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The Alan Parsons Project - Tales of Mystery and Imagination CD (album) cover

TALES OF MYSTERY AND IMAGINATION

The Alan Parsons Project

Crossover Prog


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Sean Trane
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Prog Folk
3 stars 3,5 stars really!!!!

This UFO appeared early in my record-buying carreer and it still remains a soft spot in my ears, although I find APP a bit out of the scope of the ProgArchives . A concept album does not make for a prog record (although there are solid prog overtones and it is a very symphonis affair) because then The Who and Pretty Things should then be included. Tales is the only APP album that approaches prog in the strict sense of the term.

However, the music is really endearing and Raven is my fave on here and Doctor Tarr not lagging far behind. The lenghty suite on side 2 The Fall of The House of Usher is another highlight , although I find this a little too easy for my complicated tastes. Apart from being an outstanding record producer , Alan Parsons had some real taste for symphonic music (as he showed us on the Ambrosia debut) and there are lenghty passages where he must've had a ball. So do most listeners.

Would this not be a prog site , this album would easily have gotten a fourth star.

Report this review (#5526)
Posted Tuesday, February 3, 2004 | Review Permalink
loserboy
PROG REVIEWER
5 stars This recording would rank as one of my all time favorite progressive rock recordings. PARSONS takes this recording one step beyond all of his other recordings. Unfortunately the original feeling has been slightly altered by the overdubs added on the re-mastering to CD. If you can get the original I would strongly suggest it, but the new version captures the essense of the recording. The strength of this recording is clearly rooted in what PARSONS does with the themes and moods throughout. Sound effects are added which greatly enhance the impact on the listener. This album is centered around the writing of Edgar Allan Poe and each song successfully creates the dark world which Poe's prose details. Orchestra is filtered throughout, but never detracts from the raw progressive nature of the recording. Eric Woolfson get his moment to shine in the sun and delivers some of the most beautiful vocals ever recorded.
Report this review (#5528)
Posted Saturday, March 13, 2004 | Review Permalink
5 stars An excellent debut album, I just bought it yesterday, the idea of an album honouring Edgar Allan Poe caught my mind, and it was difficult for me to get rid of the idea of acquiring it. Outstanding, from the beginning to the end, this Project #1 gives you Poe's feelings in each poem and stories he wrote. Arthur Brown (yes the one of the CRAZY WORLD) is outstanding with his song (one of my favourite: THE TELL-TALE HEART), this album is worth to have it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Report this review (#5530)
Posted Sunday, April 11, 2004 | Review Permalink
Easy Livin
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin
4 stars The Eric Woolfson Project

The album which set the Alan Parsons Project on their way, and gave them instant success. In a recent interview (in Classic Rock magazine), Eric Wolfson explained that Parsons name was chosen for the band because of his "fame" as the top engineer at Abbey Road. He further alludes to the fact that Parsons was very much a figurehead, and that in fact Wolfson was the real driving force.

"Tales.." is something of a one off, and is not really representative of the bulk of the output from APP. Side two of the album is dominated by "The fall of the house of usher", a largely orchestral piece complete with chilling sound effects, which while enjoyable, is a bit overlong. Also unlike most other APP albums, the majority of the other tracks are very strong, with the many guest vocalists (including John Miles in great form) putting in first class performances. Others may disagree, but for me "Dr Tarr & Prof. Feather" is the only sub-standard piece.

An excellent collection of music, and probably the best from the APP. The remastered CD includes additional instrumentation and narration. Watch out also for a recently released "follow up" by Wolfson, revisiting the works of Poe.

Report this review (#5529)
Posted Sunday, May 16, 2004 | Review Permalink
Ivan_Melgar_M
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
5 stars "Tales of Mystery and Imagination - Edgar Alan Poe" was not the first Alan Parsons Project album I had the chance to listen but surely the one that gave me more gratification. For many years I owned Pyramid, which with the pass of time was finding more simple and less progressive, also listened another ones like the weak "Eye in the Sky" or "EVE" so my interest in the band was decreasing at exponential degree.

In 1991 I had to make a visit to United States and bought this CD only because there was a special sale, if you bought "Tubular Bells" for $9.99 for an extra cent they gave "Tales of Mystery and Imagination".

From the first listen I found this release was something different to what I ever heard, a very dark and mysterious album with excellent 100% progressive tracks. Something much more serious than anything Alan Parsons Project did later.

Alan Parsons is a capable engineer great musician and a talented composer but would be unfair to forget that Andrew Powell an incredible conducer is responsible for the perfect orchestral arrangements that play such an important part in almost every APP album.

The first track "A Dream Within a Dream" starts with a narration by Orson Welles of an Edgar Allan Poe passage that sets the mood not only for this song but also for all the album, as always his perfect English and educated voice gives extra credibility to whatever he reads. The song, as the track says is oneiric, beginning with a synthetizer solo that goes in crescendo until drums and bass join it in an explosion of power that again starts to fade in order to end the song, a beautiful and haunting opening.

"The Raven" is enhanced by the orchestra and the English Chorale brilliantly conducted by Andrew Powel, the vocals are soft and almost hidden behind the instruments and choir. This track has the particularity that Alan Parsons sings some sections using an EMI vocoder, with the company of the correct Leonard Whiting.

Without loosing the dark atmosphere, "The Tell-Tale Heart" starts faster than all the previous, the breathtaking vocals by the legendary Arthur Brown create the perfect sense of guilt and anguish for the story of a man who is tormented by his obsession with the beat of the heart from a person he killed, correctly complemented by the instruments and music, it's a perfect song for a perfect story.

The next track is "The Cask of Amontillado" gives us an example of the style Alan Parsons Project developed with the pass of the years, soft vocals by John Miles and Terry Sylvester followed by impressive orchestral sections full of brass instruments and professional choirs, sadly in later albums he mixed this apotheosis with weaker and pop oriented tunes.

"The System of Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether" is a very strange song, starts dark and obscure and gets confusing as the minutes pass because they mix to many different chords and tunes creating some kind of pleasant chaos. Excellent track that mixes different styles and sounds in a very inventive way, and that's what progressive rock means, challenge the listener even when it's confusing.

"La piece de resistance" is "The Fall of the House of the Usher" a 20 minutes instrumental epic divided in five parts:

I.- "Prelude" : Seven minutes introduction for orchestra and bass that situates the listener in the middle of the scene, the darkness and mystery create an atmosphere of suspense perfect for the doomed house.

II.- "Arrival": A haunting track that starts with a frightening baroque organ, immediately followed by a fast keyboard and band, the set is ready for a Christopher Lee or Boris Karloff movie, simply spectacular.

III.- "Intermezzo": A collection of more haunting sounds which take the suspense to its higher point.

IV.- "Pavane" is a softer tune mainly played with harp, works as a relief for the supposedly strong ending of the epic.

V.- "Fall": The orchestra creates a musical cacophony that resemblances the fall of an old house, not a strong end as anybody should expect for an excellent epic, technically is very accurate but musically could have been developed much more.

The album is closed with "To One for the Paradise" sung by Terry Sylvester, Erick Woolfson and Alan Parsons who create complex vocal sections with the background by The Westminster City School Boys Choir and Jane Powell, mostly for guitars, is a semi acoustic song that softens the dark atmosphere of the whole album, extremely beautiful.

It's important to mention Erick Woolfson, assistant producer and impeccable keyboardist, often known as Alan Parsons right hand, without him the album wouldn't have been the same.

Absolutely essential release, if you got this one and none other by Alan Parsons Project, don't worry, it's by far the best and more imaginative, but if you can get I Robot and Pyramid, go for them, also very good albums.

Without hesitation I will rate it with 5 stars, doesn't deserve any less.

Report this review (#5531)
Posted Monday, May 17, 2004 | Review Permalink
philippe
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
5 stars An incredible musical tribute to Edgar Poe 's tales of terror. Fantastic mindblowing music with anguished, introspective instrumental pieces ("A Dream within a Dream"...), an hilarous and powerful song about madness ("The Tell Tale Heart") sung by Arthur Brown who cries like one possessed, sad melancolic pop ballads ("The Cask of Amontillado"...) and a sumptuous classical arrengement for orchestra ("The fall of the house of Usher"). The best work recorded by the Alan Parson's project thanks to the participation of prestigious artists and musicians as Andrew Powel, Arthur Brown and many others. The kind of album that changes your life forever.
Report this review (#5532)
Posted Tuesday, August 10, 2004 | Review Permalink
greenback
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
5 stars This is an excellent record from Alan PARSON. Symphonic, progressive, the songs are varied, and there are many people involved in the making of this chef d'oeuvre. The presence of orchestration (string & horn arrangements) give some grandeur to this album. The mix of classical arrangements, modern keyboards, choir and catchy pop rock bits is interesting. I like the numerous excellent & sweet backing vocals. On side 2, there is a catchy, beautiful & delicate mandolin bit, followed by a FLOYD-esque ("Us and Them") mellow pattern full of excellent vocals.
Report this review (#5533)
Posted Sunday, August 15, 2004 | Review Permalink
andrew@collin
5 stars In my opinion this is one of THE greatest albums ever released.Had it been issued as say a Pink Floyd or Yes album then everybody would be raving about it.But unfortunately because it was released with little promotion by a then obscure artist it hasn't received anything like the credit it deserves.Everything about this album is excellent.The production on the original record was amazing ,and the additional instruments and re-mixing on the c.d.version enhance the project.The performances by the guest artists are all superb, in particular John Miles (The Cask Of Amontillado),Arthur Brown(The Tell- Tale Heart)David Paton(Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether)and my favorite track on the album ,Terry Sylvester on (To One in Paradise).The opening track (A Dream within a dream) begins with an atmospheric minor chord sequence gradually building up then emerging into The Raven,with its eary vocoder effect.The first time you hear this you're in another world.As the tracks unfold into different musical directions you get the same feeling as say Sgt Pepper or Pet Sounds so far as it takes you totally somewhere else.The first side of the record version ends with a short instrumental montage' of the earlier tracks.Then comes side two- The Fall of the House of usher,wow! If the first side had a few surprises then what about this! This piece runs through many movements ranging from the most beautiful melodies to something out of a horror film.The score by Andrew Powell is fantastic and the integration between the orchestra and the rock musicians is wonderful.The track ends with an absolute demolition of sound.Just when you think its safe to come out of the water. Boom they're off again,only this time the carnage melts into the superb To One In Paradise.I could go on and on about this album, for me its an absolute gem so if you havent checked it out already then believe me you need to.
Report this review (#5535)
Posted Wednesday, September 1, 2004 | Review Permalink
Chris S
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
5 stars Yes , join the band of merry critics and reviewers giving this album a solid 5 points. Take it as a given this is an essential addition to any progressive rock archive or collection. There is not a weak moment on the album. Side 2 for me though with ' The fall of the house of usher' showing what a genius Alan Parsons was as that time and on a few of his important other albums that followed.
Report this review (#5536)
Posted Wednesday, September 1, 2004 | Review Permalink
5 stars We have great rock tunes here, that would seem this work doesn't deserves soooooo many stars (eg. A Tell-Tale Heart, The Cask of Amontadillo and The System of Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether)...BUT we have excellent tracks like the classic Raven, A Dream within a Dream (mostly an introduction of The Raven), and we have maybe the best B-Side ever recorded by a prog band ever. No words, the whole thing is amazing...The Fall of The House of the Usher is maybe the greatest composition of the APP. To One in Paradise is a ballad that in the end results a very nice complement after hearing such a extended piece of music...THIS WORK HAS EVERYTHING...Great buying if you don't have it, Great posesion if you do.
Report this review (#5537)
Posted Wednesday, September 1, 2004 | Review Permalink
4 stars After producing one of the best selling and enduring rock albums of all time, Pink Floyd's Dark Side Of The Moon with monumental and technichal and artistic skill Al decided to launch his own project. The result was a phenonemal yet flawed album based on some of the brilliant works of lterary genious Edgar Allan Poe, who died penniless, drunk and friendless in a gutter. This prog reviwer has a lifelong intimacy with the works of this unique man and encourages the potential listener to aquaint themselves with his work,and not only the titles which appear on the album. Go to the library, bookstore, wherever. The interpretations of the tales and poems which are included on the recording are interpreted magnificently and echo the their true essence. However there was much more to Poe than just the macabre. He also wrote about astronomy, oceanography, aeronautics, and was the inventor of the detective story as well as the phsychological thriller. This reveiwer is very intamite with this great man's work and feels that one not familiar with his complex diversity will meet with a wrong impression as a result of this album. Parson's should have delved deeper into Poe's pshyce. It is musically flawless, however, and it is one of this reviwers faves of all time MUSICALLY. The highlight is an instrumental interpretation of The Fall Of The House Of Usher, a story about a family haunted by an ancient curse in 3 movements.An interesting feature is the utilization of an acoustic upright bass and the inclusion of sound effects from a sudden electrical storm which occurred during recording. Crazy Arthur Brown, appropiately, has been selected as vocalist on The Tell Tale Heart and captures and conveys the insanity and paranoia of Poe's original tale. Effective narations fom Orson Welles and Leanard Whiting put the listener in the proper mindset. A progressive rock masterpiece flawed only in the fact that certain aspects of Poe's writings are neglected therefore it has to lose one star out of five.
Report this review (#5538)
Posted Thursday, September 9, 2004 | Review Permalink
penguindf12
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars I was introduced to this by my Dad and an old cassette of it he had. Then I bought the CD, because I liked it quite a bit. The opening "A Dream within a Dream" is amazing, and the thudding bass on "the Raven" is even more amazing. Then "the tell-tale heart" comes in with a lilting hard rock guitar sound and insane feel, also excellent. "The Cask of Amontillado" is also great, so is the "Docor Tarr.." one (my favorite on the album, actually, is this song) and then the so-called "masterpiece" "Fall of the House of Usher."

This song is good, but not excellent. Just because a song is long doesn't make it good. However, it is fairly good and exceptional at points. "Prelude" reminds me of an old Warner Bros cartoon in a haunted house. "Arrival" is my favorite part of the entire piece, and "intermezzo" is just a pointless interlude. "Pavane" is great as well, but "the Fall" is a bit anticlimactic. A disappointing close which actually is the main reason this album is not five stars. Then "To one in Paradise" closes the album on an upper note, and there you have it. An excellent album suggested to newcomers and veterans alike.

Report this review (#5539)
Posted Sunday, September 19, 2004 | Review Permalink
Marc Baum
PROG REVIEWER
5 stars This is in any word a pasterpiece of progressive rock! A more mystic and atmospheric music was never discovered before it's release and must been heard by any prog fan out there! Some people say this is the best album ever made, now I know why. My father had the original lp from 1976 and as I heard it the first time, I was absolutely surprised! This record is state of art and brings the perfect atmosphere of Edgar Allan Poe's horror-storys to place. It would would too long to talk about any single song, you can write whole books about all that tracks, so I just say: If you have the chance: BUY!!!
Report this review (#5540)
Posted Saturday, October 9, 2004 | Review Permalink
Proghead
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars This is the debut from the ALAN PARSONS PROJECT. Alan PARSONS himself wasn't thinking that this studio outfit was to last more than ten years and give just as many albums (and continuing on in the 1990s as just Alan PARSONS without the Project, since Eric Woolfson went his separate way).

What I'm reviewing is the original pressing (20th Century Records here in America, and Charisma Records, same label as GENESIS, in the UK). In 1987, when Mercury Records reissued this (both vinyl and CD), it was given some Orson Welles narrations (which obviously had to been recorded before 1985, since '85 was the year Welles died), with '80s digital add-ons (especially those big '80s "gated" drums - think like what ZZ Top did to their early albums around the same time when they reissued those albums, same digital treatments). If you heard the 1987 remixed version first, you'll be put in a shock not hearing the narration or those '80s drums.

Already you can hear the ALAN PARSONS PROJECT sound already established, although one big surprise: lack of synthesizers! Duncan MacKay (who would play on their next three albums, then joined CAMEL for a short time, that's why he left by 1980) wasn't on this album. But there is still that '70s hi-tech feel, and they did use a vocodor (custom made by EMI) and a Projectron (a custom made analog sampler), so the album wasn't completely absent of electronics.

There are some interesting people involved in this album. Members of the Los Angeles band AMBROSIA are here. They even have Francis Monkman (ex-CURVED AIR) here. Plus there's Terry Sylvester (who replaced Graham Nash in The HOLLIES in 1969), and a totally unlikely figure, but totally appropriate for the concept here: Arthur BROWN (as in the CRAZY WORLD OF ARTHUR BROWN and the 1968 hit "Fire" and his much lesser-known prog band KINGDOM COME).

This album is based on a bunch of short stories and poems from Edgar Allen Poe, so no suprise that the song titles should be named after them.

"A Dream Within a Dream" is an instrumental, and already demonstrates that classic instrumental ALAN PARSONS PROJECT sound. "The Raven" is a wonderful piece with vocoder, and orchestrations. "The Tell-Tale Heart" is the piece that Arthur BROWN sings on, giving his wild persona to PARSONS brand of orchestrated rock. "The Cask of Amontillado" is a soft-rock ballad, while "(The System of) Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether" is a more rocking number that actually became a hit (but to be honest, I never heard this song played on the radio). Then you have the Andrew Powell orchestrated suite "The Fall of the House of Usher", which, as you guess, is largely orchestrated, except for "Pavane" which centers around John Leach's cimbalom (Hungarian dulcimer) and kantele (Finnish zither) that obviously sounds like a precursor to the title track of "I Robot". "To One in Paradise" is a nice, closing ballad. While (if I'm not mistakened) Terry Sylvester is doing vocal duties, the backing vocals are by Eric Woolfson, so it's not "Time" that you first hear his vocals, it's this song (as well as the backing vocals on "What Goes Up..." on "Pyramid"). Of course it was on "The Turn of a Friendly Card" (which features "Time") that Woolfson does lead for the first time.

It's a nice album, but I felt "I Robot" was better.

Report this review (#5541)
Posted Friday, October 29, 2004 | Review Permalink
4 stars I discovered this album at a time when I was constantly trying to improve my already adequate Hi-Fi and it turned out to be a reference recording I would use in the future to compare equipment. The production is phenomenal but can tale a little of your attention away from the actual soul of the music as it can be a little clinical for some ears. Nonetheless there are some fantastic songs including The Raven And Cask of Amontillado and the album flows as one suite rather than a collection of individual songs. Even John Miles of 'Music' guests on a couple of tracks, Cask of Amontillado and (The System of) . For lovers of clinically well produced rock this album is a must listen. The remastered version is the one for them.
Report this review (#5544)
Posted Wednesday, December 1, 2004 | Review Permalink
Trotsky
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
3 stars The version I have (also the only one I have ever heard) is the "doctored" one that came out in 1987, when in the course of preparing the masters for transfer to then new CD format, Parsons took the opportunity of making some minor tweaks with the album. Apparently aside from the ominious narration by Orson Welles, which I feel lends some much needed context and atmosphere to the orchestral interludes, these included some synth additions and a couple of guitar solos. I must say that while I think this is quite a decent concept album (based on themes by the tragic writer Edgar Allan Poe), I do feel it to be somewhat over-rated. The albums kicks off with Welles talking us through A Dream Within A Dream and leading us to one of the album's peaks, The Raven. With futuristic vocals (using a vocoder) directing an atmospheric, melodic tune that switches from hard rocking to ethereal at the drop of a hat, this tune has one hell of a hook. The raucous vocal performance of Arthur Brown is the highlight of its Tell-Tale Heart, which is generally a straight ahead rocker. Then there's The Cask Of Amontillado, which has some great orchestral themes interacting with conventional rock backing, topped off by a nice vocal melody from John Miles and Terry Slyvester chiming in with Hollies style harmony vocals. I do feel that Dortoc Tarr and Professor Fether is quite a lightweight offering despite some Cathedral organ from Parsons and unfortunately the first half of the 16 minute, 5 part track The Fall Of The House Of Usher fails due to the stupendously boring 7 minute Prelude. Arrival with its beautiful rippling waves of music is great, Intermezzo is appropriately dark and mysterious, Pavane reminds me of some of Mike Oldfield's layered New Age-tinged compositions ... it has great instrumentation including harp, mandolin, harpsichord and two instruments I'd never heard of before (cimbalom and kantele) and the brief last segment Fall is downright grim and scary. So it's real pity that the first half of the tune is so dull.

The album closes with the dreamy To One In Paradise (a sort of cross between The Beatles' Across The Universe and yer average Pink Floyd stoner ballad) which emphasises the fact that while APP had some great instrumental themes and vocal melodies, there are hardly any progressive instrumental exchanges to speak of, which is surprising because aside from Parsons' main sidekicks of keyboardist Eric Woolfson (who co-writes the material with Parsons) and guitarist Ian Bairnson, the backing band included talented musicians from lesser-known bands like Curved Air, Ambrosia and Pilot.

This is one that I think most progressive fans will definitely appreciate, more for the atmosphere and tale-telling rather than any great musical exchanges. ... 64% on the MPV scale

Report this review (#5550)
Posted Friday, May 13, 2005 | Review Permalink
Matti
PROG REVIEWER
5 stars One of the best debut albums ever! Sad how Project went down later on, into crappy pop (wannabe) hits. If only they had continued in this style, inspired by classic literature, then they sure would be among my dearest bands. And what would be a better source of inspiration than horror stories and poems of E. A. Poe? Parsons and Woolfson (and Powell in his orchestral opus 'Fall of the House of Usher') succeeded perfectly to catch the spirit without turning into cliches. The lyrics also are thoroughly thought, independent SONG lyrics, not just rearranging Poe's own vocabulary or trying to retell the stories too literally.

Original LP didn't have Orson Welles narrating ('A Dream Within a Dream' and Usher's prologue) but he surely adds a delicious ingredient. 'The Raven' is famous for the use of vocoder and is extremely powerful and atmospheric prog song. 'The Tell-tale Heart' features Arthur Brown, exactly the right singer to deliver the paranoid madness of the story. My favourite is 'Cask of Amontillado' - calm but very full of horror atmosphere about being locked in a catacomb. Fantastic arrangement again, as in the whole album. And the beautiful and peaceful 'To One in Paradise' balances the album nicely, leaving the lines of Poe's poem linger in mind.

This album is a fantastic classic (with great artwork too) which you'll love especially if you ever have enjoyed Poe yourself. It has none of the dullness of later A P Project and the choice of singers is perfect here.

Report this review (#5551)
Posted Thursday, May 26, 2005 | Review Permalink
shakalito@hot
5 stars Simply a Masterpiece of Prog Music!!!!! Whithout a doubt this is the very best album of APP. Music and lyrics are great, and lead vocals very well chosen, especially the madness of Arthur Brown on the track "The Tell-tale Heart". This album is COMPLETE, and really (IMHO) essential in any prog music collection.
Report this review (#35699)
Posted Wednesday, June 8, 2005 | Review Permalink
2 stars Well, sorry to tell, but the music of Alan is, how to say, a bit simple, for the beginners mostly. Even with help of Edgar Poe. There is no masterpiece, but just attempt to be in music. Alan is shy composer, after 2nd time his album has no more interest to listen to again. Very strange figure anyway, liike Oldfield f. e.. Maybe the ideas are greats but the results... Well, for collectors.
Report this review (#38119)
Posted Thursday, June 30, 2005 | Review Permalink
Menswear
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars My first attempt to drawing closer to the Alan Parsons Project...and probably my last.

I believe that this album is enough to give me an idea of what the mid 70's nerds referred to technical prodigy. At that time, this album surely seemed like a revelation, the top of the hill in terms of sound quality, the apogee of Dolby technology...unfortunetly, this is also the kind of album that do not age well, where the style, the approach of the concept album is less attractive compared to Dark Side of the Moon or the Wall. The type of melodies have that 'classic rock' feeling, the type you hear on a boring car ride on a sunday afternoon. To youngsters, it takes more attention not to laugh, to yawn or to maun at the price you paid for it.

Why am I stating Pink FLoyd? The most obvious influence is of course the great Floyd himself, and the Beatles for the rest. Many times we hear waves of Dark Side or singing type a la The Wall. Not a bad thing at all. This album provides lots of trippy moments, especially the suite called the Fall of the House of Usher, where the exquisite narration of Orson Welles interacts with orchestration worthy of the old Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi movies. Once again, youngsters will bore out very quickly, and those without imagination could regret the purchase...I almost did!

This album is definitely a grower, a cd to pop in often to finally being able to grab the feeling of the oh so groovy 70's.

Classic for rainy days or candle light evenings.

Report this review (#38960)
Posted Saturday, July 9, 2005 | Review Permalink
Philrod
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars Musically speaking, this a true gem to cherish. This is a well built album, filled with excellent songs from start to finish. A conceptual album around the work of Edgar Allan Poe, Parson did a great job aof including the symphonic elements to his mostly poppish songs. This is the only "problem" here. This is not progressive. Not at all. Art Rock as it is called, but really this is mostly pop from the 70s. An absolute album, but progressively talking, not the strongest. Still, a good 4 stars.
Report this review (#40887)
Posted Friday, July 29, 2005 | Review Permalink
Gatot
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
4 stars I knew Allan Parsons for the first time was due to his involvement in the making of Pink Floyd's seminal album that changed the music industry in 1973. That wonderful album would not sound they we hear right now without the minds and the skills of Mr Parsons, I admit. Even, my CD of Dark Side of The Moon is the original version, no remastering, but I still consider that the sound produced by this record was awesome. With that experience, I expected that this first album of Allan Parsons Project would sound the same or at least close to Dark Side album. It does not seem so even though I purchased the digitally remixed version. This album sounds a bit dry because it has less bass sounds. But it does not mean that this is not a good production. It is.

As the album name implies this is a concept album about a writer Edgar Allan Poe (1809 - 1849) whom at end of his life, exactly on October 3, 1849, in mysterious circumstances he is discovered unconscious and is taken to hospital and he dies four days later. The album kicks off with a narration by Orson Welles that remarks the first track "A Dream within a Dream" (4:13) with some orchestration. The music enters with bass lines and drum work in repetitive notes followed with nice keyboard work and guitar. The music moves in crescendo with drum sound and it slowly fades out maintaining only the bass guitar to keep the beat. "The Raven" (3:57) enters beautifully with EMI vocoder voice line combined with orchestra and real Parsons' voice. It's a good track combining clean vocal, stunning guitar solo and orchestra.

"The Tell-tale Heart" (4:38) is a rockier track performed in an operatic singing style accompanied with a melodic arrangements of guitar, keyboard, bass guitar and drumming. At the background, the orchestra enriches the music textures especially during quiet passages. "The Cask of Amontillado" (4:33) is a song-oriented music with powerful melody that is really tasty to most ears, performed with excellent vocal and orchestration. This is my favorite APP track because I love the melody very much. The orchestration part is really good and I urge you to play it outloud with your stereo set. "(The System of) Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether" (4:20) brings the music into uplifting emotion with a combination of electric guitar solo, soaring keyboard sound and voice line.

The album features an instrumental epic "The Fall of the House of Usher" that comprises five parts: Prelude (7:02), Arrival (2:39) , Intermezzo (1:00), Pavane (4:36), and Fall (0:51). The epic is exploratory in nature and it contains excellent orchestration work. It finally concludes with a ballad "To One in Paradise" (4:46) using acoustic guitar and backing vocals as main rhythm section.

Overall, it's a very good album that delivers relatively light progressive music and it may favor most of music buffs, be it prog lovers or not, because is pretty accessible. Some people call it as ear-candy prog. The CD package has an excellent sleeve with liner notes by Allan Parsons, chronology of Mr Edgar Allan Poe, musicians CV and lyrics. It's an excellent package. Keep on proggin' ..!

Peace on earth and mercy mild - GW

Report this review (#43397)
Posted Friday, August 19, 2005 | Review Permalink
STAMLock@aol.
5 stars Simply -- This is a must have! Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon" and APP's "Tales of Mystery and Imagination" are perhaps the two top "put the head phones on and listen to more than just songs" musical masterpieces from the 70s. And of course what do they have in common? The creative genius of Alan Parsons. Both works take the listener on a musical roller coaster. "Tales" uses influences ranging from classical orchestration to ahead-of-its-time electronics. While I enjoy all APP and AP works, "Tales" is the best. Of APP works, it stays with the theme (works of Poe) more tightly than other works, with an integration of sound and mood that is second to none. I like the original, but the new version does include an interesting Orson Wells narrative that does not detract, perhaps even enhances, depending on the listener (how can you not enjoy his voice). Truly one of those "different", but not necessarily better or worse situations. While such a work of art could not have been accomplished without Alan Parsons, the impact of Eric Wolfson should never be dismissed or overlooked. I do not know for sure why they went their separate ways, but it is a shame. If is was jealousy over it being the "Alan Parsons" Project I do not know, but at least AP has had the class to not use "Project" on works without Wolfson. It's been since the 70s that works like "Tales" and "I Robot" moved music forward. They should seriously consider reuniting to take integrative-progressive music to its next level, what ever that may be.
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Posted Wednesday, August 31, 2005 | Review Permalink
Andrea Cortese
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
3 stars Impia torturorum longas hic turba furores / sanguinis innocui, non satiata, aluit.

A great concept about one of the greatest writer in all the history of the western society. I've always loved his tales, his imagination, his great literature's knowledge, even his humour! I remember me going to library or buying his Tales, reading those terrifying pages 'til the late hours. Poe's characters, few exceptions apart, are always examples of a banished humanity: they are perverse (The Imp of the Perverse), insane (Roderick Usher), spectral (Silence), angel-like creatures (Ligeia, Morella, Berenice). All masques for musical dramas, all nightmares for evenings without moon. Love, amusement, fear, terror, imagination, anguish.THIS IS MUSIC ITSELF!

Alan Parsons had really a good idea.did he reach the goal to disclose Poe's music?

Surely he did it in the instrumental The Fall Of The House Of Usher, 16 minutes of pure trembling feelings, spectral movements and dark structures. What about the sung tracks? The Cask of Amontillado and (The System of) Doctor Tarr and Professor Leather are excellent (expecially the first one with those powerful orchestral parts!) and deserve a high rating. I cannot say the same for The Tell-tale Heart and The Raven which seem to me somehow more superficial and banal (not bad though).

P.S. narration on the opener track A Dream Within A Dream was provided by Orson Welles. He never met Alan Parsons. Only sent the recorded tape.

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Posted Wednesday, November 2, 2005 | Review Permalink
Tony Fisher
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars This was the most successful of the APP albums and does credit to the work of a great writer. I must admit, when I first bought it, I did not expect much, since the band seemed to consist largely of members of Scottish band Pilot, who were commercial and not apparently very talented, but they do a fine job (and have since developed into very capable musicians). Two future members of Sky also contribute as well as a variety of guests and session players. Several vocalists are used including John Miles and Arthur Brown. My original vinyl copy has no narration, which I suspect is a good thing.

The first side consists of 5 short tracks, each based on a Poe short story. Highlights are The Raven and The Cask of Amontillado, where the sense of menace is conveyed in the music, but all the tracks on the first side are well worth a listen. The third track ( The Tell-tale Heart ) was sung by Arthur Brown (of Crazy World fame) and the vocals on this track stand out.

The second side is the magnum opus, complete with thunder and some fine orchestral arrangements, well integrated with the rock musicians. Pavane is particularly exquisite. The whole thing sounds like the soundtrack to a high quality horror movie. It ends with the gentle To One in Paradise.

Overall, an album well worth owning.

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Posted Friday, December 30, 2005 | Review Permalink
skir@bigpond.
5 stars I first heard this album in the very early 1980's, just after I had left school and started breaking away from all that conformity of education and family, etc, and just as I was starting to get serious about my own music. (I was a serious working musician for many years on guitar, voice, and composing/arranging across many genres, and this will probably influence my comments, hopefully in a positive way.

'Tales of Mystery and Imagination' blew my mind and I listened to it at least a hundred times over 2-3 years, and it was one of the main formative influences on my early musical tastes, along with music such as 'Tubular Bells', mid-period Pink Floyd, Dire Straits and Supertramp. All of the tracks on 'Tales of Mystery and Imagination' appealed to me and I heard the album as a unified whole, rather than a collection of different tracks, and I always listened to the whole album from start to finish. I was especially taken by the literary influences, Arthur Brown's singing, some of the guitar work, the arranging, the engineering, and the use of choir. In a different way I was also very influenced by the extended orchestra based piece, 'The fall of the House of Usher', which greatly enhanced and expanded my understanding of what music, particularly orchestral music, could be. As a complete musical work in its own right, I think 'The fall of the House of Usher' deserves wider recognition, and I would recommend it to all serious music students as an example of interesting modern orchestral writing.

The only criticism I would make is that I am not very impressed by the 1987 re-mix. I only listened to the 1987 version 2-3 times, around 1995, and then gave it away. The Orson Welles narration is fine, but I didn't like the musical changes, particularly (if memory serves) the additional guitar solos. I think this is a good example of something that was an outstanding work in its original version, and which should have been left alone (apart from re-mastering for digital format, and maybe adding the OW narration). My advice is that, if possible, anyone who is seriously interested in this album should listen to the 1975 version first, and then the 1987 version later for comparison. However, my dissatisfaction with the 1987 version may just be because I was used to the 1975 version, and discovered it during a particularly formative and impressionable period of my musical and personal life.

I thought long and hard about whether it deserved four or five stars. However, even if strictly speaking it isn't prog rock, it is very close and is one of the best, and certainly most underrated albums ever released in rock music. I also think it has been a lot more influential than many realise or acknowledge. So I have decided to give this one a little extra and award the maximum score. Five stars from me!

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Posted Wednesday, January 18, 2006 | Review Permalink
5 stars This album is a 5 stars without any question. If you have to hown a Alan Parsons Project album, "Tales of Mystery and Imagination" is the one to get, i fact, every prog fan sould hown the album.

The album starts with the voice of the famous actor and director "Orson Wells" who narrates parts of Edger A Poe poems than slowly, the music build-up, with some kind of a flute and synth under it, to a bass rhythm + the drums that's the instrumental "Dreams Within A Dreams" wow! what a strong way to start a album about E. A. Poe.

Without knowing it, you realised that you've switch from "Dreams..." to "The Raven", the guitar solo in that song is completly amazing!!!! "Nevermore, nevermore, never..."

The third one is "The Tell-tale Heart" a rockyer kind of song. The vocal here is really fitting the story, i really like that song, my second favorite of the album.

"The Cast of Amontillado" is more ballad like in the verse to change drasticlly in the chorus. Very good orchestration here.

"(The System of) Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether" is the more known song of the album, a very good song with very strong vocal prestation by John Miles.

Now we enter the core of the album, the best track ever recorded by The Alan Parsons Project, "The Fall of the House of Usher" a 15 min instrumental tour de force !

The first part "Prelude" is 7 min of orchestral only music, no guitar, bass or drums, just the orchestra, a very incredible trip it is!!!

The second part "Arrival" starts up with a real recording of a storm then, in the back you hear a church organ and couple second after that the synth comes in, it may be the best part of the song, i really like that build-up that comes right after the storm.

The third part "Intermezzo" is, like the title sugest, a interlude played by the orchestra.

The "Pavane" is filled with beautiful strings instruments, the main melody is played by the mandoline, the rhythm is played on the harps + you have by the end a beautiful build-up with acoustics guitars, bass and the drums.

"Fall" is the last parts and, it's mainly a chaotic orchestral build-up that goes in to the last song of the album, the beautiful ballad "To One in Paradise". What a wonderful way to close the album that the voice of Terry Sylvester surrounded by acoustic guitar and a boys choir.

5 Stars, essential to my life and definetly a masterpiece of progressive music.

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Posted Tuesday, July 11, 2006 | Review Permalink
ClemofNazareth
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Prog Folk Researcher
4 stars “Tales…” was an impressive debut for the Alan Parsons Project in 1976. Parsons’ motivation for creating a performing group were quite straightforward at the time – he wanted to make some money. Despite his legendary work for the likes of Pink Floyd, Ambrosia, Pilot, and the Hollies, Parsons has claimed that his compensation for producing hits for these and many other performers was paltry. While he didn’t exactly get rich off this album either, the Project was certainly well-rewarded for the flurry of pop hits they churned out in the years following its release.

In the seventies Alan Parsons was certainly a person who was keenly aware of popular sensibilities and what kinds of music would go over with the listening public. Indeed, his career as a producer largely depended on this, and he was savvy enough to be one of the first rock music producers to employ his own business agent to help maximize on his rare talent. In the mid-70s there were a fair number of artists that attempted to merge literary works with music to varying degrees of success (Triumvirat’s “Spartacus”, Jeff Wayne’s “War of the Worlds”, Jack Lancaster & Robin Lumley’s “Peter and the Wolf”, and Rush’s “2112”, just to name a few). Parsons perhaps believed that a similar concept would also bring him commercial success. That combined with his supremely competent skill at arranging and producing highly accessible and technical excellent music led to this very accessible and impressive debut.

This album takes the literary theme to another level though. Parsons and creative partner Eric Woolfson selected a number of short stories and poems from the late Edgar Allen Poe and merged them together into what is a little bit literary soundtrack, and a little bit concept album. The meticulous attention to detail and impeccable choices in the supporting cast resulted in a time-tested classic.

The original album did not include Orson Wells’ tasteful narration, but pretty much any version of the album you might run across today is based on the later reissue that did include these passages. Wells adds some pomp and texture with his short readings scattered throughout, including leading into the opening track.

The album opens with “A Dream Within a Dream” which is loosely based on one of Poe’s early poems by the same name. That poem has roughly the same theme as Kansas’ “Dust in the Wind” only in Poe’s case he is lamenting the hopelessness of nature, change, and loss, all while standing on a beach watching sand slip through his fingers. So I guess that makes “Sand in the Water” a suitable subtitle (chuckle). Parsons employs a number of musicians throughout the album, and many of them play keyed instruments of one sort or another, including synthesizers, piano, organ, harpsichord, cimbalom, and kantele. The opening instrumental employs a number of these and while it is difficult-to-impossible to separate each one, the result is a quite ambient and beautiful beginning to the album. The Project would use the same leading-instrumental pattern on several of their subsequent albums, most notably with the self-titled I Robot opener and “Sirius” on Eye in the Sky.

“The Raven” is pretty much standard reading for any grammar school literature course, and Parsons captures the mood of this morbid tale wonderfully with the haunting backing choral, strident organ chords, and the plaintive cry of “Nevermore” spaced throughout. The guitar work here is especially tight and well-done, offered by David Paton (Pilot, Camel) and David Pack (Ambrosia). Parsons sings lead here for one of the rare times in the Project’s history. This was a minor hit single in the United States and one of the stronger tracks on the album.

Crazy Arthur Brown establishes the perfect mood with his lead vocals for “The Tell-tale Heart”, a Poe short-story about a man who is driven to murder while caring for an elderly relative, only to slide into madness and confess in the end. Kind of an abbreviated equivalent to Crime and Punishment, I suppose. The pulsating keyboards and intense rhythm provide a great interpretation of the mood Poe probably intended for this tale.

Long-time Parsons collaborator John Miles provides theatrical and brooding vocals on “The Cask of Amontillado” which is also based on a short story, this one of a man who is insulted by an acquaintance and exacts revenge by bricking the man up in a lair and leaving him to die there. The stark organ here helps to create a musical scene of dank castles with mildewed moats and torch-lit corridors, while the backing vocals at the close could easily have been lifted from a church funeral requiem. The soundscape here fits the storyline perfectly.

Miles and Brown combine to set the vocal mood for “Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether”, again based on a Poe short story. In this one a young man is invited for dinner at a mental institution under the premise that he is there to observe a new method for subjugating insane patients that has been developed by the sanatorium’s physicians. As he eats the visitor is struck by the seemingly odd behavior of the staff, only to find in the end that the patients have tarred, feathered, and locked up the physicians and are masquerading as the staff themselves. So here quite literally – the lunatics are running the asylum. This was a modestly popular single in the States in the mid-70s although many reviewers (including Rolling Stone magazine) complained that the instruments and tempo are haphazard and make little sense. If I’m not mistaken, that was exactly the point.

The sixteen minute epic instrumental “The Fall of the House of Usher” is based on what is probably Poe’s most well-known work, the thoroughly macabre and disturbing story of the twin brother and sister who inhabit the grisly House of Usher. I’ve read the fear of being buried alive was a major concern in Poe’s time, so the premise that the brother does so to his sister only to have her return and exact revenge was probably akin on the believability scale to the glut of psycho-slasher movies that were released in the seventies and eighties at a time when serial killers seemed to be almost a fad in the Americas. This is easily Parsons’ most ambitious musical work ever, and benefits greatly from the expansive and elaborated orchestral arrangements of Andrew Powell. Parsons and Woolfson also add authentic rain and lightning sounds taken from outside the studio to enhance the dreary mood they are attempting to portray. The long and mournful guitar sustains here reminds me very much of some of those on Dark Side of the Moon, and even some Moody Blues works from the same period.

The album ends with “To One in Paradise”, another work based on a Poe poem. Here Hollies guitarist Terry Sylvester adds some vocals and the mood is more sanguine than anywhere else on the album, and even mildly nostalgic. This composition reminds me very much of Klaatu circa “Sir Army Suit” or “Magdalena”. A nice closer, but a bit out of character with the rest of the album.

Some hardcore progressive fans dismiss this as a simplistic piece of music, perhaps progressively inclined but not deep or complex enough to merit serious consideration. I disagree. Alan Parson and Eric Woolfson produced an impeccably-engineered piece of art here, with logical and believable references to some of the finer works of a legendary author. The fact they possessed the skill to do so while managing to make it highly accessible and even inspiring to listen to only makes this more worthwhile for collectors of the genre. I would stop just short of saying it is essential however, but four stars out of five is certainly warranted, so that’s what I’ll give it.

peace

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Posted Saturday, October 7, 2006 | Review Permalink
Prognut
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars APP was one of my favorites Bands during the 80', when I did not have any knowledge of what had happened with the progressive movement! and you were started to be bombarded by the commercial cliché of pop music.

I discover their first album sidetracking from Robot, and even I am a complete sell out fan to APP, for many reasons, I would not give any of the albums 5 stars because they are not 100% prog; to me this is not mature enough, and even though fans look at this as one of the best releases, I have to disagree. They are imposing their sound, and much better things will come; in spite of this is a incredible strong debut, for a "prog related band".... concept album, with heavy prog overtones. Highly recommended, but not the place to start!

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Posted Friday, October 20, 2006 | Review Permalink
Tom Ozric
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars Alan Parsons Project are generally a union of session players recording a concept work, devised by Alan and friend Eric Woolfson and inspired by famous writers - from the many Project albums I've heard, they hardly qualify for being 'Prog Rock' - more like bombastic pop music. This, the first release by APP, is the only release which comes close. Since my interest in this 'band' has waned over the years, my assessment may not necessarily be 'correct' as such, but rather a current opinion. I enjoy most of the instrumentals, and the production is quite 'large' sounding and clear, as you would expect from Parsons. My gripe with the entire affair is the vocal arrangements - mostly cheezy pop-star wannabees, of only which Arthur Brown stands out. 'The Fall of the House of Usher' is an absolutely superb, symphonic offering here, as is the beautiful opening instrumental 'A Dream Within a Dream'. Overall, some good music, but heads way too much into commercial sounding territory.
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Posted Monday, November 20, 2006 | Review Permalink
seamusdog21@h
5 stars Certainly to listen to "Tales Of Mystery And Immagination- Edgar Allan Poe" is not easy enterprise. above all is not easy to listen to "The Fall Of The House Of Usher", poisonous suite with the orchestra that becomes also Gothic! In general, nevertheless, it is a disc in possession also of too measure. In fact the first 5 tracks run fishbones like the oil risking of not to to be appraised in correct manner (like happens me also with the firsts album of the Camel), mark of large music without that a song prevails on the other one (large quality). But "The Fall Of The House Of Usher" is attractive weighing and is not easy to tolerate. So "To One In Paradise" becomes too Pop to our ears.
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Posted Monday, December 11, 2006 | Review Permalink
5 stars This album is really great. The idea to make an album out of Poe's frightening tales is awesome. The music is great. The arrangements are great. Basically the challenge here to Alan Parsons was to recreate in music the atmospheres of Poe's tales, and he did good, very good indeed. The album contains different kind of approach to composition, from something more rock like "The Tell-Tale Heart" and "The Raven", the first song ever to feature a vocoder in whole rock history, to something incredibly closer to symphonic prog like "The Cask Of Amontillado"; not to mention the suite in the middle of the work : "The Fall Of The House Of Usher" which is simply great classical music. The most interesting aspect of this album are the arrangements, and Alan has always been a master in this matter, which are always impeccable. In my opinion Tales Of Mystery And Imagination remains the best ALAN PARSONS PROJECT release by far, really prog and very evocative.

Yes in the end we could consider it a masterpiece, a must have, an essential album for every prog head around the planet.

5 stars.

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Posted Wednesday, March 14, 2007 | Review Permalink
Chicapah
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars In early 1976 I was working at a record superstore and I have to tell you that the marketing and in-house advertising for this album was so extravagant and over the top that there was no way in Hades it could live up to its "next big thing" hype. We're talking stuff like freestanding, life-sized cardboard cutouts of mummies placed in the aisles and plastic ravens hanging from the rafters. The local reps gave every employee a complimentary LP, tee shirt and button in an attempt to create word-of-mouth promotion, as well. Inside the fancy album cover was a full chronology of Edgar Allan Poe's life, extensive credits and a 12"x12" eight-page booklet containing lyrics, photographs and illustrations nestled between two leafs of onion-skin paper. In other words, 20th Century Records sank the entire pension fund into this thing. However, I found that the music on the vinyl didn't meet my needs at the time (I was heavily into the harder sounds of Yes, King Crimson, Return to Forever, etc.) so, after a few cursory listens, I filed it in one of my crammed orange crates and forgot about it. Thirty years later I discovered that it's highly regarded by many prog rock lovers and decided to blow off the dust and give it a spin. I was surprised at how much I liked it.

I gather that Orson Welles recited narration that was added to the newer version released in the eighties but my original LP doesn't have it so the opening tune, "A Dream Within A Dream," is an instrumental. And a fine one, at that. It has a dreamy, mysterious beginning and a very Pink Floydian build up that's very effective as it leads right into "The Raven." Alan Parsons was ahead of his time and didn't hesitate to utilize new innovations so the Harmony Vocoder was introduced here. Very cool effect. It's not a particularly remarkable song in and of itself but the pristine orchestral score in the middle section is outstanding. Throughout the album the solo, harmony and chorale work is top notch and each featured vocalist is suitably cast for the tune they sing. A case in point is "The Tell-Tale Heart," a song about unbearable guilt that drives the protagonist stark raving mad, performed eloquently by Mr. Manic himself, the "fiery" Arthur Brown. Once again the soaring symphonic passage halfway through elevates it above the ordinary. As the studio engineer who worked under Sir George Martin on "Abbey Road" Parsons learned from the best and "The Cask of Amontillado" has a definite Beatles aura about it and there's not a thing wrong with that. The strings are crisp and clear as well as the intricate vocalizations, making this one of the highlights of the album. "(The System Of) Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether" is very pop and debuts the distinct aural characteristics that would indelibly brand future "Project" hit songs and endeavors. It's an okay tune but a little too contrived and formulaic to me. In my book it's the awesome "The Fall of the House of Usher" that garners the MVP trophy. While Parsons and Eric Woolfson are the principal architects, it is Andrew Powell who is the creative force behind this epic five-part collaboration. "Prelude," as a symphonic composition, compares favorably with the works of modernists such as Gustav Mahler and Claude Debussy in its structure and tone. Yes, it's that good. "Arrival" starts with a thunderclap and rain before an organ and some programmed synthesizers start a slow build that is reminiscent of parts of "The Dark Side of the Moon." After a brief return visit from the orchestra for "Intermezzo" the piece transitions to a more contemporary style for "Pavane" with guitars, keyboards and some delicate upright bass. The use of classic stringed instruments like the Cimbalom and the Kantele (played flawlessly by John Leach) creates a unique, beautiful atmosphere. There's a dynamic, slow rising tide of sound leading up to "Fall," a fitting, noisy affair to end the opus. For Parsons and Co. to include something so unorthodox was admirably gutsy and bold. Therefore it endures as a model of what progressive music is. The closer, "To One in Paradise," is a pretty ballad with deep, flanged guitars and a chord progression that brings to mind Pink Floyd once more.

Another important aspect of this album is the fact that it was one of the first to acknowledge the huge revolution going on in home stereo systems during the mid- seventies. There was a growing demand for LPs that were immaculately engineered, produced and mastered so pricey state-of-the-art amps and speakers could deliver their high-fidelity promises to the consumer. There's no question that this sounds like a million bucks but when you use two hundred musicians to record an album there is an inherent lack of "soul" in the finished product and that's the case here. I truly understand the attraction but I can't tag it as a masterpiece. I rank it somewhere between 3.5 and 4 stars, with the stately "Usher" suite serving as the essential prog moment to cherish.

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Posted Thursday, March 22, 2007 | Review Permalink
5 stars Prog rock perfection from an unlikely source. "Tales" is not only an outstanding prog rock album but one of the greatest debut albums of all time. Whether or not you are a fan of their other work, this one deserves a listen. All the tracks hold up very well and have stood the test of time. Some may take issue with the length of "Fall of the House of Usher", but this is the centerpiece of the album and rightfully so. It is a piece that could have been included in any number of horror/suspense films to great effect.

Now, a word of warning. In 1987, Parsons took it upon himself to 'resurrect' the recording by re-recording the entire drum track as well as some guitar and vocal tracks. This resulted in a blasphemous rework (in my humble opinion) of this classic album. The updated drum tracks took away the eerie, organic feel that the original drum tracks lent to the recording. The additional guitar leads and new vocals added nothing. Even the original Orson Welles voiceover for 'A Dream Within A Dream' felt cheesy and forced.

So do yourself a favor and track down a copy of the ORIGINAL release of this album. To my knowledge, the only CD version of the original recording is the MFSL gold disc version. Unfortunately you will probably have to resort to Ebay to secure a copy of this CD, and last time I checked copies were going for over $50. I am not sure if Itunes has the original version of this album or the 'updated' version from 1987.

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Posted Wednesday, April 11, 2007 | Review Permalink
5 stars I'm basing this review on the "Deluxe" version of this album, released in early 2007. This 2-disc set contains remasters of the original 1976 album version of "Tales", and the 1987 remixed CD version (along with the usual extras tracks, etc.)

I've always been a fan of Parsons, having bought "Tales" at the time of its original vinyl release. I quite enjoy most his subsequent work, much of which seems to be derided by many here at PA for not being "proggy" enough (fair enough point, I guess!). Having said that, though, I must admit that nothing he has done has ever reached the heights of this debut. "Tales" is quite simply a stunning album, and has remained one of the high points of my collection for many years.

I won't go deeply into descriptives of the various tracks on the album, as this has already been done by many previous reviewers. What I will say is that this newly remastered version brings out the complexities of the pieces with much more clarity than ever before - as you might expect from someone with the engineering and production skills of Alan Parsons.

To me, this is an album well worth a 5-star rating.

ps Guys - here's a useful little listening tip. Before putting on "The Fall Of The House Of Usher", dim the lights, pour a glass of wine, and curl up on a comfy seat with your significant other. If she's never heard the piece before, you just might get some interesting reactions!!

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Posted Wednesday, May 23, 2007 | Review Permalink
5 stars After learning that Alan Parsons had engineered Dark Side of the Moon, I was curious to hear what his little "Project" sounded like. I must say that I was very impressed, even upon my first listen. This debut reminded me of some Pink Floyd's atmospheric sounds and effects (an obvious connection) but also had its own merits, including Orson Welles' excellent narration on "A Dream Within A Dream" and "TFOTHOU - Part I (Prelude)," which is at least on par with (if not better than) the Moody Blues' own narrated tracks. I also love the effects used for "The Raven" and Arthur Brown's psychotic vocals for "The Tell-Tale Heart" are perfect. Additionally, "The Cask of Amontillado" is a beautiful track, and the epic "TFOTHOU" is both calming and creepy. Really, the only tracks on this album that I don't consider exceptional are Parts III. and V. of "TFOTHOU" (as standalone songs), and (depending on my mood) To One In Paradise can get a little boring. Besides those minor complaints, "Tales of Mystery and Imagination" is a true classic that every fan of 70s Prog Rock should own. Unfortunately, it was the one and only masterpiece made by Parsons' Band, but it was certainly a worthwhile project all the same!
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Posted Monday, July 23, 2007 | Review Permalink
Flucktrot
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars This album is as enigmatic as its subject matter, as some days I can get into it, and other days this seems just another overblown and cheesy concept album that probably shouldn't have been made. I suppose that I'm glad to have it, but I rarely find the motivation to listen to it all the way through. The music is decent, and of course there are plenty of sound effects and lead-ins, as well as the now recognizeable plodding Parson's rhythm, but most of the time Tales of Mystery and Imagination is fairly boring.

Side 1. The opener, A Dream Within a Dream, sets a nice atmosphere, with some engaging narration followed by a dreamy crescendo. Then things become a bit cheesy, whether it's the computerized vocals on the Raven the rediculously throaty wails of The Tell-Tale Heart. There are also many high points, as most of the songs feature climactic endings--espcially The Cask of Amontillado and Dr. Tarr and Professor Fether. And of course there are the Project trademarks that we've come to expect: lush synth arrangements (and variety), a few nice guitar licks, and huge choirs.

The Fall of the House of Usher. The centerpiece of the album, at nearly 15 minutes, is unfortunately uninspiring and strangely not cohesive. The first and longest section features brooding and relatively boring orchestral noodlings until finally builiding nicely into Arrival, which is the highlight of the piece, capped by the intense knocking bit. Then things take a turn for the worst the rest of the way, with two sections of cheesy haunted house effects and a generic instrumental. Definitely creative, but not especially memorable musically. The album ends with the dreamy, yet simplistic To One in Paradise.

All in all, you have to at least respect the Project for trying. My personal opinion is that so many people were involved, and these songs have been so tightly produced, that any of the raw emotion from Poe's work has been slowly but surely drained from the album. The result is solid music that is mostly entertaining but really fails to engage on more than a superficial level. Also, the vocals aren't bad, but they really don't fit my expectations for Poe. Too bad we couldn't have someone like Jim Morrison's interpretation--I think a powerful, bassy voice might have given these songs the punch that's lacking. That and maybe at least some up-tempo tunes.

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Posted Sunday, October 7, 2007 | Review Permalink
progaardvark
COLLABORATOR
Crossover/Symphonic/RPI Teams
3 stars The Alan Parsons Project's debut album was a musical tribute to Edgar Allan Poe and although there are times when the music is fitting for Poe's horror tales, at other times it seems to miss the mark. This album would have been much better if it had a more "macabre" feel to it. Anyhow, for the most part, it is an enjoyable listen and showcases the engineering genius of Alan Parsons' sound, a formula he would use over and over in what would seem like a never-ending series of Project albums.

APP would also make it a regular habit of incorporating new musical technology into each of its albums, most notably the vocoder on this album. Parsons also incorporated a group of guest vocalists and often hired session musicians for his various projects. Examples on this album include John Miles, Francis Monkman (of Curved Air), the amazing Arthur Brown, and Terry Sylvester (Hollies), among others. This album also features choirs and an orchestra. Everything you could ever want for a concept album, right?

Unfortunately, Tales of Mystery and Imagination lacks one major ingredient and that's a good dose of progressive rock. I'll be the first to admit that it has a sort of "progressiveness" to it, but when you listen more closely, it only shows itself in a few spots here and there. This is basically an artsy-style of plain old rock and I can see why it has been placed in the "prog-related" category. Maybe pop-prog would be a more appropriate label as many of these songs could have easily been released as singles (Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether and The Raven both were).

I'm not doubting that this is a great work, it is. It's just it would get a better rating on a "Rock Archives" site then here. For me, it deserves three stars, good but not essential to the prog rock genre. Think about it. Is it in the same league as Close to the Edge, Wish You Were Here, or Selling England by the Pound? Not even close.

Report this review (#153025)
Posted Wednesday, November 28, 2007 | Review Permalink
Guillermo
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars While not being really a band with permanent members, the Alan Parsons Project had very good musical ideas, mostly created by Eric Woolfson, and recorded, mixed and produced by Alan Parsons, one of the best studio engineers from England. Alan Parsons knows it well, that most of his contributions for their albums were more done in the creative process during the recording, mixing and general production of the sound of their albums. He also recognized it in one interview which I read in one magazine in the mid nineties: he was asked why the Alan Parsons Project`s name wasn`t used anymore for his new albums. He said that most of the songs were composed by Eric Woolfson, so he thought that it wasn`t fair to use the name for his new albums, so he released them under his own name.

I think that this is their most Progressive Rock album. But there are still some things which were very characteristic in the sound of this band, even some Pop Rock influences in the final song of the album called "To One In Paradise", which could have been a hit single. Was it relased as a single? Other very characteristic things also appear in this album: the very British dramatic vocals by the hired lead singers , the very characteristic use of the synthesizers, the very good backing vocals, and very good orchestral arrangements. The orchestra mostly appears in the longest piece of music in this album called "The Fall of the House of Usher", which is mostly instrumental, with some mysterious musical atmospheres. The song To One In Paradise is really like a light song to finish the album after the mysterious musical atmospheres of "The Fall of the House of Usher". The spoken vocals also add mystery to the album`s sound. The song called "The Raven" is also very good, and it is also one of the Pop Rock influenced songs of the album. But as a whole the album is very good and the much closer to Prog Rock that this band recorded.

I read some of Edgar Allan Poe`s works so I`m a bit familiarized with the themes of the stories. But it was a very long time ago that I read them (in Prep School, I think, it was 26-27 years ago!). Anyway, this album is very good to listen to from start to finish to let your imagination flow.

Report this review (#161694)
Posted Wednesday, February 13, 2008 | Review Permalink
5 stars From far, the best APP album - and their first one. Based only on Edgar Allan Poe stories (see the track titles, like The Cask Of Amontillado or The Raven), this is one of the most innovative and magnificent progressive albums. Favorite moments ? The Raven, The Tell-Tale Heart, and all of the Fall Of The House Of Usher suite, which is the highlight of the album. This is a must-have. If you want to own one single APP album, choose this one.
Report this review (#164152)
Posted Monday, March 17, 2008 | Review Permalink
5 stars Absolutely essential! The day this was released I bought it and was pretty much disappointed. Friends told me to buy this, because so many well known artist appear. But unfortunately, after just buying albums like Relayer or Foxtrot this one came as a bit of let-down. So why is it essential. Well over the years I leaned to appreciate it a lot. I should say: immense! And this hsa nothing to do with side one which is OK, but not more than that. It's the epic on side two which you should listen to! It doesn't have to do with APP in general a lot. Instead it's a very fine symphonic peace, starting with the classical prelude, throuw some haunting rain stuff, with nice themes ending with to one in paradise which is a very fine ballad. Now one thing which has been stated before: The first part of the Usher Epic is in fact by Debussy. This isn't mentioned anywere, not on the LP, the CD or on many websites. So the best part of APP wasn't written by APP! To be fair, I have the Debussy version as well, and it is not as nice as this arrangement. Moreover the rest of the Debussy piece isn't appalling, so it's good to have it like this, with the rest of the Epic. Another thing: The original or the 87 remake? Well, normally I'd go for the original, but this time I'll go for the opposite: The remake has some fantastic intro's by Orson Welles and Side one and Two are nicely abridges. For me there's no need to but the newly released original-on-CD. So 5 stars as I regularly play Side two of this disc!
Report this review (#167211)
Posted Tuesday, April 15, 2008 | Review Permalink
5 stars The first album I heard from Alan Parsons Project and one of the first prog rock albums that I enjoyed. That was some years ago (not many, really. Probably, four of five years) and in that time I wasn't ready to listen to Larks' Tongues or The Wall. I was almost a child and I wouldn't understand them (in fact, I wasn't even interested in music). So I could say that this album was my introduction to progressive.

Why am I telling my life here? Well, it's important to understand what this album is about: a boy can hear it and like it, from beggining to end. Anyone can enjoy this album. It's the perfect album for that. The songs are attractive. The sound is attractive. Even the topic of the album is attractive. It has something special. I can't say what is it, but it's special. Something that, in your first listening, catches you and don't let you leave until the album is finished. It's really a good album to prog starters. What does not mean that it is superficial or bad.

The album is perfect in its songs. The instrumental intro of A Dream Within A Dream, the psychedelic The Raven, with that digital effect in the voice; the more rocker The Tell-Tale Heart, the relaxed The Casl of Amontillado, the catchy Doctor Tarr and the final orchestral track, The Fall of the House of Usher. They are all perfect, no defects. Just one bad thing can be said about this album: it's supposed to be a tribute to Allan Poe, a romanthic, tetric writer. The songs just don't match to that idea. The songs are too happy, not dark at all. Maybe a more gothic band could make this sound more similar to Allan Poe's books. But, if you forget this detail, you have a perfect album, filled with amazing songs that can be heard either by neofits or by old prog rockers.

Report this review (#174401)
Posted Wednesday, June 18, 2008 | Review Permalink
Sinusoid
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars I've never really considered myself an APP fan; this is the first of their albums my ears came across, and I consider this one to be the best.

I never familiarised myself too much with this group. I always found most of the music to be underwhelmingly unsatisfying in some way, shape or form. Here, they try to earn art kudos with the classical sounding epic of ''The Fall of the House of Usher''. In my mind, this doesn't work because the ''Prelude'' is waaaaaaaaayyyyyyyyy too long for me, and it reminds me of the most boring of classical music. This is a shame since the ''Pavane'' and ''Arrival'' sections aren't too bad.

The poppier songs have some sophistication too them, but there really isn't a special song here. There are some interesting grooves underlying ''The Tell-Tale Heart'' and ''Dr. Tarr...'', and the former is bolstered by Arthur Brown's voice. Overall, the album fails to please me, but it gets three stars under the knowledge now that future APP poppy songs will be less sophisticated, more mainstream and more uninteresting.

Report this review (#176875)
Posted Monday, July 14, 2008 | Review Permalink
The Whistler
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars (Fall of the House of 3.5)

So basically, if you're going to create a "project;" no, not a band, but a "project," you better sure as [&*!#] have something pretty damn impossible to achieve set up for your first album. And, hey, Alan Parsons does JUST that!

Because, in layman's terms, Alan Parsons' Tales of Mystery and Imagination is hardly the sprawling epic of Gothic horror that the mummy on the cover wants you to think. This ISN'T Powerslave. It's an art pop gem, for the first half. For the second half, it's some kind of dull ass art pop...thingy. It also has very little to do with Poe by the second side. But, hey, what about that first side, huh?

MY version opens with "A Dream Within a Dream," which is some pleasant narration by Orson Welles, followed by some pleasant, layered synth riffage (I say "MY version" all pretentious like because some folks don't have this narration. So there). This spills quite nicely into "The Raven," which follows with the same droning synths, bass and drums, but adds...Alan himself on vocorder! There's also a pretty good guitar solo afterwards. Toss in some cool changes in the riffage, and some over-the-top vocals, and you get an instant highlight.

But it's not "The Raven" that claims top song on this album: no, that falls squarely on the humble shoulders of "The Tell-Tale Heart."First off, it's sung by one of the few men in rock actually qualified to portray one of Poe's doomed protagonists, crazy Arthur Brown. Secondly, the tune is both catchy as hell, and manages to take as many twists and turns as Brown's delivery, moving from a stomping, almost funky rocker, to sweeping orchestral dips and twists and back.

Not quite as pleasing is "The Cask of Amontillado," which tries to mix some almost Beach Boy type vocals with calm, then swooping, orchestral movements. All in all there's nothing wrong with it, but it ends up sounding like an imitation of a Peter Gabriel mini-opera. Nothing wrong with that, but I'd rather hear Pete's version somehow. No real complaints with "Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether" though; it's loads of fun, another funky art popper packed with vocal hooks (and I dig the reference to "The Raven" riff).

The BIG letdown comes on the second side, which is mostly devoted to this "Fall of the House of Usher" thing, which is essentially one long symphonic piece split amongst several tracks of varying size. "Prelude" is the longest, and also the least interesting. Admittedly, it does start with some more classy Welles narration, but beyond that it sounds just like a film score for an old Roger Corman American International Poe movie! And I have no problem with those soundtracks...as long as they're accompanied by images of Vincent Price raiding the Arkham cemetery for bodies. "Prelude" can't do that...without the aid of illegal substances of course...

It actually picks up a little with "Arrival," in which some rain sound effects and cheesey organ actually enhance the horror mood. Toss in some door knocking sound effects that turn into percussion, and hey, I'm sold! "Intermezzo" is basically a minute long orchestra sting, but "Pavane" is an actual SONG! You know, with, like, a melody. Okay, so it's actually a harpsichord riff, but whatever. It's nice enough, and I can actually tap my foot to it and everything.

Unfortunately, "Fall" is a fairly unimaginative conclusion to the whole affair. Fifty seconds of orchestral crescendo? That's not that scary. Doesn't sound so much like the "Fall of the House of Usher" as it does "A Wall That Fell Down in the House of Usher," or maybe, "Someone's Been Throwing Rocks at the House of Usher's Windows Again" or something. And finally, "To One in Paradise" is a pretty poor place to end the album; a lackluster pop ballad that has nothing that I can tell to do with Edgar Allen Poe.

So what's wrong with our album Alan? Well, it doesn't really work as a dank, despairing, endlessly depressing look into the lives of various Poe characters. At least, it doesn't in a certain way; when it tries to be all artsy and expressive, it fails miserably. Writing epic orchestral suites is definitely NOT Alan Parsons' cup of tea. And, honestly, I know that "Fall" is a classic Poe story, but the suite doesn't have a lot to do with the story it seems. I TOLD you Dark Side of the Moon was overrated...

However, dressing up pop songs in one way or another, there, THAT'S Parsons' specialty. When he sticks with the art pop route, it usually works. And, if it's dark you want, there IS a sort of darkness to this album...a kind of proto- Cure darkness sort of, found at its best in things like the manic "Tell-Tale Heart," or the pretty "Cask of Amontillado," or even the weird "Raven." In fact, "Raven" is pretty cool, showing that Parsons can be spooky, catchy and experimental all in one, and in such a way as to not bite off more than he can chew. Tales is not a bad album; it just had the mistake of having a very dull second side.

It also isn't very epic or heartfelt or contains any soul shattering solos, but hey, what do you want? It's got Orson Welles! True enough, Jeff Wayne got Richard Burton...who actually acted and everything...but Welles is Welles, and I think that's enough.

Report this review (#184259)
Posted Wednesday, October 1, 2008 | Review Permalink
Tarcisio Moura
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars I have always thought critics - and many of my firends - were too harsh on The Alan Parsons Project. And the only of his works that received some praising was his first, Tales Of Mystery And Imagination. Looking back now I can see that this is maybe his most progressive overall, maybe because of the long symphonic piece The Fall Of House of Usher, which occupies much of the second side of the original LP. but still I don´t think this first work was not too far removed from those remaning albums by the Project.

Ok, their 80´s output tended too much to pop, but from the very start the music here is quite melodic and accessible. The lyrics are very interesting and they were one fot APP´s strongest points, along with the tasteful arrangements, the fine choice of singers and the great melodies. And this first release was no exception. It has some more orchestration and weird sounds here and there for some effect, but the music overall did not differs much from what they did next (they were bashed by critics from the second LP on).

All those polemics aside, I was pleased when I heard this album again after many years. It was a bold nove for such an unknown act: Parsons could be famous inside the music business for his brilliancy on the production and engineering board, but most music fans never heard about him. the LP was not a great seller but it does have a strong personality and showed the world the potential of such bold (some say pretentious) attempt to do some musical work on America´s great poet Edgar Alan Poe. The result was great and I still think it is one of APP´s best. All songs are good, but the instrumental The Fall.. is certainly the highlight of the album with its hauting atmosphere and its stunning ending piece.

A very fine start for a much underrated essemble of fine artists. Four stars.

Report this review (#192285)
Posted Monday, December 8, 2008 | Review Permalink
5 stars Well, this masterwork has been reviewed about a million times, so I won't go into any lengthy discussion.

In fact, I will say though, that if you don't have this beautiful, powerful, progressive album, GO GET IT! This is true classical/prog rock at it's best. One of the few albums where there's spoken word and you don't start feeling embarrassed about it half way into the speech. The first (I believe) use of vocoder, and what a perfect introduction to something that's also been over used since then.

The version that I have is a remaster, but not the one with the double CD, and the remix. I love what I hear on my copy. Crystal clear, powerful.

My only regret is that the follow up catalog of Mr. Parson's is, although successful and interesting, nowhere near as perfect.

BUT! Thank you Mr. Alan Parson's and Mr. Eric Woolfson. Even after over 30 years, this musical work stands the test of time - you listen to it over and over again.

Report this review (#197555)
Posted Tuesday, January 6, 2009 | Review Permalink
CCVP
PROG REVIEWER
5 stars Do you believe in love at first sight? (or should it be love at the first listen?)

Alan Parsons Project was, alongside with Pink Floyd, one of the firsts progressive rock bands i ever knew and one of the firsts progressive bands i ever listened. However, my father only had the Alan Parsons Project vinyls so, as i grew up, i slowly lost touch with this great band, until i bought a CD with the 1987 remix and could relive the pleasure of listening this album once again, but with digital quality this time, what makes Tales of Mystery and Imagination - Edgar Allan Poe much more enjoyable because it has a lot of piano and pianissimo parts that were outshone by the vinyl residual noise.

By the way, i said love at first sight because i have forgotten almost completely how good this album was because i didn't listened it since i were a child, so when i listened it again it was almost like i were listening it for the first time.

Tales of Mystery and Imagination - Edgar Allan Poe could be easily considered a concept album because it was made around a theme and the whole album follows that theme, the theme being make music inspired by the Edgar Allan Poe poetry and to use those very poems as the lyrics to the music they inspired.

Though Poe's poetry isn't exactly upbeat, not every song of the album is introspective, minimalistic or has a sad mood. Actually, there are songs that are pretty festive and songs that don't relate much to the album in a way or another, like the song The Tell-tale Heart, for example, that has vocals from its beginning that are completely of the wall (in a bad way) or the song (The System of) Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether, which have a bit too much of a dancing beat for its own good. Another issue is that some songs seem to be a bit shorter than they should be, like the opening track A Dream Within a Dream. Those potential problems, however, are easily erased or forgotten by the overall quality of the songs themselves and the overall quality of the album.

The highlights are: A Dream Within a Dream, The Raven, The Cask of Amontillado, The Fall of the House of Usher and To One in Paradise.

Grade and Final Thoughts

After being the sound engineer for Pink Floyd in their acclaimed album Dark Side of the Moon, Allan Parsons decided to make a project so he could make music and get more cash than he did as a sound engineer. Clearly inspired by Pink Floyd, more specifically by the PF album Dark side if the Moon, and Moody Blues, this album sits somewhere between Dark Side and days of Future Past and, like both albums, i think Tales of Mystery and Imagination - Edgar Allan Poe is a terrific album. Due to that, it deserves an equally good grade, so it is 5 stars for the Allan Parsons Project debut album.

Report this review (#204293)
Posted Wednesday, February 25, 2009 | Review Permalink
SouthSideoftheSky
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Symphonic Team
3 stars (The system of) Doctor Parsons and Professor Woolfson

This was the first album by The Alan Parsons Project and like all the albums they did later this one too is based around a theme or concept. The concept here rather obviously revolves around the writings of Edgar Allan Poe. While the core of The Alan Parsons Project is Alan Parsons and Eric Woolfson, like on all their subsequent albums, they invite a cast of other musicians and vocalists to contribute. One notable celebrity here is Arthur Brown who sings lead vocals on The Tell Tale Heart, the rockiest song on the album. The song fits Brown very well. Orson Wells provided some narration, but I have now learned that this was only for the 1987 remix of the album and Wells did not feature on the original 1976 release.

One problem that I often have with Alan Parsons albums is just that they always rely on too many outside people, particularly vocalists. I feel that having different vocalists on different tracks makes the albums sound like compilations of independent songs and not as unified albums. The fact that the songs are tied together by a common theme does not remedy the incoherence created by having several vocalists. All of the songs on the first half of the album are good Pop/Rock songs, but not much Prog is in sight. The second side is dominated by a long orchestral piece that I also wouldn't call Prog at all.

Many hold the present album as the Project's best, but I don't think it is. Good, but certainly not essential!

Report this review (#209122)
Posted Saturday, March 28, 2009 | Review Permalink
kenethlevine
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Prog-Folk Team
4 stars By 1976 progressive rock was already becoming tired and long in the tooth. The heavyweights - PINK FLOYD, JETHRO TULL, GENESIS, YES, ELP - were still around, but few new acts could challenge their dominance, and it was becoming increasingly apparent that prog as a whole was not a particularly successful commercial art form. The emergence of the ALAN PARSONS PROJECT provided a much needed short term boost to prog, even if 80% of Parsons' credibility was a result of his involvement with FLOYD, and he would ultimately take the project into the mainstream. But for the debut, we are dealing with a suitably ambitious adaptation of the works of the master of macabre himself, with a cast of dozens, a formula later adopted by a plethora of explorers like JEFF WAYNE, INTERGALACTIC TOURING BAND, MANDALABAND, and even some of MIKE OLDFIELD's 1980s output.

Consistency amid daunting variety are among the qualities that make "Tales" such a winner and so sweet sounding decades later. Firstly, the repeating melodic theme first introduced in "A Dream within a Dream" and coaxed into orgasmic waves on "The Fall of the House of Usher" became a blueprint for countless symphonic, electronic, and neo progressive artists for years to come, among them ELOY, CLEPSYDRA and even BARCLAY JAMES HARVEST. The choral accompaniments do not hold back at all, and are all the more endearing on tracks like the schizophrenically brilliant "Cask of Amontillado". While "Dr Tarr and Professor Fether" provide the blueprint for more oozing commercial material that would eventually follow, it was a breath of fresh air at the time. Both "The Raven" and "Tell Tale Heart" capture the foreboding and torment of Edgar Allan Poe's protagonists such that even their repetitive nature seems justified. Even "To One in Paradise" distinguishes itself by its poetic understatement. This is an immaculately constructed work that still revels in a certain raw charm.

Ultimately, PARSONS should not be flawed for his part in the birth of arena rock which may have done more to stifle prog than punk ever could, because "Tales" provides enough cues for a more artistically rewarding direction that few, even APP itself, ultimately followed. 4.5 stars, flip a coin, tales wins.

Report this review (#212233)
Posted Thursday, April 23, 2009 | Review Permalink
ZowieZiggy
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars I am not a fan reader (except of some French classic writers) so I know nothing of E.A. Poe. But this should not be a problem while listening to this type of music.

The music, the arrangements, the fine flow is speaking for itself. This is an fine concept album of which there are still some mistakes to be recalled like the heavy and little appealing ''Tell-Tale Heart''.

I first listened to this album at a friend's place back then (salut Patrick); but I had already read some rave reviews about this release. To be honest, when I first discovered it, I couldn't really match the comments with the music. And it is the feeling that I will translate into words in this review.

To me, it sounds more as a musical (''The Cask of Amontillado''). It is of course all well crafted and produced (Alan was the engineer behind DSOTM) but I can't be as laudatory as most of the reviewers in terms of brilliance of this album.

To be more honest, in those days I had no clue that Alan had anything to do with the superb DSOTM. And this wasn't my concern at all. I was just heading for great music. Period. And I am closer to Tom Ozric's views than of lots of other reviewers about this work.

The long prelude of the epic is too much orchestra-oriented IMO. And I have never liked this. Neither in '76 nor in '09, so?Of course the Floydian ''Arrival'' is one of the highlight (but it lasts less than three minutes).

Some Oldfield feel can be interpreted during the beautiful ''Pavane''. These are magical moments but too scarce overall.

There is a whole lack of humanity in this work. It was attempted to be too perfect . IMO it hasn't passed well the proof of time. Three stars.

Report this review (#220192)
Posted Sunday, June 7, 2009 | Review Permalink
3 stars Edgar Allen Poe is a figure that divides opinion, in spite of his influence many feel his neo-gothic poetry and prose is too ugly, too cold, too unpalatable. It is strange then, to find that Alan Parson's album inspired entirely by the works of the man, tries so hard to cover all bases. It would have been very easy to dip into the Hammer Horror sounds catalogue and create a monochrome work that of generic creepy nonsense. Instead the album tries to shoehorn as many styles as possible into the musical re-imaginings of Poe's work.

It certainly leans towards the chilling at times, but the gothic edges always remain in the background, adding depth rather than dominating the tone, allowing sweeping strings and harsh blues guitar to bring variety and colour into the songs. This variety is further enhanced by the use of many different vocalists, giving each story it's own character. It should all sound like a terrible mess, but somehow it does work, the mad-scientist experimentation tied together by Alan Parsons' keen ear for a catchy, dare I say it, poppy hook.

Of course, it has some decidedly weaker moments. The high-camp glory of the doomily contemplative Orson Welles voiced introduction that segues directly into the high energy funk-rock of 'The Raven' is somewhat spoiled by 'The Tell Tale Heart' that follows, featuring an Arthur Brown vocal more over the top than an international comb-over convention. The mostly excellent haunting orchestral epic, 'Fall in the House of Usher', which takes up most of the second side, has it's effect dampened both by an irritatingly ponderous spoken introduction and 'To One in Paradise', the slightly limp closer that follows it.

Overall, though, this is a strong and entertaining album, well worth a listen despite, and because of, its idiosyncrasies.

Report this review (#226492)
Posted Monday, July 13, 2009 | Review Permalink
The Crow
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars Excellent debut of this important "project" from the 70's!

The two main minds behind this band were the producer and engineer Alan Parsons himself, and the talented musician and composer Eric Woolfson... Together, they tried to recreate the dark world of the great american writer Edgar Allan Poe in a short but very intense album, with some fails, but with a lot of virtues too.

The main of the problem this album has, is that the Poe spirit was not really represented through the album... Maybe the songs are too soft, and too luminous sometimes to make a good approaching to the genious's dark imaginary. This happens with more intensity in the singed tracks, while The Fall of the House Usher suite, with its cinematographic and symphonic feeling, catches this dark sentiment with more intensity.

Nevertheless, the quality of the music is undeniable... Alan Parsons kwew how to produce and mix an album (he was the main enginer of albums like "Abbey Road" and "The Dark Side of the Moon") and gave a cristal clear sound to the songs. The 80's remix, with the brilliant addition of two Orson Welles monologues and a new drums tracks, made the album's sound even better. It still sounds fresh today!

This first Alan Parsons Project's album, is also their most symphonic and darker... The Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon" influence is here, and also the symphonic experiments of bands like the early Deep Purple and The Moody Blues, but with a more cohesionated mix between rock and classical elements, with a coherent dramatic orientation wich helps to introduce the listener (although not completely...) in the Edgar Allan Poe's world. This good ideas, together with the contribution of later classic studio members like the great Ian Bairnson on guitars and John Patton on bass, make "Tales of Mystery and Imagination" a worthy album.

Best tracks: every song of the albums has its interest... But I specially like The Raven, The Tale-Tell Heart, and the intense rock track (The System Of) Doctor Tarr And Pfofessor Fether. The symphonic suite The Fall of House Usher also deserves a special mention.

Conclusion: maybe Alan Parsons Project did not the best prog or symphonic rock in the years they were active... But they released some worthy albums, being "Tales of Mystery and Imaginations" one of their finest, if not the best. Maybe Parsons and Woolfson failed in capturing the dark essences of the bizarre and necromatical stories and poems of Allan Poe, but they achieved to make a very worthy contribution to the 70's symphonic rock, wich had also its influence in movements like the later Neo-Prog. Strongly recommended, and maybe the best place to start if you are a newcomer to Alan Parsons Project!

My rating: ****

Report this review (#232154)
Posted Monday, August 17, 2009 | Review Permalink
UMUR
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
3 stars "Tales of Mystery and Imagination - Edgar Allan Poe" is the debut full-length studio album by UK semi-progressive rock project act Alan Parsons Project. The album was released through 20th Century Fox Records in the US in May 1976 and through Charisma in the UK in June 1976.

Alan Parsons Project has always evolved around the nucleous of songwriter Eric Woolfson and keyboard player Alan Parsons. The latter is known for being engineer on "Abbey Road (1969)" by The Beatles and "Dark Side of the Moon (1973)" by Pink Floyd. While Alan Parsons is the most prolific person in the project Eric Woolfson has an equal part in the project.

The music on the album is progressive rock of the symphonic variation altough for the most part on the light pop side of the genre (hence the semi mention in the beginning of the review). Side 1 are seperate tracks while most of side 2 is an instrumental suite which features orchestration. There are many different guest musicians on the album and I can mention among others Francis Monkman (Curved Air) and Arthur Brown who delivers one of his fierce Tom Jones like vocal performances on the song "The Tell-Tale Heart". The lyrical themes all come from Edgar Allan Poe stories. Influences from such acts as Pink Floyd and The Beatles are audible throughout. For an example take a listen to the closing track on side 2 titled "To One in Paradise" for evidence of those influences. The instrumental suite which takes up most of side 2 titled "The fall of the House of Usher" features some interesting sections but doesn´t really blow me away like I had hoped for. I feel the tracks on Side 1 are generally both stronger and more memorable.

The musicianship is impeccable and the sound production professional and well sounding. Add to that professional songwriting and you have a quality product. Personally I´ve always felt that "Tales of Mystery and Imagination - Edgar Allan Poe" lacks a bit of soul and bite. Maybe a "band" feeling or something like that, but still a 3.5 star (70%) rating is deserved.

Report this review (#245876)
Posted Friday, October 23, 2009 | Review Permalink
Rune2000
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
3 stars Now that I've covered some of the least impressive collaboration acts in the history of rock, let's talk about one which is probably considered to be one of the household names in the popular music history. After all they were mentioned in an Austin Powers movie!

This first Alan Parsons Project record is the only one that will be remembered as a truly thematic piece of work. Many of the following albums would try to replicate the ideas of this first venture but always end up short in one way or another. This by no means implies that Tales Of Mystery And Imagination is a perfect album. In fact it didn't impress me as much as their sophomore release I Robot but that's because that particular album put the song writing before its concept.

Parsons and Woolfson definitely dived head first into prog-territory when working on the The Fall Of The House Of Usher-suite. Although the composition might not seem all that original by 1976 standards the passion and dedication really shows in the each of the individual pieces. At the same time it actually shows my main concern with this album. There just aren't any real stand-out moments here, on contrary the record has an even flow that non of its successors could achieve. This is what makes it a bit boring by my standards.

Sometimes the most progressive piece of work isn't necessarily a highlight even for prog-fans, but I would definitely recommend to hear this album just for its novelty factor.

**** star songs: A Dream Within A Dream (4:13) The Raven (3:57) The Cask Of Amontillado (4:33) Prelude (7:02) Arrival (2:39) Intermezzo (1:00) Pavane (4:36) Fall (0:51) To One In Paradise (4:46)

*** star songs: The Tell-Tale Heart (4:38) (The System Of) Doctor Tarr And Professor Fether (4:20)

Report this review (#267105)
Posted Friday, February 19, 2010 | Review Permalink
4 stars It's been awhile since I have really listened to this so I spun it again before this review. Leaving aside the "prog-or pop?" argument, I believe Alan Parsons nonetheless made some excellent music and was a top notch producer. Side one is my favorite on this release: " A Dream within a Dream", "The Raven", and "Cask of Amontillado" are awesome Parsons songs, some of his best. Based on these, this might be a five star review. I also enjoy the ending album track "To One in Paradise". Now, the problem. Unlike most other reviewers of this album, I just can't get into "The Fall of the House of Usher". I find it overlong and boring in parts. I have never been a big fan of mixing orchestra and rock ala' Moody Blues, so I guess my problem is understandable. I can see the effort and skill- but just not the result. But that's just my own personal hangup. Overall, though, this album rates a 4 stars whcih is as high as any of Alan Parsons' efforts. (I Robot and Pyramid are probably 4 star also).
Report this review (#278734)
Posted Tuesday, April 20, 2010 | Review Permalink
stefro
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars A former engineer who worked on, amongst others, Pink Floyd's 'Dark Side Of The Moon' and The Beatles 'Abbey Road', Alan Parsons was a top-notch studio operator who, in tandem with musician-and-lyricist Eric Woolfson, created the ever-shifting Alan Parsons Project, a collective of two, augmented by a cast of talented session musicians. The basic idea was a series of concept albums based on lofty, literal themes and brought to life by top-quality musicianship. Indeed, 'Tales Of Mystery & Imagination' - which is based on the works of legendary US horror-author Edgar Allan Poe - features a wonderfully crisp production that combines the compositional beauty of prog with a catchy pop sensibility that marked the APP out from the crowd, and, surprisingly, came at a time when punk was starting to ravage the prog world. Not unlike the early musings of a certain Mr Oldfield, with sparkling keyboards andn ethereal synth-washes to the fore, 'Tales Of Mystery & Imagination' is an assured debut with a glossy production sheen - so much so that many first-time listeners accidently - and understandably - believe it to be a product of the mid-1980's! The album is often heralded for the 5-part epic 'The Fall Of The House Of Usher' which fills the entire second side of vinyl. A 20-minute long song-suite with heavy classical overtones, this lengthy piece eschews the rock-orientated style of side 1 in favour of full-blown ELP-style histrionics. However, for many, it's the shorter, more concise and rockier numbers that prove to be the most indelible. The opening bass-thuds of 'Dream Within A Dream' promise much and deliver a fantastic pop-rock odyssey, before leading into the fantastic vocoder-sung 'The Raven'(one of the only APP songs actually sung by Mr Parsons himself) which showcases the APP's perfect merging of musical ideas and technology. Side 1 finishes with another excellent rocker, the slightly jokey '(The System Of)Dr Tarr and Professor Fether', which features a chorus any top-notch pop act would be proud to call their own. Overall, it's a debut to remember, and one that proved hugely successful in both North America and Continental Europe. But NOT, for reasons unknown, in Parson's UK homeland. Fusing pop with a heavy slice of technical prog, 'Tales Of Mystery & Imagination' was a hugely-entertaining beginning for this slightly-unusual union of musicians and producers. STEFAN TURNER, LONDON, 2010
Report this review (#279130)
Posted Friday, April 23, 2010 | Review Permalink
Bonnek
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
3 stars Alan Parsons needs no introduction; he's that technical studio wiz-kid with more references under his belt then any other producer in those days. His debut album sure served to deliver another proof of his technical skills as this album sounds years ahead of its time. He even succeed in integrating the rock instrumentation with a classical orchestra, something many have tried but few have succeeded in.

As to the quality of the songs, it's a mixed bag for me. On the bright side, the album shows a passionate and inspired band. The musicianship is functional and fitting, meant to serve the songs and not the musician's egos. There are a couple of great songs on the album, the opening duo of A Dream Within a Dream and Raven register as the best and also the most progressive to me. Their attention to sonic texture, the sophistication of the arrangement and the crescendo build-up towards the sweeping finale match up with the big symphonic tradition of years passed.

The melodies themselves are rather predictable though. APP never leaves the secure path of traditional harmonies and mainstream chord progressions. On The Cask of Amontillado they even sound 'regressive', as if rock music hadn't progressed an inch since the ballad pop of the Beatles. Also Dr.Tarr is a fairly standard rock track. Only the ambitious production make it sound prog on the outside, but it doesn't have a deeper layer underneath. Still, I quite like that one.

Side two of the original album is more ambitious, featuring a long classical suite taking lots of inspiration from late romanticists/early modernist composer like Wagner, Mahler and Prokofiev. I can't say I'm particularly thrilled by it. Both the classical parts and the atmospheric instrumental rock parts just don't speak to me. It ends with To One In Paradise, a bland pop sugar ballad that easily knocks off a star.

The second side makes the album difficult to rate. Much of it sounds so empty, as if all attention went into creating the sound instead of the music. As a result I can't rate this album above 3 stars, but I would still recommend it to everyone that doesn't mind the silky soft touch of pop music in his prog.

Report this review (#279330)
Posted Sunday, April 25, 2010 | Review Permalink
5 stars What happens when a songwriter and producer make music. They make something as amazing as this.

This being a milsetone in prog rock, it really does live up to it's standars.

Amazing experimental styles of songwrting (for band and orchestra), great vocalists, and amazing instrumentation work.

The songs of the album are based on nut case Edgar Allen Poe's most famous works, and I do think that his stuff is very obscure, but prog rock is the perfect genre to describe his werid and wonderfull tales.

1. A Dream Within A Dream - Very Pink Floyd esque instrumental with some folky timbres. Pretty cool. 8/10

2. The Raven - Kick ass song with some beautiful instrumentation. I love the vocorder.Alan's vocals are actuualyl pretty good in this song. 9/10

3. The Tell-Tale Heart - My favourite song on the album, mainly cause it has Arthur Brown in it, and I love his voice. Just an amazing piece of music. The middle section is quite beautfiul. Love the lyrics. 10/10

4. The Cask Of Amontillado - The vocals in this song sound like a duet between Peter Gabriel and Paul McCartney (that would be an amazing duo).Great solemn atmosphere. The orchestration is amazing. 9/10

5. (The System Of) Dr. Tarr & Professor Fether - Love the deep vocals in the chorus. Quite cathcy for such an ecclectic piece. Just in short a kick ass song. Love the vocals. 9/10

6. The Fall Of The House Of Usher - It does seem quite out of place, a big orchestral suite in the middle of a prog album, but it does work suprisingly well. It has some great themes and some very weird noisy parts. A successful bash at modern orchestral music. 8/10

7. To One In Paradise - Very Dream Theater intro. Love all the many vocals and the counterpoint sections. Some very beautifull melodies and cadences. Now don't hit me, but it does remind me of ABBA. 10/10

CONCLUSION: If you don't have this album, then shame on you. Buy it now. The Deluxe Edition (the copy I have), is packed full of extras.

Report this review (#288531)
Posted Monday, June 28, 2010 | Review Permalink
4 stars The first, the best... Even through the subsequent wonderful works as I Robot and the successfully Eye in the Sky which, by the way, have defined the sound for Alan Parsons, is here, with "Tales..." when the ambition of a well orchestrated and elaborated record has come to be.

Beyond the remarkable work as a music engineer, Alan Parsons develops and incredible sensibility in matter of musical environment, as well as the imagination from musician Eric Wolfson. As funny as clever, the selection of works from another Alan (Poe) has come to make the perfect scenario for explores the qualities of musical production and push its boundaries beyond the possibilities, at least at the time it was recorded.

Each story, dark as well, has in the same level a unique identity and the signature from its author. Parsons understood this and he worked over the sensations, the musical textures in order of develop a sound-brother for each tale. The lyrics are, evidently, based in the stories they are inspired by, even the obvious, some of its lines calls the listener to understand once again how to feel Poe's fears of his own imaginer. From the very beginning to the end, the sensation for isolation, a cold old castle, the winter at the window begging for life of their own, the crime just committed, all of them are fantastically landed.

Orchestrated by the great Andrew Powell, the spirit of symphonic rejoice surreal voice of electronic, each song has its brawn, and could be basically be heard as one single opus. Tough the narration from Orson Wells works as bridge between the first part and the marvellous suite "The Fall of the House of Usher". Indeed there are fails, as such as many influence from many styles and artists from Parson's previous collaborations, since Abbey Road even Dark Side of the Moon (a little more obvious in the final track To One in Paradise), but this may not lack its emotional side, as dark as exciting, with a musical and story line so easy to follow...

Alan Parsons Project wanted to prove they were capable to sign their names in the magical book of progressive rock artists, and they did.

Report this review (#300142)
Posted Wednesday, September 22, 2010 | Review Permalink
5 stars 1976 APP- Tales of Mystery and Imagination - Edgar Alan Poe (redo). 12/1""/10""""""The man that engineered not only the Beatles Abbey Road album but then to go onto Pink """Floyds Dark Side of the Moon, it is no wonder that Alan Parsons retained the same concept """of one song flowing right into the next.""""""When this came out on CD I rushed right out and bought it, to my dissatisfaction, it was """different than the original vinyl I had. There was extra excerpts of narration, additional guitar """bits. Looking into the guts of the CD was Parsons explanation. He (Parsons) wanted to """enhance his album (though some diehards would still prefer the original). I yearned to have """a CLEAN CD copy (available import only). Many years later I would put the vinyl back on the """turntable and though it was what I expected, near perfection album, I missed the extras he """had put into the REDO. So I must say that Alan improved near perfection. """"""1. A dream Within a Dream -4:14 Opening narration by Orson Wells to a flute from the """middle east feel. Enter a bass and snare soft keys and then very melodic keys and guitars """entering to a triumphant beat of drums, Alan Parsons knows how to put the feel into you, """quieting down to make you strain to listen""""""2. The Raven 3:""8 A reverberated vocal becoming full sound to the shout Never more! """Horns, drums choral backing with bass, very nice vocals re-enter. Then the first aspects of """the REDO. A strong electric guitar with heavy notes. Thus, quote the raven, nevermore! """This is a music that most if not all of us had never heard before. Parsons put these pieces """together very nicely, a flowing design that brings you up and down his coaster of dramatic """music. """"""3. The Tell-Tale Heart 4:39 Very strong vocal start, heavy bass guitar and electric, drums """solidly making known they are there, hidden piano to a wonderful soothing change of key """chords, light strings. Soft vocals And he wont be found at all, new insert floral keys, drums """slowly coming back with elec guitar, to an amazing full sound with elec guitar. Louder and """Louder! Great lyrics. I have seen the movie, The Tell-Tale Heart, very creepy. closing """with The eyes of the Devil himself shout. """"""4. The Cask of Amontillado 4:34 Strings in background vocals with such feeling """strengthening strings drinking the wine as we laugh at the time which is passing """incredibly slow backing vocals enter, sharp strings heavy brass notes, then full brass enter """with drums to a quiet, start vocals with sole piano and instruments join back in with strings """to a great lyric vocal with backing vocal you feel your mind, slipping away """Incredible deep brass overlying male chorus French horn coming out to strengthen the """might sound fading you here the strings."""""""". (The System of) Doctor Tarr and professor Fether 4:21 Just what you need to make you """feel better Strong guitar lead heavy deep vocal to verses accompanied by keys and so """much going on. Great play on words. Dont stop bringing the girls round! Powerful lyrics """strong instrumentation enter synths to round this out with flute, drums never ceasing, elec """guitar.. fade""""""6. The Fall of the House Usher 21:""7 - A very profound intro by Orson Wells Shadows of """shadows passing, it is now 1831 and as always, I am absorbed with a delicate thought, it """is how poetry has indefinite sensations, to which end, music is an essential. Since the """comprehension of sweet sound is our most indefinite conception, music when combined"""with a pleasurable idea is poetry. Music without the idea is simply music."""Without music or an intriguing idea, colour become pallor, man becomes carcass, home """becomes catacomb and the dead are for a moment motionless. """Enter subtle flutes, soft brass orchestra solidarity, bassoon, high strings straining to hear, """crescendos high and mighty back to a single shrill of violins, bassoon notes flutter to a """deafening quiet, like someone is slowely releasing the volume, pretty violins atop muted """brass, flutes taking over and then a major brass influx back to dark then the roll begins as a """bass guitar hits a note violins scraping the sky deep bass, timpani drums screeching """strings to a thunderous halt.""""""Storm sounds with organ and keys bringing you upward spiral ever rising Bang on the """door!! OH yes! Need I say more? OK I will. This is a piece of brilliance."""A changing section of held notes and deep sounds, till the bass and acoustic guitar comes """in, enter synth keys bringing you to a land beyond your thoughts, the bass guitar behind the """high pitch of keys is so wonderful. Everyone wonders to their own place when listening to """this Im sure, Alan directs you there though. Increasing intensity with the strumming guitar, """strumming guitar heavy brass note drums, it is so there. Tear forming in my eyes. Chorus """faint in background increasing, oh what a sound this is. Crashing to a mash of various """instrumentation at full screech. """"""To One in Paradise 4:47 A very sweet and mellow guitar (I Robot sounds) vocals I believe """in my dreams! Nothing could change my mind"""Just a great closing song for a miraculous album. Such backing vocals.""""""This IS an absolute essential piece of music. I give it a 4.99 of """""
Report this review (#353320)
Posted Wednesday, December 15, 2010 | Review Permalink
Mellotron Storm
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars I knew of Alan Parsons back in the early eighties and perhaps before that. He's somewhat famous for being the engineer on both "Abbey Road" and "Dark Side Of The Moon" before this band came to be. I knew the song "Eye In The Sky" very well from the radio and my other Parsons memory would be when I drove from the College I was going to in Toronto back home with two friends in a drug fuelled adventure that would have made Cheech & Chong proud. One of the guys on this road trip had an ALAN PARSONS PROJECT cassette with him and we listened to it on the way up North. I couldn't begin to remember which album it was though.This particular album seems to be the favourite among Prog fans perhaps because it's a concept album and there's a fair amount of orchestration. Both of these features are negatives for me unfortunatley. Actually Andrew Powell who conducted and arranged the orchestral sections would go on to produce Kate Bush's first two studio albums. I have the remasterd version which is the one where Alan re-did the guitars, synths and drums. Plus he got Orsen Welles to open the album with that monologue.

"A Dream Within A Dream" has Orsen speaking before the music takes over and builds. It blends into "The Raven" where we get processed vocals joining the beat. Both get louder then it settles with vocals, the tempo will change often.The guitar leads after 2 1/2 minutes. "The Tell- Tale Heart" has a catchy beat with vocals from none other than Arthur Brown, and yes he does get theatrical. It turns spacey after 2 1/2 minutes then builds. "The Cask Of Amontillado" is melancholic with reserved vocals and orchestral strings. It turns BEATLES-like then the tempo picks up.Themes are repeated. "(The System Of) Doctor Tarr And Professor Fether" opens with drums and guitar as the organ then vocals join in.

"The Fall Of The House Of Usher" is a five part suite. All of the tracks blend into each other. First up is "Prelude" with it's atmosphere and spoken words. Orchestral music before 1 1/2 minutes takes over. Not a fan of this. "Arrival" has thunder and rain before the music returns. "Intermezzo" is dark and orchestral. "Pavane" sounds really good with the synths and a beat. It's fuller as the drums come in after 3 minutes and it continues to build. "Fall" is a short less than one minute piece before the final track of the album "To One In Paradise" ends it.This is kind of dreamy with vocals.

A good album no doubt about it, but one that falls well short of 4 stars.

Report this review (#367604)
Posted Wednesday, December 29, 2010 | Review Permalink
BrufordFreak
COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
4 stars I am very surprised that I haven't reviewed this album yet. It made quite an impact on my when it was released in the fall of 1976 as it married some amazing story-lines with classically orchestrated rock band fronted music in a way I had never before heard. Though all of the radio-friendly art rock songs of Side One are well done, well-conceived, and well performed, except for "A Dream Within a Dream" (3:40) (9/10) with its amazing Orson Wells poetry reading, I always felt that they were a bit "over the top"--over-dramatized. The jewel of the album, however, is the orchestrated interpretation of "The Fall of the House of Usher" (16:10) (10/10)--one of my most favorite stories of all-time is here matched stunningly well by Alan Parsons and Eric Woolfson's music. The finale, "To One in Paradise" (4:13) (8/10) is absolutely gorgeous, but almost too-syrupy pretty, if you know what I mean.

Excellent album that introduced the world to the genius team of Alan Parsons and Eric Woolfson--as well as to a cast of "guest" artists that would grace APP albums for years to come.

Report this review (#387677)
Posted Thursday, January 27, 2011 | Review Permalink
4 stars Alan Parsons Pro . . . gressive

The theme of this album is represented, as the title suggests, by the works of the great American poet and writer Edgar Allan Poe. Naturally translate into music the masterworks of Poe is extremely difficult and pretentious, yet despite this we can say that Alan Parsons has succeeded brilliantly in this aim in almost all the tracks on this record.

Of course the fanatics of progressive rock should pay attention: I cannot guarantee you like this album because something here sounds, without doubt, a bit commercial. But certainly we are miles away from the "poppy" APP of "Eye In The Sky", "Stereotomy" and "Ammonia Avenue": if there is an album of this band that we can consider at least comparable to the progressive rock, this is it.

Very near to be a little masterpiece and I would give it 5 stars . . . but there is a loss of quality in some tracks. For example, the final song To One In Paradise (which is not a "tale" but a poem like A Dream Within A Dream and The Raven) isn't as good as the others, and the prologue of The Fall Of The House Of Usher", played by a symphonic orchestra, is a bit monotonous. For the rest of the album, there are no weak points: it is an album where the music is compelling and in many cases also perfectly suited to the atmosphere of the stories written by Poe. The production is masterful (as we could expect from the sound engineer of "Dark Side Of The Moon") and the album does not sound like a mid-seventies one: heard today it sounds incredibly modern and what is even more surprising when one considers that, at the time, Alan Parsons did not use any synthesizer. Very importance have the presence of distinguished guests like Francis Monkman in The Fall Of The House Of Usher and especially Arthur Brown, lead singer in The Tell-Tale Heart (the interpretation of the maniac murderer protagonist of the story is absolutely amazing).

Even a lighter episode as The System of Dr. Tarr and Professor Feather (Poe's surreal story, set in an asylum) is on the whole successful, as well as The Raven and The Cask Of Amontillado (the choruses of the latter track, however, could be avoided). Of course, the instrumental parts are the highlight of the album and especially The Fall Of The House Of Usher, just disappointing in the orchestral prologue.

Without doubt the best album of APP and also probably the only one I would recommend to a fan of progressive rock (but if you love only experimental prog or jazz-rock, I think is better for you to avoid it).

rating: 7/10.

Best song: The Tell-Tale Heart

Report this review (#434134)
Posted Friday, April 15, 2011 | Review Permalink
4 stars Their first project is uncharactaristic to their later works in that it has more of a lively, organic feel, and even though there are many musicians involved, they sound more like a band here than they ever did. That being said, I don't consider it their best album, and I think they perfected their formula with their next album, I Robot. And that being said, there is some very good music on this album, especially the first two and last two songs. "A Dream Within A Dream" is one of their most unique instrumentals, I love the groove of "The Raven", and the very stately "To One In Paradise" is probably the best song on the album, besides "The Fall of The House of Usher", which I consider to be a fine piece of avant-classical. That track probably conveys the feeling of the story better than any of the other songs, and I think they found better vocalists after this album, although the vocals contributed by Terry Sylvester and Parsons himself are very good. Overall, a worthwhile recording, though they would get better after this.
Report this review (#539636)
Posted Saturday, October 1, 2011 | Review Permalink
Warthur
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars I wouldn't say this album is a prog classic by any stretch of the imagination. The tone never really gets across the depressive and morbid nature of Poe's tales (though The Tell-Tale Heart featuring Arthur Brown and The Cask of Amontillado both come close), the epic Fall of the House of Usher uses flashy sound effects to mask shortcomings in the songwriting, and it's all rather cheesy. But at the same time, there's just something I find strangely comforting about this album. It's like the prog equivalent to a toasted cheese sandwich - there is nothing really fancy or gourmet about it, but when you're in the right mood there's nothing better.
Report this review (#548620)
Posted Tuesday, October 11, 2011 | Review Permalink
Epignosis
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
3 stars Here lies an album musically depicting the works of American Romanticist Edgar Allan Poe. This album from The Alan Parsons Project is thoughtful and literary progressive pop. The darkness of the literature represented here is rarely magnified; indeed, the tones of the age render Poe's work somewhat cheaply or queerly. That said, it is an enjoyable and occasionally disconcerting musical experience in its own right.

"A Dream within a Dream" The title of this piece is taken from a poem. After a spoken word section, a typical sounds from the Alan Parsons Project comes to the fore, semi-psychedelic and with a build of instruments and vocal harmonies, but never complex.

"The Raven" Leading in from the previous track, this piece features Poe's most famous poem adapted and run through a vocoder, boasting a strong rock chorus.

"The Tell-Tale Heart" Screeching vocals ruin this more traditional rocker; they are just too dramatic and ring hallow. The guitar solo almost makes up for it in the second bit.

"The Cask of Amontillado" Relating what is perhaps my favorite Poe story in Neo-Prog fashion, full of strings and overdramatic vocals, this piece leads into a beautiful counterpoint dialogue that is quite frightening given the context of the piece- well done. There is a heavier, synthetic brass-led interlude indicating the tension before the somber, and then peaceful, mood returns. This is an excellent composition from The Alan Parsons Project.

"(The System of) Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether" One of Poe's lesser known but more comedic works makes an appearance on this album. It is a more upbeat but still moderate rocker with fun vocals. The theme from "The Raven" makes a brief appearance here.

"The Fall of the House of Usher" What is considered a masterpiece of American Gothic literature is treated to a suite and given an initial spoken-word introduction. The prelude consists of an orchestral, and almost light-hearted piece that dips its toe in strangeness once in a while. A storm, appropriate enough, segues into the second, brief, organ-led segment. It admittedly becomes background noise until the bass, acoustic guitars, and synthesizers pick it up. It becomes an icy, melodic piece of music for a time. The twisted tones that overtake the suite are contextually disjointed- the author of the music should have found a way to make the fall flow.

"To One in Paradise" The final piece relates to one of Poe's poems. It is a peaceful and lovely piece that musically presents the poet's Romanticist but unquiet mind.

Report this review (#658410)
Posted Tuesday, March 13, 2012 | Review Permalink
3 stars Oddly enough, Alan Parsons was the first band that brought me into the prog world, so I have him and this album partly to thank. I always view this album as the Parson's version of Darkside of the Moon, as he had such an influence on that album it most definitely carried over here. While this album should be considred prog, there are a lot of elements from normal rock, pop, and classical as well, giving this a rather diverse feel.

The album opens with 'A Dream Within a Dream,' which begins with some spoken words and builds up to a Floydian-like atmosphere.

This segues into 'The Raven,' which makes decent use of orchestral sounds to give it a symphonic feel.

'The Tell-tale Heart' is a pretty decent rocker with some driving bass along with some frantic vocals.

'The Cask of Amontillado' has a glaringly obvious Beatles sound to it, which is never a bad thing. The orchestral segments in here are great as always. '(The System Of) Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether' is a fun tune, if slightly structurally simple.

'The Fall of the House of the Usher' is a 15-minute long suite in a undeniably symphonic symphonic style. The opening prelude is absolutely beautiful and mysterious. It is something that could have heard during the modern classical period. Two more rocking tracks are separated by a short prelude, before the tense conclusion.

The album ends with 'To One In Paradise,' which just kind of flows through you with the calm vocals and instrumentals.

Overall, this is a great album to start with (as I did), but is often quite predictable, which may leave the seasoned prog listener a tad cold.

5/10

Report this review (#779525)
Posted Friday, June 29, 2012 | Review Permalink
AtomicCrimsonRush
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
4 stars The debut of The Alan Parsons Project is one of the bravest, most adventurous debuts of any progressive act since King Crimson blazed a trail of innovation with their astonishing debut.

It is a retelling or reimagining of Edgar Allan Poe's infamous Tales of Terror, a subject I have some fascination with. I was inexorably drawn to this album for this one reason. The album is rather odd in its construction, featuring a whole vinyl side of an overblown instrumental reworking of The Fall of the House of Usher.

It opens with a blaze of glory featuring the wonderful keyboard work of extraordinaire Eric Woolfson at his best. The monotone bass work is a trademark of many APP songs over the ensuing years and it works as a heartbeat to the music. Soon we are blessed by the brilliance of The Raven, perhaps one of the greatest APP songs, certainly the one that always seems to rear its head on APP compilations. The way the vocoder processed voice enters is always chilling creating an ethereal atmosphere. The lyrics are affectionately akin to Poe's masterpiece. It builds with Andrew Powell's stunning orchestration, a factor that will appear on almost every APP album hereafter. The actor Leonard Whiting is terrific on lead vocals, with Alan Parsons performing the vocals through an EMI vocoder. The album's liner notes state that it was the first rock song that used a digital vocoder, and of course many artists used the device over the years such as Peter Frampton, Camel, The Sweet and a plethora of others.

Arthur Brown of The Crazy World of Arthur Brown is magnificent on The Tell Tale Heart, as is Francis Monkman, from Curved Air, and founder of Sky. This is a rocking song with a strong melody as is most of the earlier APP songs, always catchy and memorable.

The Cask of Amontillado is excellent with vox by John Miles and a stirring orchestra of blaring horns and choral vocals augmenting the chilling soundscape. In some ways the music could be even more creepy as the tales were always bone chilling in themselves, but the music on this album is pleasant enough to digest on side one, although the lyrics are still chilling.

Following this mesmirising start to the album is the single (The System Of) Doctor Tarr And Professor Fether, and as a hit it went to #37 on the Pop Singles chart, not a bad effort for a debut band nobody had heard about. This song has the duel vocals of Jack Harris and John Miles, and opens with the deep gravelly mantra. It moves into a pop feel but nothing like how the band would evolve into during the awful mid 80s. this album is a totally different beast and actually brims over with invention and progressiveness. These traits would be shed in their 80s period unfortunately.

Side two of the vinyl is virtually a dynamic orchestra filled symphonic suite dedicated to the classic tale, The Fall of the House of Usher. This is difficult to digest at first but soon the brilliance of the musicianship somehow seeps into the system and it really is one of the most captivating suites I have heard. The band never did anything this daring again but it is so refreshing and makes this a cult album. It opens with Prelude, with creepy flute and haunting strings, like the soundtrack of a horror movie, albeit majestic and sweeping.

This is a very avant-garde approach and was inspired by the opera fragment "La chute de la maison Usher" by Claude Debussy from 1908 and 1917. It is akin to classical music or soundtrack music from a movie, but somehow it works as a surprise and a delight on this album.

After some awesome thunder and rain pouring down effects we segue into the next part, Arrival. Dracula organ plays and the scene is set for some Hammer Horror fun. The keyboards are incredible from Woolfson, building into a crescendo outbreak of an organic flowing ambience. The drums, bass and guitar are overlayed with strong cathedral organ; it is a fantastic soundscape.

Intermezzo and Pavane continue the sage with beautiful execution. I love the keyboard motif on Pavane giving it an agreeable Spanish-Latin texture. This is APP at their best, reminding me of In The Lap of the Gods from the yet to be released 'Pyramid'. The atmosphere is dense with imagery of darkened forests and that creepy old house that falls into the tarn after the appearance of the apparition. It segues nicely into the preternatural Fall.

This last part is the finale though it is less than a minute and could have been longer. It builds with crashing staccato keyboard stabs that chill the marrow of the bone as the house sinks into oblivion. It creeps me out everytime, sinister, dark and terrifying on every level, this is as dark as the band would get.

To One In Paradise closes the album with a more pleasant song, though it softens the blow for me, and I would rather it had ended with Fall. Not that this is a bad song, but it is out of place here. This song is very gentle and has lovely harmonies, ending things on a more positive note. It sounds a bit like a cross between The Beatles' Across the Universe and the cosmic scapes of Pink Floyd.

Overall, this is definitely one of the all time great debuts, absolutely essential listening and groundbreaking for prog. The 1987 remix version is also worth a listen as it features dialogue and added segments enhancing this original version. This was when APP were at their most innovative and they would continue to produce one excellent album after another for the next few years until it dissolved into standard AOR commercial pop in the 80s. This album is an astonishing achievement and must be listened to by every serious prog fan.

Report this review (#897671)
Posted Tuesday, January 22, 2013 | Review Permalink
admireArt
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars It of course, is not the first time someone sets his "project" on a known concept or character outside the strict musical environment. So this review will focus on the music rather than the concept; wich of course is embedded in the same. So music wise, this work is quiet daring.

For starters, it delivers for the first time Alan Parsons' already established high tech quality- engineering skills, into his own pen-written album. Very creative music compositions that move in very opposite grounds, melting these differences with ingenious studio-effects and arrangements. So everything flows naturally. Even if the ambitious goal is pretentious, the result is invinting.

And once you feel comfortable with this Rock/Pop/Prog language, the project detours into an amazing closedown, with a quiet more daring long-timed composition: "The Fall of the House of the Usher" a more "classical music/structure", leaded by the "Project's" accomplice: Erick Woolfson, which own work is closer to those aesthetics.

Add to that; good songs and arrangements. (APP´s later lyrics will never be this relevant, so, by adapting E.A. Poe's poems it turned out to be a relief for him and us. imo.) MUSIC-wise, this work is fun, well performed and exquisitely accomplished.

..Good things grow well with age. Even the songs that are now well known to be Alan Parson's commercial song writing style, still sound interesting in this specific project, as pieces of a "whole" and at that time this kind of APP's "Pop/Rock" language was still more prog-related and "fresh" ( less-corny) than his later works.

****4 "Great-listening experience in High-Tech Studio conditions" PA Stars!

Report this review (#971672)
Posted Wednesday, June 5, 2013 | Review Permalink
5 stars "Tales of Mystery and Imagination" is the first studio album by Alan Parsons Project and it was released in 1976. It is an interesting record. Alan Parsons was a well known producer of music and the project was a cooperation with a lot of people amongst which the keyboardist Eric Woolfson is ione of the most important. I count to more than twenty nine musicians that perform here so it's now strange that this turns up to be inspiring and huge symphonic rock music. The cover pisture is mostly green and you could open the "book" and read both the lyrics and a lot of others. This record is inspired by the poem's of Edgar Allan Poe and it starts my journey through Alan Parsons Projects world.

The music has similarities with the powerful, keyboard driven music of Manfred Mann's Earth Band. The musical world showed here is mysterious and very intriguing. It has some classical approach, especially in "The Fall of the House of Usher" with all its parts and different themes. The album is though very rocky and future oriented, still with lyrics refering to wide ranges of age. "To one in Paradise" is a mild and whispering closer just as "A dream within a dream" starts the record with magic in its every tune. "The Raven" refers to on of Poe's most famous poems and here it sounds like APP experiments with auto tune or something. The three next coming song on the first side is powerful rock songs with eternal lyrics. "Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether" is lovely in it's catchy coherence.

There are so many musicians on this record but they don't play in the same time, fortunately. The music is amazing, top class and just want I expect music to give me. The vocalists who sing here do a fantastic job such as everybody else. This was a big surprise for me and I am glad to give a record the highest rating tonight. A most hear recording for every proger!

Report this review (#1155550)
Posted Saturday, March 29, 2014 | Review Permalink
2 stars The Alan Parsons Project is not a typical band per se, but more of an in-studio collaboration lead by music producer Alan Parsons, working with a huge array of different musicians as and when possible. It wasn't a touring outfit, and the style of music varies from song to song. While the "group" are often loosely considered progressive rock, the music in this, their debut, is mostly straightforward rock or symphonic music.

First and foremost, 'Tales of Mystery and Imagination' is a collection of songs based upon works by renowned author Edgar Allan Poe, of which, I must say, I have absolutely no knowledge or interest in. I can only judge this album based solely on the quality of the music, of which it's a fairly mixed bag.

The record is mostly divided into two parts. The first, being some rather standard rock songs, is easily the highlight for me, with 'The Tell-Tale Heart' and '(The System of) Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether' being the only two songs I like. They're rocking and catchy, with some infectious vocal melodies and hooks.

The second half is a prog-inspired symphonic piece called 'The Fall of the House of Usher'. It's broken into five individual parts, and to be honest none of them really do anything for me. There's some big, orchestral sounding parts, and sections that sound reminiscent of Mike Oldfield's work, but other than the odd melody here-and-there, there really isn't anything going on that interests me.

And that's pretty much all there is to it! I'm a fan of Alan Parsons (and his project), but this debut release is fairly lacklustre to me. Maybe I'd appreciate it more if I was a fan of the source material, but I'm not. Onto the next album!

Report this review (#1885796)
Posted Thursday, February 15, 2018 | Review Permalink
4 stars For me, this is an album I have to be in the right mood to access properly. The overblown arrangements on some of the tracks can unnerve my senses and kill my mood.

That said, in the right mood, this album can blow me away. I can see how this is the favorite of some and loathsome in the eyes of others.

I've come to appreciate the style I call poprog, and this album belongs at the top of that list. I'm not very familiar anymore with anything but the outline of the most famous Poe stories, but this production is obviously lovingly detailed and functions as a great concept album for the initiated and the neophyte. Highlights for me include the first two tracks and Dr. Tarr on side A, and Pavane on the flip. Dr. Tarr is a great poprog single and points the way to Parsons best, most accessible work in the poprog realm.

I'm lucky to have the 3CD 40th anniversary edition that adds skeleton tracks and unreleased tracks to the first disc, as well as a short radio spot with orson welles and a seperate interview with Parsons and Woolfson. I'm not so into Woolfson's songwriting processes on Disc II, but disc III with all the tracks in their initial phases is sublime.

Report this review (#1933072)
Posted Tuesday, May 22, 2018 | Review Permalink
TCat
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin
5 stars For a band that would become famous for it's art pop style, Alan Parsons Project's debut album "Tales of Mystery and Imagination", inspired by Edgar Allen Poe, was a definite risky release, but it did bring a lot to the band, and started the project with a impressive debut. Of course, several fans knew that Alan Parson was responsible for some excellent production and engineering having had his hand on so many progressive albums like (of course) "Dark Side of the Moon", "Ambrosia"s debut album and his work with The Beatles. By now, most music lovers know this, but at the time, his name was not so well-known yet, though some knew to expect a production as huge as this album.

There have been so many opinions already made on this album, but most seem to rate it around 4 - 5 stars, which it definitely deserves. I remember falling in love with the music right away, at least the tracks on the first side, and then later developing a love for the orchestral masterpiece "The Fall of the House of Usher", which is based on a combination of classical composition, especially from the early 20th century style, and instrumental, rock styles and it was all merged together so beautifully and convincingly. The thing that so many listeners had problems with is the amount of dissonance in the orchestral sections of the track, but the style is authentic, following along the lines of orchestral works by composers such as Grofe (Grand Canyon Suite), Stravinsky (The Firebird) and Prokofiev (Romeo & Juliet, Peter and the Wolf). That might have been a little much for the rock audience, but progressive rock lovers should have been able to understand the influence. It took me some time to fully appreciate this track, but I now recognize it as an amazing achievement.

Of course, the other tracks here are quite memorable too, and the theme of the album does justice to it's inspirational material. My love for this album started with the single "The Raven" and the flip side of it "Dream Within a Dream". When I first heard it on the radio, I was hooked, and then when I played the flip side, it totally supported the fact that I had to buy this album. These songs are dreamy and wonderful with just that hint of darkness. Then of course there was the dramatic feel of "The Tell Tale Heart", the amazing "The Cask of Amontillado" and the heavy pop/rock song "(The System of) Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether". There is also the lush beauty of "To One in Paradise" that is tucked away after the expansive and cinematic "....Usher".

Even now, after all these years, this album always amazes me. I find it just as strong as it was when it was new, timeless and exciting. Yes it leaned a bit towards the pop art style that they would finally completely embrace, but this album was done before they had been sold on that idea completely. Alan Parsons Project would never rise above the pinnacle of this album, though "I, Robot" came close, and other albums had hints of genius in them, they were overall too much immersed in the pop side of things, which is where they really got their notoriety. I have been familiar with the works of Poe for quite a while, even before the release of this album, I had read these stories, and always felt that the music does Poe's works justice. This is definitely a 5 star affair, and the strongest album APP would release.

Report this review (#2218882)
Posted Wednesday, June 5, 2019 | Review Permalink
4 stars To be truthful, I've always viewed the APP as something like "prog lite" when compared to contemporaries like Pink Floyd, Yes, Genesis, etc., but this album is a bit of a gem in that it's mostly pop prog with a quasi concept. And who doesn't appreciate Mr. Poe, his spooky poems and the myriad of horror flicks staring the one and only Vincent Price?

The musical template of the APP is very much in place on Tales Of Mystery, and not too dissimilar to the radio hits that would follow this album. However, this album is put together with so much love that it simply outshines all others in the group's future output. That a pop group like Pilot can be employed to make such engaging music along with pop singers like Terry Sylvester (of the Hollies!) is quite an eye opener. But the songs still a have to be substantial in order to shine and that they do. "The Raven", "The Tell- Tale Heart", "The Cask Of Amontillado" and "(The System Of) Doctor Tarr And Professor Fether", in particular, work well without being pretentious. The eerily symphonic 5 part suite that makes up the instrumental "The Fall Of The House Of Usher" really sells the somber concept of this album and is the album's highlight.

The bottom line is that Tales Of Mystery And Imagination, if not particularly earth shattering prog rock, is a fun and engaging listen, just the way music should be. 4 stars.

Report this review (#2337733)
Posted Sunday, February 23, 2020 | Review Permalink
5 stars APP or the creation of a group that we hadn't thought of! 1. A Dream Within a Dream voice-over, flute, rising instruments, like a pre-tsunami wave; a gripping bass, a melody that flows suddenly, clear... like that of a torrent coming from the Alps; choirs 2. The Raven well you have it, the vocoder too; the keyboard too; a climb that grabs you by the guts, suddenly with voices here and there and choirs, the trademark of ALAN PARSONS even if the crow resumes his voice in the end 3. The Tell-Tale Heart and Arthur BROWN on voice commands, yes that's hot if the prog pope comes for a ride it can't be standardized; furious madness in the distance... approaching; and then and then in the middle, a progressive variation as we like it, a moment where the instrumental goes for a spin and comes back, an orgasmic moment with Arthur who returns and floods the title with his voice, special mention to the Wallian bass from WATERS ... before its time 4. The Cask of Amontillado for the ultra-present bass, the soaring choirs, the APP touch, the volley of violins like on a BEATLES song yes I thought of it, for this neo-classical orchestration, for this cinematic finale who passes the musical puck to 5. (The System of) Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether for the funky-groovy-pop-rock part; yes APP that will also be that, an explosive mix, dancing yes it is possible and the symbiosis with a Floydian keyboard at the end to throw even more confusion; the prog blood is there

6. The Fall of the House of Usher for side B and 5 drawers for this great title; Prelude with narration voice-over, classic instrumentals, slightly 'sinister', = a wait with the oboe, the clarinet, well it sounds like 'The Sorcerer's Apprentice' there; 6 minutes of pure musical peregrination before the contribution of the wait-and-see bass, there is a final flight of violins, a drum roll, a flash of lightning in the distance; we manage to amalgamate organ and storm rain for an intimate orgasmic time with the explosion then the Intermezzo of '2001' with the robot which will take possession of the ship... ah yes I robot is after ok; well come on let's go to Greece then with the crystalline mandolin and harp; yes we can... Strut to this Mediterranean air which makes you dream even more; go a little bass-drums to give the rock side all the same and a beautiful progressive crescendo like we dream of a stratspheric group... yes the fall on TANGERINE DREAM of course, I could not ignore the final Dantesque sensation created 7. To One in Paradise interrupts the musical fury by emitting a soft tune from up there, yes from Paradise you read correctly; yes we can cause Nirvana, celestial but let's use the right word... the title which ends this brilliant journey, think we are in 76; a consensual title to return to earth without too much trouble.... it's over.

Report this review (#2374573)
Posted Sunday, April 26, 2020 | Review Permalink
4 stars Review #27: Tales of Mystery and Imagination

The debut of "The Alan Parsons Project", my favourite band (for those who care to know), apart from being an excellent and glorious tribute to Edgar Allan Poe, a great and personally admired writer linked to tales of near-death, bereavement, and loss-related events (but this is not a review of Poe's career, so I'll stop), has a sound of orchestral and symphonic blending that is worthy of recognition and admiration.

The atmosphere that traps you in a huge and glorious circuit of the melodies and the very marked choruses that the songs possess, lead you to a state of "goosebumps" in a great part of the tracklist.

I'm not surprised by the "Floyd" sound of this album, being that Alan Parsons has collaborated with the aforementioned band as sound engineer (a clearer example couldn't be any other than "The Dark Side of the Moon").

"The Fall of the House of Usher", by far the highlight of the album. An orchestral-space suite full of feelings and deep changes that move you and make you feel observed. Few songs achieve such a sublime ambience as this one.

A great foot forward for this project. *Hats off to him

Report this review (#2784876)
Posted Tuesday, August 16, 2022 | Review Permalink
4 stars I don't remember the last time I listened to the album, but the magic is the same. The first album by Alan Parsons Project transports you to the literary world of Edgar Allan Poe, with varied and rich music.

Starting with "A Dream Within A Dream" and "The Raven" Alan Parsons set his style for the rest of the discography. Then "The Tell-Tale Heart" breaks in (with an annoying and weird "aaaah", I always hated that haha) and the beautiful ballad "The Cask of Amontillado". Everything is what you have listened in better known albums like Eye In The Sky, the essence of Alan Parsons Project is something unique.

The most impressive part is the suite called "The Fall of the House of Usher", combining experimental art rock with orchestral sections, bringing some chaos to the record that "To One in Paradise" restore with an idyllic soft song.

If you want some accessible art rock but different and varied at the same time, this is a good choice.

Report this review (#2962644)
Posted Thursday, October 19, 2023 | Review Permalink
Dapper~Blueberries
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars APP (Alan Parsons Project) is quite the band that emerged late within the progressive rock scene. I believe they made quite a mark within the culture of prog rock as a whole, as they seemingly were the spark for the progressive sounds that bands would start to approach within the mid to late 70s through to the 80s. Whilst they would get their marks within the eye of the public's sky with I Robot, and later on Eye In The Sky, they would start this experiment with something a bit different than what they would later make within their workings as a band. I am talking about the Edgar Allan Poe tribute piece of Tales Of Mystery And Imagination, released in 1976.

I want to preface this review by stating I am looking at the 1987 remix, which I believe to be the definitive listening for this record.

For a debut album's worth, this certainly is one that feels the most peculiar within the APP discography. Many of APP's workings are based around literature, or concepts inspired by literature. This is no exception, and the inspiration goes to, well, Edgar Allan Poe, a writer that needs no introduction to those that have read at least a little bit. Each of the 7 tracks are based around one of his stories, as opposed to what their next album, I Robot, would do by having most (or the entire story) within the album. For this review I decided to go to my school's library and check out a collection of stories from Poe, and so far I have read pretty much every story that this album tells, except for The Cask Of Amontillado and To One In Paradise.

Musically speaking, this album is just excellent. The best thing I would say about this record is certainly Alan Parsons' production, though that could be said with everything he had a hand in. Despite this, the heights I would say are the more symphonic stylings that persist within this record. They would move away with this more symphonic prog outlook in future releases, only really bringing it back up with The Turn Of A Friendly Card (which funnily enough also has a song based around a Edgar Allan Poe work). I feel like if they would do these songs, without the symphonic dramatics, they would fall a bit flat, but they certainly allow the ideas of Edgar's work to shine by adding such dramas into the mix.

This record also includes some of my favorite APP tracks yet. Of course the big 15 minute epic of The Fall Of The House Of Usher is a favorite of mine, being this vibrant and haunting classical melody, as well as (The System of) Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether being this groovy rock song that is both introspective in backing, but lively in front values. I would also point my attention to The Raven, which I think is just a superb song, combining funky pop sounds with magnificent prog to what I think is a very amazing and introspective jam. Certainly a highlight to what this album holds.

I believe there are no weak tracks, or at least no outright bad tracks. Perhaps maybe The Cask Of Amontillado and To One In Paradise, but even then they get quite the job done as very pretty tracks within the strong listing of songs here. Alan Parsons and Eric Woolfson certainly know how to write some fantastic stuff.

However, what I do find weakening about this record is less of the music, and more of the general lyricism that is found here. I certainly do agree with Billy Altman of Rolling Stone magazine that this album does not quite capture the same darkness and gothic ideals that a lot of Poe's stories deliver, especially in lyrics. The only track to really come close is that of The Tell-Tale Heart, and even then that song is a bit too upbeat for a story about a guy killing an old man (though I guess if The Beatles made songs about murder with the same upbeat tunes then I guess APP should as well). Now, as of writing this, I think it'd be cool to hear some of these songs in a more gothic rock or dark cabaret sound. Imagine a cover of The Raven from a band like Cocteau Twins or The Cure, or a cover of The Tell- Tale Heart by someone like Will Wood. Honestly, I think that'd be pretty awesome.

Some of the lyrics feel out of place too, or even strangely obtuse to the source material. While I love Usher and Doctor Tarr, even I can admit they just feel odd in the songwriting. Doctor Tarr feels more like an ad for the services provided by Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether, which I guess isn't too weird as in the original story the head of the Asylum, Monsieur Maillard, mentioned the revolutionary method of the two scientists, but merely only briefly which causes the unnamed narrator to try and find writings made by the two unknown scientists at the end, but even still lines like "You're in need of Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether" and "Just what you need to make you feel better" feels quite weird in context, even weirder than the stuff in the original story.

Usher is even weirder, having no lyrics, which to me seems like an odd choice. I guess the band wanted to create a track based around the vibes of the original story, but it kinda makes the epic feel out of place with the rest of the track listings, despite how great it is. I obviously do not hate these tracks, or think they are at all weak, but they certainly prove that for all their worth, I do not think Alan Parsons and Eric Woolfson have what it takes to do something within the macabre.

This album is in an odd limbo in the APP discography. The sound of it is quite different from stuff like I Robot or Turn Of The Friendly Card, and it is a record that has an aura that feels out of tune with the works of Poe, but in tune within them as well oddly enough. But, no matter how you cut it, this certainly is not a bad album, far from it. Certainly not the best APP album, or the best record to come out of the 1976 prog mythos, but what you do get out of this is some great music, and a picture of the evolving progression that prog rock was taking at the time. It's mysterious, it's imaginative, and while it might not fully grasp the papers of Edgar Allan Poe's works, they certainly achieve something in spirit. I recommend this to those who enjoy a more pop prog sound, but also enjoy some symphonics as well. It is an album worth exploring if you might so desire.

Best tracks: The Raven, (The System of) Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether, The Fall of the House of Usher

Weak tracks: The Cask of Amontillado, To One In Paradise

Report this review (#2988622)
Posted Monday, February 5, 2024 | Review Permalink

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