Garden of the Arcane Delights explained

Garden of the Arcane Delights
Type:EP
Artist:Dead Can Dance
Cover:Garden of the Arcane Delights (Dead Can Dance EP) cover art.jpg
Released:August 1984
Length:14:59
Label:4AD
Producer:Lisa Gerrard, Brendan Perry
Prev Title:Dead Can Dance
Prev Year:1984
Next Title:Spleen and Ideal
Next Year:1985

Garden of the Arcane Delights is the first EP by Australian band Dead Can Dance. It was released in August 1984 on record label 4AD. The tracks were later added to Dead Can Dance's self-titled debut album when it was re-released on CD.

Background

The cover art is a sketch done by Brendan Perry and represents the themes of the song "The Arcane". As Perry explains:

The naked blindfolded figure, representing primal man deprived of perception, stands, within the confines of a garden (the world) containing a fountain and trees laden with fruit. His left arm stretches out – the grasping for knowledge – towards a fruit bearing tree, its trunk encircled by a snake. In the garden wall – the wall between freedom and confinement – are two gateways: the dualistic notion of choice. It is a Blakean universe in which mankind can only redeem itself, can only rid itself of blindness, through the correct interpretation of signs and events that permeate the fabric of nature's laws.[1]

Critical reception

AllMusic retrospectively described the EP as "the clear transition between the group's competent but derivative goth start and something much, much more special."

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Anywhere Out Of The World: The Unique Vision of Dead Can Dance. Martin Aston. 4AD.