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Ocean Rain [Extra tracks, Original recording remastered]

Echo & The BunnymenAudio CD
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (65 customer reviews)

Price: $10.98 & FREE Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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Formats

Amazon Price New from Used from
MP3 Music, 9 Songs, 2007 $7.99  
Audio CD, Extra tracks, Original recording remastered, 2004 $10.98  
Vinyl, 2011 $16.98  
Audio Cassette, 1990 --  

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         

Samples
Song Title Time Price
listen  1. Silver 3:20$1.29  Buy MP3 
listen  2. Nocturnal Me 4:58$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen  3. Crystal Days 2:24$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen  4. The Yo Yo Man 3:10$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen  5. Thorn Of Crowns 4:52$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen  6. The Killing Moon 5:47$1.29  Buy MP3 
listen  7. Seven Seas 3:20$1.29  Buy MP3 
listen  8. My Kingdom 4:05$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen  9. Ocean Rain 5:12$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen10. Angels and Devils 4:22$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen11. All You Need Is Love (Life At Brian's) 6:42$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen12. The Killing Moon (Life At Brian's) 3:25$1.29  Buy MP3 
listen13. Stars Are Stars (Life At Brian's) 3:05$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen14. Villiers Terrace (Life At Brian's) 6:00$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen15. Silver (Life At Brian's) 3:23$1.29  Buy MP3 
listen16. My Kingdom (Live - The Crystal Day, 12 May 1984) 3:58$0.99  Buy MP3 
listen17. Ocean Rain (Live - The Crystal Day, 12 May 1984) 5:18$0.99  Buy MP3 


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Frequently Bought Together

Ocean Rain + Crocodiles (Expanded & Remastered) + Porcupine
Price for all three: $36.51

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Product Details

  • Audio CD (January 27, 2004)
  • Original Release Date: 2000
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Extra tracks, Original recording remastered
  • Label: Rhino
  • ASIN: B0000E2PY6
  • Also Available in: Audio CD  |  Audio Cassette  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Music
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (65 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #32,971 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Editorial Reviews

Their string-laden 1984 masterpiece featuring The Killing Moon; Crystal Days , and more. Eight bonus cuts: five recorded for UK television, an unissued version of Silver and live tracks!

Customer Reviews

Echo & the Bunnymen made their claim to greatness with this album, one of the best of the 1980s. Matthew Williams  |  11 reviewers made a similar statement
The music and lyrics touched my soul at that moment in such a way that I can barely describe it. Jack Dempsey  |  12 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
22 of 22 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars They called it "The Best Album Ever Made." May 2, 2004
Format:Audio CD
Like the placid water and serene blue of the album's cover photography, the fourth recording from Echo and The Bunnymen conveyed a retreat into a calmer space. After the relentless aggression on "Porcupine," the change in direction to midtempo, texture heavy songs on "Ocean Rain" was a surprise to those who came to the table once they'd heard "The Cutter." Gone was the brute force, and in was a sudden rush of romanticism. It made for an intriguing set of songs, and certainly for a major shift in the perception of the band (and in leader Ian McCulloch).

It also lead to a batch of incredible songs. "The Killing Moon," "Crystal Days" and "Silver" are awash in strings and romantic allusions. In the liner notes, McCulloch recalls that he "fell in love with Paris" while the band was recording there, and the spirit of "Ocean Rain" reflects that. The tones are often muted - DeFreitas uses brushes and other odd percussion to spectacular effect. On the other hand, McCulloch was still not beyond self-aggrandizing overstatement. His "Thorn of Crowns" will prove that.

"Ocean Rain" also sports some of the Bunnymen reissue series' better bonus selections. The five songs from "Life At Brian's" are interesting in that the band sounds loose and relaxed, and the recording of The Beatles' "All You Need is Love" show a sense of humor. There's also a pair of live cuts (including Mac's comment about "the greatest album ever made") that shows E&TB as a first class concert act.

While I am hard pressed to decide which Echo album I like more, "Ocean Rain" or "Porcupine," the days I give the nod to "Ocean Rain" are when I listen to "The Killing Moon," which I consider to be one of the finest songs to emerge from the whole 80's liverpool scene. This album is worth having for that one song alone.

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55 of 64 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Career high from 1984. December 11, 2003
Format:Audio CD
While Crocodiles (1980) remains my personal favourite Bunnymen album, it is without a doubt that Ocean Rain remains their most accomplished album and their career high. The albums that had followed Crocodiles had been miserable (Heaven Up Here) & messy (Porcupine) though there had been a wealth of great songs: Never Stop, Back of Love, Zimbo, Show of Strength, Clay, The Cutter...

Recorded mostly as Studio Des Dames in Paris (the location of The Cure's Lovecats recording also), it found the Bunnymen with Gil Norton, Adam Peter & Jean Yves crafting an orchestrally-accompanied classic. Probably the best Scott III influenced album till Suede's Dog Man Star! The strings & experimentation of the flawed Porcupine pay off here, as they pretty much deliver the proposed 'greatest album ever made' (this statement has worn thin with overuse by McCulloch to every subsequent release, no matter how mediocre).

McCulloch's lyrics are suitably nonsensical, the right balance between Lear and Le Bon- Crystal Days is gorgeous stuff, though the opening single Silver has a breezy quality that suggests seasons other than the autumn or winter that dominated the feel of the early recordings. Nocturnal Me ("bury me internally") is the miserablism of Heaven Up Here given a more original direction- this is the greatest night-time music! Pity this edition doesn't get across the greatness of the album cover- this & Porcupine need to be owned on LP just for the brilliant covers which perfectly render the contents of the recordings in visual form.

It's the latter four songs of Ocean Rain that really stand out, often cited by journos as the greatest album side in history (fair enough I suppose!), what's left of The Bunnymen still play all four of these songs in a row live. Pity the extra tracks at the end don't have all four songs in a row/live (just My Kingdom & Ocean Rain). The Killing Moon is probably the greatest Bunnymen song, later covered by Pavement on Major League & featured in the cult classic Donnie Darko (as well as so so nostalgia flick Grosse Point Blank). The third single Seven Seas is a breezy acoustic driven slab of beauty- this would be the template for the disappointing Bunnymen album that would follow in 1987. It was not bettered. My Kingdom explores a sound that recalls and advances on Love's timeless Forever Changes; but it's the title track that blows the mind:"All at sea again/and now my hurricans bought down this ocean rain...screaming from beneath the waves/all hands on deck at dawn/sailing to sadder shores/your port in my heavy storms/harbours the blackest thoughts..." Quite simply this song, and this side, need to be heard- listening to them makes clear what words don't seem capable of: this is godlike stuff!

The extra tracks are pleasant- classic b-side Angels & Devils, a few live takes and alternate versions of songs from the 'Life at Brians' sessions that preceded the 'Crystal Days' series of gigs where the Bunnymen decided they were The Beatles (an idea ripped off by Oasis later...) Hence the cover version of All You Need is Love- though to be fair the live medley of Do It Clean/Ticket to Ride etc found on The Cutter 12" is much better! The alternate versions of Killing Moon & Silver are fine, though don't touch the album originals; nice to see some old Crocodiles songs- Villiers Terrace & the sublime Stars are Stars are returned to- almost suggesting that the band cite Crocodiles as the closest album to this in terms of quality (which it is).

Ocean Rain is a fantastic album, one of the greatest albums ever made- up there with any candidate you could name (e.g. Sulk, Closer, Low, 154, The Queen is Dead, Dust, For Your Pleasure etc); it's hard to work out what went wrong- surely global domination should have beckoned? Like The Smiths, the Bunnymen fell by the wayside & U2 ended up taking it all with The Joshua Tree. After this, the Bunnymen would release the dire eponymous album of 1987 (from which De Freitas went absent to form the Sex Gods- see Julian Cope's Repossessed), then McCulloch would leave the band. Then De Freitas was killed in a motorcycle accident. Then McCulloch released the rather good Candleland solo album (which would have been better had it been a Bunnymen album) as Sergeant & Pattinson ploughed on with a new line-up from Irish band St Vitus Dance (a bad idea in retrospect) The Bunnymen could never get close to this again- the reformed Bunnymen (which featured the Electrafixion duo of McCulloch & Sergeant, alongside Pattinson- who would leave after 1998's Evergreen) did some nice stuff, but not great stuff. & it was demeaning to see them have to accept the patronage of mediocre bands like Coldplay, Fun Lovin Criminals & Oasis in order to get noticed. Hopefully this set of reissues will get them noticed for the right reasons- for being one of the greatest bands of the 80s and producing two of the greatest albums ever made...

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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The "Sgt. Pepper's" of the 80's March 9, 2000
By Scott
Format:Audio CD
Beautifully constructed, this is by far the best work Echo and the Bunnymen ever did. This album seeps into your pores like thick honey and coils into your heart and your brain until it's lodged in and found a home. The music from a band at their creative peak, the songs range from haunting ("Eternal Me" "Ocean Rain"), hopelessly upbeat ("Silver"), to songs that still make me cry ("Killing Moon"). One of those (sadly) rare albums without a weak song, this is a MUST have for anyone who lived through 80's, for all the nostalgia about Culture Club, Wham, and Kajagoogoo, Echo and the Bunnymen's "Ocean Rain" is the real deal and proof that music of importance and staying power came out of that time.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars " My Crystal Days"
No one is going to be able to exist forever within the confines of their body on a strictly physical plane; that's just simply a fact that mankind has come to universally... Read more
Published 10 days ago by kabalabonga
4.0 out of 5 stars New? Maybe Don't Start with This Album . . .
Many years ago, I decided to pick up a Bunnymen album to see what they were all about. I decided to go with Ocean Rain because its the most popular (what with Donnie Darko and... Read more
Published 3 months ago by InnerMacro
5.0 out of 5 stars Ocean Rain- Echo and the Bunnymen at their best!
This band can do so much.. I purchased the remaster..finally...recently...due to a upgrade of some stereo components...this remaster is excellent... Read more
Published 7 months ago by Static Frost
5.0 out of 5 stars great album. great seller
i love this record. echo and the bunnymen at their best. a vinyl recording gives this album a great sound. amazing band.
Published 7 months ago by mando
5.0 out of 5 stars Best Echo Album
Wow, I am surprised no one has reviewed this classic album. One of the best albums from the 80's, great desert island disc...unique one of a kind sound. Read more
Published 21 months ago by AndyZ
2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing
I am trying to like this album, but it's not going to happen. You wouldn't know it's the Bunnymen without McCulloch's voice. Read more
Published 23 months ago by RRiicckk
5.0 out of 5 stars Ocean Rain with RAH
This collector's version is just two albums smooshed into one: "Ocean Rain" with the Bunnymen's "Live at the Royal Albert Hall". Read more
Published on November 9, 2010 by M. Albert
5.0 out of 5 stars LOVE IT LOVE IT!!!!!
This was one of my favorite albums back in the 80s. I had a cassette tape of it that finally bit the dust so I ordered the cd. Read more
Published on September 17, 2010 by Shannon V
5.0 out of 5 stars Anthemic
Some music is great because it represents a time and place for people, some is just good. I think this is both. This is when Ian could still sing. Read more
Published on February 5, 2010 by E. Jankowski
5.0 out of 5 stars Bliss.
I had heard a few tracks off of this album before and, tantalized by what I had stumbled across, I bought it. Read more
Published on January 15, 2010 by Anna B. Wilkes
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