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Clearance Sale! New vinyl starting from £4.99, first come first served!
Clearance Sale! New vinyl starting from £4.99, first come first served!

Cosmic Cathedral - Deep Water 2x Vinyl LP

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Original price £0
Original price £29.99 - Original price £29.99
Original price
Current price £29.99
£29.99 - £29.99
Current price £29.99

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Estimated dispatch: 3 - 5 days

2x Black Vinyl LP
Release Year: 2025
Catalogue Number: 19802885931
Barcode: 0198028859318
Record Grading: Mint (M)
Sleeve Grading: Mint (M)
Condition Note: Brand New

Track Listing / Description
A1 The Heart of Life
B1 Time To Fly
B2 I Won't Make It
B3 Walking In Daylight
C1 Deep Water Suite I: Introduction 
C2 Deep Water Suite II: Launch Out, Pt. One 
C3 Deep Water Suite III: Fires Of The Sunrise 
C4 Deep Water Suite IV: Storm Surface 
C5 Deep Water Suite V: Nightmare In Paradise 
C6 Deep Water Suite VI: Launch Out, Pt. Two 
D1 Deep Water Suite VII: New Revelation  
D2 Deep Water Suite VIII: Launch Out, Pt. Three  
D3 Deep Water Suite IX: The Door To Heaven 
 
If you are a celebrated progressive rock musician who has produced dozens of albums, how do you make an album that is different to what is usually expected? One answer is to work with musicians who also have decades of experience and worldwide recognition, plant a few seeds, then stand back and see what happens. For the Cosmic Cathedral project and their debut album 'Deep Water', this is exactly what Neal Morse did, joining up with Chester Thompson (Genesis), Phil Keaggy (Glass Harp) & Byron House (Robert Plant). Much of the album was created from jam sessions where Morse's long-time audio partner Jerry Guidroz put the best parts together, such as for the 38 minute epic, Deep Water Suite. Says Morse, "Time To Fly, also came directly from one of the jam sessions, where we took one of Phil's ideas and all four of us elaborated on it." What resulted from all this was a more groove-orientated feel, which Morse calls a "prog meets yacht rock meets The Beatles" kind of album, with an unmistakable jazz fusion influence: "These guys are real groovers: even if they're playing proggy stuff, it has more of a Steely Dan feel to it, but when Phil and I start singing it sounds like The Beatles!"