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EVENING COLOURS (AS GATE WAY)

Laurence Vanay

Eclectic Prog


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Laurence Vanay Evening Colours (as Gate Way) album cover
3.41 | 15 ratings | 1 reviews | 20% 5 stars

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Studio Album, released in 1975

Songs / Tracks Listing

1. Alone In The Rain (4:19)
2. Lover's Prayer (3:22)
3. Evening Colours (2:57)
4. Morning Quiet Song (3:18)
5. Walk Thru Tomorrow (4:08)
6. Strange Moment (2:33)
7. Twin Cities (3:25)
8. Forgotten Moments (2:40)
9. Eyes Closed on the Way (3:41)
10. Underwater Light Reflections (4:09)
11. Sunshine In My Heart (3:34)

Total Time 38:06


Bonus tracks on 2013 CD:
12. Alone In The Rain (Alternate) (4:25)
13. Morning Quiet (Alternate) (2:51)
14. Strange Moment (Alternate) (2:41)
15. Twin Cities (Alternate) (3:55)
16. Eyes Closed On The Way (Alternate) (3:45)
17. Sunshine In My Heart (Alternate) (2:52)
18. Morning Quiet Song (Alternate) (2:16)
19. MOP (Alternate) (2:52)
20. Mamie (Alternate) (2:30)
21. Fausse Fin (Fragment) (0:17)

Line-up / Musicians

- Laurence Vanay / guitar, Fender Rhodes, Hammond organ, piano, synthesizer, backing vocals
- Serge Derrien / guitar, vocals
- Jean Chevalier / drums, percussion

Releases information

LP Galloway Records 600 572 (1975, France)

LP CAM CML 121 (1977, Italy, different cover)
CD Lion Productions LION 671 (2013, US, with 10 bonus tracks)
CD Galloway Records 600 572 (2013, France, with 10 bonus tracks)
CD CAM CAM CML121 (2013, Italy, with 10 bonus tracks)

Thanks to historian9 for the addition
and to NotAProghead for the last updates
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LAURENCE VANAY Evening Colours (as Gate Way) ratings distribution


3.41
(15 ratings)
Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music(20%)
20%
Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection(53%)
53%
Good, but non-essential (27%)
27%
Collectors/fans only (0%)
0%
Poor. Only for completionists (0%)
0%

LAURENCE VANAY Evening Colours (as Gate Way) reviews


Showing all collaborators reviews and last reviews preview | Show all reviews/ratings

Collaborators/Experts Reviews

Review by Sagichim
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Honorary Collaborator
3 stars Laurence Vanay is the pseudonym for Jacqueline Thibault, wife of bass player and producer Laurent Thibault (ex-Magma). She released two albums in the 70's that would fit nicely in any french prog collector's catalogue. Evening Colours is her second album and the one I prefer of the two. It's not enough that Laurence Vanay is not the artist's real name but this album was originally released under the fictitious band name Gateway, I guess the record company thought they would sell more copies that way instead of using a woman's name.

Following her 1974 debut album Galaxies, this album marks a step forward in Vanay's vision and ambitious creative song writing. This time the album is completely instrumental and gracefully goes through several genres without stretching too much to unknown territories. Symphonic, folk, rock and even some mild zehul touches (especially in the bass playing) including keys, flutes, piano, acoustic and electric guitars, all contributes to the eclectic feel of the album. The key word here is beauty! The album effectively radiates melodic beauty in the most natural and easiest way, the compositions are relaxed and calm even in the more harder edged songs. Although the album is quite relaxed, there are some rockier moments to be found featuring good fuzzy guitars and a few disturbing melodies which contributes and complements the somewhat trippy atmosphere of the whole album. The album's strength lies on the melodies which ranges from good to gorgeous and on the varied sounds produced by a nice array of analog keys such as the fender rhodes, hammond organ and synths. Vanay certainly has an ear for mixing different sounds, I love the fact that she doesn't stick to one keyboard sound but comes up with a clever combination of a few, plus of course combining them with the rest of the instruments. As I said the album is instrumental so there's a lot of room for playing, some of it is really good and some of it is just ok, there aren't brilliant solos or moments that really manages to transcend beyond the surface, personally I'm missing a few really killer songs. But the album is definitely good and worth to locate if you enjoy the melodic side of prog.

3 stars.

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