AUTOR

Monday, October 24, 2022

Barclay James Harvest-Ring Of Changes (1983)

Released amidst the synth-pop and new wave craze, Barclay James Harvest gave us their twelfth studio album, "Ring of Changes". Now a trio after Stuart "Woolly" Wolstenholme's departure several years prior, John Lees, Les Holroyd, and Mel Pritchard, with valuable contributions from Kevin McAlea and Bias Boshell on keyboards, continue the stylistic vein of their previous album, "Turn of the Tide", released in 1981. This album features a subtle shift towards folk and acoustic sounds, including a symphonic orchestra on some tracks. Despite being considered a minor album in the British group's discography, "Ring of Changes" still boasts moments of brilliance such as "Looking from the Outside", "High Wire", and "Paraíso dos Cavalos", where BJH's melodic approach, their main strength, remains intact, and a solid, albeit somewhat understated, instrumental and symphonic foundation is still present. Other tracks, like "Fifties Child", perhaps suffer from being a watered-down copy of the iconic "Hymn". On the other hand, "Midnight Drug" retains a freshness and dynamism that at times dangerously approaches the new wave sounds of the era. However, although this album doesn't reach the creativity of the group's previous work, it still has enough merit to be considered one of their magnificent albums of the 80s.