This item has closed with no items sold
View the relisted Item
View other items offered by CultureShop758

Similar products

Barclay James Harvest - Nexus CD Barclay James Harvest - Nexus CD
Barclay James Harvest - Nexus CD Barclay James Harvest - Nexus CD
Closed

Barclay James Harvest - Nexus CD

Secondhand 1 was available
R150.00
Shipping
Free shipping is available from CultureShop for all orders above R750.00, using one of our trusted couriers.
Check my rate
Free collection is available from various lockers and counter collection points across South Africa, for all orders above R750.00 from CultureShop
View locations
The seller has indicated that they will usually have this item ready to ship within 2 business days. Shipping time depends on your delivery address. The most accurate delivery time will be calculated at checkout, but in general, the following shipping times apply:
 
Standard Delivery
Main centres:  1-3 business days
Regional areas: 3-4 business days
Remote areas: 3-5 business days
Get it now, pay later

Product details

Condition
Secondhand
Location
South Africa
Bob Shop ID
660359319

Progarchives Review

Nexus, the first album from the John Lees version of BJH [JLBJH], was something of a return to roots both in style and method though Lees was constrained by his record company's insistence on incorporating several old standards in a re-worked form. Moods range from the blockbuster opening of Festival, which has a wonderful little organ sequence around the "ticking of the clock" vocal and reminds me somewhat of Renaissance's Trip To The Fair, to the oh-so-languid closer Star Bright with a space-scape keyboard backdrop as John's guitar reaches for the heavens.

All the new songs are good, but I should pick out the orchestrated effects of Float and The Devils That I Keep which juxtaposes a jaunty tune with lyrics depicting hopeless despair. The re-hashed classics are arguably less successful and more controversial. For me, The Iron Maiden works well, Mocking Bird is good and I now prefer it to the original [but I seem to be in a seriously small minority here!], Hymn is a radical new arrangement which takes some getting used to, while Titles and Loving Is Easy are taken a little too slowly for my taste.

Nexus is hugely underrated even by BJH fans and deserves to be heard much more, in my opinion. Irrespective that it was recorded 30 years after the band's formation and long after they last did anything remotely progressive or adventurous, it contains some very high quality material indeed, some of it old-school melodic Prog. Could it be significant that this project saw the re-emergence of former BJH keysman and Mellotron tickler extraordinaire Woolly Wolstenholme from musical exile? Certainly, his influence cannot be doubted, and at times the album has his character crawling all over it.

Not too long ago I dismissed Nexus, as many others continue to do, for being far too disjointed, but having made a greater effort to make its acquaintance I now appreciate it as an excellent return to form. Recommended.

5034504105225

EAGCD052

Eagle Records, 1999

Country: UK

Good condition

C01