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GORDON GILTRAP BAND: AIRWAVES

Gordon Giltrap

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Gordon Giltrap Gordon Giltrap Band: Airwaves album cover
3.02 | 6 ratings | 2 reviews | 0% 5 stars

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Studio Album, released in 1982

Songs / Tracks Listing

1. Black Lightning (3:04)
2. El Greco (3:56)
3. Heroes (3:31)
4. Haunted Heart (3:53)
5. Rainbells (2:29)
6. Dreamteller (3:11)
7. Reaching Out (2:55)
8. Sad Skies (4:51)
9. Airwaves (3:35)
10. Empty (2:28)
11. Lake Isle (2:05)
12. Lost Love (3:35)

Total time 39:33

Bonus tracks on 2000/2014 reissues:
13. The Snow Goose (Part 1) (0:49)
14. The Snow Goose (Part 2) (1:57)
15. The Snow Goose (Part 3) (1:56)

Extra bonus tracks on 2014 reissue:
16. Blue Haze
17. Sad Skies (edited version)

Line-up / Musicians

- Gordon Giltrap / acoustic & electric guitars, composer

With:
- Rod Edwards / keyboards, co-producer
- Bimbo Acock / sax, flute
- Chas Cronk / bass
- Clive Bunker / drums, percussion

Releases information

LP PVK Records ‎- GIL 2 (1982, UK)

CD La Cooka Ratcha ‎- LCVP108CD (2000, UK) With 3 bonus tracks
CD Esoteric Recordings - ECLEC 2454 (2014, UK) Remastered (?), with 5 bonus tracks

Thanks to b_olariu for the addition
and to Quinino for the last updates
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GORDON GILTRAP Gordon Giltrap Band: Airwaves ratings distribution


3.02
(6 ratings)
Essential: a masterpiece of rock music(0%)
0%
Excellent addition to any rock music collection(17%)
17%
Good, but non-essential (83%)
83%
Collectors/fans only (0%)
0%
Poor. Only for completionists (0%)
0%

GORDON GILTRAP Gordon Giltrap Band: Airwaves reviews


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Collaborators/Experts Reviews

Review by SouthSideoftheSky
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Symphonic Team
3 stars Heroes

The Gordon Giltrap Band here consisted of Gordon Giltrap (of course) on acoustic and electric guitars, Rod Edwards on keyboards, Bimbo Acock on saxophone and flute, Chas Cronk (of Strawbs fame) on bass guitar, and Clive Bunker (of Jethro Tull fame) on drums. The music is entirely instrumental, which is the norm for Giltrap. But, as already hinted, it is not entirely acoustic as most of his subsequent albums. This album belongs to Giltrap's progressive period, which began with 1976's Visionary. But the present album is more Jazz-Rock/Fusion- oriented than Giltrap's most famous trio of albums - Visionary, Perilous Journey, and Fear Of The Dark. This jazzier direction was begun on the previous The Peacock Party.

The musicians involved are all very skilled and the album is of a high sonic quality. The keyboard sounds are varied and there is a good balance between electric and acoustic numbers. Flutes add colour to the overall sound as well, but the saxophone makes some passages a bit slick. The end result is an enjoyable listen, but it fails to leave any lasting impression on me. The compositions are decent, but not very memorable.

Still, Airwaves belong among Giltrap's more interesting recordings

Review by kenethlevine
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Prog-Folk Team
3 stars Again surrounding himself with names from the social register of progressive rock, GORDON GILTRAP barely misses a beat in his successor to "The Peacock Party". Here, however, he loosens the reins paradoxically helping the band to tighten up, and "Airwaves" is therefore a more eclectic group effort, while still providing a forum for Giltrap's relatively unambitious concepts.

The pieces on "Airwaves" skirt the imaginary boundary between adult contemporary instrumental, light jazz, and crossover progressive rock, with English folk, while still high in the mix, taking a back seat a little more often. Nothing here is far above or below average, and as such it can be enjoyed to varying degrees from beginning to end, the credits outweighing the debits. I hear more of a CAMEL influence before, especially in the lively opener "Black Lightning", and the sultry "Lost Love", with Latimer like gentle lead guitar and Mel Collins-like sax by Bimbo Acock. Just to drive the point home, Giltrap presents a trilogy entitled "The Snow Goose" to close off the album. It's mostly a forum for his acoustic guitar and sensitive orchestration. The lovely piano oriented "Dreamteller" pulls a page from the Pete Bardens' playbook, but also recalls Camel's early 1990s period. The title cut is one of the more progressive with a lot of thick bass action and lead guitar and synth fills over a catchy beat.

This is not likely to come across over any local or internet airwaves with much regularity, but, provided you have a tolerance for the mellow, the pedigree, technical skill and synergy of the players all justify your attention for a spin or two over a much more intimate airspace.

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