Needless to say, I was not disappointed, and my descent into the rest of their discography came soon after, but I’m getting ahead of myself. “Could be a dud,” I thought, but I had been intrigued enough by the recent discovery of the band that I figured I was willing to risk a dollar to explore them further.
THE ALAN PARSONS PROJECT EVE SONGS FREE
The LP itself was clean and free of scratches and the jacket was in pretty good shape. Not long after this, I found a copy of APP’s second album, I Robot, for a buck at a thrift store. “Time” grew on me as well, and I came to appreciate it as a beautifully structured “by-the-book” pop ballad. And before long, I recognized “Eye in the Sky” for the masterful pop hit that it is, getting reeled in by those swirling, flawless vocal harmonies and that chugging guitar, and “Sirius” along with it (the two are inseparable, really, since one bleeds directly into the other). I found myself humming them as I drove home that day, these songs that upon first listen I hadn’t even liked. It began about two years ago with my mother sending me three songs on Spotify: “Time,” “Sirius,” and “Eye in the Sky.” I enjoyed “Sirius” because it reminded me of going to Nebraska Cornhusker games in my home state (it’s their theme song when they run out onto the field), but the other two tracks I found to be depressing and indigestible at the time - something about the airy, reverb-drenched production that 1970’s albums were so notoriously wrought with simply bummed me out.Īnd yet, there was something about those tracks and their melodies that I couldn’t get out of my head. My deep love for APP was gradual in its growth, and had a somewhat rocky start. Coincidentally enough, this was also twenty-five years after APP had disbanded.
I was not introduced to The Alan Parsons Project until I was twenty-five.