About Shikasta by Afterlife Album
Afterlife - Shikasta album info will be updated!
Afterlife - Shikasta album info will be updated!
No | Song Title | Artist | Time |
---|---|---|---|
1. | Shikasta | Afterlife | 5:25 |
2. | Incredible (feat. Rachel Lloyd) | Afterlife | 5:04 |
3. | Pearl & Dean | Afterlife | 4:53 |
4. | Pirates (feat. Ella May) | Afterlife | 4:20 |
5. | Surface Detail | Afterlife | 5:04 |
6. | A Little Bit Of Love (feat. Ella Ma... | Afterlife | 4:07 |
7. | Salt Water Waves (feat. Rachel Lloy... | Afterlife | 4:51 |
8. | Subliming | Afterlife | 6:05 |
9. | Suddenly (feat. Rachel Lloyd) | Afterlife | 4:42 |
10. | Sweet Basil | Afterlife | 5:01 |
11. | Orion's Place (feat. Ella May) | Afterlife | 4:39 |
12. | Dust | Afterlife | 4:47 |
13. | Orion's Place (feat. Ella May) [Gel... | Afterlife | 3:23 |
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This is a great album but you have to take your time and listen..Afterlife is not one to follow trends of music..One of my favorite is "Sweet Basil but I also have other favorites.! Get a copy and you will enjoy it..
Something is amiss, whether it be a memorable tune or the passion of the female vocals. We get a washed down half amorphous version of their definitive great "Sunrise" or "Speckle of Gold" sound. Energetically weak vocal and under defined beat made this latest Afterlife album a dull get.....
Preorder this item and just got it. The music is absolutely beautiful as one would expect from Afterlife. Love it.
A wonderful return to form and a must have!
I love chill-out and lounge and I'm a casual fan of Afterlife (love their "Speck of Gold" CD. But this...absolutely fabulous CD all the way through. Really enjoyed the title track. And then I heard "Pearl & Dean". Whatta beat!!! But no worries...everything else is just as good. (These two just happen to my faves at the moment). There is *plenty* to enjoy here. Put your headphones on and press play (or better yet, just put it on shuffle) and let go. This will do it. One of the best CD's I've heard in a while!
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Re: Colonised Planet 5, Shikasta (often shortened to Shikasta) is a 1979 science fiction novel by Doris Lessing, and is the first book in her five-book Canopus in Argos series. It was first published in the United States in December 1980 by Alfred A. Knopf, and in the United Kingdom in November 1979 by Jonathan Cape. Shikasta is also the name of the fictional planet featured in the novel. Subtitled "Personal, psychological, historical documents relating to visit by Johor (George Sherban) Emissary (Grade 9) 87th of the Period of the Last Days", Shikasta is the history of the planet Shikasta (whose inhabitants call it Earth) under the influence of three galactic empires, Canopus, Sirius, and their mutual enemy, Puttiora. The book is presented in the form of a series of reports by Canopean emissaries to Shikasta who document the planet's prehistory, its degeneration leading to the "Century of Destruction" (the 20th century), and the Apocalypse (World War III). Shikasta draws on the Old Testament and is influenced by spiritual and mystical themes in Sufism, an Islamic belief system in which Lessing had taken an interest in the mid-1960s. The book represented a major shift of focus in Lessing's writing, from realism to science fiction, and this disappointed many of her readers. It received mixed reviews from critics. Some were impressed by the scope and vision of the book, with one reviewer calling it "an audacious and disturbing work from one of the world's great living writers". Others were critical of the novel's bleakness, that humanity has no free will and that their fate lies in the hands of galactic empires. The story of Shikasta is retold in the third book of the Canopus series, The Sirian Experiments (1980), this time from the point of view of Sirius. Shikasta reappears in the fourth book in the series, The Making of the Representative for Planet 8 (1982), and the Zones, briefly mentioned in Shikasta, are the subject of the second book in the series, The Marriages Between Zones Three, Four and Five (1980).
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