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The Cross of Changes

 
Album Review: The Cross of Changes

  • Artist: Enigma
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: February 08, 1994
  • Total Time: 44:12
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: New Age

Review

Cretu being no fool, he figured if it worked the first time, no need to change things much for the second. But he also knew not to simply go ahead and just rehash his debut for Cross of Changes, resulting in a just different enough effort along the same overall lines. The usual air of tasteful middle-of-the-road spirituality takes precedence, right down to the cover art and appropriately pantheistic quote from Persian mystic poet Rumi in the CD booklet. Needless to say, the music attempts to match the same throughout, and often succeeds. Things kick off with more of the synth-whale song noises and atmospherics from MCMXC, however there aren't any monks to be found this time around, but what sounds like the same whispering woman talking about "clearing the debts of many hundred years" and the like. From there, Cretu merrily takes the same plunge -- some of his sample choices this time around show he's got a decent record collection, including parts from Songs From the Victorious City, the striking fusion of Egyptian and Western musics from Anne Dudley and Jaz Coleman. His work with beats and loops noticeably shows a more developed edge -- while hardly an innovator, there's a bit more grime and loud in his rhythms, which in combination with extra electric guitar make a reasonable contrast to the smoother elements. Consider the rampaging conclusion to "I Love You...I'll Kill You," which while sharing some cheese with the title itself still works surprisingly well, right down to a clever Robert Plant vocal sample at the end. "Return to Innocence" was the big single from this one, not quite up there with "Sadeness" in the popular culture in the U.S. but almost inescapable elsewhere. There's another Led Zeppelin sample (this time John Bonham) and a haunting male vocal providing oomph under the fuzzy-headed greeting card philosophy of the main lyrics. It's an impressive effort, showing Cretu had a definite something in his own way. ~ Ned Raggett, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Second Chapter Curly M.C. Enigma (2:16)
The Eyes of Truth Curly M.C. Enigma (7:13)
Return to Innocence (Lyrics) Curly M.C. Enigma (4:17)
I Love You, I'll Kill You Curly M.C., David Fairstein Enigma (8:51)
Silent Warrior Curly M.C. Enigma (6:10)
The Dream of the Dolphin David Fairstein Enigma (2:47)
Age of Loneliness (Lyrics) Curly M.C. Enigma (5:22)
Out from the Deep (Lyrics) Curly M.C. Enigma (4:53)
The Cross of Changes Curly M.C. Enigma (2:23)

Credits

Peter Cornelius (Guitar), Enigma (Main Performer), Michael Crétu (Programming), Michael Crétu (Vocals), Michael Crétu (Voices), Michael Crétu (Producer), Michael Crétu (Engineer), Jens Gad (Guitar), Louisa Stanley (Vocals (Background)), Louisa Stanley (Voices), Sandra Cretu (Vocals (Background)), Angel (Vocals (Background))
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Wikipedia: The Cross of Changes
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The Cross of Changes
Studio album by Enigma
Released December 6, 1993
November 21, 1994 (Reissue)
Recorded A.R.T. Studios, Ibiza
Genre New Age, ambient
Length 44:12
Label Virgin, Charisma (US)
Producer Michael Cretu
Professional reviews
Enigma chronology
MCMXC a.D.
(1990)
The Cross Of Changes
(1993)
Le Roi Est Mort, Vive Le Roi!
(1996)

The Cross of Changes is a 1993 album by the musical project Enigma. It is Enigma's second album, following MCMXC a.D., released three years earlier.

The most notable song of the album was "Return to Innocence", which was released as a single and featured in several film soundtracks. A more rock-infused sound is present in The Cross of Changes, and the Gregorian chants from the previous album were replaced with ethnic-style world chants. The Ami (Native Taiwanese) chants featured in "Return to Innocence" are often wrongly identified as Native American.

Contents

Track listing

Original album

  1. "Second Chapter" (Curly M.C.) – 2:16
  2. "The Eyes of Truth" (Curly) – 7:13
  3. "Return to Innocence" (Curly / Kuo Ying-nan / Kuo Hsiu-chu) – 4:17
  4. "I Love You ... I'll Kill You" (Curly, David Fairstein) – 8:51
  5. "Silent Warrior" (Curly) – 6:10
  6. "The Dream of the Dolphin" (Curly, Fairstein) – 2:47
  7. "Age of Loneliness (Carly's Song)" (Curly) – 5:22
  8. "Out from the Deep" (Curly) – 4:53
  9. "The Cross of Changes" (Curly) – 2:23

Special limited edition

(Released on November 21, 1994 on a 24-carat gold plated disc with three additional remixes.)

10. "Return to Innocence (Long & Alive Version)" (Curly M.C.) – 7:07
11. "Age of Loneliness (Enigmatic Club Mix)" (Curly M.C.) – 6:23
12. "The Eyes of Truth (The Götterdämmerung Mix)" (Curly M.C.) – 7:18

Singles

Personnel

Charts

Worldwide sales : proved by Virgin Records in 1996 - 8 mil. Estimate sales: 13.5 million.

Certifications

Country Peak Certification Sales
Australia ? 2x Platinum 150,000
Canada ? 2x Platinum 220,000
France ? 2x Platinum 650,000
Germany 4 Platinum 540,000
Japan ? Platinum 270,000
Switzerland 3 Platinum 60,000+
Norway 4 Platinum 35,000
South Korea ? 2x Platinum 220,000
Spain ? 2x Platinum 220,000
Taiwan ? 2x Platinum 110,000
UK 1 2x Platinum 650,000
USA 8 3x Platinum 3,000,000
Worldwide ? 6x Platinum 13,500,000

Singles - Billboard (North America)

Year Single Chart Position
1994 "Age of Loneliness" Hot Dance Music/Club Play 30
"Return to Innocence" Modern Rock Tracks 1
Rhythmic Top 40 15
The Billboard Hot 100 3
Top 40 Mainstream 5

List of samples

  • Vocals in "I Love You, I'll Kill You" were inspired by Robert Plant's in the Led Zeppelin song "The Battle of Evermore" but were provided by Michael Cretu
  • Sampled John Bonham's drumbeats from "When the Levee Breaks" in "Return to Innocence"
  • Sampled Anne Dudley and Jaz Coleman's "A Survivor's Tale" in "The Eyes of Truth"
  • Sampled U2's "Ultraviolet (Light My Way) in "The Eyes of Truth"
  • Sampled Genesis's drumbeats from "Fading Lights" in "I Love You...I'll Kill You" and "Tonight Tonight Tonight" on "Silent Warrior"
  • Sampled Black Sabbath's harmonica from "The Wizard" in "I Love You...I'll Kill You"
  • Sampled the same NASA conversation used in Vangelis' "Mare Tranquilitas" for "The Eyes of Truth"
  • Sampled Peter Gabriel's drumbeats from "Kiss That Frog" in "The Eyes of Truth"

External links

Preceded by
Under the Pink by Tori Amos
UK number one album
February 19, 1994 – February 25, 1994
Succeeded by
Music Box by Mariah Carey

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Cross of Changes" Read more