Despite the refinement of a pleasant and melodic rock/pop sound with progressive tendencies, Barclay James Harvest's ninth album is far removed from the symphonic/progressive path they had forged in their previous releases. "Turn of the Tide" became their second album without original keyboardist Woolly Wolstenholme, who had left the band precisely because of its more mainstream direction, something that would become particularly evident in the works he didn't participate in. To replace him, the rest of the lineup (John Lees, Les Holroyd, and Mel Pritchard) had hired keyboardists Kevin McAlea and Colin Browne, two musicians who, despite not possessing Wolstenholme's instrumental prowess, fulfilled their roles professionally. "Turn of the Tide" unfolds through a series of welcoming and warm soft rock compositions that are easy to listen to, where the bright treble, so typical of early digital recordings, is more than evident. Tracks like the rock songs "Highway for Fools" and "Death of a City", despite their quality, lack the enthusiasm of yesteryear. Others, like the emotive "How Do You Feel Now?" and "In Memory of the Martyrs", or the pleasant soft-rock tracks "Back to the Wall", "Echoes and Shadows", or "I'm Like a Train", show, despite everything mentioned above, a quality musicality full of melancholic vocal performances and sophisticated, tasteful instrumentation.

