Journey (Kingdom Come album)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Journey_(Kingdom_Come_album) an entity of type: Thing

Journey is the third and final studio album by British rock band Kingdom Come, known as Arthur Brown's Kingdom Come outside the UK. After the band featured drastically different styles on their first two albums, and after several line-up changes, band leader Arthur Brown worked the band towards a new direction for Journey. The album was the first album in history to use a drum machine responsible for all the percussive sounds on the album. The drum machine in question was the Bentley Rhythm Ace, manufactured by Ace Tone. Although the band had commented the album was entirely based on the drum machine, the band attempted to, in rock and electronic terms, create an album that was the closest they could get "to a string quartet". The album features other experimental techniques, including usi rdf:langString
rdf:langString Journey (Kingdom Come album)
rdf:langString Journey
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rdf:langString KingdomComeJourney.jpg
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rdf:langString Kingdom Come
xsd:integer 1972
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Dave Edmunds
rdf:langString Arthur Brown
rdf:langString Dennis Taylor
rdf:langString "We took a triangle, which is simply a frame and moved it up and down the fretboard. And ended up playing only those notes that came within the space in the centre of the triangle! It gave us a different tone"
rdf:langString November–December 1972
rdf:langString April 1973
rdf:langString Head Heritage
rdf:langString Freq
rdf:langString Planet Mellotron
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
rdf:langString —Arthur Brown explaining how he used a triangle to guide the guitar playing in "Triangles".
rdf:langString Rockfield Studios, Monmouthshire
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rdf:langString studio
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rdf:langString Journey is the third and final studio album by British rock band Kingdom Come, known as Arthur Brown's Kingdom Come outside the UK. After the band featured drastically different styles on their first two albums, and after several line-up changes, band leader Arthur Brown worked the band towards a new direction for Journey. The album was the first album in history to use a drum machine responsible for all the percussive sounds on the album. The drum machine in question was the Bentley Rhythm Ace, manufactured by Ace Tone. Although the band had commented the album was entirely based on the drum machine, the band attempted to, in rock and electronic terms, create an album that was the closest they could get "to a string quartet". The album features other experimental techniques, including using a triangle to guide guitar playing and extensive use of Mellotron and synthesizers from new member Victor Peraino, who replaced Michael "Goodge" Harris early on production. The album was recorded in November 1972 in Rockfield Studios and released in 1973 by Polydor Records. The album was not a popular release, although has gone on to be regarded as a groundbreaking and innovative album that was ahead of its time. Although overlooked upon release, it has received generally positive retrospective reviews from critics. Alan Holmes of Freq said that "Journey was so far ahead of its time that you have to keep checking the sleeve to make sure that it really does say 1973 and not 1983" and that the album was "not only Arthur Brown’s masterpiece, but also one of the truly great albums of the seventies."
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