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Greatest New Age Hits

1996

CD

Oreade Music

5406

1. Hymn - 2:35 
2. Tubular Bells - 6:21 
3. Mayra, Born in the Sea - 4:02 
4. Song of the Heart - 2:17 
5. Skin & Skin - 3:25 
6. In Dulci Jubilo - 2:46 
7. Callas Went Away - 4:33 
8. Lady Marian - 3:33 
9. Perfect Indian - 3:16 
10. In the Stillness of the Dawn - 3:14 
11. Caribbean Blue - 3:21 
12. Nightingale - 4:36 
13. Final Statement - 3:10 
14. Chariots of Fire - 3:30 
15. Reincarnation - 4:14 
16. West Across the Ocean Sea - 3:04 

AMG EXPERT REVIEW: This is not a compilation album, but a reinterpretations of famous new age pieces from such composers as Vangelis, Adiemus, Kitaro, Enya, Tangerine Dream, and Mike Oldfield (remember the 1973 Tubular Bells from the movie The Exorcist?). One can argue over the choice of tracks for any "greatest hits" album; then one should ask if they should be retinterpreted. Cecil Harding has recreated these masterpiece with nearly the same arrangements, and the homogenization effect has me wanting to find the original versions. The very seductive and sacrilegious "Callas Went Away" by Enigma from their MCMCX.A.D. is altered just slightly when Harding pulls back on the hip-sourced beat and has the woman's voice say clearly "God bless you" instead of the anguished "mea culpa." (One would also question if the original version was "new age"; it sure sold a lot to new agers.) To his credit, I think Harding has improved on the famous theme from Mike Rowland's The Fairy Ring Suite. I can't divorce myself from the original versions to give a fair appraisal. The arrangements are skillful, the sound exciting. The album will probably lead people to not only focus their idea of what new age music really is, but send them to the artists who defined the genre. — Carol Wright