Create account Log in

Divinities: Twelve Dances With God

[Edit]

Download links and information about Divinities: Twelve Dances With God by Ian Anderson. This album was released in 1995 and it belongs to Rock genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 47:15 minutes.

Artist: Ian Anderson
Release date: 1995
Genre: Rock
Tracks: 12
Duration: 47:15
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $9.49

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Twelve Dances With God: In a stone circle (featuring Andrew Giddings) 3:26
2. Twelve Dances With God: In Sight of the Minaret (featuring Andrew Giddings) 3:56
3. Twelve Dances With God: In a Black Box (featuring Andrew Giddings) 3:24
4. Twelve Dances With God: In the Grip of Stronger Stuff (featuring Andrew Giddings) 2:49
5. Twelve Dances With God: In Maternal Grace (featuring Andrew Giddings) 3:22
6. Twelve Dances With God: In the Moneylender's Temple (featuring Andrew Giddings) 3:20
7. Twelve Dances With God: In Defence of Faiths (featuring Andrew Giddings) 3:13
8. Twelve Dances With God: At Their Father's Knee (featuring Andrew Giddings) 5:43
9. Twelve Dances With God: En Afrique (featuring Andrew Giddings) 2:56
10. Twelve Dances With God: In the Olive Garden (featuring Andrew Giddings) 2:51
11. Twelve Dances With God: In the Pay of Spain (featuring Andrew Giddings) 4:06
12. Twelve Dances With God: In the Times of India (Bombay Valentine) (featuring Andrew Giddings) 8:09

Details

[Edit]

This album, along with Aqualung and Thick As A Brick, constitutes Ian Anderson's thrust for serious music credibility—unlike the two Tull albums, however, this one started out with a serious intent and seems to be roughly Anderson's equivalent to Paul McCartney's Liverpool Oratorio, except that there's nothing remotely as embarrassing here as there was in that piece of overblown North England drivel (also done for EMI, on should recall). The familiar voice is absent, as Anderson confines his work to the flute and, with keyboard player/arranger Andrew Giddings, gets backing from various size classical ensembles. The result is a kind of New Age pastiche, drawing together contemporary classical and folk/pop music influences into a smooth, pleasant, at time soporific whole, a tour around the religious world by way of Muzak-style instrumental tunes, some of which ("In A Black Box") will recall specific Jethro Tull tunes out of the past.