| Track by Track Review | 
 
	
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	| Distant Seas 
 There is a bit of a jazzy vibe to this mellow and quite pretty piece of music. It covers quite a bit of territory before eventually dropping down to a particularly sedate movement that eventually takes it to its closing. | 
	
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	| Provence This one opens with some very folk-like music before working towards more of that jazz sound. Those two musical elements seem to combine on this number.
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	| Intersection Blues 
 Trademark Steve Howe, this merges his type of intricate folk guitar sounds with some blues elements. It’s a cool little jam that has some particularly complex instrumental work. | 
	
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	| Family Tree 
 Somehow this one feels a little playful. It has more of that folk element on display, but some of the slide guitar and other sounds lend some bluegrass into the mix. | 
	
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	| J's Theme 
 This acoustic guitar solo is quite sedate and pretty. | 
	
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	| In the Course of the Day 
 Intricate and compelling, this is another cool acoustic guitar solo. It rocks a bit more than the previous tune did. Some strings add a different level of sound and emotion to the piece. | 
	
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	| Dream River 
 Fairly complex acoustic guitar lines create a piece that seems to merge classical music and jazz. | 
	
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	| Golden Years There’s a real country and blue grass vibe in a bouncy folk-styled sound on the first minute or so of this. It rocks out a bit more after that and comparisons to something like The Beatles with those other elements merged into it wouldn’t be out of the question.
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	| The Little Galliard This is a short acoustic guitar solo that’s very classical in nature. It’s a gentle piece.
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	| Up above Somewhere 
 Another gentle and sedate number, this is pretty. It’s got plenty of classical music in the mix. | 
	
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	| Curls & Swirls 
 I love this. It’s a complex and compelling instrumental that is trademark Steve Howe. While it’s not all that different from a lot of the stuff here, it somehow just works better than the rest. Considering that nothing here is weak, that says a lot. | 
	
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	| Pyramidology 
 This acoustic guitar solo is quite involved. It definitely has a lot of basis in classical music. | 
	
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	| Lost for Words 
 Some of the guitar melodies here make me think of spaghetti westerns. That said, this is very much a classically tinged intricate piece of music. | 
	
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	| Winter 
 There is almost a music box kind of feeling to some of this. Otherwise, though, it’s another that has a lot of classical music and some seriously intricate melody lines built into it. | 
	
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	| Solar Winds 
 Folk music and mellow progressive rock merge with classical on this piece. | 
	
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	| Your Move 
 I really like this instrumental rendition of a section of the Yes song “I’ve Seen All Good People.” | 
	
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	| Disillusion 
 Another Yes section, this one from “Starship Trooper,” this takes on a cool folk meets country music aspect in this telling. It’s a lot of fun. | 
	
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	| To Be Over This time the source song comes from Yes’ Relayer album. I’ve always loved this passage of music and it works quite well here.
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