Aion (Dead Can Dance album) explained

Aion
Type:studio
Artist:Dead Can Dance
Cover:Dead Can Dance-Aion (album cover).jpg
Released:
8 February 1994 (USA)
Genre:Neoclassical dark wave, medieval music
Length:36:11
Label:4AD
4AD/Warner Bros. Records
45575
Prev Title:The Serpent's Egg
Prev Year:1988
Next Title:A Passage in Time
Next Year:1991

Aion is the fifth studio album by the Australian band Dead Can Dance, released on 11 June 1990 by 4AD. The first album Lisa Gerrard and Brendan Perry wrote after the end of their romantic partnership, it was recorded at Perry's new estate, Quivvy Church in Ireland, with additional recording on "The Arrival and the Reunion" and "The End of Words" taking place at Woodbine Street Recording Studios in Leamington Spa.

On this album, Dead Can Dance explored early music to a greater degree, including medieval music and Renaissance music, as Perry noted, "synonymous with the Bosch period"; this included pieces like the 14th-century Italian dance instrumental ("Saltarello") and 16th-century Catalan ballad ("The Song of the Sibyl"), lyrics from 17th-century Spanish baroque poet Luis de Góngora ("Fortune Presents Gifts Not According to the Book"), and instrumentation such as hurdy-gurdy and viols.[1] [2] The male soprano David Navarro Sust contributed vocals to tracks 1 and 7.

The album cover shows a detail from the Dutch painter Hieronymus Bosch's triptych The Garden of Earthly Delights (specifically, its central "Earth" panel).

Personnel

Personnel adapted from Aion liner notes.

Dead Can Dance

Additional personnel

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Dead Can Dance . 23 March 2018 . 22 March 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180322143056/http://4ad.com/forewords/dcd/ . live .
  2. Web site: Medievalism and Exoticism in the Music of Dead Can Dance - Medievalists.net . 6 December 2015 . 23 March 2018 . 24 March 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180324041752/http://www.medievalists.net/2015/12/medievalism-and-exoticism-in-the-music-of-dead-can-dance/ . live .