The Time Machine by
Alan Parsons actually features very little musical input from
Parsons himself, who produced and engineered the album. No matter, because this concept album about the passage of time -- and the triumphs, mistakes, regrets, and memories associated with it -- is
Parsons' best work of the '90s. It blends
Parsons' traditional prog rock and pop/rock leanings with a bit of techno. The real stars are guitarist/saxophonist/keyboardist/bassist
Ian Bairnson and drummer/keyboardist
Stuart Elliott, both longtime
Alan Parsons Project cohorts who individually wrote most of this album's songs. Other
Parsons veterans on
The Time Machine include vocalists
Colin Blunstone,
Chris Rainbow, and
Neil Lockwood. "The Time Machine (Part 1)" is a wonderful instrumental complete with dreamy acoustic guitar lines and a steady drum-machine rhythm.
Spandau Ballet vocalist
Tony Hadley tastefully restrains his past histrionics for "Out of the Blue."
Blunstone is featured on the hypnotic "Ignorance Is Bliss," which also contains tasteful piano and orchestral flourishes. "The Call of the Wild" has a warm, Celtic feel thanks to the vocals by
Clannad's
Máire Brennan and a sprinkling of Northumbrian pipes. "No Future in the Past" and "Press Rewind" are the album's most distinctive pop/rock numbers.
Beverley Craven provides the vocals on the lush, bittersweet ballad "The Very Last Time." "Far Ago and Long Away" is a densely arranged instrumental with an overtly techno flavor.
The Time Machine will definitely please die-hard
Parsons fans.