Up the Downstair
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Up the Downstair | |||||
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Cover art by Nop and Win Machielse
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Studio album by Porcupine Tree | |||||
Released | May, 1993 | ||||
Recorded | February, 1992-January, 1993 | ||||
Genre | Progressive rock | ||||
Length | 47:59 | ||||
Label | Delerium | ||||
Professional reviews | |||||
Porcupine Tree chronology | |||||
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Up the Downstair is the second studio album by British progressive rock band Porcupine Tree, first released in May 1993. It was originally intended to be a double album set including the song "Voyage 34", which was instead released as a single in 1992, and other material that ended up on the Staircase Infinities (1994) EP. In 2005, it was partially re-recorded, fully re-mixed and, along with the EP Staircase Infinities, remastered and re-released as a double album. The re-release contains a new mix by Steven Wilson, along with recorded drums by Gavin Harrison that replace the electronic drums of the original. Steven Wilson has stated that the title of the album came from a line in the song "Voyage 34."
Contents |
[edit] Track listing
All songs written by Steven Wilson, except where noted.
Original Version
- "What You Are Listening To..." – 0:58
- "Synesthesia" – 5:11
- "Monuments Burn into Moments" – 0:20
- "Always Never" (Wilson, Alan Duffy) – 6:58
- "Up the Downstair" – 10:03
- "Not Beautiful Anymore" – 3:26
- "Siren" – 0:52
- "Small Fish" (Wilson, Duffy) – 2:43
- "Burning Sky" – 11:06
- "Fadeaway" (Wilson, Duffy) – 6:19
2004 Remastered And Remixed Edition
Disc One - Up The Downstair
- "What You Are Listening To..." – 0:57
- "Synesthesia" – 5:16
- "Monuments Burn into Moments" – 0:22
- "Always Never" (Wilson, Duffy) – 7:00
- "Up the Downstair" – 10:14
- "Not Beautiful Anymore" – 3:25
- "Siren" – 0:57
- "Small Fish" (Wilson, Duffy) – 2:42
- "Burning Sky" – 11:36
- "Fadeaway" (Wilson, Duffy) – 6:19
Disc Two - Staircase Infinities
- "Cloud Zero" – 4:40
- "The Joke's On You" (Wilson, Duffy) – 4:17
- "Navigator" – 4:49
- "Rainy Taxy" – 6:50
- "Yellow Hedgerow Dreamscape" – 9:36
[edit] Personnel
Performed by Steven Wilson, except:
- Colin Edwin – Bass guitar on "Always Never"
- Richard Barbieri – Electronics on "Up the Downstair"
- Suzanne J Barbieri – Vocals on "Up the Downstair"
[edit] Reviews
Professional reviews:[1]
- Melody Maker - They've embarked upon a mission impossible: to create a truly Nineties progressive rock soundscape, utilising modern technology but avoiding prog pomposity. And they've managed it with room to spare. It's a strange and wonderful brew, taking in Orb ambience, FSoL dub, Metallica steel and all points in between. Ambient space dubs, technological cut- ups and Gregorian chants texture the sound, but the fire at the heart of the noise comes from good old guitar. Be warned, there are solo's here, but they're played with a force and a purity that defies indulgence.
- Organ - "Up The Downstair" is an LP that hides many surprises for the attentive listener. After a few spins you realise that even the sounds mixed into the background and he vocal interventions from old "drug" records all play a part in this warm, soothing lysergic tapestry that contains sparse, but matching lyrics. When I wrote an article on Porcupine Tree last year (published in Crohinga Well 2) I predicted that this act would become a "third way" in New British Psychedelia (the first and second being the psychedelic rock of Bevis Frond and the spacey festival sounds of Ozric Tentacles, of course). This record only confirms my statement. "Up The Downstair" is a record to get incredibly stoned to (and you will...)!
- CMJ - Up The Downstair retains the band's willowy roots in Albion psychedelia but expands the brief, dropping its cheesy self-consciousness while infusing some contemporary dance auras (from acidic mesmerism to almost funky syncopation) with more 'group-like' interaction.
[edit] External links
[edit] References
- ^ Delerium Records: Porcupine Tree - Up The Downstair. Retrieved on 2008-04-18.
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