Bridge Across Forever (2001)

i.motherless
children.
ii.walk
away
iii.silence
of the night
iv.you're
not alone
v.almost
home
2.Suite
v. if
she runs
vi.
mr. wonderful
vii.
lost and found pt. 1
viii.temple
of the gods
ix.
motherless children / if she runs (reprise)
3.Bridge
Across Forever (5:33)
4.Stranger
In Your Soul (26:05)
f.
stranger in your soul
Additional musicians:
Chris Carmichael - violin, viola & cello
Keith Mears - saxophone
The "Elite" Choir - background vocals
Produced by:
Transatlantic
1.Duel With the Devil:
This is a 26:33 suite that shows the band
doing what it does best - creating an entire album within a song, with
inter-related themes in complex arrangements.
I - Motherless Children:
The song first starts with a somber-enough
string quarter, then the band comes in in a lengthy instrumental passage,
mostly as an overture to this suite.
II - Walk Away:
Based in an acoustic mode for most of
this section, eventually the band kicks in, going to overdrive on an
instrumental section before pulling back. Stolt gets a slightly understated
solo, then a Pink Floydian saxophone takes the lead.
III - Silence of the Night:
Morse sings the verse from
"Motherless Children", and the background vocals make this section
sound all the more like "Dark Side"-era Floyd.
IV - You're Not Alone:
A Gentle-Giant-type bridge leads to a
light-yet-up-tempo section. The chorus from "Motherless Children" is
used but with a different musical theme - a common technique on this album.
V - Almost Home:
This is another instrumental section,
and here Portnoy takes off. It is really a reprise of "Motherless
Children", but the chorus uses a choir to excellent effect. The section
builds before it finishes in a ¾ instrumental finale.
2.Suite Charlotte Pike:
This song differs from the other
Transatlantic suites in its relative brevity ("only" 14:33 long) and
it's looseness. Less orchestral than other suites, this song shows the band
letting its hair down and it sounds like the band is having a blast in the
process.
I - If She Comes:
After an aborted intro, the band kicks
in on a fun, funky riff. At one point in this section someone (perhaps Morse)
checks for the key change to the next section, indicating that this whole piece
has a "not 100% polished" feel to it.
II - Mr. Wonderful:
A total change from the first movement.
Stolt sings lead in this section. The chorus ("His name is wonderful / And
it's wonderful / just to be near him") sounds a bit like the band is
dipping its collective toe into contemporary Christian music.
III - Lost and Found (Part 1):
This piece is a short interlude that
leads back to the opening rock-out riff for a brief bit, then moves straight
into the next cut.
IV -
This is another hard rocking movement,
complete with the high-pitched synthesizer riff.
V - Motherless Children / If She Comes
(reprise):
This section uses the "Motherless
Children" theme from "Duel with the Devil", but the lyrics are a
bit different. Morse then comes in with the opening theme, but all this is done
in a slow 6/8 tempo. Then, the band finally shifts gears and the line
"Don't wanna hear it now" gets repeated - as enigmatic an ending as
one could imagine.
3.Bridge Across Forever:
The title cut is a solo piece from
Morse, featuring him on piano and occasional synth. Co-written with Prince,
this song acts as a "break" from all the lengthy numbers and is quite
beautiful.
4.Stranger in Your Soul:
This suite is reminiscent of Van der
Graaf Generator's "A Plague of Lighthouse Keepers" in its
ebb-and-flow arrangements, veering between moments of heavy rock and softer
moments, changing sometimes in the blink of an eye.
I - Sleeping Wide Awake:
The string quartet motif that opened
this album reappears again. The band then comes in, but only with the intro for
this section and not an overture-type section.
II - Hanging in the Balance:
The band gets more metal than usual,
Stolt crunching out power chords in the verse while all four members trade
vocal lines
III - Lost and Found (Part 2):
Again the group uses a theme from an
earlier piece. They then turn it up a notch, allowing Stolt to go postal on his
solo while Trewavas and Portnoy keep a driving rhythm. The whole thing is
brought down in a hurry, Morse playing arpeggiated chords.
IV - Awakening the Stranger:
Rather quiet at the start, the band
stays restrained through the verses. The string quartet comes in to accompany
the piece before the band then goes back to the opening theme and then take it
up a notch, Portnoy's double-bass drum pushing the piece to its brink..
V - Slide:
Bouncing between driving rock and
straight-out jazz rhythms, this section also borrows from "Suite Charlotte
Pike." Morse gets a combination synth-Hammond solo in this section, and
Trewavas gets a chance to show off his licks in a jazzy backdrop
VI - Stranger in Your Soul:
The grand finale repeats the themes of
"Sleeping Wide Awake." The strings come in towards the end as well to
add to the big finish.
At the end of the disk you hear the
fade-in of the end of "Suite Charlotte Pike" and some other random
noises and sound effects. This music-and-sound pastiche ends the whole piece
right on the 30-minute mark.