Gillan - Magic (Japanese Remastered 2007)
Artist: Gillan
Title: Magic
Year Of Release: 1982
Label: Air Mail Archive AIRAC-1392
Genre: Hard Rock
Quality: APE (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 01:14:56
Total Size: 490 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Magic
Year Of Release: 1982
Label: Air Mail Archive AIRAC-1392
Genre: Hard Rock
Quality: APE (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 01:14:56
Total Size: 490 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. What's The Matter - 3:33
02. Bluesy Blue Sea - 4:49
03. Caught In A Trap - 3:36
04. Long Gone - 3:58
05. Driving Me Wild - 3:01
06. Demon Driver - 7:17
07. Living A Lie - 4:28
08. You're So Right - 2:56
09. Living For The City - 4:28
Written-By – S. Wonder
10. Demon Driver (Reprise) - 0:46
Bonus Tracks
11. Breaking Chains - 3:29
12. Purple Sky - 3:25
13. Fiji - 5:22
14. Helter Skelter - 3:27
Written-By – J. Lennon/P. McCartney
15. Smokestack Lightning - 4:08
Written-By – C. Burnett
16. South Africa - 4:04
17. John - 4:45
18. South Africa — extended version - 7:23
The final release of original material from Ian Gillan's second project to bare his name, Gillan's Magic was originally issued in 1982 by Virgin Records. The label also reissued the disc in 1988 with seven extra tracks, including covers and B-sides. As the group was winding down, their sound was softened a bit on Magic. The LP was generally accepted by Gillan's staunch U.K. following; however, it failed to achieve the chart success of Glory Road. After opening with two incredible hard-rockers -- "What's the Matter" and "Bluesy Blue Sea" -- Magic loses its edge. Moderated cuts like "Driving Me Wild" and "You're So Right" have potential, but stall during unimaginative choruses. There are even a few straight keyboard pop moments on the inexplicable "Long Gone" that couldn't have pleased older fans. This song in particular flirts with new wave, a heretic move from a co-creator of "Smoke on the Water." The first single issued from Magic, Stevie Wonder's "Living for the City" is a spectacular flop. That, along with the bonus cover material ("Helter Skelter" and "Smokestack Lightning"), prove that Gillan's powerful but quirky scream is exclusively suited for the classically influenced but catchy hard rock that made Deep Purple a platinum success.