Joe Satriani
Flying In A Blue Dream

Relativity    88561-1015-2  (1989)

Rock/Pop
CD, 18   Tracks, 64:46  Length
01 Flying In A Blue Dream Joe Satriani 05:23
02 The Mystical Potato Head Groove Thing Joe Satriani 05:09
03 Can't Slow Down Joe Satriani 04:49
04 Headless Joe Satriani 01:29
05 Strange Joe Satriani 05:02
06 I Believe Joe Satriani 05:54
07 One Big Rush Joe Satriani 03:25
08 Big Bad Moon Joe Satriani 05:15
09 The Feeling Joe Satriani 00:50
10 The Phone Call Joe Satriani 03:01
11 Day At The Beach (New Rays From An Ancient Sun) Joe Satriani 02:04
12 Back To Shalla-Bal Joe Satriani 03:14
13 Ride Joe Satriani 04:56
14 The Forgotten (Part One) Joe Satriani 01:12
15 The Forgotten (Part Two) Joe Satriani 05:08
16 The Bells Of Lal (Part One) Joe Satriani 01:19
17 The Bells Of Lal (Part Two) Joe Satriani 04:07
18 Into The Light Joe Satriani 02:29
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Guitar Joe Satriani
Drums Jeff Campitelli
Drums Bongo Bob Smith
Percussion John Cuniberti
Producer Joe Satriani; John Cuniberti
Engineer John Cuniberti
Personal Details
Index # 2995
Owner Dave
Tags Hard Rock, Heavy Metal, Funk Metal, Blues Rock
User Defined
Purchased New
Notes
An hour-long disc filled with musical explorations and compositions that defy belief, Flying in a Blue Dream is unquestionably Joe Satriani at his absolute best. Breaking his all-instrumental tradition for the first time, he croons on six of the disc's 18 tracks, including the weird "Strange"; and the bluesy, hard-rocking "Big Bad Moon"; and the driving "Can't Slow Down." Satriani's voice isn't extraordinary, but it fits extremely well with the music he creates, especially on the acoustic-tinged, uplifting "I Believe." It's his playing that's the really impressive thing here, though; his unique tone and complex song structures are enhanced by his signature playing style and the incredible array of effects and tricks he wrestles out of his instrument. The disc closes with the high-flying, misty piece "Into the Light," leaving behind a feeling of real wonder. Soaring, powerful, and triumphant, this recording deserves a place in everyone's collection. -- Phil Carter (allmusic.com)