the intro from the Door's "Light My Fire". However, it wins bonus points in the conceptual continuity department by sarcastically referencing "Freaks", an old-school Marillion password.

The lowdown: after lots of effort and heartache, Marillion has finally carved a niche for themselves with Hogarth at the helm. If you have been dilligently waiting for them to do something worthwhile since Fish left, its time to jump on board, because in trying to distance themselves from the progressive label, they have made what could arguably be the most significant symphonic rock album this year. If you don't know them at all, consider what would happen if Radiohead and U2 collided with a stylized Genesis. Check it out!

One other thing...what the heck is an Anorak, anyway......

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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A brilliant reinvention, but not abandoning their past, May 15, 2001
By 
M. Richichi "mrichich" (Chatham, NJ United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Anoraknophobia (Audio CD)
The question is how to market this album? A reviewer who only listens once may not get the whole picture, but you can't just say, "Don't write your review until you've listened to this album continuously for a week." The thing is, a Marillion album is a lifelong commitment, not a fad of the month, and these things grow into who you are and affect you profoundly. How do you market that in today's pop music world?

This is definitely one of Marillion's 3 best albums. In fact, every 4th album has been, and it shares quite a bit with "Clutching at Straws" and "Afraid of Sunlight." Both those albums really did sound quite different from what had come before, not just from Marillion but anyone. Not that they were earth-shattering, they were clearly progressive-tinged rock, but there's something about song structures and arrangements that set them apart.

Anoraknophobia continues in this tradition. The songs aren't like what you've heard before (except possibly for "Map of the World" but the aforementioned Marillion albums had their pop song too.) I mean, listen to "Quartz"--it's basically the perfect Marillion song while being something that they've never pulled off--the 9 minutes fly by, you're brought through a host of emotions, and at the end you've been communicated to. I've also gotten into "When I Meet God"--the first 5 minutes are a perfect pop single, but the song is made by the ending, and all of it is necessary. Songs like "Separated Out" and "If My Heart Were A Ball it Would Roll Uphill" are rockers the best the band has ever written, with some extended passages that if, say, the Dave Matthews Band had done, critics would be praising for the free-form jamming they got down. Even the full-on rocker "Between You And Me" has enough twists and turns to keep many die-hard proggers happy, with enough pop to please a U2 fan.

A side note on song length. The best long songs aren't long. Examples are Yes' "Close To The Edge", and any epic from Marillion (yes, even "Grendel", but especially "This Strange Engine" and "Interior Lulu") They take time to explore musical ideas. Instead of hitting you over the head and finishing with you quickly, they weave together themes, revisit sounds, and create a whole sonic experience. Yeah, on first listen you're not going to pick up on that, but on every long song on this album, there is that effect. Perhaps that's why it takes some time to get in to the album--your brain has to identify those patterns and be able to understand them. Marillion has created an album of 6 to 9 minute pop songs. Now, that's going to bother those of you who think pop songs are 3 to 4 minutes, but you're missing out if you don't give this longer format a chance. The "epic" of the album, "This is the 21st Century," is 11 minutes of trancelike sounds that tell us where we are right now, and where we might be going; reconciling the mystical with the technological.

So, yes, this is a masterpiece, truly a new way of thinking for the band, that doesn't abandon where they've come from. I mean, I'm sure some fans didn't like "Clutching" when it came out, but most of us now seem to think it's one of the most perfect albums ever, by any band. I think time will show out Anoraknophobia the same way. Yeah, I liked com and Radiation, and I just relistened to "TSE" in a whole new light, but A12a stands as the best of the post-EMI albums (although I guess it's not really a post-EMI album.)

And I really want to see it live. I know the band will do what they can to get to the US, but I also know they won't go broke trying. Mark's comment that the band isn't rich really rang true--I mean, just run the numbers. The band raised 100,000 pounds on the pre-orders--but they not only have to pay themselves, but the staff (4 or 5 people now?), they had to pay a producer, and they may own the Racket Club but they still need to buy gear and minidiscs and power. They're not dealing with millions here, certainly not after expenses. We should all be thankful they seem to be making enough to be able to afford to keep doing it, and doing it well, but you don't need to see the ledger books to figure out they're not getting filthy rich from it. Here's hoping the buzz on this album is good enough to support a US tour. Here's hoping you buy it.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not what I was expecting....but who cares?, May 28, 2005
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Anoraknophobia (Audio CD)
Rather late at jumping on the Marillion bandwagon, I'd been filling out my collection of their CD's in mish-mash order: first I bought "Clutching at Straws", "Season's End" and "Brave" in one fell swoop. They seemed ok, and "Brave" caught my attention the most. Then I bought "This Strange Engine" and was even more enmaored. Here was a band that changed with each release. Each successive CD I purchased surprised me and delighted me on different levels and for different reasons. "Holidays in Eden", "Marbles" (their best yet, in my humble opinion) and (...) (vastly underrated in my estimation) came next, and I became rabid to buy the rest.
I've since bought the Marbles on the Road DVD, and am totally mezmerized by the music on it. Have watched it several times in just over a week. Now I have "Anoraknophobia", and it too shattered my expectations. I have to say I was hoping for more like (...), but I've since learned that that kind of hoping and wishing is foolish and doomed to disappointment.
This CD starts powerfully then meanders some. I'm very impressed with "Between You and Me", kind of turned off by "Separated Out" (for some reason", but totally blown away by "This is the 21st Century". This song is so compelling and subtle in ways that seem rather Pink Floyd-ish, but still are clearly Marillion's creativity fully stretched. Although I like other CD's by them more than this one, I still feel it's solid and would recommend it quickly.
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Marillion's album Anoraknophobia was produced by Dave Meegan.
Fish, Steve Hogarth, Pete Trewavas, Steve Rothery, Mark Kelly and eight other artists have been a member of Marillion.

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