Question: who remembers how the first Duran Duran sounded? I think everyone (at least those who are my age or thereabouts). Another question: who remembers how Japan sounded? Already fewer people. Glam pop that eventually evolved into a strange, more sophisticated and chic laboratory. Third question: who knows David Sylvian? Those who know Japan, obviously! Silly questions aside, what I’m about to review is the second solo album of the leader of the aforementioned group after it disbanded. The year is 1984, and Sylvian surprises everyone with a record that was prodigious at its time, a clear break from the Japan formula, using an artistic language, a palette with very different colors from those before.

Are you familiar with certain paintings of Renoir, like the "Grenouillère"? Those snapshots of common life, an instant frozen in time and space, with those splendid plays of light and those sparks of sunshine dancing on the lake’s waves, among the tree fronds and on people's clothes? Imagine such a rarefied air, such a suspended and sunny atmosphere, and transpose it into music: only then will you approach the mental images generated by certain songs contained in "Brilliant Trees".

"Pulling Punches" is sophisticated and cultured pop, moving nimbly among melodic lines halfway between jazzy and certain distant oriental echoes, a recipe that, if you will, recalls Japan. However, with the next track comes the break.

The hazy "The Ink In The Well" is a spectacular sweep of subtle brushstrokes on a canvas that gradually acquires the features of a typical Japanese art painting. The peach trees let fall their petals, which, carried by a gentle breeze, lightly rest on a little pond topped by a small bridge, on whose railing leans a lone man, observing such natural beauty. Everything seems immobile and eternal, a superhuman calm reigns over the whole landscape, perhaps Nirvana.

I mentioned Renoir before: here you have "Nostalgia". The light guitar touches seem to mimic the gentle tremor of the water and the sunlight reflections; the atmosphere, if you will, is even more rarefied and relaxed, time is stretched to the limit, the track almost invites us to stop, to take our time to look around and back. The rhythm continues with these stylistic features to the beautiful, intense finale, which almost tempts one to listen to the track again.

From this description, useful interpretations can also be drawn for "Weathered Wall" and "Backwaters". The first of the two is very nocturnal and intimate, perhaps more static and contemplative than "Nostalgia" but no less beautiful for that. Slightly darker is "Backwaters", thanks to a very strange distorted bass and a voice much deeper and more controlled than usual.

It ends beautifully with the title track, the third beautiful manifesto of Sylvian's new course poetic. The air is that fresh of a summer morning in the open countryside, with fields and woods opening before you and you on a promontory, contemplating it all. By now we are at the peak of the disintegration of the self and its panical fusion with the whole, in an ethereal and powdery calm rarely reached, in my opinion, by other authors.

Sylvian’s music is not for everyone. Due to its sought-after characteristics, vaguely cultured, with a (obviously) new romantic and new age flavor, it does not lend itself to quick listening, but requires all the calm in the world. After a hard day, lie down for a moment, put on the record, and wander into the clearing of brilliant trees drawn by Sylvian's soft brush: you will get lost, but you'll find yourself again, even if just for a moment.

Tracklist and Lyrics

01   Pulling Punches (05:02)

If heaven watches over me
Sowing seeds back in the soil
With eyes that see, hands that feel
Why am I the last to know

Sheltered lives spent partially breathing
Are gathered together under new religion

Pulling punches, sleeping on our feet
Pulling punches, I needed someone to comfort me
Raised in summer days of splendour
Who would've dreamed of love never ending?

A better world lies in front of me
A sketch of life in the books I read
Then as I walk where heaven leads
Why am I the last to know?

Simple lives spent partially breathing
Are gathered together under new religion

Pulling punches, sleeping on our feet
Pulling punches, I needed someone to comfort me
Raised in summer days of splendour
Who would've dreamed of love never ending?

Nature feeds this nausea
Deep inside the heart of me

02   The Ink in the Well (04:30)

The lights of the ashes smoulder through hills and vales
Nostalgia burns in the hearts of the strongest
Picasso is painting the ships in the harbour
The wind and sails
These are years with a genius for living

The rope is cut, the rabbit is loose
(Fire at will in this open season)
The blood of a poet, the ink in the well
(It's all written down in this age of reason)

The animals run through harvested fields of fire
The bitterness shown on the face of the homeless
Picasso is painting the flames from the houses
The sudden rain
These are years with a genius for living

The rope has been cut, the rabbit is loose
(Fire at will in this open season)
The blood of a poet, the ink in the well
(It's all written down in this age of reason)

Fire at will

03   Nostalgia (05:41)

Voices heard in fields of green
Their joy their calm and luxury
Are lost within the wanderings of my mind

I'm cutting branches from the trees
Shaped by years of memories
To exorcise their ghosts from inside of me

The sound of waves in a pool of water
I'm drowning in my nostalgia

04   Red Guitar (05:09)

05   Weathered Wall (05:44)

06   Backwaters (04:52)

Once again I'm hiding in backwaters
Running this way and that
Trying so very hard to please

(Beware of hidden snares)

Rushing to bite the hand that feeds me
Running this way and that

(There are always other possibilities)

This way and that

07   Brilliant Trees (08:39)

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