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Porcupine Tree - Lightbulb Sun (CD)

Lightbulb Sun
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4.5 out of 5.0 stars 4 Ratings (3 Reviews)

Album Details: Lightbulb Sun

Release Date:01/23/2008
Label:Jvc Japan
UPC:458221391207

Other Available Formats: Lightbulb Sun

User Reviews: Lightbulb Sun

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    Lightbulb Sun

    By Ron  Nov 30, 2009

    Pros: Want to hear it over again

    Cons: None

    This album sets the pace for all other PT albums; were every song is a journey, and every song is a jem. The mood is set and the band plays, and you feel good to know there is a band out there that has breathed life back into music again.This group j...ust keeps getting better and better. Read more Less

  • Overall:

    Another Absolutely Awesome Album!

    By Dave  Aug 6, 2003

    I remember when I heard In Absentia I had heard it was their finest. Stupid Dream and LBS are the best albums by PT. Both are just epic in everyway. Musically flawless and vocals that !@$#! Just beyond me. Buy this album or forever live in the dark. ...All the songs are wonderful so no point saying which are the best. Buy this and Stupid Dream at once. Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Lightbulb Sun

  • All Music Guide

    Some older fans looked askance at Lightbulb Sun, feeling it was verging on overt commercialism (and admittedly, the near power ballad solo on "Where We Would Be" is a bit odd). Then again, given Wilson's own explorations of avantgarde pop with NoMan, who's to say why a slightly more radiofriendly stance can't work? "Shesmovedon" may have been a single, but there's no question who wrote and performed it the elegant cascade of backing vocals on the chorus shows that much. Certainly Wilson hasn't turned into Max Martin or anything it's still very much Porcupine Tree, in its lyrical turns of phrase and general sense of exploration. One of the best tracks on the album is the brilliantly titled "Four Chords That Made a Million," a barbed cut on some unnamed "emperor in new clothes" beset by a "moron with a cheque book." The lead riff is a majestic hit of flange and feedback, while the hints of sitar and Indian percussion give the song even more attractive heft. But there's a definite bent ...towards calmer art pop throughout Lightbulb Sun those who preferred the sheer surge of Stupid Dream will find this album tamer in comparison. Still, it's hard to resist the beautiful, understated tension about a fractured friendship or relationship on "Feel So Low" or the gentle, stringtouched roll and build of "The Rest Will Flow," flat out two of Wilson's best tunes anywhere. Those who prefer the lengthy explorations won't be disappointed, though "Hatesong" unfolds its sharp message over eight minutes and then the stringswept, slow time explosion of "Russia on Ice" over 13. Slyest title of the bunch "Last Chance to Leave the Planet Earth Before It Is Recycled," which samples the videotape made by the leader of the Heaven's Gate cult before its mass suicide in 1997. - Ned Raggett, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Porcupine Tree

Though he initially came to wider attention (at least in the U.K.) with No-Man, his long-running collaboration with Tim Bowness, throughout the 1990s, singer/guitarist Steven Wilson has gained as much of a reputation for Porcupine Tree. Embracing and exploring prog rock inspirations while always keeping an ear out for newer musical connections, thus sidestepping the poi... Read more