During the latter half of the 1990s, Marillion seemed to be preaching in the wilderness, releasing a series of rather predictable albums that would mark the lowest point creatively in their extensive discography. Albums like the unenthusiastic "Radiation" (1998), the predictable pop-rock "Marillion.com" (1999), and the more innovative "Anoraknophobia" (2001) left a certain unease among their more purist fans and a low commercial return, leading them to seriously reconsider their immediate future, convinced that this path was leading them nowhere. Thus, three years later they released "Marbles", a sprawling double album where they stepped outside their comfort zone to create one of their most consistent and progressive albums, meticulously delving into their musical origins with an intense and memorable neo-progressive sound. From epic progressive anthems like "Ocean Cloud" to the intense "Neverland", and from the melancholic "The Invisible Man" to the poignant "You're Gone" and "Fantastic Place", they demonstrated that they hadn't yet lost the essential original sound that had begun two decades earlier. However, there was also room for melodic and commercial soft rock, as exemplified by the catchy "Don't Hurt Yourself" and "Angelina". With this superb album (their thirteenth), Marillion entered a phase of great creativity, producing excellent works such as the subsequent "Happiness Is The Road" (2008), "Sounds That Can't Be Made" (2012), and "Fear" (2016).


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